Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 27, Number 45, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 August 1885 — Page 3

a.

A.

WEEKLY COURIER.

c.

DOAItfJ., VmIiIImImm',

JASPKK.

A NOVELETTE.

R n'.i f

Hut tttn:

4w) mi mweies.

ove

O rupture!

A fund embrace;

a. prying lace

Mlefuu

1 TWOI KH Of

HOW M

A mother's room, A ukter; (toon: A hurried flight. A darkaomo night

l...L.ir.li ?- w"

-Jer,

ptM

A

A mat-now; A vow for life, A happy wife, A carriage. HWT III. A Mth-r's tew, A raker mwrst . t "Kent UkI" A iiwhh's kaeek, Adre.lf Mook: A tetter. A new-round SOB, Twe frRU woar A dowrerl A little etulTheir tmphuw MM And soar. OMAPTkR IT.! iu'M?re9?)'ii Joy," It Rleeplng: Fa's prteel rrl

A happy pair . Uae-ntMM bfeaJr , , , . 0VrlWf:. While grind pap .AudirraHaiBiwiM, Are hUhM! .

Chamber-' Journal,

What "Mom o' VittlM" Cam

Near Beiinr Upeot

An'

next

... LLli ltl.

intHnn. an'5 wen

week I'll finish, up them

i V ,. L ' : 1

WMNI DIM WOUiVM

rn

hanging .!

H!WprfH iff) CallstajMO'- V

lone," said Miss Jane, wim empnasis

remorseless wfungT,thb 1m

r . 1

lite) dif h?pa ori a nail, .vigor

ouslr rubbed .out the sink with a bit el

flanuel rhoisterfed with kerosene. There

wiu ao one ia tko little "but'ry" witk

herbuUslterhsd a habit ol thinking

loud, just.as Iter, father read lite wee

lv imnAf alotid for fortv Years. It was

liko telrlrig some one wliat she thought, or what she-saw, or .did, or heard. As

the kitchen

room i

Mis Jane kad emittied her quiver.

anil paused, hut Catttla was mania ker Hemlle slowly Uirviijfh the Week el pink print, a if every arrow had ftowa over her head.

SIih lahl her work ea bar kaea aaw.

and looked through tlie wiadew away to the blue kill that melted InW the horiaoH. "I (IWh'I jlien muok last

night.' lie said, gently -a shado stole over Mlw Jh'h sharp face, hut CalUta

went cm, qtwsiiy "hiiu i tiiougni, ae i lakl ia my good elenn bfld, just m the light was coming, and hoard the Wrda singing overywliere, and the lay-looks brushed agaisst tk window, and they saielied so pretty I thought) bow Mis'

utiaadier said some of them dear ituie things upver'd smelt a rose, aor so

much as see any grueu grass." The voice eaded ia sobs, and Miss Jane felt her own eyes grow dim, and realized jtliHt her strong-tower of defense would fall if she lingered here much lonmr.

bhe rose determinedly, ana tieu tier

bonuet-strings in,a snugger knot..

"There.! don't feel bad

way,

said

In H

" aakl k to kerself, a ad "Stop," eke to the aiahiter; "brMg kim

sahl. "I'll think it

about it' ska

ever, andwe'll

see.

tDear Lord, do Thou be ia her thought' silently prayed tke sietor

loft at homebut aim only sakl. cheerily, a; Miss Jane's shoes creuked out aurose

the kitelien fteor: "They're tke Lord'a little ones, yon know," but Mies Jane vouchsafed no reply. , 'Kevbr saw no grasa," she sniffed, rubbing her nose. "What nonsense! as muck grass at there is in the world! Am' I woa't kave a ears young oae kere." But as her shoes trod energetically over the. short, crisp moss and crushed tke fragrant pennyroyal, she found herself wondering vaguely how it would seem if thia

were the first time. Mo one but herself and her God knew of the warfare that west on dowa in the southwest pasture that afternoon, but Caiista knew who had the victory when they sat down to their five o'clock supper. But she said nothing. And even after the dishes were waslied and the milk put away, aud Miss Jane tied ob an ancient black straw hackerncy" and said, after a little hesitation, that she guessed she'd rua over to the minister s and tell him "if he can ketch hold, of a likely little girl, we'll try an'

then CalisU only said: "Well, I would, sister. A little girl wouldn't be so

most

'I hose vou'll never regret it," said

the minister, shaking hands wkea be west away, I hope I ska' n't," raspouded Miss Jaae, in a tone that said "I know I shall;" but Mr. Chandler was used to a lack of faith, and be rode away, leaving the boy, with the box under hia ara, standing on the broad, flat door-stone,

in the morning sunshine. Mies Jane said she "never did see suoh a fool for a lxy that seemed to have wit, too," as the days wore away; and be asked kor "what bald up the stone wall" that fenced the pasture across the road, or wondered that raspberried grew oa bushes, -or puzzled at the connection between the hen or the nest and the eg? found in there afterward. Miss Jane was, as she said, really "nonplussed at such ignorance." The dog, .Snap, proved to be a harmless little ragged-haired tiling, who paid great respect to the enormous yellow-and-whlte oat Sarah, and mollified her

mistress hy catching the rati the lazy Sarah had allowed to gambol about the barn almost under her nose.

Outte a friendship grew between

wMi a terror f ska knew not what, she' sped dowa the bill wkk Snap, jtMt a tke day, fair aad aaslHeff , peeped erer the bills. "She's a-llvin' ?" ailed a feeWa vole from the water.; Not a ward in anewer said Mies Jane, but she niurohed straight Into the brook, aad, taking Jaok in her arms, put him on the ground. "I couldn't hold much longer," said be, ami dropped at her feet. Two or three days afterward the

minister came round to ask if Jack would be ready to go hack with the other children. "No," said Mkw Jane, abruptly: "I can't let him go, and Calista, she wanU him. an' weUl keep

him a spell longer. 1 guess, ay want he tails about life aunt he Uvea with, there won't be any trouble there." "Blossthe Lord, sister!" sa!d the minister, earnestly. He had heard the story pf Mad Brook. This spring Mt5 Jane, with a beaming face, put down her name for four children to spend two weeks with her. "Jack and Calista will eujoy it," said she, apologetically. "How about Snap?" laughed tin minister.

"There, ain't he the knowtn'est little

Calista and Jaek, for he loved to listen thing you ever saw?" exclaimed Mies

called:1" -J 1 ' f

rj "Sisterj'J, t The Rineak

1 m

in 'Miss-

Jane's shoes

iketi died.,

"Aro you goaig out."Ouly jesih!fHgTrhe.s6 JflVt1iWg the fence. Trmt:rrrHi,'w-t"" "I'll wait till you come back," said T "UCTvolieT WTiTiwpia rking-chair rc1 WSkc?chv4TrAwch. and Miss w, , jftSmV idinaa.tapkl.a.liUla mora. brisk-.

item nuv "'v1 ...... .- w-... -v l' .K-Ahin' 'Jie muttered, suread-l

hi bor toYala oate vMtH W

v tiiTiHniptmcK: ncrne:in io aquini avn at. small black cloud that

nnMlnr Mi) from-the horiaoa.

b'lieTtf 1 must tiy for. another

o' them'aWerttos,, though:

one

was "1

mess'

"there's

v n

nothin' rhakca o nch sauce lor me.

nd Miss Jane .gathered up her milkEans lapin. the cellar door,.where they ad Ben( lazilr: sunafng themselves rj$cejlre aloei in the Morning, ani V wentM. ' f , tt . , Kh nnnuncml herself M "goln'

down to the sou' west corner o' the back Y,fiifV' when she anneared at the

kal-.Tvxuii rfoor a lew minutes later,

t''.nm imIkwi (wn-uonnet nnwn not

Hikk U." she added. l'it you

Miitt ant aotkm1 that you wanted

The old rocking-chair creaked nervusly a few times; ana Carta's lingers trembled as alio tried to eoav the ttiruad

into the eye of the ncciHe. Misa ; Jane waited. lL t i W I f'-'Tlierel Carina- laJd oWn th kuuruU,invii loaf brtrnth.

. iVk vnn raM.inmlMir. 8l.ster. what the

t w r - ------ - t

if

minister's wifsfwas siwing yeslenlay? "About tiiat slack piece, Screny Jackau.Vio'igo Im'iharAedP Can 't ma ke . i.Y.iUiSu,uM Not that Miss Chans!-'

for you

as a boy,

much trouble

likolv.!'

But after Mise' Jane had gone on bar errand Calista went into her bedroom

and shut the door. She had entered kito her closet

What Miss Jane said to herself as she

trudged away was:, "If I'm a seliisn

jtjkLord, help meuiot to saieai auu knock over mv vittles every time Ican't llave cm to suit me." And she backed

up her prayers by her deeds.

Twenty vcars ago wania citwou the eifjjof her husband, young Lieutenant -John Emmons, in a Southern

hospital. She stayed with the siek and

wppmiau wo yeans monger, anu wiuu came home with the malaria that made her an invalid foe life. t. JanV kHall hac heard, as her neighbors had; that Aloander Merrill was shot through the hoad as ho Hung himself in desperation across the fatal deadline of the pen at Andersonvillc; but there had been no engagement announced between them. Ho had whisperod to her under the blooming applo troes the night before liis regiment went away, aad asked if she would wait until he came back, and after his death it was whispered about that he had been " kind 0' shinin' up to Jane Sewall," and the postmaster was sure "he had wrote to hor;" but the modesty of the Now Kngland village would 'have been shocked if she had presumed to openly mourn for him. Anil an tho Morrow that flowed from

sweet aad

to her stories ol tne war, tnougn ue

never hesitated to tell her. when ke thought she left the straight highway of fact and strayed into the fields of iniaginatioa. After awhile they found, in addition to Snap, he bad brought with bim au old flageolet, on which he played, if not scientifically, at least ia a way pleasing to these lonely women. "Pinafore" was new, but, fortunately, the bands still play "Marching Throrigh Georgia" and "Annie Laurie,"

arid Jack rattiea tuem on, wane listaTiuninied, in a soft little voice, an aittnrnnaninient half a measure ahead

nr hnhind. u it hannened. Miss Jane

naid little heed, aoiiarcntly, to the boy

hut tr waa not CaU3ta who crept up

stairs to look at him as he lay asleep, bmiI murmured: "If he had lived," and

then blushed hotly alone in the dark at what seemed, to her rigid creed, alrdost a sin for the unwed to think of wifehood or motherhood, even though

it might never be. The second week of Jack's stay was extremely sultry, and one night, in a twrrJhln shower. Calista was taken with

one of the attacks of jllness that had hung about her ever since her Southern campaign. As Miss Jane hurriedly prepared the medicine she kopt athaad, Jack's face looked in at tho door. "Sick, hain't she?" he whispered. "Oh!" The honse shook as a peal of thunder, like the boom of guns, cracked about it, and Miss Jane cried out, for the. bottle fell from her hand and shattered on the Jioor, ,

Ha n't ve sot no more?" asKea

Jane, with enthusiasm, and the

ter assented; and she walked murmuriner: "What a mess o'

.

you'd

Ok

upset,

Jane SewalL

Lord had let you had your own

AnnxtM. lmby, tn (JHrman

minis-

home, vittles if the way!" tHIO.

SOUR BREAD. The Cm It Induclvr t Dy

Kindred KWI. In this country there is much pear and sour bread, resulting in part from

a want of knowledge of the chemical

principles, and also from our hot haste,

PERSONAL AND LITERARY.

A. widaw hi Wlltoa. Coa.

be never mtoads to marry ag am.

id 101. .- Mme. Patti, having sung us ut at our cash for many seasons, new preiKwes to writo wgi articles t toll it how she dW it A'. J. ZfcrwW. Mr. Blaine has been made a Doetor of Uws by Uw. University of Georgetown, and the same honor has been uonierred uon General Hancock by b. John's College. James W. Hale, the originator of cheap postage between Boston, New York and iMadelphla in 1SSL now eighty-four years of age. He baa bee visiting Beaton recently. Mmtm r-t. Lucy Laroom recently lectured ha her native town, Lowell, Mass.. on her

life and the life of ail mill gins wpj and forty years ago, when she worked twelve hours a day, and edited the Of trativei' Mugtzme ia her 'leisure hours." -Within a yea the shilliag novel lias become a very popular form ef literature in Eagland. Amerkmn publisher made fortunes in the printing ef suoh editions long; before the HteaajK curred to tbek English brethren. (,dljihia Pre, , . Mr. rastus Brooks says that smb. baa seen one hundred and twenty daily, newspapers established In New Tees: and of these only six are new in eaisteuce. He estimates that $26, 000,00

lias been sunk dunng tbat tmse on daily newspapers, and yet every ether college graduate thinks be can ran a newspaper. m Hie following are the ages of the various Presidents at the time of tkebr inauguration: Washington, 57: Adasatj (J.), 61: Jefferson, 67; Madison. 67; Monroe. 68: Adams f J. Q. 67: Jack-

Vau Buren, f4; iiarmon,

a I - ........... t. .i u unn. nit van nuren. o

not naving uraeioiooK auertuuugH. "lr. Ali Polk. 48: Taylor. 64: FBI

l T t.- za X. mm. fea a l i ' i i

Tt in t.uryi n. v ov, wv more, 60; Pierce, 49;

dousrh is not allowed te ferment too

much, and of course soda is not used. They laugh at us for our mo of it as unnecessary. Now it should be known that the range of fermentation is from 50 to 90 degrees Kah. or tho best temperature lor it while it is arrested below about 35 degrees and when it rises to 190,212 boing the boiling point The putrefactive lermentation (rotting) is from 50 degrees to 100; is slow at 50, moderate attiO, rapid at-70, and very much so at 90, and utterly stops

at 195. It, should be rerr embered that it is utterly impossible to have sweet and good "bread if the dough, is soured by too jrreat a derroe of fermentation.

It is true that the sourne s of the dough mav be neutralised by soda or any alkali (the bakers sometimes use ammonia), but that does not make sweet and nutritious bread. Since the fermentive or "raising" process is one of

destruction, consuming tho starch, dis-

Buchanan, 4;

Lincoln, 62; Johnson,' 66;

4f; 61

Grant,

Hayes, 64; Garfield, 4; Arthur, Cleveland, 47. Chicago Herald:

Mr. Henry J. Ileadrix, of Hollow Creek, sends us the following long names of that locality: Barbara Balgoro Chickasaw 'Cherokee Choctaw Teanesiee Sprinkle and Harriet Ann Cassandra Dishie Bowie Sackie Litha Hanoyer Adams. Mr. H. C. Bailey sends the following male name: Benjamin Betaur.st Benbow William Henry Jeremiah. Andrew Jackson Singo Simon Peter George Washington Johnson. Lcxing (on (6. C.) J5HalA. The Northern Atlantic States hare) vigorous old men. Dr. David Barker, of Gardner, Mass.. is eighty-three years old, and has been in practice ia that town sixty-two years. He rides more than any other physician ia Worcester 'County. He frequently takes his sleep in his carriage. Biehard Shaw, eighty vnara old. carries the mail between

"1 la n't ye. got no morer &.eu aesirucuou, wumuhhui iu - cu-w vuire K H.. Jack, .-I caV go8 the. lfJrr &. did

to ttlC doctor s. 1 Know Wliwe iu uuu- in i.bb nuurumi yjL ..S"""' iZ. o Aav 1Mf irintnr. Sosioii

tor lives." Miss Jano didn't answer. It would be dire cruelty to send that morsel of humanity out in such a storm, but CalisU v, 4 . , Before she could collect her thoughts the rain boat heavily in at the open door, and Jack was gone. She sprang out to call after him to go bv the road and not by the steppingstones; but the wind rushed round the house and carried her words away, and

Jack, with Snap at his heels, had been swallowed up by tho night Jack had been in Stoneham long enough to know that It was a half mile to Dr. Mclntyre's by the road, while the path that led on the stepping-stones across Mad Brook was only half as far.

"We'll go over the steppin'-stones, for may bo she's a-dyin'," said Jack to Snap, and Snap responded by a little bowl as the fled down tho path. T)r. Moltitvre was sick himself, and;

as certaialv. therefore, as this process

proceeds beyond the first stage, ontarin' the acetous, some of the best elements of nutrition, the sweetness, are forever destroyed, and all 'the alkalies of commerce can not restore them. If we eat such bread, we are liable to become dyspeptics, while its use in, the

familv will naturally make the children

of various ages alike sour. It is economy, therefore, to bury such dough or give it to the swine or fowls, unless we have much sympathy for them. This will be less wasteful than to eat it

provided we are careful to avoid tne repetition by due care. We may avoid sour bread, as we do sco robed steak -by care. Dr. J. II. Ilanaford. in Golden little.

not miss

Journal.

HUMOROUS.

accident

.- . a 1 t !

SM.U. . crust d rSSSStMtt

few broke tnrougu. She and Calista lived comfortably oa the old place with a little money and Calista's pension; and though their lives might not lie in the sunshine, and the

light was suuauea, itj d the kind woman added.

r nnn r. ami ino oniy reai ounuvn tin.

rj . . ., .i. .1

THE MAIL IN CHINA.

Hew Lttteri aad Huilneti Correipoadatiee Ara DtatruiaUa la the CeleilUl Kmidre. But as reeards letters, a considerable

"It was a terrible accident, lie

never will be able to talk again." "Why not? He only lost his arms." res, but he can't talk with bis toes, and he's deaf and dumb." N. T, Graphic Fine Facilities for Observation: "Can yon tell the difference between an egg and cabbage?" asked jemn Mr. iTaddger. "lean." responded Ms. llanter; "1 have been on the stage fee ten years." Puck.

The morphine habit, it Is said, wiu cause tie hair to drop off. Ladies who are addicted to this habit should taketh precaution to pin their hair en securely before starting out for a promenade. A few extra hairpins will! the opium habit. NorrMwm JsVafst More ainrreesrve than usual: Agnes

-Umni told vou that you were not

' ZZ . r v l

nrnnnrtirvn of the 1UU.UW.UW Ki lliamen . " T iL.llT r.m

..... 1 --' , , , . , . i x In ED W IKwT Jnnmi unui tor togethornut up the medicine which. do occasionally exchange Utters -those ,&Zau but 1 couldn't help it Agnen asMw. Woodbury said, "always fetched wko Mn wrlte for themselves -Couldn't help it-why? Sally-Bs Mrs. Lmmons right round jhonaho Aq These ;ell6r3 cawwb-cause-Satan tempted me. SSiSSJS& - Lsigned to firms which have Agnes-n you should K

lar Q.i.l snvtliins about matt sat mi

abounhe p dot4 children obnfing out hiia tW sbiso4nWv for a lltUe1 vacation. Oh,

I laid and rtoKM.aw

ebeemtihklng'

mie fat vtbe twe

trlpeonB)raVeV-"lV whv couldn't we take- mi

f Irisllrtsraiunerwa!ll:ir

fr'ushtatiiii sfuan

offnft tvm rhe enemy.

- wiui ',,J tnr the enemv in this case,

h neitaitilv wasn't dead, bat'lt

t!ri? iwiiv before she could reckon

TV"L7-' .s ... ' Uto. .Tnn

wasequal-

. , krt!HwlPf!!tyj,! ! stunned. 1 i Vell," she said, recovering herself i kmOsfterAlew.iumuteK W a .i., ..i.tni aiinitt. it. an I don t

tlinutrlit tinthin'

n bettevb vou "could slan'

U nnn ilav aa'

...Wht, Calista;" and this Way plt ' 'aTohHon beingwell WJt

Ifr.irfcW. WWlf a ntpinuy

mmneatt fMw'. cnHlvator

Calista. wn informed

that ialmsst

herself, nnd that suoh "!a

r

ywtriffbrm.lbemMinedaicatsd ami ua

rwuui i at,,, a ... ...w

Mil ' TT CT... nwM.v. - mm - 1

r . .1 j

till 4 1. u LnV.ua wrnrrv the eat. and

:..nu m 1 arWLd frur. ita Motlvor. U It

I;:: i-TJ JiTial,: T .MouidnH be sur

H it hadn't, ' auueu mm

good

1UH!CI i w si . :

k.wom, rrimbv; ."An' WW K4V vm .?.'nil.rWi a. foreltrner when

ii i ibi 1 1 1 ii bnuuava. w - - - n

w rnt II and sarsv t that; far you

n - it T An that

made ua of

.know, uansta, as wen

larkened the path was the dread that

enmntimns thrust itself forward mat

M -

oae might be left alone.

The fatal Tuesday, as Mm jane

Wnniri liave expressed it, came ana

found Miss Jane frying o many doughnuts thatCalista said, laughingly, she

must .be expecting aJLoy, after all; but

they were uotn surpriscu wnen wi minister stopped a( tho door with a boy ia

said Miss Jane, em-

Shatlcally, meeting the minister on the

VI know you w, mkmi mwiu, i

know ybu d'd," sahf tke goou man, "but new I'll tell you hist how it is. This hoy has brought a. dog with him Miss Jane's face was gorgon-like m Bir,ntnnjaanil nobody wants lura.

lie hrotight the dog aboard" the boat in

that pasicoaera uox, kept him till somebody caught him put-

ting in part o b iubwuwo w tie creature to eat He out holes in.tlie box so the deg could breathe,, and told him to keep still, and the knowing little thing hasn't made a sound since they started last night. The boy said he was afraid to leave him for fear he would be abused or lost" Mr. Chandler paused, and looked at Miss Jane's faae. He read nothing th"Tcan't sav I blame you, though,

thr not Wantlnr a boy," he coatinued,

w . . .... .

Jack pulled a bit ol dirty string irom his pocket for answer, and made the bottle fast to Snap's neck. "e can't tumble down," said tke little master, but Mrs. Woodbury was onlv divided as to the risks. Nothing letter presented itself, hawrur en a k dubiously rolled tke pow

ders in a bit of oiled silk, and started the two' homeward, with very Jittle hope the medicine would reach there, if the boy and dog did. Mad Brook was rearing when the dog reached' it foaming over the steppingstones, but the moon was struggling out now, and shpwed a tree olown aeross from bank to beak. ; "Keep close to me, old fellow," said Jack, starting nimbly across. . Almost over, a doad branch snapped, and Jack felL He caught a limb with each hand, aud drew himself half out of the water; but ,the boughs swayed and creaked, and threatened to break, and Jack dare trust them no further. "Kh'a ml to hare the 'potecary

stuff," he sa'd, pulling the roll out tl bis pocket; while he hf Id unsteadily by one hand. "Here, Snap, take it an' go borne." Snap howled, but Jack reMated tne command, and Snap trotted

- . . i j .

houses in all the lursre towns, wkere

letters are forwarded to distant ports, to be distributed by special agents, wbe generally collect the postage from the receiver" There was certainly something co nib in the fact that when China was no longer abk to exclude foreigners from Pekin, our British postal arrangements were no sooner stabBslicd than some of the Imperial officials came to ask Sir Frederick Bruce to forward

certain Statti documents for them Between Pekin and Canton. On the death of the Emperor Hien-fung, which occurred jmt at that time, intimation thereof was sent from bis country palace (a distance of 600 H, which hi upward of 200 miles) in twenty-four hours, which is the highest speed attainable in China. But the placid Celestials, to luirrv anucars a form of vulgar

,.... - . . , l I 1BUI1UUIU v

impatience, ami to wnora xeiegrauiw v cl(iril)e. jt xa so bright aud I are an abomination, are content that j miM5h (regy,er, "Do vou, dear nrdinarv commualoations Should be ' . a,tnv that nnaaihla

, ,

conveyed eitner oy siow pauuung wi

ing boats, or else byfootrunners, whose high sounding title of "tho thousand mile horse" does not quiekea their

pace beyond about twelve miles in twen-' ty-four hours. They carry a paper Ian-1 tern and a paper nmbrella, and their

scWs Family

tmwLaT aeraln.

"Go home," rspeatod Jack, In his sternest tone, and Jack's word was law to Snap; so he picked up his roll, and

tares minutes iaer, we, uin.

sveross tne

Mataxint.

aATBDwhere with ours."

Miss Jane eaught a fllmaoo of CalUta's face. "You pig. Jans Sewall, ftowkiek over the whole trough btajroUtM't hTt OTlCyMilH !

opened the door for ..perhaps the bun dredm time to le iW listen. With trembling bands she look the bundle and unthA the bottle, and, as aooa as CaUsla'a H7 rtlrtrad,

For a scurrilous article against the Hungarian Parliament, published in tt comic newspaper of Agram, Austria, the Scottrge, the editor, M. Zima, bai been sentenced to two years' Imprisonmeat wHh two footing days por Month, Tbepuhtitfcor wan mtonotd

0 w oWk4lnnnnl enaa'(nPSCoWlW(BW

Siun behind Vou. Sally:

he pushed me. Life, -Soon told . T.lltla tJLr.

Pareat'sjert " ' Teak theHe- . . ratwgorle. WKkout auwfcer. Boy atesgaaie 1 Cueumbw. Chicago Trthm. Young Foatberly (at a late hear) l Really, Miss Clara, it's very annoying,' but I had it on the tip of my tongue but a moment ago. I was about to say to say er -singular, but it seems to have escaped me.'' Miss Clara (coming to his assitance)-PosiWy yon were about to nay "Good-night'1 Ma. Featherly. AT. Y. Sun. They were walking on the beach, and as Claude Jield her little hand ho

murmured: "I love to be with you.

id J. feet dear? I

should not think that possible." And then he dropped her hand and tamed sadly away, his sighs keeping time to the surges as they lashed themselves to foam on the pebbly beach. iJeefe. Pretty cousin (to young doctor) So you "are a full-fledged doctor aro you, 'Torn?" Young doctor" Yes; X got my diploma last week." Pretty cousln-Have you any jrpeoialtyr Young doctor "Yes; I shall make end dren's diseases a specialty." Pretty cousin" Ah, yes, f see; and as ye gain experience In, your profession ye

will no awe to aiwnu ui injupw.

the imtoojj

Zr'

That's right Tom; begin at the button aad work your way up." Zrs'

'taffem-CrM Wad an4,

4'