•sin: is 31 v win:, sn
Pennsylvania Blue lSlood Outwit
ted. by a I'ittsliurj Dentist.
Trenton Specia lto Naw York journal.
A short distance from this city is sh
country residence of William II. Rawle,
the distinguished Philadelphia lawyer,
i handsome mansion with extensive
ground?, which played it5! share as a
tilde.-.vous in a recent romance tHat
iis until now not only been kept from
he newspapers, but has also been kept
i ecrct from the select social circles in
which uno of tin actors moved. Mr.
'.'iwle prides himself on beiMir one o:
he bluest of blueddooded Arnencaus.
!e:v:ended fro in the stock of patrician
evolutionary patriots, llisgreat grand
athci was a ".Signer," or something of
-hat serf, while his grand*
.itber wn' a chief justice of the Keystone
-date. lie himseit was a prominent, can
didate for the attorney generalship in
•he. la-1 Pennsylvania state election, and
a man of groat wealth,culture and the
widest social connections.
The present Mrs. Bawle is hi- S"con I
•.\ife, IJ his lirst wife Jie h.id t\v love
,c daughters, who inherited indepen
dent fortunes from their mother, which
gave tl»em an income variously stated at
from i''.ouii to sdO.lmil a year each. Tiie
relations between these y-itm^r ladies
^itid their stepmother have i»cn such
that they have not spent much time in
each other's society.* The daughters
have made their home at their father's
®iace near this city.
One morning in the last week of 0-
.her Mr. llawle was in his Phil.eh Iphia
a ,\ o/licv*. when n card was handed hirn.
I? hole (he name of "Pr. L. Uodfrey
S issetiu, Pittsburg."'
When the owner of the name was
•-hered into the dignified presence he
.inked to .state Ins iM-meis.
"I called to .sec yon Mr. ll-iwle." said
i.y visitor with .some slight h-s:iati"n.
"about u rather delicate maUer, which
1-es n-t e
fleet a'one.nn 1 eomerning
deli i -mj .lUthor'-'M to speak. I want
marrv your daughter!"
"Who "are yo:j, sir. that dare come to
me in this wav'.''1 he demanded.
"I am a dentin by profession. 1 have
a pood practice and am earning a good
living. 1 am amplv able to care for two
people. I am thirty years of air a and
my home is in Pittsburgh. 1 love your
daughter—"
"Thi-i is a piece of biankpy^dinkey
blanked ridiculous nonsense, sir!"
•'15ni we are engaged to be married
ami-—"'
"tie! out of my ofhee'. shouted dr.
llawle, fairly purple with_ rage.
Metaphorically, it not l.teiaiiy, kicked
rmt, ttie doctor from Pittsburgh took his
departure, with the iuet remark:
1'on will hear from me again, sir.
The more Mr. Bawle thought oi hit
unwelcome \isii-jr and his audacious er
rand, the more uneasy he grew. Ik
hurried oil and ciught the ne.\t train foi
New Vork. There is a special station
for his country place, a short distance
from Trenton. When he reached his
suburban mansion lie asked for the
elder daughter, Miss fcdith llawle. lie
was told she liad driven to Trenton a
short time before with a strange gentle
man. In hot haste he follewed, taking
ihe train from his !o" U station. As he
stepped from the train, widen
was bound for Jersey City,
Dr.Kossc.m and Mr. Bawle's uaughter
sprang on boar*!. Mr. Iiawle saw them
too late to regain the train he had juat
..'Kitted, n,« lr. Ko-sera wav«nl an exas
perating adieu from the platform. Mr.
K'lwie followed the fugitives, and on
reaching New Vork at once employed
detectives to track the dentist and his
daughter The same evening one of the
detectives reported that he had found
the runaway lovers at the St. Nicholas.
Mr. I'awle reached the c.iravansary an i
nervously glancing down the last page
of arrivals read:
"Dr. L, Godfrey Rossea.i and wife,
Pittsburgh."
He sent up his card to Mrs. Bossean.
After short delay Dr. Kosseau eame
tripping down the steps with Mr.
HawSe's card poised between his thumb
and forefinger. The tables had been
turned since monring.
Mr. Uawle?" he said, as though in
doubt as to the identify of hi"
caller.
"Yes, sir! i want to see my daughtei!"
*'On. ve» 1 believe I had the pleasure
of meeting you somewhere recently."'
"I want to see my daughter, sdr!"
"I am really very sorry, but she
doesn't receive at this hour."
"But she's my (laughter, sir, and I ile
v"HDd to see her!"
"She is my wife, sir! I'm very sorry,
'..ut you cannot sec her!"
And he did not see her, nor has he
seen her since. Dr. liosneau and Miss
?taw le were married and have gone to
Pittsburg to live. The wedding an
nouncement was inserted by the happy
husband in a Philadelphia paper. Tne
facts as to the brief acquaintance and
the ratiier terse relations between Mr.
Bawle and his dentist son-in-law are
now for the "first time promulgated
the enjoyment of the upper ten thous
and.
An ismergeuey.
"A few days ago a man with humble
expression and wearing a dumincr suit
of clothes applied to one oi the railroad
passenger agents for a dead-head pass
to Toledo, "Why do you want to go to
Toledo?" "To get married." "And you
haven't any money?" "Not above
twenty-five cents." "Hadn't you better
be worth your fare to Toledo before tak
inga wife'on your hands to support.'"
"You don't understand the case," per
sisted the man, "I'm going to marry a
widow worth at least $*),U0(, and the
first thing I shall do will be to remit you
the price of a ticket. I'm poor, and the
widow knows it, tmt she mai ries me for
love." He protested so long and earn
estly that he was finally passed down
the road. Two days elapsed and then a
letter was received from him saving:
"Heaven bless vou for your kindness!
Reached here ail right, and married the
widow according to programme. It
turns out that she isn't worth a copper.
In this emerirenev triav I ask vou to
pass us ootti to Detroit, where i have
hopes of striking a job?''-—Detroit Free
-Press.
A dure
r\
V
'?i irocr
1,
.!•'
1'leDCi o
eller.
Washington is a city ol' quaint charac
ters. They are everywhere', even in
the most unexpected places, and, as a
matter of course, ma uy of t' i- :n find
their way into otUcial poBiti ci^ My at
tention has often been brought to th
colored messenger of the attorney gen
eral's o?!iee, and the other d.iy I (p»es
tioned him about his lustory. He has
held the present position fov many
years, and I doubt if there a single
member of congresses or a United States
judge in this section of the country who
does net know Coleman. 1 wih give hss
history in his own words.
Said .he: "I was horn in ForkhiM
county, Va., on the old plantation of the
l.ee family, 1 don't know exactly how
old I sini, but 1 think I will be sixt
three some time in next March. In
I HIS Mr. Lee, mv master, sent me to
Richmond to be sold, as iie had to raise
some money, and I was carried a.vav
from my wife, handuulfed, and
pir in a freight car. That night 1
lodged fri the jail, and the next
morning I was led out to the block
Years In-fore 1 had been kicked in the
head by a horse, wli eh lelt the Uirlv
looking scjr which you see on mv fore
head. That niirht in jail I nibbed the
srar with my bands until it looked very
sore, and on auction day, when the
traders came around, tlvv a^ked me it' I
ever Telt any effects of the wo-.md. 1
told them thai il 1 el a jood mast
guessed that 1 cjuld get, rdong wel
enough, hir tl»at was sul»|ect to attack,
if tits. I v,-.is ap]»raised »t a hijh t'cjrnre.
bit the ':its' storv v.it i* down ('on^ider
iblv. The dav W'H-u I was led oat to
the ancfjoit block tie.ov. were ov.-r .Vie
i her s aves S ld. i Kieii.-'hiujiii named
Brant lunudit iiu? at a private sale f-»»
K)iin. a:i I I was hi^ valet a-, the old
'iiansre !i..tel in Kiehmoii'l, reuv the
!ard ho:i»"e. for ven years, and at tne
-lid of tliit i :iI- 1 l/.iil Siilli" jj.L'Vl, ui'h
which 1 b.iiht ireed-mi lor myelt and
wife. 1 usud to make a *.rreat ileal o!
money at. the 5", eh:i n-re, an I I remem
ber that som»*_ weeks I laid by as much
.is ilnu in a single week, bui tijis of
(.or.r-e did n it happen o!u:n.
Mr. Prant, when he found that I was
a married man, told me tnut he al a
lot of "yailer" girls on his plantation,
and that. 1 cuid easily tind another
wife, but he liked me so well Mia' lie
bought my wife, in Is"'1' 1 bought my
wife's s ster, and paid jJ'iO foi tier, as
r.he was sickly. She hadn't been with
us long hefoie she died, at an expt use
-f I had three sisters scrn-'where
in l.oins'iina or Mississippi, mid after
th- war was over I sent letters to the vi
rions churche- in t'nat section to be read
from the pulpits, with the hone that 1
could some information as to wheth
er they were dead or auve. One of
I'-tteis wa-J read in a little town in Mi-s
is-.ippi, when a colore.l woman jumped
up and said that she was one of the sis
ters. I brought her here, and she
with me now My rem aning two sis
ters died during the war, or sotne time
previous. I appointed messeiigio
by Attorney (ienerai Speed, who wan in
President Lincoln's cabinet, ami I h:i\:*
served at this flor ever since, incliaiimi
terms of otliee of Mes.jts. SpoeiJ.
the
S aasberry, Hearts Hoar. Akerman.
Williams, Pierpont, Taft. l)evens, Mc
\'ea^li and the present incumbent, Mr.
Pre water."
About Amber.
From the Philadelphia Times.
"Is amber found in this country.'
a«ked the reporter.
"Yes. it occurs at Gay Head, Martha'.
Vineyard and Camden, N. J. In the
latter place, some years ago, several
barrels were taken from the green sand
but burned by mistake, or rather
through the icnorance of the dnders
At the present day it finds its eatest
value as an adjunct to the smoker's out
fit, but in olden times it was considered
a jewel and worn as such. In an Irish
tumulus a cup ofamlcr has been found
that would h.told halt a pint. The C/.:»rof
Uussia possesses a lea set cut from am
ber blocks that are probably worth
much more than treble their weigh! in
gold.
"For commercial purpose* the raw
material is ^operated into dillerent class
es. The finest generally goes to Con
stantinople, there being made into
mouthpieces. The next class, corn
posed of smaller pieces, are made inu
beads. They tind lively sale abroad,
hut go off rather elow here. A set of
amber jewelry ~pin, ear-rings—can be.
bought very reasonable here, but at
present there is no call for it. The low
price is on account of their being no du
ty on it curiously enough, it comes nn
der the h«ad oi" guns and is admitted
free. For the last year nearly
worth ot it was imported, showing that
th***"** is some demand for it: but, as I
have said, it comes fioio smokers. The
d. ders here buy it by the weight: where
aboufjoo pieces make a pound it is$l.ol,
but where four pieces go to a pound
it runs up to $50 or $100, as the ease mnv
be. has many colors. Green is most
valued, though others prefer black, that
matches well with colored meetshaum.
The real amber yellow, however, brings
the best price the eloudy is pretty, but
not so valuable."
re large pieces rare?" asked the re
porter.
"Yes," was the reply, "both rare and
costly. There is a pieje weighing eigh
teen pounds in the Cerlin Museum, for
which was paid, and previous to
thiti |0,0oo was refused for an eighteen
pound lump found in Prussia. The
mines all along the Baltic coast yield
yearly about M')0,iH)o pounds, and some
one estimated that the amount still in
the amber district is worth $l,L,r)U,{*)()o.
The vast amounts taken s»em incredible.,
yet since the beginning of this century
tons have been quarried ami for
the last :'.,•)?•» years over tons have
been taken from the Baltic locality and
made up into jewelry and articles of
luxury As the amber is taken from the
mines it is placed in baskets and stowed
away in vaults arranged «ccordin-_* to the
size and quality. In the vaults of Puteh
er Douglas the records can be seen 'A
mining as earlv as loOU."
i.iioi on er\,o»'x.
K'oin the Pail Mall Uaz Hte.
Some eighteen years ago •••,«•. p..:
in this journal an article t''
George Kliot on servants' iog.v, «\.h,
if it had appeared under tier name,
would have received much more notice
than that which was actually accorded
did ••••lev pe -p.e kllO« a' t'.
.,1H. o:' female t..
ists was
a o n
the ciiUtrii'iiJors to t!i
journal. Tiie article, aliliotigh, perhap
not in Gcrge Kiiot'a beststy.'e, is neve:
theless sutSicientiy ehurac'eristic to ii
dure us lo reproduce it in our v .durnn
to dav. After des'-ti'dtur the dismav
withwlucti a host'-ss discovers tr«af tne
scalioped ovsters with which she would
fain lead a friend'b plate iia\e been
served witii theii beards on.and tin
troubles of a dvspefttic phy.*i -logist with
a weakness for spmav'ti wt:* lets va u.\
ndeavored to impress on the cook the
importance of thoroughly s jiieezin/
tireen vegetables, the writer proceeds:
Again, vou desire Hoep, hut desire it
without fat. Yon are perhaps a genius
the world is in need ot your new poem
o
yuu are evolving :i momentous the
ory, and the esoiution of fattv aeid^
within yon is a eerious impediment,
vour mental activity is reduced to the
eon-'ci ^usneSH that interesrin*1' facts in
animal chemistry are goimr on within
yos: you begin to think yiei can serve
'mankind onlv by leaviin: vour body for
dissct lion. At lengtli yi u ask your wi'e.
.vith hanily suppressed ptevisluics-?,
and unusual emphasis on "my dear." to
iiiqui:e into the making ol the soup.
Y i.ii' wife, who is rather frightened at
ih'eo ik, tells her tlntl. Mr. tjneasy. in
spite of his orders, discerned fatty p.t
ti'-lcs in bis soup yesterday, "ft's a
tiling impossible there can h« fat, mum
for skmunin^ aiet evervmiUsT -there's
nothiugiieg!ecti»-i in mv power.'' "!io a
me yo'i:' cold y.o.-k." Fxd Sally,
1
n
I could
have give that atisuction -and Scvo.-h
people wanting tilings you migld ttii'ik
no (.'hristain 'ud touch—and Mr.Toi/lev
the gentleman with the wooden e'u'
praising my soup, and r-ayhig he ne.vr
la-ted Oet'er'.' Put«ii»re'.-,".-i.» e.achs wili
not Htaial soup, and ttiat'-i when: it is.'
'Here Sally shakes her head and -ig.hs,
is i- her wont when she i- seeing deep
lv in! 1 (lie cause of things.! "And us
I've Srii 1 To Jane many and manv'.s the
time, if gentle folks (•oii-fiiutions .Jie of
that sort. it's, no wonder what come*.
v.el only vest rtlay, when 1 was
'raining the ri'e. and t'oo eat eating the
White sauce all the wl.de. and me" not
knowing. It's true wtiat 1 speak —every
word."' Here ally sets down the ve.--el
ot st-.i-k emphatically, and tapping the
•ut.side cd if with her tlnger-euds, looks
uinJ out of the window. Mrs. i-.iea«v i.-,
u-m-plussed. Jt sli says more :dtv will
give warning ,-hedrar/s herdress roun I
her crinoline, and rustles up utairs
again.
Servants are rich in intuitions. Tiiey
have \ast numbers of certai.uties wliich
are deep by ason of their groundles-'
ca.'ss, 'i'ne po:-tntan bungs a letter for
Man
1.
she. was sine lie would, she lidn't
know from whom it wouid come, and if
you were to knock herdownshecouldn't
tell you why, but this morning when
she got on of bed, and drew'up the
'li'i'.l and saw tne wind blowing thu
ieavesabont, she seemed to see the po.jf
"jan eomuig with the letter in his I hi
mi.
You tnake a great mistiko if you suggest
'ertain conditions wliich might itave
given rise to the expectation. She re
ject.-. such low-minded analysis of her
certainty. No there was no reason whv
shouid expect a letter this morning
more tUftn any other but so it was
and it was the same once before, when
the dish cover fell and got bruised: siH»
had said at breakfast something would
happen that day, she knew. P.ut a.s
your certainties, for which vou allege
arguments, the same Maria' c-msid^rs
them offensive unless they are to he
overcome by her assertion. If you will
not believe that a looking--giass is cloudy
and spotty in spite o daily, dilligeut
rubbing, or that ti e steel of all vour va
riously procured stoves happens"to be oi
so peculiar a quality that it will not
"take" a polish, she flunks she has a
right t* feel offended. If, however, she
happens to be in a good humor, she
wih perhaps observe'apropos of the steel,
that at one place where she lived there
was a bright fender with a sharp ed"e
and the nurse Jet the child fali on it and
cut herself and when she has given you
ad the circumstances attendant on this
event, the name ot the doctor wdio wa
called in and what he said, she will feel
that shft has readjuste 1 her position as a
polisher ol stoves.
Ou the whole, servants are little dis
posed to think (hat the opinions of gen
tlemlkscan h.veanv practical value for
them. Our remedies, our methods, our
explanations, are like the drapery and
tailoring we pay ho much for, they cor
respond to the supposed scale of our in
come but servants, for their part ee'
their fituHs and their views from othei
quarters. The cure for a gentleurin'«
toothache is not likely to suit S.ilb 's mo
lar so well as the cure recommended bv
th" grocer's boy on the authority o'f his
tirst cousin, who went atumt with a blue
handkerchief round bis head for we«d-*s
and weeks. And for the probabilities
concerning the dryness the i-.,mij»
summer, or the guilt, of the man la^
taken for murder, the person to he con
sulted with the most deference is the
laundress who -erve.s very good fanc
ies, and whose husband is in the cai
rymg iine.
The moral of all this is that v,i-e i.i
.' tresses will not argue n ,th
•heir servant's will not give them rea
^ns, win m*
irm Authoiltv
A
Hlons-
yet
1
^pously demands
that ccir.in tl.nM,- hf without urg
ing inctives or i«t!te?ii{« tnto fxplai.a
tions is both prefer-, by servants
tiiemselves and is lie best ni^ns of ed
ucating them into any improvement ut
their method* and habit,*. AutuoriU'
a i tradition are the ehie.', almost the
n v s- i e u s e u n i s n
•e the cine" means* «.if developing the
udc mind. hetlier »'hildish or Jtdult.
-asonahrmt vcrything n ith nr i hihl,
make -, 'n "nsier, without rev
cni-e. with idfe.'t I'li'is. Reason
ore tl'ing** «."• our servants, ninsult
lin-m, give- t': 'in Mitfrage. an«i you pro
dire no ei'ect in them jiian a :*rnw*
ol'ami.-'l heiotse,!!, Hiis|)icion of
irres 'lutciess mi you, the most oppo.-**d
to tli.it *»pir.i .u order and pnenp innh*
which can alone enable them to till
their pia a• a' i make tMei- !:•,'»»«
respectal
WAITING TWi:XT¥ YKAIIS.
ltomant»c I !piode iiv She Idv o)
livo liover ».
L'o.res jondpRce of ihe New V irk 1
rojune.
At Coal tin, Pa., a romantic episode in
the lives of two lovers is at prtrsent ev
cuing great interest in that vieinity.
William Craig, a young farmer, and
.Mary Parker, the ls-year-oid daughtei
ofASh'.iiam Parker, also a farmer, were
to bine been married on Christm::s luv.
On the evening of the 7th of i)e
cember, in the above-named year, the)"
wn* a social party at Parmer Barker's
house, and among the guests v«s a
young man from this villa-u". Miss
Barker danced with him twice in sn-
e e
re
turning w'ih i vessc: !U one ioind and u
sf.-oi:u in (tie other. There is a whit.v
tihii off.it over the surfve of tiu* sto/k.
".S-e, now, iii.v, there is fat."' "La,
mum,"1 says S.illy, f»:nn^iii'.: !i on in
and turning up the jeliied -n be
neatii .s a gardner ie.rns tin- when
lie is digging the ro.'.H, the cold
getting underneath in the pr
"ti at's pothitig: besides take mv
from under and 1 take the fat od with a
spoon." Tte- spoon itself is
^tuided pleiiteousiy with frag
ments of cold fat *'rhit uuless y(\ i
wa-ii your si^on each t-me you flip it
there will be fat, and however little .Mr.
MiU'Usv sutlers from it. J!e-' de- '••••(Mrs.
heie exi-ris all her courage' -it be
longb to a good cook to send up her souu
IVei! from fit." Sally smiles tutterlv.
'3.a mum, do you think when 1 was at
Xniieham gate, :md there was people ot
di sorts coming the iio'H
-sion, and young Craig reproved In
'or such marked attention to anothe
and told her that he did not wi«h her to
dance again with The ''oung man in ip
!m::. Th:?
\oii'.g .'ad
Mould du
«he cSr»M
she liked
that she
of
e S[drit of tfie
replied th
(iraii.\(i|..
m.tnv tini
.n informed |n*r
hut that .-he
a tor twenty -s
replied tii:
from her •.
i-o hard.'' i,o.:
next d.iy iie was
••villi Iih parents.
Mid any traco of
owed she never
.ve company ag.r.n
As years parsed I»y
mining )n wn
s came lo look upon
s Barker, w»-ver.
Sfil
ith h:
I as
Cra
might
•a oilid n't S( e hi::
To this she taunting
ul'.ln't stay awav
a I S it he tri- eVi
v,-1*ii' home, and
s-ing. He 1 i\
wlio were unank-
1
hiiii. Mis-i Bar!
would go into or
until he returned.
and no tr.ices of the
received, his par, .':!
him as dead.
had a sjing-ilar f.n'h tliat iie would come
hack some day. S!,e kepi her vn\y as
living a secluded life, and few e
ever saw her idh-r the night she .1
q'larre »*d w all her loner.
illug, Wiiiidi was .he
the
and
Lust ]'rid ay
7tii instant, a stranger kiK'eked n
door of o Mr. Barker's hou-*e
ak('d to see Mis-. Barker. He was a
large, tiue-looru ig man aboutforty years
of age. He was a imitted. and Wlien
Miss P.arKer appeared he held out Ilia
hand and saiu
"Marv Parker d.i in't U*U you that
you wouldn't se? ine agiin in twenty
years?''
It was William Craig. Ife had re
turned Jo his parent's home in thr after
noon. Both hi- father and mother wen*
s"i 11 living. The secret of his arrival was
kept. and when he appealed in so dra
matte a nmi ner in the presence of his
old sweetheart sin* fainted in his arms.
Craig's disapp.-araneo and long ab
sence svutf that he had gone straight to
Philadelphia alter Solving ho ne, ami
then enlist,*1 in the annv under an as
sumed name, lb* nerved until the end
ot the wur, and was mustered out at
Philadelphia, lie kmged very much to
return home, hut he permitted his de
termination to remain away twenty
vears !o control him, and he went di
lectly to Nebraska. I here he took up a
tract of land and went to farming, re
mninhig there until the twenty "years
were up, lie resolved to time his re
turn and the meeting with his old sweet
heart, it she was sii11 alive and unear
ned, at as near tiie hour of his leaving
her us i*. was prc-sil le to do. He came
hack with an ample fortune, and found
matters much as he had lett them. The
wedding that did not come oil twenty
years ago will be ceiebrated at the ap
proaching (Jhrist ma».
Ail«'y eil Siijiernatural(iii'ts.
One of the most remarkable vas .g of
.he exercise of idiegod .supernatural
iii'ts has recently beep unearthed by a
jorrespondent in Shropshire, lOugland.
I'-mrna luvies, a young nurse gi.l hut
.Inrteen ytairs old, sigtied to eoinpuvr
other worlds beside the somewhat lim
ited one over which Hhe presided, and
3ne niglP resolved strike out in an
uiginal line. She heard her compan
ions sneaking of moving chairs and
table*, and furniture of all kinds mys
teriously, by dexterity of the hand, and
practiced the art until she became pro
haent enough to announce herself
as a full-Hedged medium. She went
around among the ereduloin peasantry
practicing the deception, and her fame
VI" V
u
,"
lli0 sl|
most vitu^
w
hulc tosvii olT
^"8 invur'.Hblv
2
•IV
?rtain prji
1
"d
i'lar.ni
lenou"lw
ijllitlly.
/filiation
0
f'[-
I'1'dnrDsion,
"Shall yo
u
ventured is Nyat«n,|,.r
sir,'" 8aiii^r
H!iv
A ma! irinl d..|
IC11
low n of Tuclivi}
emy of
nouneed.
file '"vcmiijntovt,,,
a uioct-ry
was cnniing 'in fnsV
%r
tms. and the
i*!ig «d in
p'ain.ng awav
vi^to-hp,
t:
i
emv,
s
i»"d se'hite. It h,,.,
enmny would llUV(M,:iV
and lomn •?, Mr. (ir:W
''Mi- VriimbHrh,"
WCiglied ijUOMioj o
,-ard long mid earefnilv
to itiseit it""
replied
•r imeasilv.
ted to it dllc AMisii|f fj)(
de ii.)enit .!ti,'
"Yes, I trn-t thm yr
-sary thought uml au#
u i ti t* it *-f.
hut thie •.
n M»L i e i
at 1 wa« tarn ia-i, :ri
'.I, inmiith-d hijiKJnv
'. up"d a |.J, 1,
mainly
i did. s
rathe
a
tfhest pretext the
deeds of the little nurse girl were mag
nified, and the child, finding herself the
observed of all observers, with some de
gree of cleverness jerkel about books,
buckets and small articles of furniture.
lHles of pigs standing on their heads
when she commanded, rahs ami mice
appearing from their recesses and oth
er wonderful stones brought down upon
her the rnore enlightened reporter, ami
alter he had witnessed some of her al
I leged supernatural powers, he miiutlv
expose,!
tiM who!( U|jni Mj|jg )avie
lias ttel, no one knows whither.
The wife of ienerai Sherman has or
gum/ed a club in St. Bonis for the study
1 "iinyson's income is t)oui y-jo cno
year. If he is mntJe n 1 ord he wii! have
a pension. Ihetc is no Rtvie in "o ooa a
vear.
Mv, Hubbard sees no reason
f-aion o'il^islature y"l
'i ied M'.
s»ich W3
i i i .n anrsa
|e«". 'l-'.'.ce, 11 A'A :,
the than ot he to
or*--' t.-ue dief-..-'j •.
con, irm a
p,.! fra:nt i: own
1 r, I have n"t 1
hat," co dmi!fl Mr. i-r.
•"and I intend li s evv1..
ei:ce j11hese
lirst society ot T.n'k',i:.-.
iioitnce y-'ii, the vi :r
of s iitciarv n ve. i
^lr. rmnliiich, utif:.j
duties oh mg 1'- tiK ?t«i
and the home i.f a.y !i
neglect this fav«jralti
Crumhacti, nrc Vf.'i
.-'ruceed," su:d rnxi
shifting his r.ositi'.in .wj
the -p "f a cracKer f-sr:'
"All iight" siiit Mr.
coinmeiJi e with, I rvi."'.:1
Iiidebomid, tP'Si het'-'S
daily ream® triese^ sU
pursuit of tiie uila! "V
which voa have e'f
childho d'- i'ii"t.i" i
unclaimed, au'l .a?.i :eri
tiier name than t'^t
bv uncertain par.
profligate youth, v»uih®
of the lowest tuiriW l.-'»
ate the Par p-nn
mornii.g ti'-ddv.
ous exha:.iti-ni ft"® 'a
tree are fragnint :tf tlif
rose compared tu toe
slander with nisi'
name and tame "t tb-»e*'
to you in all wli'.cli
majentv of man, h*t.rf.
caj )ei nioniitii'.n w**"
green sce.m ot the u'«-v
The face of Mr.1''
livid as he rertcliP't t••£
dres«i, and histing"'^1'1-'
ed, n'ud again the iiaiJ
tiie palms ol bis liM"^
shifted his p..«i!i« n if1
barrel back
"Yes,"said Mr.i'roe:
pearances scciiip
cirrec!, hut I n "ii') "r
you, out also th.lt
l.io ni coinpimi"" of
vour back."
Mr. rmuhai'h turne,
poor 'rumbacli. ha-'^
indiscretion, his eV"v
tiiose of Mr. t«ro(igii'",i
and (irogginh' su,r!|.
gleamed a uicI^-p.hH
as u "bull dog,
ll
the drop. A mil'.in
ri*e ran over tlx J
"That was a
one enthusiast.
14Yes,
that
played," assented «not,
the game. "I wowlf
will do next'-'
The two belhzere^
other. But the ovor
not eventuated b\
spired cowboy.
the rear, sent a
a glass jar of pdckJe-1
shelf, and then the a
Revolver bnrre
ait like the glistcni!'
the hillside. A ''e
meated the narrow
grocery, while
i
imprecations ro^11
cordant »Pm ef V.jf't*
merit ran high. A
the outside cheer*'
wit hin. And win
1-
the dust and Bal0'^,'
curled along tb(*l1
ing of ttie roeiii.
were carrie_d out l"
laid on cofh'(! sack
Messrs. Or"^'11,''
discovered curie"
1
brace of death u»'»
each to eacn «s
t!it
to his prey, au'lti", ...
gled in a crimson,
the grimv "r*
Mr. (irogginl a?"
t-my.-—Texas
v
The Duke of K,l!
parent]'.' given iml
ing to sea,
«ive sc.
,V'
t0