Fortmmtvly for Roger, the elephant could not for some seconds make out where hi3 tiny nqsuilant was. Presently. however. he wnulml him, and came crashing after him. screaming M"ï¬lly. with its trunk and tail well up. n hennup Um shot and the germ 1" n' Hm elephant. EIFCSL who “’33 9"} ,“llllnmm- way nut, In the open A“ antlcxpntmn of a driving shot at the Hyman-fowl. had run inward Hm nnnf Fuel) 1m “Alice in Wonderland“ sort of performmn-e on the part of a true could not but excite the curiosity of an intelligent youth. Accordingly, Roger pushed for- ward. and. getting round an intervening tree. this was what he saw. In a little. ulmlu‘about tgn pap-08 from him, flapping I pm . uwvet maids and yuutlm, hm Au mind what yuu're about . For now the saints around. mku ca Don't let him “ ï¬nd yuu out.“ Sadly St. Valentine fluutml back To the gate of good ï¬t. l’utur. " A!“ 2" criud hu " of uirln than~ " They're good and pretty, gay and MM 'l‘th'ro nothing if not; pedantic ; They now what â€my like and wlmnh»: “It they don‘t svolu to ho romantic." 'l'hun 5t. Q‘cttsrclungcd the human gm And lut' m the dour old simwn Whu' (1 been “5) only and stay ml out 1: And prubab y wanted his dinner A tounh 1n water And 031» could paint All things beneath and above ; A ï¬fth In good works was a. purlccl saint But they'd none 0! '01:: time: to low. The For one was pncusing Muudolsm-ln Alouo in her maiden huwur ; Anothur wsa carviu an old dry bun While a. third rem Schopenhauer Re you)! expected to bu amused “ ban ‘6 mid his ï¬rst. morning call But the lid on “ begged to be excused. They'd baeu all mum at a. hall 30 the saint in woude-r turned uwuy. And bnvely trim! oucu more ; But hm'o they all had visits to phi. And the (uutmau showcd him I c «1‘ But he still hop! on. nud tried all klndx Tim good. 9110 “rave. the busy ; ~ "a flaw all sorts 0! brain»: and minds, 'l‘iu they (airly tunwd him dizzy. “ But love." thought he. " and life and youth Axe tuteb‘the sumo u u! yore, l‘ll jult go around and discover the truth, ‘ And make things as nice. i! not more." T‘w Nu! ho untied Is he paced Broadway. His teeth shamed clear and pqarly. I or ho tctuuny had en out lu broad day Since m the mm: cc 'y»-enrly. The“ Pour Ilovly tugnud the key, Md hit “an coed 'uim en 1: v as tho fourteenth of F ebruurec. Hud the around was whim with s‘uuv 8:. \‘suatlno st Peter's “Ate Did knock with night Ind mun. " L» a. on: to: once. 01' us too Inc My time bu come tan a." Ill m And I must any I seiilom saw sv (By John Abcn‘rnmbiu. lh'idgvporl, Chm wav. mm m..- sou yo, my bonnie wuu ‘JI pride 0' my lwart mnl yvr fund mithv wraryiu' lu' suir yer lrlythr- (um- um m u the ae gowdun link (hut Mmls L1; A Legend 0! Good 8!. Valentino. The A0 (hunk-n Llnk A NOVEL. rm, and [.1 . name wu TUE OF THREE : 11m! MUHA Laud t ‘ \V ruls OQIUINAL DOCUMENT IS IN VERY POOR Conoltrou At )u 'w-uklt vhuir m mm “X“ it lm the spa msh. and l-cnu sot nu' me. RI hamo ancu HUI 127.10 an y named a. lllU tune. the D00 hoosto can travel on three legs when he in not too fat is perfectly astonishing. and Ernest had traversed umuplu of mites of great rolling plum lwforc ho own got within A fair galloping distance of him. He had it good horse, however. and at last he got witlvin ï¬fty yards. quid than away . they went in n. merry pace. Ernest's obim-t being to ride nlongsido and put n bullet through him. Their gallop lasted a good twnmilos orinorc. On the level Ernest ‘gninudon the vildorbecsto. but whcnuwr they came to a patch of nut-boar holes or a ridge of atom-s. tho vildci'buoste had the pnllnnd drew away again. At last they came“ to a. dry ion or lake about half a mile broad.crowdodwitli hundreds of buck of all sorts. which scainpcred away as they came touring: along. More Ernest at length drew up level with hixqum-ry. and. grasp. ing the title with his right hand. tried to get it so that he could put a bullet through the beast and drop him. 13m- it was no easy matter. as any one who has ever tried “ "'illknow. and. while how†still mnkin “P u â€3 Mind, the vilderbcum alum round nnd came a.» $4.“ bravely. Hud his hunts boon unused to the work. he must ha ‘i- hml his ’inside rippedoout by tho or Red horns, but he was an old [hunter 41114 equal to the occasion. To turn has be ï¬nished \‘ildorbcoste bevsto can t not too fat The horse. which was tied already saddled behind the waggon, was quickly brought, and .Erncst mount- ing told them not to keep the waggonu for him. as he would strike across country and "M'Cl the-m at tho outspnn place about a mile or am an. Then he started uftrr his wounded hull. which ‘conld he plainly discerned standing with one leg up an the crest of a rise about nthonsand yards away. lint if over a vildcrheosto was possessed by a ï¬xed determination not to be ï¬nished off. it was that particular \‘ildorbot-sto. The pace at which a. Vilder- “Dash it !“ {said Ernest. when he saw what he had done, “ I «‘un't leave the poor beast like that. Brim; mo my home: I will go after him and ï¬nish hinM‘ gilli'vii‘xii HUFUSJIJ UK: 'I'v'i'sggiiii';lililii “DULCE LHU hundrml yards in from uf the oxen. The Vum‘loopvr stuppml thu uxvu iuordcr to give Ernest, who was aitliug (m the waggmi- -box “ith u xifle b) his side a. stcmh shut. Ernest fired M the lust of the two 'nlloping bulls.]‘1u- lint: “as good but he did not make suflicivnt nllowancte fur the pace at which the bull was train-Hing. with the result that instead of striking it forsvnrd and killing it. tho bullet slmttvrcd, im flank and did not stop its career. This was the ï¬rst elephant they killed, and also thu largest. It measured ton {mu-level: inches at the shoulder. and the tusks weighed. when dried out. about sixty pounds each. They remained in the elephant couutr for nearly four months when the upgroach of tho unhealthy Samson forced them to leave itâ€"â€"not. how. ever, before they had killed a great qumxtity of large game of all sorts. Rnger dcscciukd uccnrdingly, consider- ably crcstfallc-n. " Never you mind, Roger. that walla most rattling guml shot of‘yours at- his knee." said Ernest, who had now got his breath again. “ You Would not do it again if you ï¬red at elephants for_ a week.†And so the waiter passed off, but after- ward Mr. Alston thanked Ernest with tears in jun eyvs {91' saving his son’s lifu. i It witâ€"s on t-hé oébasion of their return to Pretoria that Ernest made the acquaint: ancu Ufa curious character in a cunoua “'CLV. As soon as they got to the boundaries of the Transvaal Ernest bought a horse from a Boer, on which he used to ride after the horde of buck that swarmed upon the high v.¢-ldt They had none with them, because in the country which they had been shoot. ing no horse would liw. Ono dm. as they were truvdlinu slnxsl} along n little befow mid-(1m . a couple of bull \‘ildcrbcustu "a“, .- ..1W ~r- II nm â€.0... 1.. ,\,,,\, â€.1, ‘,, ‘ Meanwhile Mr. Alston hm! extracted the story of the udvcnturc from Ernest. " You young rascal." he said to his son, ‘ come off that tusk. Do you know that if it had not been for Mr. Kcrshuw hero. who courted almost certain death to saw: you from the rcsnlta of your own folly, you would be (in (load as that olvphunt um! u» ï¬ut as u biscuit 2’ Come down. air. uud other up your thanks to Providence and Mr. lieruhaw that you have it sound square inch of flesh left on your Worthless young body†But at this moment the young gentle- man have in sight, and. recovering from his (right when he saw that the great animal wax stone-dead. rushed up with‘ yells o! oxultution. and. climbing on to the u : )er task. begun to point out where ha ha it him. “ Boomâ€"thudâ€"cmsh 2" and the elephant was down dead as a. doornuil. Jeremy hld made no mistake : the bullet wept straight through the great bruto’s heart. and broke the shoulder on the other side. He wu one of those men who not only rarely min. but always seem to hit their game in the right place. llrncat sank exhausted on the ground and Mr. Alston and Juan) rushed up rejoicing. .. Near go that. Ernest.†said the former. Ernest nodded his headiu reply. he could not speak. “ By Jove ! where is Roger ‘3“ 1w Went on. turning pale «a he missed his son (or the ï¬rst time. iuu. The prohbility d Monty‘s stopping the bout It thnt diuum~thoy Were ‘lluite sixty yuds off-1w" inï¬ll- telimu . There mm a moud'u pause. The ump- iug tip touched the retreating tron-en. ut did not get hold of them. and the con. tactk sent a. mugm-tic thrill up Ernest‘s ac . Lshcd off. it was 30'; to The pace 3 an travel on throc i fut is perfectly laud traversed u. or hw awn-mm. ['0 turn ‘\Hlé4 a wwl \xu'»; 24m 13741â€. M]! h: '12: 11w]! Hm! thu inuhml 1 mt- Ollf‘ naturo, Ernest. never enjoyed Enhything more in his life. Their meal did not take long. and After it his friend Hana produced some excellent Door tobacco, and over thoir )inR h!) told him how he had lost his Why. Inns asked him which road ho had been no "911““: on. †0 nuuwnhuru road." A “ Ah. yes. nf course. Let us bra-$11“ “'illwmiua shall gin- ua,“ and he ti‘ottml round to thv bdck and of the cart. which. in kco mug with its hoarse-like character. npcnml by moans of two little folding doors. and pulled out. ï¬rst, two blankets. mm of which ho gave to Ernest to put round his shoulders; second, a large piece of biltong. or sun-dried name-flesh. nml somo biscuits; and. third. a bottle of pouch-brandy. On these \‘innddthoy full to, and though they ware not in themselves of an_ nppctlzlng “Behold niy beautiful wife." said the (Surnmn. †Soon 1 will show you how 110!‘ log slmlwn: it shakes. oh. horrid." " It; - is the lmly insidu"."' asked Ernest. it. occurred to him that his fricml might be curling about 0. corpse. “Inside! no. ï¬lm is outside. aim is all m'rr.†um! stepping buck the (Harman put lllH head on one side in a most comical fashion. and, regarding the unofï¬cial hearse with the deepest affection. said in a. low voice. †Ah, lic‘be vrouw. uh. Wilhomiim. is you tired, mydcur? and how in your poor leg 1’“ and he caught hold of a groggy wheel and shook it. llud Ernest been a little less wretchul, and one (logrce further off starvation, it is yrobnhlo thut he woxflfhavc exploded with auglltor. forlichzul n keen SHWUOf iii.- ludicrous : but he hml nut. gut n laugh loft in him, and. bvhidvn, he mm ilfl'tlltl of offending the (ii-rumâ€. So has inure l) murmur‘ . " Poor, pnm‘ lag !" sympa- thetical . ulnl tlirii ullwlml in thu qua-etion of tumbles. knuw inuwr’y well, and all South Africa love my wife." “ Really lu 3.1111 l‘ll'l‘icni. Although ho was 80 miaumhlo, he began to fuel that the situation has intuit-sting, A lady to “horn hm horse v M to be tied and whom all South Africa. was enmnorod of could hardly fail to be interesting. Ris- ing ho advanced a. stop or two “ith his friend who. he could now See “as at him» burly man with white hui", nppmi mly about 110 wms of age: Presently they c: unv to something that in the dim light reminded him of the hand hearse in Kestcrwick church. only it lmdtwo wheels instead of four. and no springs. †Tho deuce I shall! â€â€˜ ejaculated Ernest; and thou mindful of the good things the ludv in question was to prmidc himé, wim. he added solonmly “ Lead on, Mucdufl.‘ “\Imduffcr! my name is not so; my mum; 35' dams, «H a.- mum .50th Africa km)“ nmury v.01], «1le all South Africa “ Uood! my little wife, my Wilhelmina, shall ï¬nd you all these things." “ Wlmt tho miSchief." thought Ernest to himself, “ can a. German be doing with his little wife in this place?†By this time the stnru had come out and gave a little light. “ Como, rouse yourselfmnd come and see my little wife. Oh, the pferd !" (homey- “ We will tie him to my wife. Ah, she is beautiful, though her leg shakes. Oh, yes. you will low her." ‘ Ernest sighed. , It is a bow to be embraced in the dark by an unknown mule German when you feel that you are not far ofl‘ dissolution, †You are lmngerod '2†said the German. Ernest signiï¬ed that he was. “ And atllirstod ?" , Again he signiï¬ed assent. 7 “ And perhaps you haw no ‘gui ’ (tobacco) ‘3" “ No, none." “ Uood! my little wife, my Wilhelmina, shall ï¬nd you all these thingl." “ What the milichiof.†thouuht Ernest to -' What is it ‘2“ lie said, wcarily. “ Wat is it ‘2 ach Ilimmul ! wut is it '2 dat is just wat I wants to know. What do you here ‘2 You shall die so." The voice was tho voice of a German. and Ernest knew German well. “ I have 10331:); way," he said in that language! " annot ï¬nd the waggons.’ “ All, )ou can speak the tongue of the \‘ntorland. †said his \isitor still address- ing him in English. " I will embrace you.“ and he did so. llowlouglwluy who did not know, it scum-d a low uliuutcn, it was rcallyan hour. when he was suddenly awakened by feeling somebody shaking him by tho shoulder. ind been living. through sud through. no vnndorod on simian-1y. till luddanl his tired horse put his foot in I hole an 1011 heuil . throwing him to his head .nd shoal or. For I. tew minutes his :9an left him. but he recovered, and. mounting his wow-out horse. Indexed on again. Luckily he had hrokfl no bones. Had he done an. he would probably have lK‘X‘ithd migsgrably in that lonely place. The siiiiwu sinhin ' now. and he was faint for want of i .10: he had eaten nothing that day but a biwuit. He had not own a pipe 0! fobacco with him. Just as the sun vanished he hit. a little path. or what might once ha been a. path. liq {allowed it till the pi ch darkness set in; than he go: of! his home and took of! the «kiddie, which he put down on the bare. black veldt. for a tire had mcentliy; swept of! the dry grass, and. wrap‘nng t e saddle- cloth round his feet. laid iis aching head upon the snddlc. The reins of his horse he hitched mun-l hi» arm, lost the animal should stray away from him to look for food. The wind was bitterly cold. and he wus wot thmugh; tho hyonus came and howled round him. He cut “ff :1. piece of the raw meat mud rhcwui it. but it turned his stomach and he blmt it out. Then he uhiwrul and sank into u. tor-pot from which there was a. poor chance of his awakening. 'l'hCLnuutnnburg road." Thcnsmy {non-l. you are not murot} thousand [moon off it. My wife (‘ navel nlouu him all dmL till in“ ¢ Ioded With h [15:00wa ‘1 laughh-ft u dfl'zliil (If I: mvrrl) sympa- ‘J qumtion green hasn't the groén I only roacln our indim 1. month ago huge acorn long atom 11 The liqui on gmw in ittlc pod in sweet pen.) On a “‘00 m charming si boys break use as ‘- shi: the ice, «uni tree. gnod." ()r, to return to the conwrsu side. of the picture. it may occur to our young guntlonmn [hut although I'rm‘idonco starts us in thu \wrld with 9. full inhcritcd or iiidrwtrinnml heliof in a given religionahnt is not. what I‘rovidunuu nndvrumnda by faith. Faith. perfect faith. is only to he won by struggle, and in most cultivated minds by the passngo through the dim. mirage-clad land of disbelief. The true believer is he who has troddun down dis. holiof, not he who has run away from it. When We have descended from the height of our Childhood, when we lmvvontortaincd Apollyon. and. having considered what he has to my. given him buttlo and routed him in Ilm plain. then. and not till then. can we any ‘with guilt-low hearts. " Lord. I hvlivw.“ nnd fml 1m lu-(‘d to add the sadly qualifying:r words, " help Thou my Apolly has to in Hm anv ‘ , out 0! them: discouraging rvsults. If ti}: mind that sut‘fvrs and {Mia through its suffering be of the truly liohle order. it may in timu comp to act: that. this world lH a “mid not of Hllpt'I‘luiiVU-i, but of the most uriil positives, with hun- (mrl them a. little ('mnpurutiw our-fisz‘flu ln't‘flk the monotony of its gvnemi mitlino. Ill-l uwmrr may learn thut the fault lay with him, for believing too much. for trusting ton far. for setting up its an idol n creature exactly like him. noâ€, only avvuiiul ilog'rcon lower, bunenth proof: and at last may mum to sue that though “ swat-tests and beats " are ('hinwricul, tht-rv uru Women in the world who may fairly he cnllml “ sweet and The same thing applies com‘orsvly. If a man‘s religious belief in ‘t‘nmsculuté . he chomos suspicious of tho " swuetest and best." he grows cynical, and no longer puts faith in superlatch-s. From atheism thcro is but a. small step to misogyny. or rather to that (liabclio! in hunmuixy which cmbmmfl a profouudcr (:mlmituout disbelief in its fomiuim- auction, mnl in turn, as already mid. tho misogynim \mlks daily along the why) of thia'm. ()f cuursn thm-n la n wuy out of them: (liscuumging rosnlts. If {Le EBNKBT ACCEPTS A COMHIMIUN. A 'onng man of that ardent. im tuous. intelligent mind which makes him c arming and a thing to love. contrasted with the young man of the sober. cautions. money making mind (inï¬nitely the most nsehl article), which makes him a †comfort" to his relatives and a thing to respect. avoid. and marry your daughter to, has two test safeguards standin between him an the ruin which dogs t o heels o! the ardent. the impotous, and the intelligent. These are, his religion and his belief in women. It is probable that he will start on his erratic career with a full store 0! both. He has never questioned the former ; the latter, so far as his own class in life is concerned. are to him all sweet and good. and perhaps there is one particular star who only shines for him, and is the sweetest and best of them all. But one tine day the sweetest and best of all throws him over. being a younger son and marries his eldest brother, or a paralytic cotton-spinner o! enormous wealth and uncertain temper. and then a sudden change comes over the spirit of the ardent, intelligent. and impotuous one. Not being of a \velLbalaneed mind, he rushes to the other extreme. and believes in his sore heart that all women would throw over such as he and marry eldest brothers or super- annuated cotton-spinners. 110 may be right or he may be wrong. The materials for ascertaining the fact are wanting. for all Women engaged to impecunious young gentlemen do not get the chance. But, right or wrong. the result upon the sufferer is the samowhis faith in women is shaken, if not destroyed. Nordoes the mischief sto ) there; his religion often follows his beliel in the other sex, for in some mysterious way the two things are interwoven. A young man of the nobler class of mind in love, is gener- ally for the time being a religious man ; his affection lifts him more or less above the things of earth. and tlouts him on its rndinnt wings a day's journey nearer Heaven. City of Best, and :11 WHO wd I. we must jourggy on. 9n. on. 1 wg ï¬nd it." “ From Utrecht, from out of the out, where the sun rises 80 red every morning Over Zululand, the land of bloodshed. 0b, the land will run with blood there. I know it ; \\'ilheminn told me no we came along ; but I don’t know when. tRut you are tired. Good ! you shall sleep wi W illwmlna ; I will Bloc beneath her. No, you shall, or silo will ---wllat yoo call bimwflemled.†' “ Where do you come from now 9†asked Brae-t. Ernest“(-rept into the envity, and st once fell asleep. and dammed thu. he had been buried alive. At dawn he emerged. bade his friend farewell. And gaining the road rejoined the wagon in utety. 1101111505,:ny (nthvis'm. those disco tlmt suffnm 113.; be of the u coxm- to a: not of mnwr K0 n (-hm‘ry. l amber Wu: and thali‘hz-rian this country. The pm in in 0 st higgor than the pm! ofthc ut its ycllww bloom in spring. \1‘ tho Inko. makns «me of thv ghts of the park in May. 15nd off its branches-in winter for my" ï¬ligka in their games on tlxur; mar tho symmetryof the , from 'l'urkcy, km], their I lutv. '1 hrs.- mulmat 801110 of nglish «min-t, and Inn? oven now ‘1 the falling; stage that most of ms (rm; rmchcd morctlmn n This ’l'urkish oak bears a It L»: long. and grows o‘nn Yurlnus Odd TrN-s H'ky com-n-trvc " In CHAPTER XXXII. ctlninp ) null-u Iinn v1 (mum to our young ugh I'rm‘imlonco starts a full inhcritcd or n a given religionahnt (nu-u undvrutmnla by tfuitll. is only to be I in most cultivated w through the dim. les a broad. tamarind pm]. 'l (J (301700. The trim 1 down die- :L)‘ from it. the height has a. 1 0M» wail In!» 1.1QI'HH~ \utix 4.11.1: v 11hr, huk' 11‘ :\ rmhl-r 1 .ml m. n f t“; m‘. mmnhw: A\' 1,; Imam: [‘JHLHW‘I‘L 313m» “Item rtspouu Mun {HI‘ n.’ llmn‘. 01w ul' pawlu lwngmr r: ,«l (I. w.:-1utnun.t\\n muu'm Hf . 1111‘! (m l and u 111?}: null “A â€11- l‘ mu, mum u â€1;- 'm! n! rn.- i u. h I: A»). “Hi: the milk! lhl- (‘ n w~lc m _\' (If lmltm‘. {hi-HHJK HIP 1' \H H innit}! mul xlw huttvr H nun tin mm. m illlu' tlnn Lemon Cakos.-â€"-â€"Rub together in a dry state throoqunrtors of a wound of flountwo ounces of butter, then ad three-quartersâ€! n pound of pounded sugar, tho juice and rind of mm lemon and two eggs; mix m H touvlhur with hulfa winouiuunful o! brandy. and make into small cakes; bnko in tins {preyiously button-ll) (or about 20 minutes. (Huger ('nk(:;.<»-livu.‘u tu u (‘rvum 1m†u pound of butter “ilh four eggs, ndd lmlf u mum! of flour. hnl! n. pound of pmvtlm‘rd {onf sugar, two OHIIN‘H puwdvrwl aims-r; mix those in by dvgrom; roll out, mu m the thickness of about t} quarlvr of an inch Lemon (Saltonâ€"One and a. half cups of sugar. (me-half cup of butter. onehnlf cup of milk. two cups of flour. two vggn. juice and grate the: rind of one lcmou. onc~lmlf tenspoonful of soda; bnku in small square tins and ice on sides and top. Shoes for balls are still very opgi on top, the ends are pointed and they are worked with bonds. They are trimmed with n Imnll bow or “ strnss" buckle. These shoes are of satin to match the dress. Black satin and velvet shoes for dinner wear are worked with gold beads or tinsel. Those used by young girls under light wool or gauze dresses are of crown. blue or bronze kid. They either match the drosa or trimmings in color. It is not necessary tho stockings should match the dress. The favorite colour; are 1080 color and black. For wear to the thontrcs by those ladioa who are prcpnrml to adopt the English fashion of Appearing without bunnots. are shown little Mario Stuart coii’n of silk and plush, tho fnco being surrounded by ponrl beads matching the hue of the voif. Attached to it is a long scarf of Humh that is drawn around the throat. These can be worn without disurrnngiuu the hair and thrown off mud on more easily than a lace scarf. whilo thoroughly protecting the head and throat from the night air. The tailor gowns of dark copper rod. trimmed with the same shade of plush, are worn to afternoon tone by young women with small red velvet turban: Without a brim, and adorned with gray or brown wings and breasts of birds. Tho heads are not used. With those are worn with luvcly effect breast knots of pink roses. For cur- riagc. 'v'v‘éai‘ iml ‘ucuuuicn uxuru and more popular. Several dark rod suits are shown with trimmings of black mink. and bun- nets of red velvet and jet. ' All the French waists show an effort to make the shoulders as high and square and the waist as long and slim as possible. This effect is gained by a shirring across the chest and on the shoulder seems, and the fulness drawn down us far as pessible to the waist and there sliirred more closely again. This gives the slim effect seen in French fashion plates, nd while giving an improved slenderness ml grace to thin. angular ï¬gures, hides all the pretty curves of good ones. The tendencieu in draperies is to make them long and full and ( uito dissimilar to anything hitherto {as iouable. These draperies have heavy, pointed fan iolds and very little looping. The effect is obtained by the varying length of the points in which the drapery hangs rather than by loops. These modes aru seen with plain skix' a and largo touruurc. Nearly all the newest wraps line the fashionable “sling" sleeve. and those wraps imade o! the name material as the suit show. when the arm is mined. a lining of soft, strimd snub; thin same lining is employed or the little Iancy muï¬' also numbing the suit. The uewdut club: 101' little girl: have waisu reaching only to the arm’pm. mute like a doe yoke than at waist, and skirts falling to t e widen. The new overcouts tor 'oung girls turned out by Bedlam hive t 9 hi 1). military collars installed with a. litt e irregular shaped atnp, thtt is loose and buttons to a large button on either side of the collur. For wear in wet weather are shown silk rubber cloth long wraps, with sling sleeves. Those no in indeï¬nite laids, with the pre- vailing color uhades of (ï¬n-k blue, red, green. brown and tau. I ustead of folds or frills in the neck and Islegves. mediates now send home each dross waist ï¬nished off with ribbons, which may be white or in direct contrast with the dress material. such on roscvpink in mosa- ï¬rcen dresses. or red. or orange in those of Ml:J blue. The gauze ribbons, with looped or picot edges. are used. They are folded over not quite double so that both the fancy edges will show just above the collar of the dress. - Pleated (route to buqueu are worn by persons who have very Ileuder ï¬gures. ova-n In the heaviest velvet muteriuu. They have two plants u the top of the shoulders next the collsr, um! than drawn to the middle, becoming plain a9 .he waist line. Tho hm! tune tmm‘anil in mm mpon o! crisp tu 1e. from which rise: a eyon'n plan». to be worn in the hair thh dancing toilenei. JO‘I'I’IIGB FOR THE LADIES. W Fuhioqom. Some Roclpvs. 1mm! dm'otul n time mlh In-r lm is equally Mtn The Little l'lnk-‘l‘ocd Twenty-rounder ut noun-m. The baby king of Spain is n lino. hand- some child who enjoys robust health. null does crodit to the immense amount of care with which he is surrounded. Though court etiquette requires that tho nix- montha-ohl Alphonso XIII. should he treated with tho most rigid ceremony. his mother will never call him “the king" unless on very atrict Htutooccasions, hut uses tho aim )lo term of “ my child." Ilia Majesty has his own vast nuito of apart- monta next to those of the Queen Regent; undo spacial guard keeps his bod room door at night. Ilia foster mother, tho sturdy pennant. llnymnndn, feedn nml mnnson tlmbaby; but he is washed and aroused according to traditional ceremony bynlmvy of lazuli-m of honor. under the direction of his “ “Menu-3:4,“ who hold that sumo oflioo towards his fathv-r. Doctom visit tho baby twicro daily. ninl awry dny he «lriwm out with his govornum and Roymnmlaâ€" sonwtinim with tho Quwn. In court u-rmnonim llaymnxnln must not carry the king; that in tho duty of tho Mistrom of tho llohm or of his nunt. the lnfnntu lanholin. 0110(1) ('hriutixm ii :13 soldiers will boar ms 31:: that in activo campaigns. where there was great exposure. to the Weather. no one had a cold. And. come to think of it. in my oxpcrionces in Colorado and Utah, in recent yours. 1 never saw an Indian with n cold, though they stand more exposure than our cattle do. It in our hot rooms that givu us our colds. If a. person would camp out from full till spring. exposed to the weather of n sovoro winter. ho would never take either a cold, plourisy or pucumonin. and would be abnolutoly free 1mm them. But when you are in Home you must do as tho ltomum do. and take warm rooms and , colds. A. one ï¬elder lei-tee .Il lam ' Dull-3 "I. W"- Wt‘itlnu tothob'cienliï¬e American from Cincinnati. Andrew Von Bibher aye: Reading in a recent iune of our F?†on 1 ertiole of Dr. Brown Seine on " retina ( Cold,†it occurred to me thet cold. m3 ulier to civilized life and to our com-1 rteble. worm roome. l heve lied colde u ; frequently perhope as any one. hot during one period of 1110.1 wee entirel f ; from them. wit one once in‘i'ï¬â€˜. through the war in tb Fi Ohio cavalry. beginning at Shiloh and end my service with the much to the see. Ve were an active regiment. always ot the front and therefore always remarkehly unencumbered with tentl or oomforte. We were exposed to ell weethere and ' ell aeo- eone. Many a time we were rained on for e week or more. When the sun came out the next week or the week after. it dried on. Many a time. long after dark. after a march in rain and tnudall day, we have been tiled into mir woods. where we ole it in the rain with t e runnin water was:- ing between us and our blan etc. I have seen men wake in the morning with their hair frozen in the mud. But none of us caught cold. We sweat the Tennessee river after midnight, when the mercury was at zero and among flouting ice and came out with our clothes to our erni iite frozen like sheet iron and then mane ied till morning. In the cold winter of 1863- 64, we were in the inountninoue countr of East Tennessee. where it is as col an Ohio. We Were there from November untilfl‘arch, without any tents or shelter of on kind. moving every day and sleeping in a ( ifferent place every ni ht. with the temperature frequently be ow zero, 1 have, with my comrades. ridden upon the skirmish line when 1 could not lift it cartridge out of my box, nor even pick up a carbine on J. l have been on night pick~ ets, mounte ,whcn the pickets had to be relieved every ï¬fteen minutes. because if left longer the men could not load and tire. But we never caught the slightest cold. nor did 1 ever in times of cold and ex mature to wet see a. soldier withacold. iut Idid catch one cold in tho army,end I never had such a one before or since. It came from excessive comfort, or whnt seemed comfort to us. We were at Camp Device. Mine. the southern outpost of the great fortress of Corinth. Having been there some months. we began to build meat 10' cabins. with openings for doors and wim oweâ€"no glass or doors. of course. One of our inc-ea being it young bricklayer. we thought to surprise our neighbors in style and Comfort, and we sent for brick. and no built no u. lnrgo chimney and ï¬re- place. and we built it good tire. That sctilednu. Four of us had to vo to tho hoepitul with tremendous col 3 on our chem-«taunt! in our heads. “'e never had suchhenvy coiiioin our lives. This was about the middle oi our three yearn of ser- vice. and before and after that I never saw an exposed noldier with a cold. Of course a few days after our cubine were ï¬nished we got mun-hing order. . I believe all :~'xl mtl,l;...-.q..»ill kunâ€" ... M.‘ u“; Aruba. A Kim; IN um cuAbLE. Tlu‘ (ï¬r-mum! Mt-u TA KING COLD. moth 'U th 'ctnc the duty 0 of his mm! In Christina am‘ndinu u] ntu Ht pl lu-r ()no of the penalties of- great olniigutiun of shm'mg (nu-'5 Lu m-w invention or hmhimx. ling his mum: to a \‘Ciilt'it‘, \\ tiling! and tho lute Premier to n. bug : is nothing to the {Me of 1M thnn. A lioness in u hu-imgm uM'u birth 10 three cubs ut 1501 Un 'I‘uesdnyin the littlz village or: am of Whitburn, the grave cloned om :lu mains of James Nicoluon,‘ who Wm. p. : the only remaining survivor of tlu- . it tho stunner Formrshiro, who won t‘ a ,, hmtly rescued by tho English h. it (tram Darling. in 1838. Nicolson \\.-.~ :1 young mun 0122, and noth up im on board the steamer. when v.31. wrcdkod on tho Furno Islands. llv not inclined to be very commuuimm; tho subject of the disaster. and 1,1 M :- called the subject without being m nt'fuctcd by the recollection of tho maï¬a he and his follows endured on that tu‘l night. it wan gathered from him llinl three hours ho hung on to a rope, mi ;. teeth and nails :3 in n. death-gin). afterwards got a footing on the l'm-l', on exploring it in tho dnrluwsu \\ nn ; (tuned by finding :1 sen-{owl‘s nest r 3 int: the remains of onus which hml l hntohod. This gave tho unhnpm in: my of hope that they had gained r..- «i tic n on the aunavnuhcd inland nh z:- «lc-vouring clement would not 1': in h '1 lie also related the hut impression n.“ unfortunate men on seeing a hm: \.i womnn in it approaching them tlnunuh morning lnint, nnd over the foaming lows. 'i'hoy “ thought it was an uni. and this sufliciontly indicates tlu no. Htmin their minds had Olltllllul zlmw tho long. dark haunt of night. .H‘n :- occnrrcnco Nicolson gate up thr s: w. was twice married, and is sun u .1 2. grownup lnmil’y. i; al chain egg-imitate: ““3“ u .a l 003W . hat should weaken it Illd‘ as to dining it. Irememher a story my grandma“; “ad to tell 0‘ a 0‘50 in Wthh In “heap; t life we: sacriï¬ced for a guilty oer-m. .boy on a far. for some mindemeanu. \. in. untamed by lite father. a stern nun 12h. Weaving a half price ticket. 1w deprived of hill annual circua privilege. i“ ~, ' in addition. hp was to hoe so may row ‘ corn while the rest of the family tee! ‘ . the lady's pod act. the bare back l'ldlll; t: Jack Robinson. the club that killed Comm. 000k and other attraction» of the an: moral show. '1‘ boy watched the wuw ; idrive sway. wit tears in his eyes. i.“ 1then he went at his corn row on}; determination to makes short crop. if . coaldbe worked without detection. l‘-: he gnu hungry after awhile and went i.- : ~ the tom and inveati ated the punt:- There Were seven pieaâ€" t was an Am. ; L> can household-seven blackberry pi . baked for Sunday. The boy. who 'h‘uh 1 feeling very well himself. soon plated l ; person anterior to six of the pihi. l t paused thoughtfully. and with kaolin m t midway on the seventh. One-half :‘ lll : he left. He then caught the fanii ' thrust her none and feet into the r of the pie, and dropped her on the l m, white sanded tloor, of the pantry th A 0 might track around on it. Then h v..-..i back to his corn rows. Evening bl : l i the family home. The boy saw them i 1 h joyously out of the big Waggon. Ile l 4 how the overripe apples fell from the , u when his eister jumped over the aid “1 lighted tiatJooted on the ground. He saw his father let himself ‘ '1 over the deï¬le-trees and get llll ii kicked twice by the roan colt. lie his mother waiting patiently until u . . body had time and inclination to tuki Lu baby. He saw his grandmotherlwrch self on the hub of the hind wheel on foot, while she made vague. eircunifuw i. wandering cxcuruions for the wide, w: u world with the other. He saw his hmthe :. let themselves down over the tailgate mil sneak away to amid doing any work. A‘ last the wuggon was empty, and thm'i- u; e visible signs of excitement about the In. an “ The mid is discovered." said â€11- liq, cutting the roots of a healthy stalk of w r: and carefully liilling up a vigoroua 1mg; weed. Presently he saw his fatlnr w 2v out of the house with the gun mu 1 I: shoulder and the out under his arm. ‘- i he. culprit is arrested.†calmly reniuilmi in: ‘young rubber, as he leaned tlmnglitfmly ‘ upon his hoe. and watched his father xix-.- ‘ appear behind the barn. The sharp n putt ‘ of a gun rang out upon the quiet of Hit: mm- set hour. " There." saicl the boy. \w h ilu: confident expression of one ulm l: o-.‘-I what he is talking about. “ thrro llmll another victim tocircumstantiel U‘i‘l- mu ’ «~- Bob Ifurdcth’. A Buy, a Mum, Death ofu Man “owned by Gran- hm l C [BC 1' in» STIALi’IDENCE. n the cum; wit 11V 'H‘ON‘ m. A Mayor Honored. ll '4 nu lu and flu Conu- ‘y “.3. mm 9m) â€hum-u bandâ€); that as w amfrr I“ h! \\.