lo would tif- wing from th|] ieessn' h^ that he may wait: of ifood? te*P^ y, r oan be m f '1" « uSlS 108* all «Mtmwr.pri«38 ,^ hia great ambltion'»»oop» f liH,»"!l'^i him catue to hap9. ijit i»" J inlid aa a rook. ,„ -ainly 1 Grand deslras. "otfowtonirapadfertiaes. =g^^£"!gg?;wMt«^-aeajy a j^ â- *?*;'r3i,iefc, f .. ,i^- ' MZbs^tiien, and «U tho reu. ij'iho^^hiS howthe pobjlo aiMdi rfiaowtonerapadTertiaes. .11 waited clerkB, oaihien, '"•^'^iwo^n.auch delightful «eaM. '^l ffsiTed ali.tae BnmmM'jlirougli. oUiw waf-4^ IwyJISwff i^ ^^jj y* rAtae. hk fin* browiK a^TSliHSSSS^ ben'gouiti aoid. ^^^7^' « radden nktnut bom olthSSlffiDt â- mile ufaa has knoim ftluu dSSac dk^ of miik-vhibe tteth And flwb^Sk iSI to be tha foniraiiiuir ^. «S« S2S before newâ€" a rtorm inlhiklf tbon^nM* tMinte *â-¼Â« been sttitM' ill ailMiZk fcmae, la wUoh her -^^^^^^ â„¢- ""»« and her pridei " the " wSrSk^^v '"'**« **» womdat be uad when thtj lie %jcelty yoinctUac for »Jhi,„5 at atlt rt^Kroa'^uVft tj Jta^ S;. JBit,^,«i'm4oo1one«»aie like? ran* i-^iona UtUe for the crowd to do. [tbeBto li^iuuo".-- j^ijj there'a no oenyins- E^ fKBgtof 3 without a thongbt of bur koida I .,/in"i. bat sal lules and rent ,T?o4sh and credit bosh were spent " " ercbMit hoped hi jluck wooJd turn. Sff^loaed ihe whole ooacern. AVENOED; CAtiM APTBR STORM. jaiPrER Vâ€" (CONTIXUBD.) Lnd yon really must go, Isidore? ' [gbaolutaly must, petite -my fath« lit • and I 831 of .8 308 the moat obe- « thon knowest." Itonaoftha qaeation and answer he story of Monsieor and Madama at'a marriad life as eloquently as 1 could do. Natural as Cree- ,j to her young husband is, she lit umldly, and wish a frightened I her large Instrons eyes, while he "with a gay carelessness that is jiuaahing in its indifference, and ^n ohaerfully sipping his coffee and rhb letters, wliiie she bends her teai over the breakfast-bray, to I painful flash that rises to her bb one year had passed since the I wd3ding in the suburban ohnrch, tlie Oibornea and Mias Smerdon for the antipodes, since Oressida her life Into Isidore St. Just's keep- I Sich a long, long year it seems bo lidaâ€" she is too loyai, even in her own khts, to add "sucti a sad and dreary B I'j iihe think: that if all the days I lecgthdn out so Intolerably as these day; hu^e done, the Psalmist surely vhea ho termed man's span of Ufa bafteredbia lowed by i( Ou6» yeitr that had placad a broad Im- bie rirer between her and tie old |l daya has hardly used her fairly. aQty ha3 not ripened and perfaot- Ita rare promise is, as yet at least, far jboicg tuifilied. And Isidore has than once told her, with jesting ness, tha: the aahool-girl Cresaida was «ttier than is Madame St. Jost in ^titeenth year. liiimsoK haa grown noticeably hand- fin the same space of time. The idle niarloaa life he has led has evident- «ed with him he looks as though ^d not a care or trouble in the world, ties that world boldly in the face |the bright, aadacious, defiant selfish- of one who knows himself its master. I lie lore Creaslda still 1 Is the marrl- iliappyonel No one puts the ques- Ito liim, and he is not given to iutro- Vfe rdvarie. Bat In her long empty I and dull companionless evenings â€" ifter the first few weeks, Monsieur Fast b 'Stowed bat a small proportion time apon hia wife â€" Oressida re- the subject in a long monotony t tbe marriage is in some degree a aha admits there is no possibility "ying so patent a f^ct. That they I no single thought, aspiration, or ent in common is her fault, no • Bii8 never thinks of blaming him. Ttraation between them fliga by still it dies away to a mere ,nece» mtarchinge of orders and promises "h It la doubtless because she is too tounderatand or interest him long. onght pozzes her a little, for she •'been wont to think herself a dunce Mrtainly cleverer than the other wtlieMlasej Smerdon's school. Bab So thi "^ES^?^ hnrried^ 'H«t« I d^il^tUb^rwMs f* It la aehUdlahphraae; iairfn^5ir«^rnt of ten Qreasi^ja A^^ ^lOU, «dlt ab- the ailver fUsk wish bnn£^, tod toM Matilda Jane to Mttd the MbfortweLre o'clock, thon hast done ifs;htly and well • and, sinoe tiuM w^^ajr expUeit diree- blons, I am sure tkoik Just fo^gotleA^ne of them I Creaslda nods her golden iheadj and a faint flush of pleasure rises :in thc| ^oft hollow of her oheek. Praise from him has grown precious in proportion to ite rarity, and he la eorely pra^lngiher now 1 " Yas," she says, a littleiribg of ttlnmph in her tone, "ereiry thing is quite rea^ quite as you w.«hedit, Iiidore^â€" oreepi^ a little nearer «nd looking op into Jlihe keen dark face with miity broirn evei "I «m a good wifer«i^ I ibif; ' Just for a second the exqutdte serenity of Monsiehr St. J ust's f aoels disturbed, the eyes turn restlessly from those thataeateh and strive to chaiii them, the smooth brow is shadowed and drawn; there is some- thing of regreb and. remorae in the look that childish i^eadiogi oonjore* op; bob all passes, quickly as breatli passesfrom the pollshea lurfaoeof amirrori and he is his gay insouciant self again. â- - " Thou art an angel," he says cheerily, and the Uafk moovikaehe brashes tiie smooth goldiini hUr i'iji Ja.darMMB vkiia. "And now, monan^^, it i| time to say good-bye." Ilildoi 're !s a man, and a man's stand- high. as she had seen But what of that t «o different, bd hopelessly iv-retsida concludeB with a sigh. le sought her out, wooed her ^Bi.6iy, seemed to love her well, F "oe, m her childish shyness, rather â- ^ irom, and certainly made no such fn«8 to please him puably of late F^Jl have known from the first. jiJPj^^ty child, and she amused ^^ was all 1 She is not even pretty fdl" i""' â- f'^singand moping thus, ^d^T.^^ more brilUant huel eye S'^*'"°°^'"»^'» beauty- »„ *^®'"^«' figure grows "pillar and thin.^ the iweet •«-lytaIi^'?*^^*«'y smUe-and 'lampai/'!;*' "^^^ gulps down ^i^toastiato elaborate diamonds j!wr to ba eaten; and, k. -iUto il"'^™°^°n» Wdore g wSy^® wfeject from a dif. ' •ytUds, and her thin **I2ub, Isidote, ybii hittve^neiKer tt^iaue Wnen will you be back 1 " There is sdniei^hing like ttaett^ in her look and tone. ' It is UOt t^afshe can spare him so illâ€" tlwt hvi. society is so necessary to her for a long time she has wknowledged to hexseJf, with a deadly ehill.at her heart and a guilty conscious- ness, that she iii h*ppi^ in his absence thw his presence. But lhis .jonraiey of which she knows neither tW eiid nor the purpose fills her with a vaguely terrible foreboding. She is so yoOng-^-so ignorant of the world's waysâ€" so utterly alone, for, on this side of the world at least, she has not a sinifle soul she can. call friend. All this comes over this lihrdhig girri soul as she dings with tragic passion to her young hnslMmd, and repeats a little wildlyâ€" "Isidore, tell me when I may expect you." ** 0ntll thon seest me," is the. mocking answer then the man goes on more gent- ly. " But, Oceaaida, there mnst m no fretting; my business is of the most im- portance) or I would not go. What then f Parla is not the North Pole or the Antip- odes and thon wilt hear from me soon- er than thon ezpectest." And then he {^ea, with alight eold kisf' and an odd look at the slender glrl-figore bathed (n the nuNming annahine, and round the prettily furnished rooitt, as though he fere meotdHy photographing both frame "^aiMt.iiletarerrgOM with a smile in hii(:dvk eyes-^oea whistling a few bars from a popular opexir-^bars that haunt and torture Oresaida's ilnemory for many a day to^ come, ' As the- oab ra^tfes down the street, Oressida comes dowlynp-stairs and4cops heavily into .the nearest 'chair, .wlt^^ ft dazed unreasbinable feeling that lh6 I^ passed throi^h neme crisis ot her fate. She sits there with cold locked hands and wide pathetic, eyes, so motionless and miserable-looking that the l»ii^ little maid who, aJl nnnotioed, has removed the breakfast- service and performed one or two duties With~tnniU(ie8saty ttoiBeand^- clatter that is powerless to stir the statue- like figure in the window, gi^wa stlaAned' at last, and informs her mistress, with very round eyes and forcible emphasis, that she is snre there is something wrong with tha poor young lady, on tix9 first floor. ,â- ';- nr' hv u This sendli 11^ Cl$rke V^^lrs as fait as an obes6 foTib wd aathoMitic breath will permit. The T^*; is paompted partly by curiosity and partly by prudential motives; for, though the St. Justs hate hitherto been modeljbt^gWfs in the matter of prompt payme^#*J«ndUidy knows by painful expaHliiii^tliM the lodger Jon trust is the lodgi yy |ri M 8. i 9Mii^^ yo«f " in Monsieur St. Jnatriid^arture itaUf there is somethii^ rather suspicions. At she stands in the doorway, howaver, looking with t hrewd exparienee-diarpened eyes at the sender fijgore'in the great arm-chair, her heart tfaddiBiilyMfbeaLaad her suspidona die away. Th« '•™*?°y retires into the baokgjwnnd and true woman oomei to the front. There u none of the passionate grief that raggeata a woman's tragedy here. TM».m »« • wronged woaftui, a dWiilMl â- IWi onm daaed terror-Btdekea ^*W. ^^--^ -^ "Mra. Sb. Jnatr Cfcwrf*^ •««*»»* â- Up thMCMkh tMM* "*^ .? "Toa Teara riae qnibUy ii»th«giira^mg; bvl they are not palnfoi tear. iiw. Or«riS is ao lonely indeed that the ^T^ rough and homely klndne« faaiiksaw. noonhareaca. --whediBg Udote's ownenahioned dialr forward aa aha spaaka. ^^ ^^ "Well, thank yon Undly, m wUJ^; for what with my legs and my Wh. then atafin 1. a ^br mS fâ„¢* to me; and I have ^t a word or twotoaay bi^ I -jb. YorfH ptomiae not to be ofT^ded with ae-, iren^t yoot ' nlLV^ " y°" "•«» to be kind 1^' Oreatida saya, staring with wondering eyes into the plain )a, but feelinga eense of safety and pibteotlon in the homely presence. "That I dot" ttie wonwn answers warmly. "Then Just yoi teUmewhat made yon look aO woe-D^joneand wretoh- edthab Susan [sent tna npto see what eiled you. "V^ it anything nbonb year husband?" A swift flush, a sfiuiied' look, a little haughty stiffaning of the dender white throat â€" Cresaida gives no other but Mrs. Clarke takea these fo aUiadi;Lja-. *i- awera. **AJi, well, n^ dear, I don't mean to hurt yodr feelings but you are youns;, and he too, for that matter,, and a little short tempered, as all foreigneira are I And I thought p«Aiapa yon had had a falling outâ€" that'a ail I' Young as she is, Cresdda hu sense enough to know that the rough tonch on her sorely wonnded pride is k^dly meant. So, though she does not answer without effort, she answers without a trace of of- fence. ** We have had no qnarrel. Mm. Olai^e. Mondeur St. Just has been called away on business, that is dl." " Business " the landlady grunts in a dissatis«d sorb of fashion. Sue believes implicitly every word the girl tolls her; bother distrust of the absent Iddore is rather augmented than decreased. "I did not know he had any business, ma'am," she finishes drilly, rising to take her de- parture now, for Cresaida does not seem Inclined for further onfideooes. "I hope, for your sake, he will be back soon, for t is terribly dull for you." " lb ilk rather," Crasdd» agrees, with a smile that is rabher more forlorn than her gravity. ' ' But I sha 1 hear from him to-morrow, and then " The aentonoe ends in a weary little sigh for the door is dosed, the good natured wonum gone, and the young wife thrown back once mora nyon the dreaiy company of her own thonghta. It Is a long dreary day, but It wears away at last; and as die lays her tired head upon the pillow, she thinki, with her last waking tiionght, that its succes- sor caahardly equal it in length or dnlnets. Poor little Creaslda; even her dreams, thongh they are restless and feverish enough, bring to her no dim foreshadow, ings of what the long tomorrow is to be I "I cannot heu from Iddore to-mor- row," shd mnrmura drowsily "bat the next day â€" oh surdy the next day I shall have a letter " Bat, strange to say, she does hear from Monsieur St. Jasc earlier than she e^ecbs, early indeed on the following day. She is siili seated at the breakfast- table, dpping her tea and reading the newspaper by way of lengthening one the solitary meal, which gives her at least the semblance of an occupation, when Susan eomes into the room with a belegram. It is the very first Cresaida ha^ ever received, and the sight of the orange col- oured envelope fills her with a vague im- measurable dread. Isidore must ba dead or dying. She tears the fatal missive open and masters its contents. These are not by «ny meana what she expects they bring a quick bright colour to her cheeks, and light hdf glad, hdf tearful to her soft brown eyes. 'Come to Paris at onoe," Isidore tele- graphs " my father wiahea tu see you." ' There is nothing wrong with the gentleman, I hopet ' says Susan, who has wdted while Cresdda read the tdegram. "Nothing wrongâ€" no," Cresdda says, dropping suddenly from the idottdlaad in which she had been wandering. I am to join Monsienr Sb. Just in Paris, that is aU." The news Is ao afcartling that Suans hattmii to impart It to her mistress, who, deepty loterested, soon makes her appear- anee on the scene. TOibm Im no obstacle to an Immediate ttepartute, for Creadda's billa are all paid, andahahasafew pounda, a little more thananffiaas to defray the o^naea of her jouniey, in hand; and, with theae two willing hdpera, her amall prepazatlona mre soon made. In leaa than a eonple of hoars after the reodpt ci hir hoabaad'a telegram, ahe la ready to atari. " Qood-bye, my dear young lady," Ito^ COadra aaya, reprding the j^etty flashed face and feverishly bdghli eyea of her jmam kidger wlw ^egoe' uuuaalnna *«Yoowdllet aekaTe aUne toiwyaa naehedl^aila aafe^ and loMiaD wall, won't yoat Toa mn mAt^Jffmog thing lotmTelabofntelMW M Maaenioftha leajiwl^htlrt OHAPTEBTI. **Th«' wtedofw^^hk^ t alr^bUova] Doyoaaoteael oiaalle i| ffdntingr' " MidemniadtaV faea fa todaed ghat- If in ita ^strpanadpaia aqd grJf piBat, aaitrcata^ahoakthe darkly.nMMtled waD. Butthawoidaaak Ukaaaebetrieahook; her eyea opao In a bandag flaak of indlf- nation, and sha ataadaeteob before tte mea who are judging and dondaoialng her â€" TecytrlitfeaatiiMMt a-f righteaad ahild ao aaora aa oatapced woanaa atraitg ia her hsdigaaai^yte; the tHi ahe 6^ are thraa. iaaaadbei, Isidore 8ft. Jotl. hla father, aad die lawyer, to whoae offiM they had kcooght bar faamedliM^ oahar airivd iaParla, the aiaa from whoae bk- flexiUe lips haa fallen the aentenea, which at firat aeeinid aa empty Bswid, that boce to her daUlfid i naas " vt*uj nn m««alng, that dowiy bat aareiy ^. i:a way into heart and Insaia aad aetthag both aflame. " " Ton are not, and, by the Frendi law yon never have been, the wife of Iddore St. Just." The thre« men watched her keenly in theeilent pause that follows the bomb- *§el| pee The W7er a ferret-faced yellow dufwed man, with a oalai piro- fesaional Ublireat ;. Isidore, with affdiot- ed indlffdrenee, and real anxiety, nob as to the result of^^ 8oene,'\baC:aa to tI|B U^ibloa in which she may tnrn upon him aud^he elder Sc Just, with just a touch of humap facing temperiiu; Us inflexible purpose ^aad^Boftoiiing the murd hlag^ eyea tha«are a caricature copy of Iddore's hciiUant and mdting orba. He it ia who sees the gray shadow fdl aeroes the childlike face, and change its charaotwfor ever, who notes the swift stagger back agafaist the wall, the sadden droop of the white lids that cannot shut out an unnttmable agony. He cdla for water, and presses dosely to the pale giria dde but ahe dnws back as thongh the eonbaot hurt hnr and, when she speaks, it.hr to the notary sheaddresses herself. ** I do not think you understand, mon- deur," she says with simple dignity and aodm distinctness that surprises her- selL "Their can be no question of the legality of my marrage, even if â€" ^if Mon- sieur St. Just were baae enough to deny it." "P4Z!dkn,iMademoiseDe," Interjacts tile dddr ftl'^usb, with a bow of exquisite politeness," my s^n has no such dishon- ourable thought. He owns that your charaateiiB^«faev*e reproach he does nob deny that' he 1^ gone through the cere- mony of hoiarriage 'With you, he merely protests that the marriage was illegal." Cresaida never turns her head or an- swers hit 54ddress, never once turns her eyejs to that remoter corner, where, with white face, set lips, and glittering eyes, bar traitor-husband standi Did she onoe mae!) his eeza, she knows that the fierce scorn ttinr burning indignation she holds so hardly in cheek woiHd overwhelm and master her, sweeping away all the coolness and courage of yrMch she stands in such desperate need. So she-jstaroi at Monsieur Bartrand'a Impassive^ face, and apeaka to him, as though they two were done in the room. ** I am very young, monsieur," she goes on in the same tone of forced monotonous calm " bub I am ndther a oMld nor an idiot. I was married in dioroh after doe pnblication of the banns, in presence of any number of prodndble witnesses, widi the sanction of my only guardians and friends; I do not know much of legal matters truly, but it seems to me It would .be hard to find a flaw in such a mairiaffe as that." "In Inland it would be imposdble," the lawyer admits placidly " but you overlook one important feature in the case. Monsieur St. Just is a French dti- zen, and in an event like his marriage will abide by the r^ulatlons of the French law. Perhaps you are nob acquainted with bhe diff^rancB in die code of the two countries." Fe pauses and waits the answer that comes dowly and with difficulty from the stiff white Ups, though the proud an- guished' eyes neverdroop or wander from his face. ' ' I am very Ignorant, monsieur I was a schoolgirl a yi^ ago. I know only that aa surely as I live and breathe, as surely as Heaven's law and. man's can make a marriage, I am the wife of Isidore Sb. JUBb." There, la a. slight movement in the shadowed domer Where the two Sb. Justa stand. Cressida doe* not look around, she will not, and she dare not but some instinct tolls her that her husband haa made a swift movement towarda the door, thai only his bther'e grasp restrains him. Mondeur Bertrand ahruga hla should- ers and surveys die pale young face, through hia green glasses with profcsdon- d contempt, yeitm.£^iht. to-off gleam of pity too. How abapidly she takes the blow-^w afisnrd theae Kngliah are I NoPnfncIf girioosrid get into saoha fix, but, being in, she woiud aordy try to ex- trieatahraaelfwith graoe; and yet aheia BO youngâ€" ao pretty it ia hard, no doubt " Pr^ fee t ea ted madame"â€" pashfaig forward a ehalr, uid aooordlng her die tide of honour he had hitherto aarnpu- loady denied. "Ihaveapainfdl â€" aveiy paiafal duty .to peifona In the iatereet of B^ oUenta. 1^ IfMs^ania St. Just, father add BOO. Ballere me, I i^mpathlae deep- ly wiOi yoitr aofaCtaaate posHkm. Will j^fed for adna, ad ]%fat«Bi itadifflsal dea by aeepedtig-'PiaafpetiBnt heariugf "dy. She bat her bead gmtdy, 4oeiiiol aeeepl tlii flhoir WdBHea; jMghlfy The Haw Braaeaiek aad Pdaee Sdwaii W a nd Tolaateera who waee oaUedoakte aatiraaenrioe, have beea Bodflad of thalc aafttbetog required. M j'r« Badiaaaa aad BoBwdI,ottka 9psh ^(oain8g battdloB, raported bw Qin. Middbtan,- are ^ppHesala fevtke poaiciohaof eoaamaadaaft aadeaptda of tiisjohod of hafaatiy to be iwta^Bhtd ia Wmn|p^. Hm aovanuaenl. ift ia Baldl^ eontemptate Od. T^Ior, (tf Hdlbx, a* eommaadaat. jPaeNr was aa immeaae attendanne ai tta iteml, ha Tteoate, of Private Mboi^ of the Royd Orenadiece, killed atiBatonha! The otty oarp6radoa,aBd hMaleorpa wum hi the prooaadoa, aawell aa lapieaaata. dvea of the vaiioas Uadea. Thoasaada Uned the route, and at the eemetery theia were about 6,000 poc^e. The was 18 yearn opifnlaatM^, At the Bwadttn^ of' the MelliodlBt fervaee la Kingatoo, a motion wa exprsBBhig thankfalaasB to Gkid for the oessarion of the rebellion, great adaiia- tlon for the devotion and ooorage aumi- feqited by )he young n^n who went to dm fr^nt, and the deepeat sympathy with thlae who mourn the loss of beloved oaea on the field ofbiitUe. The Carleton Place Hamld^harges thaft "s .me Of the C. P. R. cars hi which toI- unteers were taken to I«k» Superior ware terribly mutUated and defaced oa the Interior. It is said that oushiona were completely out from their ftamaa. Soma seats were completely deabroyed Wmdows were brokoi, and oar walla were wilfully and wantonly defaced." Tnis is a oharge the public will ba loathi^ to balieve unless stroogly austahied by evidence. The Phihddphia Newa atataa the dl. nation fairly when ib says "The attempt to get up a sentiment, in favor of Rid because he issdd to be an Amerioan dtizan ought to fail. Hd hai offended the laws of Canada on the aoil of the Do- minion and has been eaught red-handed. There is no law nor reason why thia should exempt him from trid in Canada so long as there is any chance for him to have a fur trial, auoh aa it is to ba pre- sumed he will get." The banner made by the ladies' of Montreal and presented to th( 65th Bat- talion, was blessed by Bishop Fabre in the Jesuit C^iorch in Montreal. The cere- monies were most impressive. This ban- ner, which is of white silk richly em- broidered with gold, bears the motto in French, 'Dieu et Pq,trie," God and Country, and on the reverse side is a sa- ciped heart and the Inaorlption, " Adveni- at regnum twum." Thy Kingdom come. In the sermon by the Rev. Father Hamoh, the reverend gentleman impressed hla hearers with the fact that the trneiCatho- lic soldier never separates religion from country, ahd, in givhig hia blood for hla native land, he also gives it in support of the Catholic f dth, which has wlthasood the asaaalt of time and of many enemies. HOMEStlC C1JU08ITU8. A rum-drinker who la able to dreasaB well, feed hia family aa well, or live in the Btyla of the Bian. of whom he bays. One who ia much intereated in hunt* ing, fishing, in gaming in genera^ devot- ing much time to recreationi, who will succeed In any osef ul employment. A good man or woman who aeea In the neighbotv only evil, only a dlapo-ition to defraud, to cheat and o^irreaon in all tramMdons, and od^' persons to be dea pi«ed and ahunnea A wi(i« indlvidud who la •inclined to .»Mk« «. uonsud attainments, or one who is not more anxlona to leMn, from any and all sourcM, than the average of the ignorant in all communities. Smdl tables may be tastefully draped widi blllhurd cloth, decorated with aj^li- qaes of velvet enriched by crescents and apangles the vaUnce is trimmed with wide olimy lace of an ecru tint. A sue sessful fanner who often attends poUticd gatherings, monkey exhlbidona, goes on oleasure exourdons and the like, during the harvest time, or any time of special haste in hia buainesa on the fitrm. A schemer, one who diooaes to live by his wits, by his trieks, one who disdaina labor, or a stock-broker, a money-lender â€" at exorbitant ratea of intoreat â€" who ever adda a dollar to the wndth of the nation. A good, industrious, obedient, tnut- worthy boy, one who ia kind to his moth- er, temperate in all of his habits, who Ib nob now needed in dl oommnnitiea, and who will not be In great demand in the future, aa he enters upon more active life. A miaer â€" not to be eommended, on the whole^who ia not a better man, praod- eally,more honest, a more useful member of Boole^, who doea not add more to the matorid wedth of the nation, than the prodigal, the spendthrift. A rich man, or me in oomf ortable dr- eomtaaneea, never unable to meet hia MUb, who has not been more esonomioal, mora oueful not to waste, who has aotbeea wan aoeoBtomed to '^gather op the frag- mmta that aothlag be lost," thaa the avenge tf thepo(«,la or oat of the alma- A ramaeller who cares aayihlag tbe weliara of so d e if, who about for aU so, or one wlMWiUnot sdl inhwrie a iit i i to aay qiM» wk3 win i^y ier theai â€"jglfc team te^ good oidar, wlu will agfe disregard laws, solar as it is saiirto do i 'P. iy If:. I ^im f W U it m m^ .H' iJ:* 'j: MDov.