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orningStar andCathollo eenger - oin Stu a .... - asTan MloRRzEN 8TA- hag been The D..ooretsfheoompaares with the approval of the eeuI most Beo. NAweasx Jo Orr l P eaons, authority of the Diooese, to a Ita aTking, mainly devoted to the tnt au ;Vise PrelideaI. Catholi0 Church. It wl not h - 'S ~~of e our Diociese. Ay. e. A. riArTOe, o S B-- polioin exopt whero tmoha yory i I O. C. MornamANl, wi + i ++,th Caholio rights, bat wil P. E. ,oawn.Lrmoey 11 a i. paoAehu otlaatistme Oee--wo.16eroydrasstreet,somerof Camp. "HOW BEAUTIFUL ARE THE FEET OF THER THAT BRING GLAD TIDINGS OF GOOD THINGS!" Tera-SIsgeCopy, ensta y a,-a VOLUMT E XI. NEW ORLEANS, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1878. NUMBER Morning Star and t;atholic -,esvenger. saW OULANA. BNOWDAY, MAY 1, 1es78. TRLEORPAIC BUMMART. [Ccndensed from Associated Press Telegrams.] FIOBRIGN Tam EASTera QuasTIoN.-There seems to have been absolutely no progress made in the negotiations during the week, the only signi flcant fact made known to the public being that Count Sohonvalcff. Russlan Ambassador to England, left for St. Petersbnrg on the 5th, after havinR held several protracted inter views with Disraeli and Lord Salisbury. No one outside of government circles knows any thing of his mission, but the idea seems to be general that it is in the interests of peace. The Connt will arrive in St. Petersburg to-day or to-morrow. If no progress has been made by diplomacy, the same assertion will not bold good with reference to the war preparations, which are continued with unabated energy on all sides. The Russians have 40,000 men now on the march to reinforce their army in Southern Turkey, and have been sending large numbers of men to foreign ports, some even to the United States, to man the privateers which they are getting ready to harass British com merce in case of war. It is also asserted that she has refused to liberate the 60,000 Turkish prisoners she captured during the war, having grave doubts as to the neutrality of the Porte In ease of trouble with England. Austria has ordered the concentration of troops in Transylvania, Croatia, and Dalmatia covering the threelfrontiers exposed to Russiaor her possible allies. The Turks have assumed a more defiant atti tude towards the Russians. They refuse to evacuate Shumla, Varna and Batoom until the Rpssians retire from the immediate neigbbor hood of Constantinople. The Russians hold that the evacuation of these fortified towns should precede their withdrawal. A signifi cant fact is that the most important Turkish --army -corps at Constantinople isoomat.e&d_ by an Englishman, Baker Pasha, and the effi eer second in command in the Turkish fleet is also an Englishman, Hobart Pasha. There is no abatement in the rapidity of war preparations in England. 1,000,000 pounds of lint for the wounded have been ordered, the troops are being fed on canned preparation, so as to gradually accustom them to the new fare audj there is no decrease in the activity at Woolwlih and other arsenals. On the 8:h a number of transports conveying the British troops from India to Malta, passed Aden. UNITED STATES. WAlSHmGTro.-The joint committee of Dem coratio Senators and Representatives appoint - ed to consider the subject of investigating the Florida frauds in the Presidential election, have determined in favor of investigation. The object seems to be not to disturb Hayes in his offce, but to place all the facts on record. The Army Appropriation bill Is ready to be reported. It contains the provisions of the Banning bill for army reorganization, with some changes more favorable to the oficers. The number of men is fixed at 20,000, and it was demonstrated by Mr. Hewitt in cýmmittee that under the new methods there wfLld be as many muskets carried as now. The expenses will not be reduced the first year, but after wards there will be an annual saving of four million dollars. During the week General Gordon made a splendid speech in the Senate in favor of re pealing the Resumption act, and Randolph Tucker, of Virginia, spoke in the House in favor of the new Tariff bill. His speech at tracted great attention. The sales of the new United States bonds belring four and a half per cent interest are very great, averaging $1 20.000 a day. THe TEXAS FRONTIER.-Tbere seems to be amore unsettled state of affairs on the fron tier just now than for some months past. This is owing to the intrigues of the followers ofex-President Lerdo who are instigating the Indians to raid upon American soil for the double purpose of withdrawing attention from their own movements and involving Diea in trouble with the United States. A general revolution against Disz is antici pated at an early day, and the Secretary of war has telegraphed General Ord to be parti uenlarly vigilant in the endeavor to prevent anyinvasion of Mexican territory with hostile intent from the American side of the Rio Grande. The opinion in Administration cir cles is that there will be serious trouble in Mexico, and particularly along the border. Russo FEIAN Movzxmrs. - For some yda the asmoeiated press dispatches has been reslarly reporting what is claimed to be a general movement among the Irishmen of the North looking to active operations in concert with Russia against England in case war breaks out. From among these dispatches we take the following : Nxw YoltE, May 5 - A special to the Herald from Buffalo says : It is reported that a gen eral movement is on foot for the invasion of Canada by the Fenians in event of war be tween England and Russia. In an interview Col. John Quinn stated that there were three Irish companies in Buffalo, well drilled, offoered and equipped. He fur ther states that Gen. Burke, formerly of the United States army, and now one of the true tees of the skirmishing fund, has received ap plioations from veteran officers to be assigned commands. .WfU a 6.-Vague rnorse are afloat jjjSjjjbjab j jish j in jj of a three companies of Irish patriots are armed and equipped here ready for service, and one thousand Western Irishmen have been noti fied so that they can be here in twenty-four hours, while there are 3000 more in this vicin ity that will rendezvous for a raid within three days after orders are issued ; but nothing authentio can be obtained to snbstantiate these rumors. SYaacusa, May 8.-Colonel Mulligan, the Fenian leader, is here for the purpose of or ganizing and equipping a Fenian force in this city. Col. Mulligan declares that in the event of a raid upon Canada, fully 100,000 men, well drilled and armed with Remington rifles, could be relied upon to march on Canada on thirty hours' notice. The society clairs to have plenty of funds and bave advioes from St. Louis and other Western cities, which state they can have all the money they want. A prominent citizen in Cleveland has contributed $25,000 towards the purchase of arms. Col. Mulligan left for Oswego last night. IIe pro poses to visit every large city to ascertain how many men can be relied on, and how many Remington rifles are needed. A special from Syracuse, N Y , says: A Fenian meeting held in this city on the 9th, was largely attended. Letters were received from General O'Neill, stating he was on the line of Red River-with 10,000 men ready for action. Dispatches from Buffalo were read stating that 3,000 men in that city were under arms. Five steam tugs and a number of canal boats have been secured in Buffalo to transport the Fenians to Canada. Letters were read from Col. Mulligan, now in Oswego, stating he had secured three steamers in that city MIBCELLAPROUS The Paris Union publishes a retraction by Fdther Cnroi, in which he declares that he entirely adheres to all the teachings of the Church respecting ti temporal power of the Pope.- The 'lb in Monroe, Louisiana, on the 6th resulted in the choice of 5 white Democrats, one colored Conservative and a colored Republican, as Councilmen, and the re or b 6 msjorit -- 'he will of the San Francisoo millionaire. O'Brien, shows his estate to be worth $6,000,000. He gives the Catholic asy lum of St. Rafael $30 000 and the Catholic and Protestant Asylums of San Francisco reepec tivly $30,000 and $20,000 - The delegates of the Orange Order in Montreal have refused by a vote of 367 to 6, to accede to the re quest made of them by the Protestant clergy not to parade on the 12th of July - Remington & Sons. the great rifle manufacturers, are fnloancially embarrassed. Liabilities $1,000,000; assets $4 000 000 -The Episcopal Bishop of Pennsyl vania in an address to his clergy expresses alarm at the eflorts of Communistic leaders to bring about a conflict between labor and capi tal which can only result in devastation and ruin, and he exhorts the clergy to study this question of social science. The Cork Examiner publishes the details of a meeting held by some of the late Lord Lei trim's tenants whereat speeches were deliver ed and resolutions adopted denying all the charges made against him and pronouncing him to have been one of the beet landlords in Ireland. What a miserable fraud the whole affair was is thus exposed in an editorial which appeared in the same issue of the Examiner: If it were the fact that his tenants volunta rily came forward to repudiate the accusations against his memory, the fact would be a strong one, but it is impossible not to note some cir cumstances which materially affect the weight attachable to the meeting we publish. The requisition to the meeting was a circular issued by an attorney in a form calculated to impress on the mind of a peasant that it was a legal document of coercive tffect. It com mences with a preamble like the recital of a deed, and then it goes on in most approved legal form to add, ' I, therefore, ask each and all of you to meet at the Court House, Mohill, on Wednesday next, etc" Notwithstanding the formidable nature of this summons the re porter of the meeting says "the Court House: which is a small building. was pretty well filled, but the main body oJ the tenantry were not present." At the end of the day about seventy signal ores were got to the memorial, including sixteen who signed by proxy, and those who not being tenants helped to compose the meeting. As the tenantry of the late lord were counted at seventeen hundred the demonstration, then, was, to say the least of it, very inconclusive as regards their opinion with reference to the charges against Lord Leitrim. Last week the Buffalo Catholic Union coele brated the seventh anniversary of its estab lishment by appearing in a new dress. It also had the satisfaction of publishing a strong letter from the distinguished Bishop of Buffa lo, Right Rev. S. V. Ryan, commending its course and recommending it to the support of clergy and people. The Bishop has faith in the power of the press, as is evidenced by the following decided language : -"We believe it to be the duty of all good and zealous Priests to encourage and exhort their people, 'in sess3o and out of season,' in public and in private, to subscribe for and sustain the Catholic Press." Last month the venerable Father Peter Beox, General of the Jesuits, left Rome for Floreno, perfectly restored in health. He is ano c!,y-tirbee eaes old. , (Translated for the Mornlag Star) DANIEL O'CONNELL. (Extraots from the French "Livre des Orateart" by Timon, published in 1844. It is not here the parliamentary orator I wish to depict; it is not Demosthenes pleading his own cause in the Oligarchical forum of Athens; it Is not Mirabean dis playing the magnificence of his oratory in the hall of Versailles, before the three orders; the clergy, the nobility and the third estate; it is not Burke, Pitt, Fox, Brougham, Canning, vibrating the win dows of Whitehall by the thunders of their University eloquence; it is another style of eloquence, an eloquence without name, prodigious, startling, unprepared and such as was never heard in ancient or in modern times; it is O'Connell, the great O'Con nell, standing on the soil of his country under the broad arch of Heaven, an im mense throng for auditory, and for his subject the people, always the people, and for echo the universal acclamations of the multitude, like the roaring of the tempest and the beating of the waves on the sands and the shores of the Ocean. Never, in any age or in any country, has any man obtained over a nation an empire so sovereign, so absolute, so complete. Ire land personifies herself in O'Connell. He is, as it were, in himself, her army, her parliament, her ambassador, her prince, her liberator, her apostle, her God. His ancestors, monarchs of Ireland, gird ed on the sword of battles. IIHe, tribune of tihe people, wields a weapon in the battles of speech far more formidable than the sword,-the trenchant blade of eloq ence. See O'Connell with his people, for the Irish are truly his people; he partakes of the same life, enjoys the same joys, bleeds from the same wounds, wails at the same sufferings. Ile transports them from fear to hope, from slavery to liberty, from fact to right, from rigit to duty, from supplica tion to invective, and from anger to mercy and pity. He comnfands the throng to kneel and to pray, and they kneel and they pray; to lift up their brows to heaven, and they lift them up; to curse their tyrants, and they curse them ; to sing hymns of liberty, and they sing them ; to uncover their heads, and with raised hands, in the presence of the Holy Gospels tr swear, and they un cover their heads, and the; raise up their hands and they swear; to sign petitions for the reform of abuses, to unite their forces, to forget their quarrels, to embrace their brethren, to forgive their enemies, and they sign, and they unite, and they forget, and they embrace, and they forgive. But how explain, how define this excep tional genius who never rests, whose body never tires, who manages to dispose of civil and criminal cases, to attend to the labori ons study of laws, to the immense corres pondence of the agents of the association, and nightly and daily to the agitation of seven millions of men; how describe that fiery soul that burns within O'Connell without consuming him ; that wit of incredible mobility that glances upon each subject without withering it, that increases as t:e proceeds, that is multiplied as he expands, that is regenerated and Invigora ted from its own exhaustion, that phenom enon of an old age, so green and so vigor- t ous, that powerful life that contains within itself several lives, that inexhaustible gush - ing of an extraordinary nature, without rival and without precedent I If O'Connell, with claymore in hand, had attacked despotism, he would have been I annihilated by the thunderbolts of British c aristocracy; but in legality he protected a and walled himself up, as in an impregna ble fortress. He is bold, but perhaps more adroit than bold. He advances, then re f tires. He will go to the farthest limits of right but no further. By cavil he shields t himself as with a buckler and battles on that ground, foot to foot; by captions and subtle interpretations he entangles his ad versaries in meshes that they cannot un ravel. Scholastic, punctillions, sparkling in retorts, subtle proctor, he obtains by cunning that which he cannot obtain by force Where others would be lost he saves himself; his skill protects hid ordor. One feels that this grand orator is cramp ed and smothered under the cupola of the < British parliament as some grand plant under a coverlid of glass. For his lungs a to expand, for his form to tower and for his a voice to thunder he needs the air, the sun t and tihe soil of Ireland. It is when be treads I that sacred land, that native land, that he breathes and he blooms. It is there in the t presence of his people, that his revolution- t ary and fiery eloquence bursts forth, flashes j and radiates like sheaf. of fire at some I grand pyrotechnical display. It Is there I that he overflows and pours forth in scald- . log tresi s tIha afl-powaeful Irevy h bM avenges the slave and strikes down the ty rant. His raillery does not pierce like a needle. Similar to some ancient sacrificer, with uplifted club, full in the front ie strike, his victim, and fells him groaning to the ground. See him gathering his indignation and his strength when he relates the long histo ry of the woes of his country, of her op pression, of her misery; when he invokes from the somb her noble heroes, and Ii -r faithful citizens, who reddened with their blood the scaffolds of Ireland, her lakes and her plains; when he exposes to view the lamentable spectacle of liberty destroyed by the English sword ; the soil of their an cestors possessed by tyrants; the covern ment they instituted for them, and for them only; the tribunals gorged with their creatures; the juries corrupted, the parlia ments purchased, the laws stained with blood, the soldiery become executioners; the prisons crowded ; the peasantry crush - ed with taxes, brutalized by ignorance, weakened by sickness and hunger, lank, haggard, bent double, crouched on fetid straw; the huts near the palaces; the insolence of the aristocracy; the unem ployed uncared for and unpitled; labor without remuneration and without inter miesson; martial law restored ; the liberty of the press abolished; the administration invaded by strangers; the nationality ab Rorbed; the Dissidents unable to become judges, jurymen, witnessen, annuitants, Instructors or constables under penalty of nullity and even of death ; the Catholic churches empty, bare, and without orna ments; her priests beggars avd persecuted; the Anglican Church with joyous heart and beaming front, tier hands in the sacks and the coffers of gold. It is then that the tears course down the cheeks, and in the mi slt n n in"n" andrt arnwl oil-rnc, that oppressed people, bursting into sobs, med itates from the heart vengeance. But let England from the heights of her palaces and on her couch of purple and silk, shiver an listen to the noise of the giant roarinm beneath the mounetain piled upon him. He courses through the dark subterraneous passages ; he straightens up, he raises on his back the fiery furnaces of democracy, and England apprehending the approaching eruption, in terror feels her feet burning, and in her fright startles back in dread, lest the volcano about to burst should overwhelm her. * * a O'Connell firmly believes in the future emancipation of Ireland. He believes in God, and it is because he believes and because he hopes, that like an eagle, with wings though whitened by the snows of many winters, he still maintains his snb lime Sights of oratory in the highest re gions of eloquence. He does not separate the triumph of religion, from the triumph of libeity. He thrills with joy, he is filled with glory, he is exalted in his magnificent visions of the future, and his inspired words have something of the grandeur of the skies above him and the air and the space around, when after his election from Clarehe addresses the thronging multitude: "In the presence of my God and with the most profound sentiment of the responsibility of the solemn and dreaded duties you have twice imposed upon me, Irishmen, I accept themorn and I obtain the assurance to fill them, not frojm my own strength, but from your own. The n:en of Clare know that the only basis of liberty is religion. They have triumphed because the voice that ia raised for conutry had first breathed her prayer to the Lord.-Now songs of liberty are heard in our green fields ; their sounds are taken up by the hills, fill the valleys, murmur in the waves of our rivers, and our torrents, in thunder tones shouts to the echoes of our mountains, Ireland is free !" But unfortunately Ireland is not yet free. What will become of her T What will become of her agitator ? Will he be thunder struck in the midst of the storm T Are England and Ireland shaken to their very foundations, to battle with one an other t are torrents of blood to flow t May God avert these forebodings ! What does it matter, Daniel, if Ireland comes from your hands surrounded with glory and palpitating with nationality, or that you should perish by the power of bayonets ? Success alas! has too often until now constituted the only title of tyrants to right and legitimacy. The world is delivered up to them, and apparently God wills that they sbou:d reign,-apparently all nations must be born, live and die in a long stormy period of darkness, relieved at rare inter vals by beams of sunlight,-apparently their oppression is one of the secrets of that Providence that sports at human justice, and that tries here below the patience and the virtue of the op pressed, in order to reserve for them the sternl rewards of a heavenly loberitance. Do mso ste nsttea yoersel a O'Qon nell, to be exempt from the common lot, and I know not, after all, if to crown your .splendid life, it would not be better for i you to perish than to triumph ! These a Saxonscan plunge you into dungeons, lead a you to the scaffold, rob you from the land of Ireland that would no longer see her I O'Connell or hear the tandering tones of his voice. But they can never prevent the sacred names of justice, of liberty, of country, to be murmured in whispers on the lips of Irishmen, to be sepeated by r every heart, and at the name of O'Connell I to thrill from the summit of your moun tains to the borders of the sea. And they I will not prevent, generous children of Green Erin, the accomplishment of your religious and political emancipation, nor future generations to kneel and to pray, and to sing songs of glory at the tomb where repose the bones of your Liberator ! LETTER FROM PENNSYLVANIA. HOWARD, CENTRE COUrNTY, PA. Editor Meornng Star: A year ago I spent considerable time in your city and State, and made up my mind that itis the place for some of the surplus workingmen of the North, especially the Democratic Catho lic who, by sobriety and industry, has saved a few hundred dollars with which to undertake the venture-I should rather say, the asnsured success, from the evidence of Catholic schools, churches, and the exemplary piety of the throngs in attendar.c. I am free to say that religion or politics has nothing to do with the material success of the immigrant, but those of our religion who go to your State to improve their condition, are doubly fortunate to Pave the consolations of the Holy Church women occupied throughout the Interior. This is not so in Kansas and the West, as many years must elapse bofore church faoillth times can compare with Louisiana. I have been endeavoring to secure a colony for Attakapas and St. Landry country, but the Kansas excitement has been so furious, the agents have madesuch extravagant offers, and put such stress on the swamps of your State, that I am greatly retarded in my work. One great source of regret is the meagerness regret is the meagreness of ocolal Informa tion concerning your State, and no positive knowledge of any action of your Legislature to encourage immigration. I have "Louisiana As It Is," by Dennett, which is good in its way, but designed more to advertise an agency than as an official guide. I have little data as to the cost of freight and passage from New Orleans to the district I speak of. If I could get in oommunicatian with some Catholic planter or other person who controlled sugar machinery in the St. Landry, Iberia or St. Marys parishes, and would give me inducements, I would bring to the country a few (two or three) mechanics-say a machinist, blacksmith and millwright-experte in their business, who would be glad to be ersgaged this coming sea son, and return N.rth in the winter, after the sugar-making was over, whose report would have great weight with the colony, and in the spring following I could lead a colony of fifty to one hundred families who are desirous of engaging in sugar and mixed farming. If you will be kind enough to place me in communication with some party who has machinery, in the region I mention, and who may want meobhanio, both purposes may be served. Or if the State has an authorized agent, to give me his address and such in formation at your command as may assist me, 1 will confer a great favor. I refer you to Father A. J. O'Brien, of Belle foot, in this county, who is our pastor. W. G. Cornaroas,. While in Turkey Grant met some American 1 travelers with whom he conversed in the most unreserved manner. lHe said he considered Joseph E. Johnston as the ablest General on the Confederate side during the war. Lee had a splendid genius and thoroughly understood the theory of war, but was not so able in prao- I tice. Stonewall Jackson he considered the most overrated man of the war. The oorres pondent of the Norfolk rirginian, who repiorts I these statements, says: "Theseeopinions will, I am sure, be counter to those of the future historians. Already Shiebert of the Royal Prussian Engineers, has shown what a host "tonowall" was and b w his ibleftain felt his k~m. CASTLE DALY: Tae Story of an Irish Home Thirty Years Ago. (Continued.) Old and new time seemed bewilderlogl mixed up together' as the day went on, Anne found herself seized upon just as sheaseo to be in longpuast days, for private oanfsreeem with one and another member of the hbaf. Even Mrs. Daly, who bad never ooed soe - to so muhob intimacy before, held her be. with a hand on her arm for a minute ortwesi the drawing-room, when the reest of the party went out for a walk, to say "If they speak to you on the subject, I hope you will say what you oan to reconcile Ellen and Connor to the ohange we are making. Yeo have great influence with Ellen ; I wish you would make her see that her disoontent is very distressing to her father-I say nothing aboat myself." 'But you should," cried Anne; "nothiag would be better for Ellen than to have suah a motive as sparing you put before her, to help her to control her feelings." "It is not my way to speak about myself. Mrs. Daly answered ; "I suppose I should gat more consideration if I claimed it, but I oea not speak of my own feelings." "Not even to her own daughter. What a strange thing that morbid reserve is," thought Anne, as Ellen, who was waiting outside the door, seized the arm Mrs. Daly relinquished, and dragged her out into the garden. "N .w, let as go op to poor Aunot Ellen's fa vorite turf walk under the larch trees, out of eight of mamma's prim flower borders; there one can get a breath of air. Oh, Anne, do you know what it is to feel all day as if you could not breathe I" "No, I can't say I do," said Anne, laughIng. "Of coores not, for you never do or say things to make people disapprove of you, and look ;rise at you out of their eyes, till you feel sousne Auu,,you .ua uimagie now mI bh en here (for me) sine Pelham N l Unoe Charlese ame. You see I am so horrid that they aon's endure me; and it has opened mammbs eyes wider than ever to all my faults I They try to like me. I cam see that, and I study hard to please them, acd watub every word; but just when I think I am sooceeding, and begin to feel a little happy out comes some unlucky speech from my ree - self, and they are disgusted with me again. It is very uncomfortable to be made so that one's nearest relations can only like one whoe one is pretending to be diferent from what one is." It was certainly not a love story that this second Ellen Daly was telling in her aunt's fa vorite walk ; but it interested Anne quite as deeply as that other tale had done, as sbe look ed down on theeager, ohangeful face and wIst ful eyes fixed on her now. "Anne, shall I be able to live at all. do yea think, among those English relations of ore we're going to, who, if Pelham describes them rightly, always say what they mean, and do what they Intend, and will be for ever msniag allowance for Connor and me f Won't die bsfore I come back, and see the shadow of Laoh.a-cree grow long on our own lak again I" "No, certainly not," said Anne, "If you are the true-hearted Irish girl I take you for, Wtb ouarege not to be ashamed of anything that b not really wrong, and spirit to take and give back a little ridicule kindly." 'It's not ridicule I'll mind, or get," said Ellen, sighing, "for I don't think that at PoI hrn Court the -hole family have a laugh among them. It's my own brother's being ashamed of me that kills me, and the fndilng out that I always make a ,rie'ake and vex him most when I try hardest to please him." ' Say serve instead of please, and you'll nad out how much better the trying answers." said Anne. "Ellen, avournoeu, you like to be thought like me. Suppose it should turn oat that the likeness between us is deeper than on the outside, saLd that the lesson set for you to learn in your life should be the same as mine." "I should not think you ever needed to learn any lessons." "Yes, this one, to put serve, instead otpleMse into my wishes, when I thought of those I loved beet. You try that plan, and )on will find what a great deal of trouble and what heartborne it saves you. Let people think of you as they will, and be content if you can only serve them." "Oh dear, and it's so pleasant and sunshiny to please everybody. I do so like the way pee ple here have of prlesing one at every momeat. Uncle Charles and mamma say it's bypocris; but whether they mesa itor not, it's very Oue to hear, and I can't think how I shall ever bear to live where I'm jost the same as everybody else to everybody. Anne, do you se that bit of a path beyond the bouse sloping up the mountain, where the shadow of that cloud lies so deep t I shall feel just like that all the time I am away. I shall be walking on, oa through the dark, with not a bit sunshine to warm me." "And look further on, do yo see what bright light the p,th opens out into when it fair ly reaches the crest of the hill. We havemads a litte story outof tt between us. Never mind bow dark the shadowy bit is if it really takes you ',p. That's all I ask for you, tbough you know I love you with all the veins of my heart, Eileen asthore. You are sare to get to the warmth and light sooner or Iater." Riles stood still o the tart walks, ad tuek . l**t 1** to"4 W.