a n‘:-::; idrmualy by surprise. You . . . â€'1; c: mu m tell how I felt or \L I mu. 1 can only â€member Oh“ I I“ '. l v‘: In my Mini and Maud her. Tho I. - . :1“ mubhul 9V0! our br-nda named to 1-“ * f. c {cc-m» 1135‘ I fell. 1' 3; wo began to move on Again. I :3, a t .u . w why I didn't upcmk. l’crha I I ‘L +4.. am; out has had Men the an of hul’ :urrnndcr. and that therefore words were {or the momenl importinont. 31-“!!- b, c the. c nwurm would be renown! from I h uh bmw. Besides. my tho ht: won 11.. - ;-,; ;.-: ju who" hr upcco to ovu- mx :1.{;;‘. I wns thinking how do uh: l... a . 11... mmuar and pronto“ 0 our ; 4 m: cm- I: was scarcely“: â€cold- :. o . ‘ Iwhzst I balioved to In my novmnl t , rum: and disposition to plunge Io mam, 3, MM Mums. reoklomly into u now mum :d rur- >0uoibflitv of lilo. I I!“ {a w AI‘J my He! too “Mia". .00 cool- 12, w 1 in: such an In)? mm m. Bu ll mu NW: and the he. I Know lull I [ml leafloaded to my own â€and hill the a; parent I'M. W0 mu m! M not) other md bud come «no: ll 08m dm no or all combination†“mum to Imp m up". Knowing. II '0 CH. sonan‘y anything of "CI m I kuuwlodm goes. to Ind yo. I!" Mil n~ mm! and oblintiol to colon Whitl- mu mo ‘t â€wrought, worldly howled. †M“ hm. th would my Way I. it? H aw wauid OI. DIM M um â€i. hm vr .‘ I cared nos. Mom! “I“ etwuqb in am. DI. IOII N .0: Mlerullmn honor-flu an n.0,. hcucnly I3 30!. Witt" M I!“ her surrendcl were {or “as n bg,c the cane htwb blaiu. ll): ; (ca (:3: mks £15631. 1 Ind Lama Hm I thl A DIAMOND WOOING : Winn we reached the court the brass band had eatabliahed itself in the liule pagoda erected there for its accommodation and wan just striking up. and there. enre enough. Were a table and chairs awaiting ua beneath the trees. I‘n neither o! as wan m a humor to face a crowd of people ; and, by a taci: agreement. we turned to the left. and. crossing the lime plank bridge which nuanced aha narrow stream that ekiried the hotel Igrcunde. we found ourselves in the hiyii road leading up the valley. Along this Wu walked {or some diaianccdwbh of ne si‘c: :. A}; {origin the opening of a part: pre- ACUE'Jii A Mi, which climbed by a zigzag {write to the Lummie or the Linc-clad hill. Inuu {DD V. J turned, and in a few moments Wet-4; (2; n7: nigh: of Mien oyca amid the zinc? . fling hemlock»). The ascent was bieLr ml at Um.- ï¬tnli naming in aha path my bazauiini companion paused for breath. W11 you take my arm now. Kale?" I Wxt‘u ;; faint smile she complied. “ J an (or. this once." I heard he! murmur, nccmiLgly speaking to herself. “ Neva: againâ€"but uhia once I will." .. Now. Kate," Isaid resolutely. bending fauna-:1 m an to catch her eye, " m as have dale with mystefles. No morc ‘ never :..-y‘.inH ’ and “was this onccs.’ it you please: 131a: . { ‘»'...ut 5m: to tell me whether you Ot'eoule um ham-n Wee: When 0! their 15:33 end mt: put. fluvo they out eonove. “when! “an 7 Do the “we floweu mete 3 their II M ? Thu lune bkde sin 'I On chagrin In! Do uhu-e like em wit .cenvee I to. Now stately. enewennu m buou ‘P ye they their Christ. their Ohmunu de! 1' how they Mehome: ‘I Buddhe 7 One. 0: all or none ‘I And do they prey ? _ 7 And have they wrou 'm n W“ hen do“? wu cannot gueee; 'm erd. indeed. Our own orb'e lulu o! m dun pen Thruhgh cqutqflea unplg go rud.‘ __ We know tho hum that holds in check The whirling worldl. ouch in m noun. And uvu we nuivom [rum ruck And peril. Tm- tremendoul force Hold luwwiso nll our muo llvu ; The qua and mu do I“ obey Bil bidding ; uavcr plnuot “th0. To swerve (row in wpolnml way. nguequop o! the 911030. val. The dnngeronl boon slam to m 13 mvou to choose 'len lll uud woll. Ruhclllou or obedience ; lhuI 'l‘u build our haven or am our bill. Um mm gran thought our nut-null uphold! Nothing shall perilbl Though Bu rod Human sum. the mercy still untold. Illa owal God's souls are an“ wlth (lod. .. lLM), Lush 1" She arm: a swap nearer . Ln! axd cuugbn my sleeve with be: little gm, ha a timoroua 0mm might do. glanc- g .mX wualy over her shoulder u it Homo- um! feariul were hidden among the in". DM 50.1 has! nothing?" she whispered. 1):: panama one 091i me? ' '- Ule 1 have oallpd you, dear. I called m ‘ i; m,’ and now I want to can you‘ " You 9.. LL! not on! me M... Gainsbor- 3 :12.‘ 1'y on can a call me ' Tom.’ call me up; 24.; but I will never be ‘ Mr. Gains. )mugu‘ to you ngni l" ' ‘ 1 though we we a to have no man v : mums? " aha re; cited with apnea- H," : x'ur'rzie ml the old playfulness in he: air. ' None of yours. I meauc.†“1 null (full you ‘ Tom.’ 1! yc-u please, on Aud Who ltd Mute shall tween": ‘3 1 Iowa him l0, 1m WI: 5 I’d In Jn trade. roligion,- w flies; “in thnughtu. his made. his aims. in ï¬ne. I'd nhupo to harmonize with mine. I love my neighbor as Ins-3011.; 1 love his horse. hi: house blfl pol! : ma poll, 1 uhould luvs nix] baton. Noll" his uznoug. his Lowil door. I love m neighbor. on. so well. That. win my now I'd have hjm smell ; With an own eyes I'd nave bun no And wit mymlunl think though" like me. All. would he let me love him so. ' How smoothly all our plans would so; In ovarythiug beneath the sun 1 and my neighbor would be one. But on: times, when I sit with him. Amlluote his humor. uweet or grim. Wub tlisappoiutiu bout 1 see My neighbor is in ova with me. â€"Rouum' J. Bcnbl‘r‘rz‘ r‘ouditi‘m.†What oogdixion ?" Tim- you w: it: be ' just. this once.’ " 1i do yuu love me 7" 0., yuu are mush!" she cried wiab pm. L. nup‘aaaisuaupping her hand from w m and being me wxeh glowing looks. q ~ 1 «30th any I hate you! You arse ‘ I ma world, and I a poor girl from I ‘ mum £1.0rmuuthicg. I am trying » gi~ . :zn '1 you oppose (no-«you make x'l .' 2,3; p: -.o ma. If );u loved me : I -~!"U;£11'J‘va†I were u. man. you .. 5 lug ~o. I mu yau.“ meat (BY THE AUTHOR OF "GAB'I‘E.") against m world. or IBM 00 IO. Ml .iuucd to ntwd motionless, with waned. listening exprew’on am! on ma yet my wards had apparently head. Win a was in. then. than raw Mminc to enroll? To my town: was full of shadowy still- mm‘. only by a hm; whisper of luozv sud than a bird-note high awnâ€, uow 'oamo‘ evenly nnd mute. Sire glanced eidalong u .gauanc. .uen. with a um. bon- .cr.‘., Sahu came ye: a trifle close: r other hand upor my arm. Emu, dr at. I will say it, to: we Mica noon. and than,“ I am at Ln comforted u Mule to think say it. Liston-Jun). do“, I N aver (on; .a: that I said ilâ€"Tom. her breath hard. -1! you nothing. Mr. Cinnabar A NOVEL hni b-. K-suol Dear Kate. mixer. and who in the world in or torbfl our being mar- Darnell-lune". n. 3 procczupdiion Mn whiqh hudbeen mean; " flow nmly you “It to me! Woll, that, you put than: on me, I Won't 00th “um my poll. “ The mm: con-loud of u nail-u Md mt. otp one-clogs. I "In! «on ‘Inliba (on tho one; olu 1:. null... run In ohm; m In I": “I ha on an Im- a Man. " Non-mu. In, duling! ' Thu'o'l no on. within but 3 mi o o! u; um! u um um they would only «a n lovely girl mung he! lovolhu." " Thoy won’t look um: 5"."qu y“ bun pm mom on. Com. 1" " Oh. I'm “and I W“. ll--" “ Maid of what 2 ' "Win It loan on. Won 00 com “I I»â€"â€"â€"" . .. Néw. den. shall I put them on you or will 3 m do ll yourull 2" She opane-J the one md the uni 11“th In Ibo checkered Inn-hin- um “and down between the leaves a! the Irena. Tho I In seamed to name he: Iomowlnt. A I no spot 0! color showed in em"! aha“. Ind «he drew in u long Drum. " They no splindid 2' Ibo aid. “ I In": out anything like them. No. you: mount "95'â€. need .09“. Milo?! (My; qp “930.†Kate set down on the slump as directed. but her manner had beeome len id and indifferent; the brightness and e ride of her lete mood were gone. As she noted up at me her level eyebrows were slightly eon- traeted. and the eornere of her mouth droOped. Her hands were folded lletleeel in her lap. Bhe wee dreeeed in eome I0 t white material, through which wee vleihle the worm uleem of her erme end ehouldere; the shut wee caught up to eueh e wey ee to allow freedom in welking; she were I broad-bummed white hot over her bleeh hair; a yellow not: no ned her while; end her hende were here. untied the rihhone of her hot. she permitting me to do e9 wlth- out reeieteuoe; and then. kneeling before her. I nnbuttonod the dlemonde from my pocket. end letd them. In thelr eeeempon h. lop. The stump of which 1 spoke etocd at the end of the path we had been following and within a law rode oi the brink cl a precipi- tous gorge. which entered the side of the steep mountain 3 or nearly at right angles. Across the gorge which. though seventy to one hundred feet in depthmae ecercely more than hell as wide at the top) a wooden bridge had formerly been thrown, but age or accident had broken it down until only a single horizontal beam remained. spanning the charm from side to side. and supported by three or four upright and transverse brecau. The beam itself was scarcely nine inches in width, and the whole structure was a dizzy thing to look at. My nerves were trained to steadiness bya good deal 0! gymnastic experience. but it would heve needed a trons inducement to get me across that cam on foot. Union it eta-nth. the union el lute. henrte it tho m d nll. '1‘ u A,“ do you went to nanny no. unity. out " We htd coined the e unit ottheetoep hill end were new pool don. the ridge. The unrrow. winding volley In] oboe: ho- neeth no on the right. with the whit. rand sad the duh ntuem lying tide by title nt the bottom of it. The event of the naming hill-eide loomed but o the" Itone'u-thtow distant ; the atom. of on: privney won the mute: to: the pigmy droehy. with it: men. nihin tumnte. which wet ornwlin dong through the duet no is: below. e oom- mnnded the world. while we wen onuelvee hidden tram it. " l ehonld rather think I did. Knte i" “ I thought Englishmen only mnnied u it matter of hneineee; thnt they untried settlements, and (lamina. and not. and influence. and ndded women melely nu n matter of eastern nod politeneee." “I am “ï¬nned to scary to: Iowa. i! â€an an Englishâ€"ho much the but" to: â€"“You would “to me withou! nnything hm jg}! myult 2"_ . “ No," soul I reploclng i; in my pocket. "50 has n bait tagger and every barrel is loaded. You shall look at something much proï¬le: and not dangerous In all. Hereâ€" all down on this stamp and “he 03‘ your halond I'll pa! Ih>em_ o_n for»yon." “ 0h. Tom! But. then. you cannot have jun myself alone. Nobody in the wortd in Indepeudom ot everythingâ€"not sun on Amelia nâ€"no: even an American girl who baa live aloveu years in aconvootl 1 may not be‘ ab 3 to bring you anything goat}â€" onytbing thsa would make me more accept- abie. Bu! who! it I worn to bring vou some- thing badâ€"something terribleâ€"something that would'mako you shudder at me It I were ten 1imen as lovable as you soy I am ‘1 ’ “ Thea I should walk to them wig‘a :hiaï¬â€˜ I â€1 fund. taking my revolver from another passes and holding u up. †Oh. that's 3 Danger! ’Ihay have 11mm in America. Was: a pretty one! Lea me iook an it.“ “'1 Win is worth having oompsud with 1°“ 2'! _. . n.‘n A1,, “But What i! robbers wcr yOUZ? “ Why. then. I should have to love you twenty times more thtn ever. I suppose. than Mi." 1 answer“! with a hash. _ " You don't mean what you layâ€"at lent. you dou' t know whst you any. You are not so brave as you think you I". lit. .. What do you know 0! me ?" She tpoho these son- tenoea in a lower, grove: tone than the pre- vious ones, which hud been uttered in a vein of halt-wuywud. tnnoilul pIuytulueu. AlmOst immediately. however. Ibo roused hemlt again. on though unwilling tom the lighLaome humor eaonpe so 9000. _ " Not when she knows whom they no for; 3116.3: any race. ehe is going to lame them to me in he: Will." â€Oh I‘ And you expect that the new: of our marriage will kill her ?" " lu ougha rather to give her a new lease of life. But you shall have the diamonds all the Heme. Will you try them on. now ?" “ Why. have you got them with you ?†" Certainly; I always carry them in this pocket." , "' flow oaxelcs‘el You might lose them.†“ No; the pocket buttons upâ€"eee l" and. turning heals the flap at my coat. I lhewod be: how all was made eeonre. “But. my dealing Kate.†interposed I. laughing again, "where on earth, in this age of railways, and ateamboets. and tele- grspbfl, and balloons. are we to ï¬nd such 3 very retired spot? Unlepe we took a voy- age 30 the moon. or could ï¬nd our way down lo ube centre at the earth, we should hardly'teel sale. I fear." " Oh. well, you musi arrange about that; mJy i: is as I tell you ; and you see merry- iag me is no: such a simple matter. after all Well. now. suppose we have reached ebe piece. wherever it itsâ€"whet would you give me for a. wedding present ?†“ What would you like ?" “ No-â€"-you are to decide that It wouldn’t be proper for your wife to choose her own wedding-present._you _kpow._" “ Well. let us pretend that you have mar- ried me. for better or none. and that ll in all settled. Now, where will you take me to, ï¬rst ?" " Where do you wish to go ?" “ Oh, it moat be somewhere where nobody could come after no I" she exclaimed with a curious. subdued laugh. “Nobody that either o! us have ever known ; neither your mother. nor my father. norâ€"nor anybody I And there We must stay always ; because, as soon as we came out we should lose each other and never ï¬nd each other again. And that would be sadder than never to have met. wouldn’t it ‘2†H I he'hEve such a thing does sometimes happen. though, when the people are very fashionable and nn’siocrahio." “ But I am not aristocratic; I am an American. Now. who: will you give me '1’" '- What: do you say to the diamonds 2" " Well, I think I will: take‘mu diamonds." aha said medatmively. as slough weighing the question in her mind. “ Yes. papa said I might: wear diamonda after I was married. But‘gnighinot you mother Aobjeofl 2" to attack "I wish I bud him: 1" Ibo nil bl a» banana In: bunk; “ or." uh. nddod a u! n abort panic. in 5 ton. um lower. but at loam omphml. " I wuh no Ind I" " You wish [Ind ?" "I an no. km you won no mm." m amudnmmmm ma. Bh- had jun «ugh. light of her wim- hn lying halide flu "imp on the moha- Ildo of m .0110. The Inppumd nernm sad the um Indium! ï¬lm Ibo now for tho flu. mm "mm! by who I perilou- Mb oh. had come Imhn. an rum-Inna or n moment gum; n th- bum m]: I no" of (solution. thin. moving florind to "I. belch. loolod down tho nhm pneiplco in tho goon bqlom " I mun not bogiu yet. at .u cums.†aha returned more ï¬rmly. " nuke mom. plant. or you will mute no fool man humdisud â€an 160 now." 8h. pin them in my on- willing hunda. " And now wo'll not out has 3nd so but to flu howl," Ibo oonIinnod. am: n In“. which wu pnhuio in in cfl m to loom Indiflonu 3nd noon-Iain“. " What; up they? â€I I" , Sho Ihook her head with a plleoun Imila. " I know who. hon been the manor wi‘h me. Mr. Goinnhorongh." one aid with on “Oomph M nuns ond ooldnou in hot tone. "I had hoped I migm hum pound from you before you know, hutâ€"n wu not to In no! u is V!!! good 0! you .0 protond to i note it. out! thank yonâ€"I than you. no.†she added. uonouuly unoluplng the neoklooo ond removing; tho «r-ttogl. " 1 how worn those too, on. Toto them. plug-3' , A, " Kue. you Ihull won than louver I" «199 I pueiongtoly. “ You wen hint, my dour. uhn'a nu," I nid cheerfully und ofleouonnoly. " I brought you under this tree and now you'n flying." _ _ usual this am. mood to onâ€: In» to; any a 1 WW Fox non ï¬lm: I unlock Ilu m “no gain lull, I inullu In lion. 0! h"; I. won looking unlgm into out moth.“ oyu. Thou ï¬ll a one. s troublud. Inxloul look «no Into bu hon. 8b. me with I Ilarllod nature to bu to". I " Bulb. hull)! Did you but 7’ “ Whn'a Ih. mntor?‘ cried I jumping up in cumin. “ Bush. none on. onlllng-odllng no I" Agdq um III-nus lnnoyl thl dld it mom? I could not ropnu a norm: thrill at the hurt as I mud I! her. It no vary walrdinnd slur go. “ You and thou iii-lind- won undo to! «ob other I I um. um! binding Rectum! £19906 her on plan lips. _ I thought I partly understood the signin- (sauce of this dnmb show. She wee wheat to those eomnembulietto treneea and was eehemed of them. She knew not, on this occasion, whet extrevegenee she might have committed in the presence of me, her lover. She flexed the construction I might put upon it, yet was too timidâ€"or, it might be. too proudâ€"to speak. But her miegiving did me injeetiee. Shocked end grieved though I wee. I loved her more than ever. 7 Ae I nod. e ennuuler ehelge crept over her. er teen was now quite eolorlus end in pellet wee intensiï¬ed by the bleekueee 0! her myetleel cyee. There eye: elowly rew ï¬xedâ€"immovable. an it lane. The lde trembled (or e moment. then dreoped. then lifted egein Io eheir wldeel even! end so remained. Ber lipe, slightly perte'd. showed rhe white teeth «I edge to edge behind them. The rlgldily deeeeuded through her whole body ; the wee like I merhle statue. She breeuhed low end deeply. as ope who lei-a prolopcd elnmper: She stopped abruptly And was slowly to her feet. Her eyes» wore out doem shunn- lmedly and she bit he: lip. She lift-d her hand-to her throat and felt the ditmonda there. Then with an spprehenoiva, almost I. cowering glance, aha peered Itealthily round through the trees. I: though expect- ing to use something lb“ she drndod. Finally she turned agoln appealingly to mg. hut apidjnothtng. “Kass. what bu happened to you ?" I cried in alarm, putting my hunt! on he: Ihouldor. Her arm was ï¬nd [its iron. aha seemed to hear nothing. fool no‘hing. She was as much beyond my pom: of mine to influence be: an it aha bud been dud.""1‘ho dismonda um almond on but bouom were ~ ' 1“. - a nun uutu w-uuumu than; she. I must conleee that I won eomewhnt un- nerved by the situation. Kate was evidently in some sort of trance. But whet hed put her into thet etnte. end how wee ehe to be got out of it? For ought 1 know it might e the prelude to a ï¬t or other eeinnre e! that netnre. involving coneeqnenoee denser- one if not fetal. In the bewilderment o! the moment the only remedy that I could think or was cold enter. To deeh her with weter might be of one end eonld ecereely make mutere worse. About thirty ecee from where we were Intending e. emel rill meendered among the route at the trees and trickled ct lost in n tiny cascade down the roeky eide ol the gorge. Toward this I ran. and. etooping down. attempted to scoop up some of the refreshing element in the crown of my etrnw hot. I led her forward a tow paces out of sight of the ravine. the more thought of which now turned me sick. and brought hop: to a plot of solt turf beneath a tree withlow. spreading branches. The tranee wan evi- dently passing away; her limbs no longer had that unnatural rigidity, her eyelids drooped heavily and her jaw relaxed. A violent trembling seized upon her; tho eank down on the tar! as it all power of sellâ€"support had gone out of her. At that moment I fancied I heard a slight crackle among the ahrubbery not far oil; I looked quickly up and sawâ€"or thought I saw-a uhort, ungainly ï¬gure ohseurely stealing away through the nnderbrueh. Almo-t immediately be vanished amid the “80;. lcuvmg me in doubt whether my eyesight had not after all played me false. As I turned again to Kate, ehe was att- lwg up against the trunk 01 the tree, the diamonds dashing at her throat and earn. and a puzzled, questioning expreuion on her face. " What makes you look so â€range '4’" lb. murmured. " When in you: but? How (in! we come harp. Tom 7 [mousing-e" Rilin with the dripping hut in my hunds, I turns to go but. but the sight um than met my eyes caused me to drop everything an_d_ spring forward with a sup of horror. Moving-es it in obedience to some power cxternnl or at lent foreign to herself. as e mechanical ï¬gure might move. steadily. deliberately end yet blindly. Kate had advanced directly toward the narrow ohesm. and when I ï¬rst beheld her she elready seemed hnlencing on the brink. Before I could cover hell the distance that sopersted us. she had set foot on the long beam which spanned the abyss and had begun to well: along it. By the time I had reached the hither end she was hell-way over. stepping as oomposedly and securely as if she were on an ordinary sidewalk, though the slightest deflection item a straight course would have sent her down a hundred feet to the jogged boulders below. Standing on the hither verge. every nerve so teneely strung that I seemed to hear the blood humming through my brain. I watched the passage of those small test which I had admired that morning as they peepcd ocqnottiehly Irom beneath her dress in the railway carriage-oi watched them pass, step after step. along that awful beam. I suppose the transit must have been accomplished in less than a minute. but it seemed to me that I was watching it tor hours. I uttered no sound, lest it might rouse her from her trance and insure the catastrophe that also she might escape. I did not attempt to overtake her, tearful lest the beam should fail to support our united weight. I saw her pass on, rigid, unbending. but sure of loot as a rope. dancer; and at last I saw her reach the opposite side and stand once more on solid earth, preserved from death. as it seemed, by a miracle. I have no distinct recollec- tion 0! how I followed. I only know that a few seconds afterward I was standing heeiderher with my arm round her waist. Tho oropl In tho Wanna a»... no mm on! mm than Inflow. out: 2" formlhmd mu. window-um. Alum: much am: sad I Ind m loam 0! allowing the uni-u: viugo o It. Bunk “up by Inu! Ihumu launch-Mural, m lm pip. "nod own n no. "Balloon :1". Mom. .80" Gumbo: With 3 throb of the «to I ppnng to my loot und "ma I kin ran: my noun-tip- hwud m hon 0h“ pup“ on u n mo. any! Wu 1. Run hoe. um ul 7 Th. um: mm! “which now gppnggd ï¬t! A» n «an window. behind the lump-fun- mined nun-in 0! which I hnd tonon to In; 9 no my (Inning wu. Wu she thinking of mo now? Bun u 1 Mind mun" this had gnzad award. I Ihndow fell upon tho onrmn. it was pushed um. nnd 0h. win. dog "an; hug! 9n_i0n_hingo_a. 4A _A- Ho wn an enigmu. sure enough. Ind yet my belief in him was .- Inmiiivo and in. Olionublo no In K“. horn". B:- 1:: mn. om hint. und wanna were power can 3‘) dmulb me. I "not. in the ability of In three combined to overthrow my mu 0- nm. 1 n: hm bonuth tho um. mm g ml branding out my pnalon. .1 young men will, mad «yer 313d _|_no_n qlnnging nan no oath-f}. " m {on I. my mt" “ I think not. 1 MM 1 Mudâ€"w" “We mun not but to tho haul." lhl intone an anomaly, “ M In». I must not but. 6011'! like to be ban. 1 xvi-h you would luv. mo. I would “the: any ‘goad‘ by. ’_:o you hon than than."_ |___ n .. _._.- “ Qui vivn. van. " wn all his Answer :- he vnlhd away with his bind. in hi- can page“ nnd bylingulu Ibon â€9pm _ , J “ I nova mom to tsy ' good-510' to you at all. KIN. I! this it the trouble you hinted st. you overntu it entirely. Why. two people out at every town an autumn bun-nth. It in on common In to but block but. Buidu. you will outgrow {t in It" ywl. It id only . nuvont Ifltouou which nyï¬optoz 959 can." a u. .A,, .__~L__A .I n “ Good-night." In aid. “holding out hll hug. wglehnpod pqnd._ “Good-night: and thank: to: your confl- doncu, which you will never "gm. Me. Birohmon.“ 11. rose 33 he fluighed 3 citing Ind flung “my my rgmaipqot big}: gu_.__ "Very well. young air, I have nothing more to any. Game with on Io the form- houso to-morrow; there’s pleniy of room there. and they ore and to being â€commo- doting. Stay with no until you're animal! any! thenâ€"don't gorge! your promiu." â€" w- -v- __ “ It in not that; you don't undoututd." the I.“ with - sigh. “ Whatever it is. I'm dctmninud not to lose you. I shall toll you: “the: when I use him thut I to" you. sad thnt whuovor he takes you I that] follow. No on. on: 0: any: keep 9| pput_."_ - - ,,,,|_A-___A_‘.I Ha lsu bed agsln and shot “other of his surging ooh“- n ma. “I"glve um promise will: leuuu. As to my lenvlug you of my own no will, lb“ labâ€"hogging your pardonâ€"impolllhlo sad 5 an: .†The unolnllon with whloh I Ipoko seemed to lmpuu ho: oomewhol. “ You can speak .0 hlm it you wlll. But, oh. ll ll no on! I! ouunot be; you don'| understand. Let me go; good-bye! No. do not come with me; plane do not! I have I touon to: outing it. I will no you once moreâ€"to- morrow. baton we leave. But let me go done now. it yogic" 330;: " 1 don't want to know your acetate, air; I wish to marry Miss Birchmoro." Mr. Birchmore laughed. “ Well. you re a pretty determined ï¬occr.†said he. " I can't give my consent to the match becauseâ€"well, because I can- not; but, it you won't take 'uo’ for an answer. nor proï¬t by the warning I hereby give you. I‘ll tell you what I will do; I will allow you yourself to discover and acknow- ledge the cause- which make your marriage with Kate impossible. You must not blame me it the discovery gives you pain and the acknowledgment causes you morti- ï¬cation. I have given you lair warning. And I will only add. air, that the pain and mortifloation won't be all on your ride. I could not give you a etronger pledge of my lriendehip and liking for you than in than letting you ï¬nd out what has hitherto been hidden from all the world. And I only de- mand eue conditionâ€"that you promise, when you have made your dilcovery and lelt us. never to mention to any human being whatour eecret warp? She went. walking qniohly “fly through the wood. I watched her to: a taw moment: .hd than returned to the gran slot honuth the urea sud threw myull own therein 3 very dinntitï¬ed turn. 0! mind. The sun had not holort I returned to that hntel’. CHAPTER V. I new nothing more of Kete thet dey. but I eeme eeross Blurh severel times end there wee e peculier look on the tellew'e counten- ence which mede me renew my longing to cheetise him. I wee enxioue to know whether Mr. Birchmore hed returned. but. es I could not bring mysell to mete any inquiries of thin velet. end did not cere to ice in see m0 eeking eny one sin. I wes ob ged to remein in ignorence. However. es 1 set out under the trees et dusk. e tell ï¬gure. with e lighted eiger in his mouth. appeared in the doormy o! the hotel. end. on my selnting him. sauntered up to my tebga end complied with my invitetion to sit own. “ Do you remember a talk we once had in Perla. when you hinted that I should accompany you on your jaunt? I told you then that the past life 0! a man sometimes had a hold over his present. constraining his freedom. whether he would or not. And can't you imagine that those circumstances, however cogent they may be. or. very likely. just because they are so oogtnt. might be very inconvenient to talk about? To speak plainly. Gainsborough, I don’t use how your loving my dltligbflet obliges now to tell you all tho, secrets of my life." The waiter brought us coflee, and under its stimulue I ventured to introduce the subject which ley nesrest to my heart to Mr. Birchmore's notice. No doubt I put my beet toot icremost and spoke as elo- quently as true consistent with my down- right earnestness and eincerity. Mr. Birch- more heard me slmost in eilenoe. only giving evidence by ex: oocseione! word or interjec- tion that he was giving me his ettentinn. Once or twice. too. I wee nwsre othie having given me one of those sharp, icy ginneeeior which he wee remarkable. When I had epoken, he ï¬ngered the pointed heard on his chin medltuiivoly and puded hie cigar. " This in a very fair and honorable offer that you mete. (kin-borough." he said a length. " I liked you before ; I like you bet- ter now. You take ll for granted, I suppose, that I am pretly well cï¬. Shore. you needn’t say anythingâ€"«I've no doubt otyonr dulntereuodnesa-bno these matters would have to be mentioned. sooner orleter, i! the allele em on. I any ' il,’ becauseâ€"I may no we! tell you at once, it will save on all poinobeeanaeio can‘ogo on; i: mueb slop right here ; and I can only regret, for both your sakes. that it has gone :0 lat." "Mr. Birohmore. I cannot. who on, 1o: an answer. You have given me no reasons. It you want conï¬rmation of my account of myself. I emf-J “ However young or old I may be, Mr. Birobmore. I am old enough to know my owu mind and to require good roaeona for changing it. It you have any such reasons I wiah you’d show your liking for me by tellipg me what they are.†U " I want nothing a! the sortâ€" on the con- trary. I feel complimented that you should accept as, not only without conï¬rmation. but without question. But you can't marry my daughter, Gainsborough, much on I like you and much as I dare any she does. When yov no older. vou will understand that man cannot always (allow shut course in the warm which appears to them most desir- a o." nâ€"noo you! Como. I. an» mil 1 m- ph... 71‘.“ an." m alum. (1'0 In human) J )humo noon. 0 Dmimoro Imnll boy. (000d 3000 0 My pMol. our in 0 lull 00 big 0: 0 buokshom wn vary 0! to cook. 8: he round the wm. on in 0rd“ to an 0 tom: nip. I slipped 00! IN NI '00. 0|: 53:0“ 00:! 00! I000 in ï¬lo-00ft y' ï¬e old men welked etemvy ewey. nop- ‘ mg ei the book-keeper's dark to relieve Io pent up Manny by cozfldjrg to Mr. Doublentry, with e eevage glerc. then he did hate e fool, wheroel the indigneu! hook-keeper resigecd on the apes. end Mr. Denim: went into In: priveea cmae in emazemcnt. and esked bie penner since when ehe house of Dcnims «S: Jeeue bed been turned into e lucevie eeylum ; where- upon Mr. Jeene invited him to sup down into the peeling depemenl end new" a... i! the! wee whee he meene. end i. wee 8 o‘eloee in ehe ehernoon before the meme Vue ezreumenflne. end It. Fhorweleer wee inflected to eeve hie jotee for he eeeh loyeih {mun Quiet reigned,- end we". winged peeee, lite e cloud of illeeien ere-ml the ehendelm. breaded solely o‘er m eeene from the paelegemn :0 we been“: counter. ; A its. to Cave ï¬e Itch-b Abbe! Decor-“lu- (Liverpool Pest-l The whale country will learn ti b dil- trsse and anxiety that Westminstotdbhey is crumbling away into tflmuldifll 2 den. strenuous“ The process haebaengclm us “tor many years. and we may I believe is .now progressing more rapidly than ever. There is something terribly destructive in the London atmosphere. into it are peered daily vest volumes oi destructive game and vapors. besides the knobs ï¬dï¬rt It... Wilton nutshell: rel. gran me grows. evii'ircwe too. and the progress at civilisa- tion. e increase at industries. and the deveio g wealth and comfort at the inhabitants appear to make matters worse instead oi better. Stone and metal are not strong enough to resist the disintegrating influence to which they are subjected in London. Every one knows that many old churches and historical buildings. hidden away in quiet quarters. are silently crumb- ling into dust tor went oi attention and at 1 money to preserve them The bronze and stone statues oi ancient date scattered throughout the metropolis are iohnd to be honeycombcd. and many oi them have been taken down and destroyed. This is a matter of small regret. inasmuch as there are very few statues in London worth the space which they occupy. Most 0! them are inartietic atrocities. The atmosphere in eating them away is really performing an aesthetic service. Uniortucately.West- minster Abbey cannot be saved by chemi- cal washing. Time has convened its ven- I erabie stones into dust and has eaten away I mortar. Only by extensive repair and rebuilding can it be saved irom actual destruction. Its dangerous condition has been known (or a good many yeaia, and Mr. Pearson. the distinguished architect. in 1882 reminded the dean and chapter that the process was going 0. wit alarming rapidity. The capitular body. however, possess no means oi dealing with the evil. Their revenues are small. and they have done what ' little they could to keep the historic trust which i is in their charge in reasonable repair. Now the question has come before Parlia- ment and a Bill has been promoted giving powers to the ecclesiastical commissioners to defray the cost of the necessary work. The commissioners have drawn very large sums each year from the Cathedral endow- ments, and it is only right that they should devote some of them to the maintenance of the fabric. Westminster Abbey is the heritage cl no Church and no denomina- tion. It is the possession of the nation. Every stone in it, every inch of its hallowed pavement speaks to Englishmen oi the making of their country. oi the growth of their liberties. of the progress of their arts, of the formation of their literature. It is a holy fabric not merely because the voice of prayer has sounded daily Within its walls for 800 years. but became it contains the dust and z-nshrines the memory oi the best and greatest men which i118 country hae ‘ produced. Among iii ciuituieg columns, i under the elude of it: lusting urohvfl. and “ Did you but that. Mr. Deniml 2 Lil- ian! Wasn't n «m 7 ' " I didn't hm anything. Mr. Floor- walker . win: at W» n 7" " Oraeh in the towel Continents". Ht. ho, ho!" The response came: with gun volume had more «saunas. Tbiv, 3! last, is solid ground of mutbomuinl (AM. " Twelve dozen, lit." "And how many is that " “ One hundred and forty-(our, air." " Right uguin. Now "nan. you lads. ‘ Gross dunno“ ' in dune-s 1“ time: u an" n that which flu scholar our ngsinn the middlo duh yonder duarlbed lot In. Dan't you forgot who! am: dukmu in in future."--Caucll‘n Family Magazine. " Well. you." M ii oondoaiendiugly con- sidering. “ you're right. Now. what‘g 3 $93: ?" 'rPloseo. air. “’9 wk“ there in after the sun ggtarand below the Igmpl up In." The unexpected and bewildering rebnï¬ seems to have inaugurated s temporary reign of silence. When the forward path diaeloten mysterious pittans. it is well to walk with onreumtpeetion. But It last 3 solitary. piping treble. ventures abighly origin“ deï¬nition. A chorus of youthful womanâ€"acme not without an inflection of acorn at “as incl. .0 their inï¬clligencc. conveyed in ,thc pm- ting of IO simple a queryâ€"makes answer : “ Great dcrkncaa. an." Tlhe inrginitor 'Iilhakes his head ‘riumphl am yâ€"“ 0-0," up.“ not exsonly. Whu'u darknen, 3* 7’ 7 ‘ 7 A_ “ Now. you lads. before you go any farther with the reading of this ohapcer. let me know 1! you known the meanin‘ o! the words you have read. It says something here abom ‘ groan dqzknesa.’ Now. when is that ? Who is grpsg darkness 7" A “vaumng ambition which outtoapa iasel! " is by no moms conï¬ned to those who flli high Bunions and are born w powaz and dimiay. I: may ahow noel! in the cobbler as wanes the king Au amusing example was rzoently given by a. member of a rural School Board. A laboxing man, iuitexato and povertysuirken, sought. the euflmgen of his fellow-tii'lpï¬jefl as In peeple'a candidate for a sum in the loos] educational parliament. By a freak of (oraone in the ehapo of mo oamulmiva vote. he won eleoxed. The boat: proved in- suflimem to allay hfa thin! to: lame and to: the conscious exercise of authority. He mum nocda oondnos an Lamination on the following lines :7 in the ghiy ubiuh tulis hum 2m ancient wxndowe, the bee: emotienn an touched. and the Mute“ aspirations um kindled. He who wxuhib‘iieï¬ufls tail to he! 1.23% n in e pnviiege to be an Eagt~ ta 855.1%: m the service 0! freedom an no: and "uh which England hue. rendered zo uammdq'. who flow non “member than mu were is mom for devation and zml and trust, meat be an unworthy heing. There in no other spot in the wmld round which xnch gicrzoue memories cling. Rome end Greece. with their hour antrqmy, ounnnt boeoï¬ & record of noble: 1mm. of bemr deeds. of hoh‘e: dead. Lee the people. then. beetir theme-Avian a; have :hm sacred etzuemre. am} we are convinced. that men of all arcade. and men of no creed, all of whom have Mike bent the knee wi:h revue- ence in the abbey, and drunk in its asecei3~ tione winh benci‘n, will uni'e iu protesting thee. whezevcr the cost may b:. the work mueo be under-mun wirhuu. any further delay. WRIT-INITI. IN .ANOK U. “ G ran Dll'knr'n." 'III II the More. mung of an inflation is “I“ what P '3 an uhould Inc the hogan In ’ Echrmcxn baa to do summing unique 1 in those days Io attract any spam notice. It Ins r mined for Jersey lightning to «it up the a Damiano! we Henson. to which Ibo Twas 1m: ulreudy called attemfcw A. l’luufleld, on July 1832:. u um: d hghOnmg undo nu inusumnoom mlbouone of mo prcfllo of Miss L‘illuu Pull. . young woman 0! h, 0.: I anunno luquored tray the lightning M. n input-Ian which. while it do“ not do the yonpg luly mum. in Mill‘ I audit-Mn momplhhnonl for In“!!! Md impromptu photonsâ€. The young Indy. who II now In On 3. doc: not In alum who also mm mm.» plan. no man by Jon. amnum I" banning much summed In an "nut-bl. ome- mm. In I aldom um I m, {Kn mm» o! with In ht... v nflmulon of the up" onml «low! the Ii Mala. can In. according 00 Leo- Dm, I .1 sh Inquu on Ibo Iny consumed abounds which undead II exlunoly mum to; hm In». 0:9 mm Winn: an month. at tho Damon-Mia candida» tor Oh. Unit“! Bum Puli- deuoy sum the III. with tho “coma o! Giovanna. have died. Gan. I00!“ ad 0059951). 1885 Gen. Ewan“ died Fob. 10th. 1886. Honflo Boymonr died Fob. Huh. 1886 Sumac! Jon» Tildcn and Am. 411:. 1880'. And Thoma A. Handticn diod Nov. ‘4†u, 1 - 3. There are um Deacons“ living whv Lav. bean undiflww to: the Vmo-l'u.ueucy~Pcndlolon and. English. M.Mncm, of Berlln. bee devised e little eppllence to: detecting an leehege 0! an item honee-eexvice pipee. It couiete eteemell pipe been twice et light englee end connected with the eetvlce before end or the meln cock. A unell glue bulb. pertly ï¬lled with e mlxlute o! glycexlne end wetcr. ie pli eed on this pipe. A tube dipe into the liquid in the bulb. end ie no errenged thet eny gee peeling thtongh the smell pipe bubbles through the liquid The bulb is also provided with czche M its inlet end notice. If these lattes: are opened end the main cccl: closed end the burners ehnl 03, any bubbles in the liquid ehow eleehsge olgeelu the pipes or ï¬x- tures beyond. '- etetietice. showing very plainly what it marked increase there has been oi lete years in the number of suicides and oi ineene pereone. the totel in the eeylume of St. Peterehurg heving more than doubled within the lent 10 yeere. end this incrcnse ie ettrihuted by the Novoaii to the develop. ment ci peeeimiem its much on to want. In the 10 yeere irem 1803 to 1813 the number of euictdee in Rueeie wee et the rete at 17 to every million inhabitants. whereee it in now 29 per million. while in St. Peterehurg ? iteel! there ere 206 euicidee per every ‘ million inhehitente. ee egeinet 402 in Perie.‘ 170 in Berlin end 87in London. It is only within the Ieet 20 yeere thet euicidce heve1 been no numeronl in St. Peterehurg. ea in! 1861 the tctel weeonly ehcnt 50 per eennm. Ten yeere leter the totel hed inet doubled. 'the increeee in the popnletion being only 8 per cent.. while the tncreeee in the number d euicidee wee et the rete oi 76 per cent. In the next 10 yeera the price 0! meet end of honee not hot! rieeu ehout 80 per cent. while the number of tuieidee hed inereeeed et the rete oi 300 per cent. The inereeee iu the number oi the ineene hee not kept pece with thet oi the euicidee. though it ie no leee then 35 per cent. Cleeeifled eecord- ing to their ceilings. two-third: o! the percent who commit euieide belong to the working cleeeee. while with rcgerd to ego tuiczde it meet frequent omens thoee he- tween 20 end 40. 'Inx oulhozluu of lho oily o! Bonnlon no pulling up tho oohhloo on cm 0! their man alruulo put down on uphollon [moment loouod. ll tho aqhm ll pio- porly put down on o oomoionl louodollon o! oonorolo ll will loot u lon on tho oily. Alpholo. proporly lold. pooh. N do“ not won om. 0o nuou who" tho gndlonl in not too sloop no pavement um has yet been dwinod is on good u asphalt. Th1- haa hzen known Imoo tho limo when tho wulla of Babylon were hulll. hm il in onloo- “hing how hurd n m to gel thin smooth. noiseless, water proof povomenl laid in our town and cuiea. Dxcozuu won immoroolny by the bid 0! his tub. but renown In than doyo seems to u. in a borrcl. Cooper Cir-bun mode bim- Ielt famous by going through the Nisan whirlpool in 3 barrel. and was {he lion 0! tbs hour. an.“ In coupon onolooed them- Ielvol in hie monner and momplishod the some teal. 5nd Grnbam'l our i: obscured. In this son a! thing to go on. inoreuix g the numbsr of 00090" tad Ibo am at the barrel. until the apeoholo in wound 0! ‘he Heidelburg tun. rtuflad (all of campus, rolling and plunging through those seonhiog rapids ? Tar silly proposition 0! a Hoosier banker “I“ the banks a! New York mould oom- blne to receive domain and keep account: exolurivoly in gold. in commended by me New Your Tribune, and the banks are hlpmed by u for not having adopted me plan before. Did it occur to the Hoosier banker and to the writer in the Tribune that bsnka are leku shopkeepers, and must take such money In their dealers have to cï¬ar. or else get none ? Whale'mr money is generally current throughcuu the coun- try must be the money of the banks. and it they refuse it new banks will spring up which Will be only too glad to take it. Brass are the servants or the public, 1.0.33 :L'.:'.'.::.", and they cauuoi dioi'uh. w 11mm: currency it ehal! use. IF the progress of olvilizniou can be measured by the competitive energy 0! advertisement; bnreune, the Hungarian cagit::loanrnnk With the mom aivnncfl cities at the globe. Two llt‘hl lJbUI‘hLO: companies had for your: been ewrllmg the udvumsemens columns of the metropolizan press». when tt few weeks ago a junta at new campetiloru ajpmrei on the 209118 and promulgated their omimu by “ private circulars," distributed by a earpa ol omniprocent oxnuesere. " Tho liberality of our terms," anyu the proapeetne “ rhuuld rtonmmend our scheme it) every {thud of personal freedom. Alter the upirmion of the ï¬fth year the holders at a policy are at pa.- feot liberty to commit enieide. 'I'ney may LhC‘ï¬â€˜, drown. poison, or hang them- selves. They osn die. in the assurance that even the acknowledged deliberation o! the not will not invalidaae the claims of the survivors. They may indulge in any desrred variety or combination of life- ehortcning excesses. They may take the risk of periehlug in the perpetration of a deed ol violence. They may die in a pot- honee. in a prison. or even on the gallows. The inenruueo vull be paid ell the some. Alter the expiration of the ï¬lth year denth in whatever form. meone peyment in lull. We ascertain the dote. the hot. end ink no further questions; and we are conï¬dent “thetliberelity Iueh “our: needs only to re lippreoieted. Competition flees shriek- n5 Tm: lroeh air land chwugo which the New Yuri: Tribune has annnclly eenu thun- eenda of poor children into the Veonnug‘ New York clay nee unfortunately bee. t , use of some earl resales in Onondecu County. The Syruooee Standard my; taste a): personein the town of Clay, u the: county. three it than belonging to one family. have juat died from diphiherie introsuced there by fresh air children irom New York. The Tribune's movement is one o! the worthless ct chemise. bun great care should be exercised bath on one pert of its manegere and on the part of people who take the children inio their families then neither phyriexl nor moral disease shall be conveyed to the households the are generously thrown open tu accommo- date the city children. Tax News“, of Russin. publishes some 611E831"- TOPIC: THE COOK’S BEST F EIEND D U N N’S BAKING POWDER untouhd by undo-.6 Tho you 1st mm tool «I! cont-u. honour. .0 lb. Hubble; did Mina tom than you hu 9!! gut. Ho; gupupofrgm‘ do»! [user- "amp um unrto'l Fora" n Bum Io C'OIO'flon W mam Hron.l‘110V':| Po :8! ll. on out. I!" «up. he dun: w“ eer- uinly ton-cubic. 1H- 0M0 tbs! lightning photognphy will “no papal. p. In an punt“ we. haiku. «- malt :4 much more nut-how" than us many Ebowwhio mom on the put 0! mm . an. in w doubt um “I. ’tnn in hoqner. Ila l'lnnd Law. Tel-lo and III I tlcva Fellow. Saï¬ingn. " And," xisponded nu midi, " tho bi:- keepon I nmnizad hove bum whcle gloat: ouno win I owe' them."-â€"Tezan 85m 0110â€"" Hyrbnio’her Ind but" hue msdo money enough am 0! no to bond ehgqulnl splendi}! goqidonou." They won hiking “on! cxpenau 3nd ho! 99m. menAguArioh, ï¬fï¬iï¬iï¬ï¬‚c‘c, 37"Y‘o'1‘iké' 8'1: "Throw. “ Don’t ny a word. my duh boy. I In: in sgony. I um bweaking in I new pan 0! onwnu for llnaw Sue. 3nd ah. I: waning mino."â€"-N¢wark Sunday Call. “Whvfln the manor, Chulieqonlmk tired. old chappie. had you don't scorn quit: yoynelf. you now ?j nun "OI! VII-m A punch epcoifla-Dr. 83g“ Chunk Ramody. Long before the birth of King 8 :lomon llvod King Set! of Egypt. After the lepee o! more than 3,000 seats hie mummy has been dleeovered end ï¬renelerred to the museum of 'Boulnk. lie wee en old man when he died. and his eyebrow" ere whim; but his face in still mulling, delicate dud amiable. end with! eo well preserved the! may of hi) eotempontiee would reooguim him a: once were they eble to rceoguiz: enything. “You. th to come up totown I; no then! the the in our stable. Bo :iéioulcu". te-he." A shake of {He hand. hilnions smilev. n cordial nod from mnmznn. and Mr. Pom- morov-b‘mith backs out of Ibo box. Fano'y’ spending a whole week in the broiling month of Anna“ wi'h Mr. Pom. mercy-Smith. and looked win the mm '11)qu wnn him an that. “HIRE FITS! " Too bad. Vary and to have seen you sggiu‘ Geog-pr' “Whus clever fallow ho “Peas in the mother. an as the! him fondly y. " I must uh him down to stay tor a met in August; In sometimes owed the sincere f) m or many. ,Thie may eocounHor the 1 umler of imitations at the original an n 1, pm :. rive corn cute-Puennm’e Paine-e 04m Extractor. All such hail to pasesa -q;hl maria. so when purchasing gen the gc use †Putnam's " - ane. sure and psi: Its». 21‘! druggieta. A law short weeks ago that: young gill Wm the pctaoniï¬cstxou of health, vigor and beauty. Thu blush upon her cheeks rxvnlmd that c: the man; but step ms Ugh: m-d buoyant,hcr every movement was a revel .- “ou of perfect: xbyeioal health. In» now she ' pullid an haggard, and her maps!" cbn an! vitality has given placu to a stun c dulnaaa and lusmude. What hm owns this change? Function-l irregu- larities. which can be cured by Dr. PiercL‘I " Favorite Prescripiion.†c remedy m which thousands of women “day on their lives. All druggiatc. A warns (on the 893an Hera‘d vs; 5 than the oonslructinn 0' the A'nerr'cxm ram. ways has pruobiomy quadruphzd uh: rfliuieuoy o! the army on the Mexican truntisr. and the ahimy to pm the troops tnto the Iron iar Snares-where troubm gnz<;.‘z.!l3 hegi:.uâ€"-givw r119 chnral Gov- ernment 0 5191.188 0! recumy when was never tell before. The Mexican 1. ldier. though largely recruited from the miminal clue by 111“ system of compulsory narviee based an army enliszmrnt hung m s In the alternative 0! vagenatingiu prisov. u. cs mod ï¬ghter. He has reoantly done eom \ «ï¬uo rive work in the Yaqui war in Bonn“. and. as a trailer of savage Indians, me» be re- lied on to tight hard and march far, a mi all $1212! 0:: very {ï¬ght rations 50.358. scientiï¬c exchmga. " how a palp, oouaisï¬ingolone part vegetable ï¬bru, mo pam asbestos, oxze~tenlh part bum. agd one-ï¬fth {an 31cm." 10 is u {my that we); facts an the one following cannot he mi , st, n, printed or otherwise preserved. um: s‘ we son at indeatzuombia paper: "My mfg Inflated sewn years and was bed riddvn, too." said W. E. Huntia. o! Emp‘ téa, Ksnaa, †a number ct phymoima (mated to help her. Dr. Platoe'a 'Goldeu Medical Dnscovery‘ cured her." All druggis's in]! this remedy. Everybody ought to keep n. It only mud»: a trial. " “ Ones-wuss " are now call»! " H .w- thomca " in Eastern, a graceful Mzunwn .o the mm of mu author's when Moxie-a. Whoa i In BRILLIAN l‘ CONVBHHATICN- HN'KNl-FM P0 INQ .W" “ Fire-pron! Paper May be Mach.“ Q‘nullu II Illa. Mild. OH I hnpple'u Agni". “'Iml u tinny-l I... I“! C. Inumlon “I". I In“. 0' Ton. rh llrg.