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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 3 Feb 1887, p. 6

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 â- â- i-ij, tjr- HOUSEHOLD. The beat adornment lor ^e hands at any of w^ll-kept an el^giuibe not wherfrine is en- y dfTihS" finger per and nit. Yoa slices of Bood bacon. lnHpiiiwii It ' may add Fwtiie time is we .diunty finger ium%^t this easily attune ever, to piWMfve nails, also that of the hands by the obeerv- ahce of certain precantions, the avoidance ol strong soaps and too hot water, and the application of proper remedies for dryness ana tendernna ol tha-skin. At t hitj JWMjnn, especially, we han»-pf many peril«».te»» peculiarly lidbleto dfipiand become ti^oable' some. To remedy this condition and to strengthen, nothisg is so'-eKcelleat aa pore glycerine dilated with twi .or^ree taftes Its weight of water, to berj^abbcrd intoihe skin before retiring. A^ir of loose, soft, old kid gloves should then be drawn on and worn during the night. Before rubbing on the glycerine the Bands Wettld be washed and Sie aaUs cleansed. Where the chapped surface has been neglected' and become sore, the parts ahoold be kept constaatly wetted with the dUiited glycerine, or.spread Jor a day or so with sp^maceti ointment before beginning treatmcoBLt Mth glyderine. And here a word may be said about ^ycerine complaint is frequently heard that glycerine disagrees with the skin this sometimes hap- pens from applying it without dilation with water to a badly chapped surfl^e. By dilut- ing pure glycerine with five or six times its bulk of water we gain a lotion which. imparts delicacy, suj^leness and an agreeable sensa- tion to the skin. More than £bis, its regular use permanently eoftiens and strengthens and preserves the skin from the effects of heat, cold, and drying winds. Make a JOB a half ef mnur. There sh a great deal of paste. |iHr,"«po-thirdB u| ^hl^ns with the l^rboiled. Int ^n 'i|(ith layers. 'iKiaeal Then cover paste, not fitting very closely, cross slit in tbftjofLinid'JbnjI tbi an hoar or more. Saxokt Cheese stf w|ffi| a pint of snr itf^l it, on the of floury when the add a little salt, a 'piece of batter, the size of a walmit, a q^uter of a pounA'Of grtOfseT^ piBChesaii (or farther good cb^e), ot^u n^ mix^fOolf'^^eese it moulMlL cjjtdBito 8^11 slices and not grated take ou'e that the whole be well incorporated, so as to be the Bv^ doing^ now war* claret aiul his stewed beef, kud a respectable the wants of one, while it takes four francs "Mr. De looked so' this af cemoon. k Icjft't f HEWS. fridge ^d ^ted u^ re^Bntly bfMw-i'Sjito Toilet ITotes. ' The dressing comb should have its teeth equally divided into two sets, the one large and open, the other finer and smaller, but not very fine, or sharp pointed. The teeth should be perfectly smooth and free from defects, and so shaped at their points and edges that they will pass easily throngh the hair, and without scratching the scalp. A good rubber comb is excellent for daily use. A necessary article for the toilet stand is a good mouth wash such is the myrrh and borax wash made by rubbing well together in a mortar one ounce each of honey and borax, then add gradually one quart spirit of wine (not above proof) and one oi^nce each of myrrh and red saunders ^od. Macerate for fourteen days and filter. This will keep the mouth and gums in excel- lent condition. Great care requires to b" exercised in the selection of the hair brush, even more than the comb. Very rough, scratching, coarse brushes carelessly used area fertile source of injury to the â-  head and hair. No hair and no scalp can ^ong stand, without injury, the irritation caused by them. A good hair brush should be formed of moder- ate!} long and fine, and rather stiff, un- bleached and imdyed bristles. Hair brushes should be frequently cleans- ed. Loose hair may be removed by the coarse part of the comb, and dust and other impurities by rubbing and beating ^e brush. This should be done every time they are used. Once weekly they should receive more thorough cleansing by being washed in warm soap and water to which a little ammonia is added, after which they should be rinsed and rubbed dry as possible with a soft towel. It may be well to give a final rinsing with a little weak alum water, from which they should be merely shaken, the back only of the brush and the handle to be wiped dry. Cosmetic gloves are worn by some ladies for the purpose of keeping the hands white and soft. To prepare them, turn a pair of white kid gloves inside out they should be several sizes larger than those worn for the street. Brush over the inside a composi- tion made in the following preparations spermaceti ointment, quarter of a pound melt and stair in one and a half drachms balsam of peru. In a few minutes pour off the clear portion and add a few drops of attar of rose and a little pure glycerine, then before it cools pour it into a china pot or box for future use. This ointment is excellent also for the lips in cold weather. easily turned oat- of the stewpan ^en mix it with three welttteai"e^ ®i^Â¥T ^^^ ^^ the paste, warm till wj^SQ^Jlok^jkrsiag. Then butter a tin baking d^^ put the paste into it, and set it in the o^eiv c luitcirmiii^ utes the cake should ri8» Ike a aokifSe and- be of a fine yeUow color. Itd^oi^ b» w^U set in every iart. !^ ^) ' DbtJGHiiUTS. â€" One cot ^,fight br^d sponge, half a oip of ahorti|Ding, half ^«up of mUk, one cup of browu4a^§;ar k^eaa to stiff dough like bread and set to rise. When thoroughly light mold oat on the bread board and roll out with the rolling pin till three-quarters of an iiich thick. Cat the dough up with a knife in twojinch strips, cheoc off the qpposite way In.diamonds and allow to rise m a warm place until light again. Then put into a deep kettle two or three pounds beef or pork drippings that are entirely' sweet, or lard if preferred, and put it over the fire. Heat it. so hot that the cakes when dropped in will immediately commence to boU and rise to the top. ' If too hot, remove from the, fire twice every five minutes until done. Apple Pot Pie. â€" ^Pare an^ «we any kind of quick cooking tart apples. It will require aboat a quart of prepared vpjfloi icat a lam- ily of three or foar persoop '^ke: a Bght crust, using for that quantity, one cup of sour cream a teaspoonful of salt and one of soda and U'o tablespoonfuls of shortening with good beef or pork dr^ps. |lf the milk is sweet then flank the soda .with two tea- spoonfuls of cream tartar make a stiff paste like biscuit and roll out take a small smooth iron pot, one that will not blacken apples when stewed therein, and grease well on the bottom with butter, then put in the cored apples cut strips of the crust and place around the sides add in a teacup of cold water, roll out the top cover, make a deep gash in the centre and cross it in the opposite have it round and fit it on neatly, wetting the edges of the crust then place it over the fire until it boils up briskly. If you have a good fire the oven will be ready when it begins to boil over the top crust. Here it will cook slowly and be ready in about half an hour for the table. I use a little pot that holds from four to six quarts. If right and cooked good it will drop out whole with light, creamy (j^st. Honest William. Honest miliam was an easy and Kood-natond fellow, Tbp' h« a little too often got a li^« mellow A toifeia coaohman waaAe ta,aa«imiM|it V^f^ AjteUnevars»a4«aW^xjt9lie»ure.,' v^; For hi; coa^ was kept clean, and no mother or Toak-ntire «aM of ihefr -babes thaa h»4a«k eM^r bonee; Seliad tiMse, t^e, and flftj^«l«od-yMlitias«ioie,f ^afe^ bmineft of tiplii^g: ^dld aer be|tot.r«t. ' So his master eirectaallviuended ih^ matter, By hiring a man who djjHk nothiB^ Jttt watir. " DHnk water!" said Wil|lam, •'badall men done so. Tou would never have wanted a coachman, I know. to dojplics titfike emergen( and ||a8^ itf why Italian iHfc^em be fovulrreat^ and wilUngato wil ten, or even twelve hoars for twenty or .twenty-five ce^ts. 2^||iyi,of these Italian, ^|ies, howevei^ cQCowitca^. in Piris, Bnuir mm, lAosaime and (|i^eTftt«reIy£tM|^ to wrillhnal labor ht-ardtt to ^e out a Iririn^ i Before leaving their native land they kia- nap bojrs and girls who have ^qod voices, or Jring weir own children with tl^m, and ^tsain tJtem np to i^kty tan^ariaai ant'dipn- â-  eertihas, or master tire fiate or ^t) vtdnn;* and once they have received this eleinentary i iiistHici^on the impressario travels all over ' Europe, with them, and sometimes crosses eyfr to Amwica where he genwa^y- fancies fh^t a Isjige'iortane is to be made but of the material which he has got ready on hand. Qsfes are ' flBqerally the haunts t»f ^these' Hinerant mmstreb. When he brines them into any town or city he tutes back luies am preservation -^riftgive eihployTnenli to 100 men duiiD fishing season. a,nd MufBng It. Customer. â€" "Don't show me any more Astrakhan. Pray what is that fur " Clerk.â€" '«• Fur ' Why, fur to keep yer hands warm!" Point in Philosophy. Miss Minks â€" " Is il, possible you really lost your way that cold night " Mr. Finks â€" "Yes, and I wovJd have frozen to death if I had not kept in motion." "In motion?" " Yes. I did nothing but run all night." " Oh, of course how foolish I am If we keep the water running it don't freeze." Early Training. " One of my school-mates," said an old man, " was a rich man's son. I was a poor boy. He had more pocket-money in. a week than I ever handled in my life, a conductor of a street car." "And you?" " I'm the driver of the car." He is now Tested Eeceipts. Salad of Salmon. â€" Cut some cold salmon into slices or pieces about the size of a dol- lar, garnish with capers and strings of let- tuce hearts pour a salad dressing over the whole. Celery Soup. â€" ^Wash and cut into small pieces, celery in sufficient quantity blanch it, and then boil it with water, salt and nut' meg pass it through a seive, and thin it with meat or chicken broth cream can be added. Domestic Cake. â€" One cup of butter, two cups of sugar, one cup of water and an even teaspoonful of soda. Make a stiff paste and knead until it does not stick to the hands or rolling board. Boll very thin and cut in any fancy shape with cake cutters and bake a light brown in a qidck oven. An egg may be added if desired, and rolled oat jimible shape in dry sugar. Kidneys Saute. â€" Cut three kidneys each into five pieces put an ounce of batter into the saute pan (frying pan), when very hot put in the kidneys, stir round for a few min- utes with a spoon till they are set. Add a teaspoonful of flour, a quarter of one of salt and the tlurdpifftoftibat of pepper-. Mix well add hafi a gill of broth and a few minutes is enough to do them. Mebserbubo Biscuits. â€" ^Takefoorounces of white STigar, seven ounces of flour, one tablespooiml of fresh cream and one egg- Make the above into dough, working it w^ Then roll it out very' tmn, cutting it into pieces two inches long and one broad. Sprinkle the tops of tiiebuscuits with sn^ar and ground cinnamon. Bake in a qoick oven, and when done they should be a!ught yellow â€" ^brown. li put away in a canmster or jar they will keep a long time soft. BuTTEKNUT Cake. â€" Prepare one teacim of buttemnt meats, then take one cap m good molasses and faalf% eop of lard or any other shortening desired Ppur ortft the two ingredients one cap of b»liiig water, then put in the nat meats andadd raw teaiqpoon- Iulof8oda,a^mt of sifted flour aod a tea- spoonful (rf Salt beat wen ana bake m a moderate o«ven iB^OM^OKf sake diA. H liked tba nnts may be omitted and a table- spom (rfHSiB(ger safafMMBd; BsJw frcm half to t|ireeqBarte»c^Mlio«iR W Witti CmtOKKS P0TPtt.-«at Vft ind paitlin a puir rf bngefowls, â- easnniiig flicm witii p^- Where the News Is. Husband. " What are you readine, mv dear?" " Wife. " A long letter from mother.' Husband, " Has she anything in parti- cular to say?" Wife. " I don't know. I haven't got to the postb^ript yet." Speedy Becoveiy. Invalid Wife (to husband.) "The doc- tor tells me that I ooght to have a cluuigeof climate;" Husband (hopefuMy.) "All right, my ..,, .^ ». in.-. ~» _*.^... ../... i«./i ^*i,^ "8 quarters in one of the "For tis soakers like me whom you load with re- j* xv j. j. • t* ii_ j j.t proaches " j sends them out to smg. Jf they dp not lay BDables you brewers to ride in your coaches." a certain amount of moiiey at his feet at r night, when they come home, he beats them A Few Sect pfiRulosophera. j and sends them to bed supperless, and the gj^jj result is that when they grow to the years of maturity they abandon the old tyrant. The cruelties practice on these little ones are feacfal to contemplate. A pret(jy, dark "Well, Jane, this is a queer world,' Joe to his wife, " a sect of women philoso- phers has just sprung up." Indeed," said Jaiie, " and what do they hold?" " The strangest thing in natore," said he, " their tongues " Tw6 of a End. ii lonely Skating Kink met a Toboggan Slide the other- day. " How are sew-^eel- eyed~ Neapolitan signorine looks pale and haggard at the early age of twelve or, thir- teen Summers, her features robbed of that rich red color of southern climes, and a piti- ful, harrowing gaze in her orbs as she ghuices meekly at you and pleads mutely for a cop- per. Others carry scars and bruises on their cheeksâ€" sad femindera of the ferocity of ingr^48ked_thtf Rink in doleful to^' " I t^eh. owners, Vho pocket the swag and loll â- m Hnnky, " Tqplied the !^lide. ' ' I':anfia8t Makii^ Barrels of Money." "QiNMe'iuid see me in about Two ears from now," said the Rink, and We will Condole togetiier. Ihave Been There myself." Very Neatly and Delicately Done- "Ah, madam," he said as he extended a hand to help her ap. " I never saw a more graceful falL Yoa threw up your arms like a born actress, your little feet indulged in a shuffle, and down yon settled with a swan- like movement which was superb." " Really, sir " "Honest Injun, madam." And he picked up a No. 7 rubber which had been flung from her left foot, turned her back to a dent in the snow which looked as if a cottage had been upset there, and, rais- ing his hat and making a profound bow he took his leave, while she got aboard a street car and continued to blush and smile or six- teen blocks. Two Acnte Observers. Old Gentleman (walking very carefully) " Hallo, bub This fine snow covers up the ice so that you can't see it, doesn't it?" Small boy (holding on to the fence) "You're right, old man but you feel it just as much when you slip down. ' ' Different Points of View. Willie â€" "Mamma, you ain't going to give all that chicken to Tommy, are you " Mamma â€" "No, Willie, dear; it is for you." WiUieâ€" " Oh, what a little bite " Virtues of the Sonl. Trained heads, polished manners, and ac- cumulated wealth may all be good things, but they are .not the qualities that can make a trustworthy and honourable man nor a solid and safe community. The cultivation of the mind and senses may lead a man to be shrewd, keen, elegant, courteous, but it never has led, and it never will lead, a man or a class to be unselfish, self-sacrificing, self-denying, humble, and virtuous. The virtues of the intellect are not the, virtues of the soul, and the latter are not to be found in grammar or arithmetic. What 10 Cents WUl Do. A lo cent bottle of Poison's Nerviline will cure neuralgia or headache. A 10 cent hot- tie of Nerviline will cure toothache or face- ache. A 10 cent sample bottle of Nerviline is sufficient to cure colds, diarrhcea, spasms, dysentery, c. Nerviline is just the thing to curd all peons, whether internal or extern- al. Buy at your druggist a 10 cent sam- ple of Nerviline, "the great pain cure." Safe, prompt, and alwalys effectuaL Large bottles at any drag store, only 25 tents. lazily at home all day, while their miserable little hacks are wasting theii lives away in the fetid ataKM|phere and low drinking sa- loons, crying for alms and forced to listen to the ribald conversation of besotted drunk- .ards. Sunday Playthings* An eminert Christian minister, now gone to his rest, had Sunday playthings for his children. After their several religious duties and instructions were over the Sun- day playthings were brought out, and they were the prettiest of all^beautiful books and pictures, with stories accompanying them, which they were not permitted to see except in this hour of recreation after Sun- day duties were done. The father and mother gave themselves up religiously to making their children happy; so happy were they that Sunday was looked forwaid to as a day of delight. It was the day of sharply defined duties, but it was the only day that they could know certainly that there would be sweetmeats when duties were well done. But already we hear an omin- ous clearing of somebody's throat, as if heresy was being diffused. Some high-ton- ed saint says " nonsense the next thing you hear will be sugar -plums for saying the catechism." Just so. We would give them a pound every Sunday if they would study it well. It is worth it. It will take as good hold on their moral and religious life and guide them a 3 well in their future path as if it had been rolled in jalap and had sickened them all the way down. It is just as good a doctrinal method as whipping it up the spinal column, and a deal better than dis- gusting them by first doses, so that they will never learn it at all. We have no sym- pathy with parents who say they can not bring their children under religious culture by some of the multitudinous motives by which the human mind, soul, and body can be reached. No worse men or women have gone to perdition than have been saved by God's grace. The methods of family re- ligion may have thwarted many a good pur- pose and loving heart behind it, but for all that the fact remains that the hudest hearts are conquered by the remembrance (^ home sanctities. "TfieriB afer3,125 iSmiths in London. »e ^iijii^fe of th« ahandrnHJMgpipel on p bMtM gow. Great landslips have taken place rensML on the Moray Frith RaUway near CuS^ One hundred men have been engaged r' and day piling np. Fyi M L engine cleaiier, was reo r lidlUied by a tnih at Greei ater^ killed in thtfsame way years ago. A fish fE AND industrj â-  Each man has but a limited right to the good things of this world and the natural allowed way by which he is to compass the possession of these things is by his own in- dustrious acquisition of them. Grandma â€" " Clara, do you think your mother would approve of your sitting up so late?" Clara â€" "Why, grandma, it was only 10:30 o'clock when Frank left last evening." Grandmaâ€" " Clara, your grand- ma happened to be awake just as Fra was leaving, and didn't she hear him say ' Now, Clara, just one ' " The tasbiok^v %Kriiro i)oo!r%^BTBks*i soiDE Mopue WHO axB so asAcrr m amk t himu The Rev. Mr. Grant, F. C, Bradford ha* ' raised a^ stoirm.in ^e through openiga â- 'â-  S^i^cary in the jmange and supplying pL i p^ple with goods below cost price, n. " merchants u:e holding indignation mctJDti Some Welsh lead mines belonging to a sequestered estate were sold in Edinbureh the other week for $3,250. It was stated is the salesroom that the bankrupt had ex- pended 1500,000 in purchasing and devdon. ' lag these nodnes. ' This is the quick way they recruit tlieir ariny in Mexico â€" " A colonel, being short of men, sent, fifty troopers into a Sonora town, and they ran down thirty or forty citizens, locked them up on a bogus charge of drunkenness, and had them sentenced to serve in the army for one year. All thij took less than half a day." The expenses of railroading in the hot cli- mate ofMexico jaire gret. Wooden ties have but a short life, cracking in the dry season and rotting daring the rainy months. Bridge timbers and piles also wear out rap. idly. Freight cars must be painted iteqn- ently to prevent diying and cracking, and even the substantial Pullman cars shrivel under this exposure. Fuel constitutes a large item of outlay. The severe weather in Southern Europe is likely to postpone operations till a later date than ordinary, even if the worst comes to the worst. There has been a tremendous snowfall in Hungary and Poland. The Danube and Rhine are both frozen, and nav- igation is suspended. Snow has fallen at Genoa and Milan, and does great damage to the telegraph and railway service. Wolves have appeared near Rome, and a bounty is paid at the Capitol for heads, the first time in many years. The North German Gazette reproduces the letters of King George of Hanover, written in 1867 and 1868, which were alluded to by Bismarck as proving that the king intrigued with the French to foil German unity and establish a Guelph empire. King George writes urging Napoleon to delay his attack upon Prussia until his preparations are com. pleted, so that when the struggle occurs suc- cess will be assured. In another letter the king assures the emperor that France in as- sailing Prussia will have the sympathy of all the German people save in the old Prussian provinces. There is a great deal of gossip among the French troops Itaely returned from Tonqnin. It is currently acknowledged that -French soldiers buried alive ten Chinamen, after making them dig their own graves. A boat- load of supplies was usuafiy taken from natives under threats of death, after the allowance already given had been squan- dered. When a soldier was tried and con- demned for treason his companions refused to shoot him, and when compelled to fire they fired either in the air or at one side, and the commanding officer was then com- pelled to use his own revolver. In the re- treat of Lang-Son the entire culpability is averred to belong to Gen. Briere del'Isle. It is generally said that Gen. Herbinger was a hero wantonly selected by his superior a» a scapegoat for his own personal errors and weakness. Gen.- Negrier, who commanded the left wing, was kept waiting without much-needed support while thousands of men were unoccupied at the cape. The soldiers stated that Admiral Courbet sought only glory for himself, and purposely sent. out the first expedition with oidy two ships, though knowing that the island was nearly as large as France, so as to come up him- self afterwards with twenty ships and give a winning and decisive blow. These stories create a gloomy and unpleasant impression. CLIPPINGS FOE THE CURIOUS. Russia's pablic debt increases at the rate of $200,000,000 annually. Of the five living ex-iQovemors of North Carolina three have bad paralysis. The President of the Fat Men's Associ- ation, of Jeirsey City, weighs 416 pounds. A farmer in Delaware Co., N. Y., has a pork barrel that has been in constant use for 160 years. There are 422,300 dram pr wine shops in. France, beiJD^ an increase of 80,000 in ten years. The Germans are makiag, piano-cases of paper. The tone is said to be improved by the process, but diminished in volume. With this consent of their piu^nts, Oscar B. Berntt, ot Clatrksdale,' IlL, bged 17, and Miss Kate J Workman, aged 14, were mar- ried in thajK town Friday last. The little bridelslqnite wealthy. They have 6 tobojggan slide at Bismark, Dak., where it is said ths sted-shod tobog- .gans acquire a velocity of three miles a min- ute. Btic thi^y are liaed to blizzards out that way 4nd can 'stand*- stSJETcnrrent of air. Amerioans leaivie the Sunday law at home whei^ they start for Eurog^ The Baroness, Rothschild in ^^ has aoooonced a series ofSonday^iilte^hiodn'dAttdai, and a number oi Ajoerioan giibtes' going to assist her in this Sabbath-fScMldng. r ' The bones of^Heuy FieldiM( rest in the ^^;Ush graveywpa attisbo^^dosed in a ^^tenttbus stOM'sarbopliagai, green with «ge and^ bearifctt «n-it« Imb aa elaborate Latin epitKph.j,]|^is a.str|kipig drramstaoce Jjiat a num ^Hram writinn are so thorough- ly EngUlih shol^ finE'lk gtȴ^ in a foreign J^ and aa epita^ flMa^MBmnt tongae. a An Bnfflishjigpp^^lfiiBiiai secured the mfriima mr%ti ^Iferr^ Unn drawn from •UriptfoFsodifer.^ii^^ nowbeipf ^,^ "â- ^"" ' lannerforworK ^* liondon. The ' â- " fencingi labor, the is i1[|(i)itMliitii?l uiiimi them _^^. iiiaji%"6rSSg2^«B ie» iacmui^ than thsnaalrai.' ^......^^s^Mmn^jk.^:... JBu£y4 i^ttiM.^^ Tbs Mos CHAPTER XXl We left Gerald aail -iibouD theii- future hoj. as Mrs. Wagner in ide V. them apparentiy in or ' Mis moods. '• Come," she said t idling there; I have so I am tilkin^ wil ,ce, quietly. Theu you will ce rather. Come this ?â- â€¢ " No " said Grace. " No r" s vid Geralii " What ' you def; katef ttl imps You both of yott, old enoi iway, Isuppoie, but icontrAry of that. It to speak to -^ and ':bo much that if you I* Moa't know what xrn '• do not refuse Grace. " Say whit Wagner." " I wish to say it " That will do no at once to Ger.dd, b may as well, M s. V he may listen to it a 1 "Very well. Y '^a shall be forced to 1 •ri listen to; but, for Xtell you that your -mush fuss with has ^and so, if anything the Rift, he will he ft, else." „ " That is false, "I thought so, d " Oh, you two wi Wagner. "I will before I have done you something thai but I won't â€" no, I made friends with have told you, but hear me " " Very well," sai This indifference • blandishments rail ner to fever heat, !i Grace she said "I know your â-  my ire starts now- don't mind telling not your father." " Not her father she is not my â€" " " Sister " gasp "NorisDolani of that," added M " We may stil brother and sister " We are, Gera affection â€" ^in dear " Ever and ever " Very good," s now when you ws perhaps you will 1 can tell you and n Mrs. Wagner t did so she mutte about Dolan beinj it was high time f after herself. Grace and Ge: some time and loc by the dim light where' they wer Grace's hands ai breast as he said " My Gracie, young French gii sea. She is verj think â€" " The color wen Grace and she co a mist of tears. " You think, you. I, too, lov thatâ€"" She turned li felt the little ha " Yes, Gracie " That I hope â€" so very happy I will love her t I, too, will love The large tear Grace and then and to dash the Gerald drew i " My Gracie- with all a broth no sister, there be to me what j you â€" you only- when we were time to come, f( Grace coven hands and aomt her. Then a li them and a voi " Ware spies ing to listen.' •' Ah, Josepl " Hush, sir offing." " Oh, Josej will trust you.' " You come " The first " Yes, soon. " At once. Gracie dear thing. " And did tl Grace. " Fie, dear The schooner " Bah " sa away. "Th« could make 8 but it wants c his ghost of a Rift." Mrs. Wagn thing to learn GerSd, mad« overhear thei the least rega The first pi Joseph had m found was th • cliff where i1 duty to be, ai conferences aid was maki Bift. J5^ They both i mi

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