The Exeter Advocate, 1889-7-4, Page 6AR DEpospf geye her. . _It whs. of _ no _cone( weeneot thh The prtesidehtttrearelthr itdttough, wetted.
cestaer sue, may he IL
her tenton o theugatabee 'emitter Olt A women , end heea awe-- A. taileeve at b:iii7 atitit, $q peordZaitle left the you inighe—I doubt if yoa mead be sued for
-- clong et. Bat a ift nOt Eil 111132 thIng tO do.
IlY THE BEV EDWARD EVERETT }SALE) D I). I bellonite;essvileathaV glen: r°1,1°03:4 reatbieetilo ig)goltdiaet. If ie herd teen you VOttitt $0t te it% a0Abt
areee than ehe bed kno'wn. yourself." a • '
------ —
CS -AFTER V. • • Fortunately she did not underettead that, "Thee& you," sald, Edith. "Yoa feel j ast
,, If anybody had tiuppoeed that the *AA die- ds I do." Bait be clia hob lett her go en,
ditli Lane reselved onoe and, agate ewer 1 honeet in egerarawin; her hmew emcee:ate ,e*You ese," he mad, "your unkaorea cornea,
fdtb°r'd rrdar° tb°t ebe we'lia tell lam1 she could have Men arrested ' Wore pendene raight appear trOlUOTIIWY morning,
dual'ehe had 1°et ter bonds'. But all day be she left the building. Thie would hot and yeil. woold want to have her reoueY
.Y74 at 142.4 6'6 3E4 and ean11114e be be Te- have happened, heweverr la any eircuM- ready for her. Yoe would, da meth better
edema rho heted to tell lame and eee put it sane, to her father's (laughter The Wier; to borrew Yourself at Your hook et of amyl.
"tg' '41' 'ccrniug'E`gh momhag he Wa4 in erley Book WM a hew haok, and the 'peop - friend. ,
"be 1°r Ma br"d°adbr and the 1)°°r girl were very glad that be held brought her "I have ER inahy !deride," and Bath,
Whildtd: oft again. After the (second oe these acconnt aed plaeed it therm 'Elith retired more bitterli than. 40 Ineaat4, "tat I OW
rree she had AO 014000: .:4151 014 edme to her carriage with as geed gra ee se she nob select, end I am afraid my tether would
thafteramverty the found a note from. her father ear ceald and bade Jenees to Wee her b.ome. ,hretohealy anseyed if he haw./ was in
ttliA eater)1 t& heereally it le frona DO fault
hone in e ea frern ere early erchery
(log that be was called to New Yerle. Vale ...”....,.,..........
of mine. I caineob well borrow at the bank
-was (allowed by a telegram, fromrleeNew Yo015APTER VI,
defog be ego eined 1.6 London, And an She 133(1.4everat caurses before her. "int, with°Ot soYloki thot he hos been careless or
peer Edith WA3 loft to her own newly ac- h''''' e'llIdtelegre'Pb. to her father 14 f"adu 'illeipg Peopleliejek e°' It
glvee a certain
.etereeo rerui be tarn/wind her own. humuess "1 am disgreeed and without moneyk Whai Pohlioit7 to the mistoho he made when he
glen 1 der atozood„,,4 a tom the thenght that fer .41.X. W.,ekskQoula—paddle
WJaet an becenle very cleer Waa that tb"gh "i:e4BIY—elle coda ge to II?' my '"'"'"'"44
,. ip
-dor the nexe six wee
retie trent heee uearey. wedeee, tbie is Efoulos Witherspoon, who had christened leer 1 do not think there s such ublleityron 4.3,- asm he, good natur-
al,* whioh gehedelin becomes clear to meet twentY"Yeers ago, and bad reeeived her into us. You fear.
/utopia in modern ece4ety. Elith gut made the Ortureh Six years ago, and lovell, her as edire 4' the bank neePlo would be onlytoo
mistakwhicmany other edie melee
her father did. • , , fled to lend your father's daughter anything,
.
of thinking that it will do aoy geed to eay This. would have been the wieest thing for t °d° b) °lest ee'ellY otroo3ed. Row =lob
the e h we
4toui. "1 znwit have e,me -money. g she her to do; but she hed a eease of inertidee- do You want•II
"$
„egg thin to the lond zhie twee „ ,he ton winch hindered her from doing ads. 05 I want as reach as 230 These are
,treeeed hereof, But no money came from !Theo the thought over thelietof her inether's ell the subscrldrfeete papa likes Me to make 1 She read tile note through and then went
was no 0,,,,,,ble. The nomegeoper lied be,o 1 and there was not one of them whom the The young mem laudleed liehtlY, as she toTehle4prhotettr'tieeftloerni, and he tolef:aketkleod the Oat, .4e to boueoteep/og 1414 wages here told friends =mug the ladiea of Temwortb., erdrra— '—
,upped_ But for hereeif, Elia, knew liked as a cemmeller. he she remember- tI3°°24t297.
.
"Peadon mee' he 04a. ".Froaveyour “gollo
,
there would be trouble very goon, 1 ed a eerinen which Dr, Witherepocia lead
the tone I thought yon were gome to say two 44Dees Mr. Antony Bleke live he the St.
She at 4400 PtIlet4Oli en short ellowain1Q. 41100"Zralneea waatewwItes byereVeleile,naitntleiaga buadred and afty th.u.aod. 1 wieh, Mise Clew Tee --
Edith, yon would let me bed it to you my- "Mk Mr. Antony Wake it he can come
116 bop. She P°35e'' cue" ao had told thena they ahead net elm away
meet attractive beek derma %ragtag, *' reded from their peteexmeo, hot =Auer leow thee, aelf. Yhai heve been kind enough to ask my to No. 99 Cnrwen street." '
eee not into temptetion.." She went ea ,ece: , in tie fete end idnd out how greet they Medea. di iii nou be good. enough to take lu ten minutes Mr. Antony Blare was
ley whieh 1 mewe the aever tee& the peoplete .4bad taika „vial tiet Inpg before bed tow her Edith was ACANT taken wheglfy elm*, She thlaeirL.4B°ugishe!p 4N;414q111141PfeAs:tteoelbt1141.4ybota' ,
if she eould nee ride m her owa eerriege ; were. doe reraembered *et some menthe g'
. .
cAllaAge—tTati ac-reet car. She wee even that the torning veiot of Rileinson ornesea, had, Ohellen her Adviser—as he Wel, ilere but whe are Forge! mid Evelyn!'
mean 0AQUe4 to put 4 niekel hate the eau- fortueee comes is the mcgrmAt wiletk IA, fews was a propoeal witieh wonld lift her tut of "I am sure Ido not UPOWt 1 wish 1
teilentien hes et, ehuroh; tatting In eV) very hioveroenmes. 1)4 snrnn piens of pspsz. the depthie Var. the inetant ehe felt that he said rni telly.
,
eew where the dean wee alweye eure et a ? be hod, with am= Ina he bad ,...ad„,,, he wrote if orily she had the three hits of peper he Poor Elide She ceulel have dropped on
tiV0 dollar bill. Bet then Edith made an 1 them 491,74 m. the,e he eteoe look at them epohe of the (Mould be perfeotly happy. rho door for her dieeppointreent.
%cement at tithe, an iteleranly Pledged heruoll end eee what they ,, ere, i,t.th tool, a eheet She eeold age the two notes of one hrie "What did you Mon thOPR 14r. Blake,
for every nickel elm laid On the altar to 'tot e0te r5per 464 proceeded to eerwo down dred—and 0140 note of fifty—Picea two 0 YittOU Yon eeid Silly and Billy, Evelyn and
164" te° aliccd. Inn wIl°4-144"144d 3.• them The lietteole the followlug order ; — 0041 aPPe"e4* (421P arlel eleen, amlend Ash' Forfine'!"
llser dild, she knew the diiferenee between ,d 1. I 4111 4 food, by ma ditty, befere be numbs eye. She had read the words forty thotee while
Bat ahe diel riot waver, even for that he was coaling,
'Tilt tUentlThernieclevelleknedptgugQp4atlearariligey,311' 1 tmt 1 b°11t1" I am a t'll't°/ but 414 not P4' 4tAAt. ger meaner was kind. enerigh, het Now It Was Ma tera to blubmei stammer.
veenomiee do not ereete XARUOYI 1 I have no =awe,' ebsolutely Arm Aa 0110 deellned. " YOU Aro Nor did. he see hew Jager yeas the oriel&
And It eeeuled a4 ft- 4f4v4 W4V4 til5 11.11- i 4 I heve tokem from the WaverIcy ,BAnk #1,b5 rIgnt In mtYlog fiehd 1 had better ask
expected ezpontee ee terrible, ThOu haree scry7 willeb 1 had no right to, tho bank peopie. I will certainly do tee
a bill ler AtalUM OfAta at the cemetery wilieh 1 By eaderht: up the amount of her eheeke Yon are very kind, end X shell atwaya he
her tether had forgotten. Edith promptly '• Alla compartrg lb with her own aecotiet the
rd Ala thAt. Theta came her allotted ealee.eripd '13a4 f,,,,,,,a the fetal roietaire %Awe showed
d.on et the Sheltering Arms, leer aseestreeee 1 thoc woad of har-ing s.. iii in the hank she
at theLealge xtelietaaaci the Sewing Women'e had taken en t 647 more alert nee ehould hare
Bet I think the etanctara of America is
higher and better. I bope the standard of
Tranworth is higher and better. I think
men and women meet eaoh other with
mutual re -spent and. muteal emaddeaces, It
DOt veto that we go to the Bailee tichoole,
work in the /SUMO cense"), study in the same
circles and, in a word, live in the same life,
Ityou and I were "Henry mid Emma," or
"Paul and Virginia," or "Silly and Billy,"
or "Fergue and Evelyn," or, any other rib.
seed people in a novel,. of emerge you veonld
met edieb. te have ree beln Tau th huY geld'
sble way l 41241 I should never Phil* of pro-
posing to. Bet seeing we Ara PiMa Tam-
worth people, reeinbore of the Alamo ohorch
end eflirere. in the same cirelee I see no
hum
lo. whet I have (1,0E4 awl I will not
A FIGHT WIT' FI A BUFFALO.
An ineident 0O. au Afro n Wain.
We had left the Crimp Elver, mad were
"trekirieg" slowly ecrose Bastetoland. Oae
afternboo two at three hours before sun-
down Iva reaOked 4kt:teller slight elevaticiat
up this the weary oxen clambered., etrain-
tng at Weir yokes with reddened epee and
streamlegefienkee The day had been, ederch-
lag aed, the take ;Andy. Up Off hill we
intended to *anteater). and enetanp .to the
night, My freiod Wein). and. I had walked,
on ahead, and theeefered manna the thaw
mit of the. hill drate—what sighe met us
There, before' tier etretelted hantenee
rolang •fer as the eye coad reach ;
Dothan* but a great 'femme Ilea of tantelaad,
say do.
Truly yours, Ammer nearte,
that seemed to dwerthy ;its immensity a
belt or forest trees too the emit) wbere e
When Elith cine home late from long. shining river slioare like" silver 'ribbon,
drive which She bad taken in the country windieg in and gut 'amid the deae RAJ:
tios noto wee waiting -for her.- - age, '
See read it morethau half through with hgroole look 1" endleimeed paint.
approval of the Young fellow's tale* and leg .and adeeedied oot het emir nth,* land
pErviedles, ndBthu wwhometgasee mdoamet4t2oZnordguRautargl wanadve:taltiqkz wtiiteusellacto,whaitt wa*le, ito!" larusto;erin
The very earth seemed undulating before, enceor, In fact, relief did not oome 'uatil
tile0Fawpaesr.ehe cradY herself! Dirl she eee *fee (toil dheer Bergmann, -the Idetch Wen,- after two cif the crew teed rea0110a Jamaica
worwwerlielethhewre"eevnerot tthweorePeoale In love Baliskarer, nPtratsingul)irom."Wthtlainad lbeVin' myth°
with each other with theee two names I as to the belie no -
"Animas," he replied, was true; we
had happened upon a great and wonderful
migration,
seven years," said. the trader,
this mime place; large droves of eminuile
MOW frOM One pasture bud to another ; AS
they pr.:mead they gather more herds till
they swell to the numbers WO SC* before as;
they're in millims."
It was atupendoua a sight that no pen. can
do jaetice to the picture ; from the wagon we
brought our deld-glaseee and 40,0 watehlog
them; the ueareet, About two milee away,
were hada°. Teem eeemed no limit to the
dark, shaggy creaures. For away to the
dietance were gineffee and oetrichee, their
aleuder neche Man egalest the ay; be-
tween them mod the buffaloes were gnus,
veldebeeate, spriniiboke, gazslies, koorlooe,
antelope?, every kind and variety of deer
that roam the great plebe of Afroa.
Ail were moving slowly along, and ail,
eept the gireffea and oetrichea, bad their
ade dawn feeding, geadoelly eetleg their
way, devourioe the somewhat X0AtItY herb.
age before them. They would go an till
they roe:lied the rich lands where their in.
atinete were taking them, where they would
be gradeally dietributed as circumstances
and their breed might direct therm
When the wagon with ita white caevea
hood, hove in eight end, then OW to a«
etaedeeld on the hilltop, It caueed eeree ex.
eitereeet In the herd of beffelees tieereet to
BOTWAAttAs utter givihg diteetione to
the Kr- trice ter the oetepenutog tor the night,
come up to Elche end myseit and euggeeted
our gettin A eta At A bAir410 Ca There
is AO tiVIlight 41f4ies, after the tau hae
nee repldly grows dark, so there 'wee
am flow to be leen
We reeanted our berets and rode away
lute the "veldt," ele we galloped along
the turfy plain we aew that the beffdoee
were inereeeing their Armed, wed preeently
a great dun colored cloud of fine duet roe
Into the aim The animate nearest to •us
were naming, only these; for toweled, the
;nyriads were still quietlyprogresaing, feed.
log as the" wenb. " Noe so feat," cued B tr. the older Egyptian mummies the face of
gwann keep to the rear; they would the outer geeing le enmity. modeled in relief,
ireraplm to death if we ow; headed them." la a purely cotter:mama way, but In them
We rode s couple of miles with our rifles leteat form of buriel under the Romeo £n.
In our hands. Bergmerin in advaace ; then pireft portrait of the decreased was pahated
with a quick moventent.—he was epienella on a very thiu piece of wood and then fixed
or—he /Log himself from Ma saddle, lev. over the deed face. It le Tiny remarkable
eled his gun audible], the well.trained horse to find such floe coloring and nkillful draw-
etanding perfeetly mill. He than vaulted log in work of thie late ditto. which must
into his IlAddle again and mime on. He had him been turned out of an mammy under -
aimed at n oaf, hub mimed, and hit an old taker's workshop. Tho portraits, both reale
held The courageous Ixeast stood waiting and female, aro moat vivid and lifelike; the
for as, thereby. metering the retreat of the latices are raostly dreesed In a purple gement
herd that thundered along. in dusty awiltneze. and the mon in a white, with a red orphrey.
Beier° we reached the anemia, however, he The modelling of the flesh le very. skillful,
turned, and with raiglety bounde followed and in some cases tlas coloring reminds one
of the Venetian school irOtA rich depth
the drove.
Agaln the bull turned and. faced us, wait- of tone. A special pant of interest about
ins, pawing up the ground, and clexeribitg those paintings is their technical execution
short circles as we approached. in the hot manor encawstio 1)1'00tee as it
1 dismounted and fired. lnatently the was called. The pigmente wore mixed with
buil charged; Baginann and Blotto were melted wax, and then fixed in their place by
now between the hefuriated animal and the holdiog a charcoal brazier near the madam)
fast -disappearing herd. Eloho was, in fact, of the painting, as is deeorthed by Vitruvlue,
on the ground, and as the bull swept round The sotnewhet lumpy impaeto of the 'surface
be fired. The animal stumbled clumsily, is dne to tie° hardentng of the melted wax
but tho next recond he was up again, hie when the brush touched the cold surface
muddy aides flaked with foem, as, snorting of the panel, owing to the non-absorbent
with anger, aud with lowered front, he rush- nature of the wood, the stzbeequent epplica-
ed upon the enemy. "To the left ld flout- tion of heat was nob able to drive the
ed Bergmann, as Moho sprang into the sad. wax below the surface, as was the
dle and gave his horse the erne But the mute with encaustic painting upon stucco.
horse, not obeying the rein, only raced for. One of theee portraits is noticeable from its
ward, while we heard the roar of the wound- ornamental framing with a flowing pattern,
ed %led maddened bull in pursuit of him. formed by preaarg wooden stamps upon soft
Moho rode thus a couple of hundred yards, stucco, Valk& WiU3 afterward gilt, a. process
tugging at the reins, and then in wheeling exactly like that which was so often used to
from the straight course, the horse suddenly decorate teedireval pictures on panel, eepeci-
ally retables, or ancone, as the Venetians
elipped and fell.
The pace had been terrific, and the impetus called them.--[ rhe Saturday Reviesv.
shot Elcho out of the saddle, while the
horse rolled over and over. Another minute
ad the bull had fallen on the horse with
indeioribable fury, Then, with head thrust
sideway, the better to uee the curiously
curved but formidable horns, the buffed°
commenced his savage onslaught. Bergmann
raced up after he had seen Elcho spring to
his feet and join me; but it was too late to
save the horse, a valuable animal ; the poor
brute was stabbed and gored in a shocking
manner, Pend could not hops te survive its
terAtiabBlelwreomunadner;
rode up, the bull waited in
front of the prostrate horse. The Dutohman
fired ; the bull tossed his headand etoodstill.
handed him my rifle and received his empty
one, into which I slipped two cartritdgee.
" Ride round slowly,' said the Dutchman,
"and fire after my next shot." I had Moho
behind me on my steed, and therefore could
not execute any racing maneuvers ; besides,
our horees were getting winded and the sun
was beginning to go down. The bull received
the contents of Bergmann'e second gun, and
dropped on his knees bellowing. Then I let
drive, as wed as 1. could see in the fast com-
ing darkness, at the spot behind the shoulder.
The bull rose, staggered blindly forward and
fell again. Bergmann and myself, then rid.
ing up, dispatched our fallen enemy. We
were alone on the empty plain. Five or six
miles away we could. see the fire at camp, to-
ward which we turned our horses' heads, and
rode slowly homeward. •
SHiPSMD SAILOBS.
-Adventures oreastaways In the Carrthheale
Sea.
•Nine ehipwrecked Balers lived for over
tines weeks, in April lest, on a deeert island
only thirty miles from the emetheast% eoroer
of -Jamaica. Tney were %entirely, naked, for
in their terrible struggle to get aettowe after
their bark had found.ered 00 a oral reef,
they legit all thew clothing. For two days
they were without drink, but they finally
obtoined by digging, a EnW1 supply of very
heackish water. They had no amens of
kendliog a fire, and were compelled to eat
their food raw. They is00011 few dome.
nuts, caught a few hirde _WI 0. number of
SeA crabo and eked out their very meagre
diet with"eonee little mote like the common
wbite radial. • Thar story is all tlae mere
intereetieg beoeuse
°ear ii:AVetZTIIIIX OCCURRED
in the Weep Indies, withle a +Alert' distance
ot the large town of Eingeton jernaica,
'where it would hardly be believed that ship -
Wrecked sailors could euffer se long without
Friend. The 0AWQ 4i;01"00013 CA010 A IUG4 dnue.
Igo= the Okleteme free etheol, Ever y iltboa wag-, 00-
1*d of tier avilueautatioe bud Imo' 5 1 owe hottext tradespeople wIto have
.orilted. SW. D,r..„S.,V,it,theraPc°4 4,4 ere?9rt4'" traeted me $17211.
mended le, 4LAt 00, kt4074. tbAhr $440 6 wi$11 bal. as uraob ee the
01tPL'ittf a to taelelib04 Eldiese appeal" were home, if It were only to beep up decent
made, indeed, from' 000 Alla another theater npptererece rill dada geta home.
'4hAri?.Y. 4Ur/ a ClialaX tha jAY 4 t. In bite, have Sid 97. eappeee the
levee and all her qnseterly bine. The foot. heatekceper weld lend me eemethiug, but
Ing was terrible. And she with se little in a4 not like to ask her, end, hove= rizht
Isar pseket, and, if there wes rely virtue te weave the family.
4d004014 40; +540 in t110 W4wrloY B4uU. Blida eeld to herielf, "1 vrourler it 1
lith, e° th° '21 at 3c137 did wbe'r ceeld not herrow $209 of somebody. I thirtk
*r w°44 base done' $4° ordered er if I were 4 =AA should know how to
coupe and bade JAMtO take her to the Aram 1i horraw d2Od. observe in beam that mica
vitae again. It was j peasible thet the awed,/ .`betrow motley when they want it.
things might Iteve elmeged therneelves beck I do not ree why exunot bdurrow this
*pin. money."
The warder', knew her and told her it was
°VhwohlY—welii you Bee—well, I once
had some letters --1 th ht they were love
lettera--addreeeed to Evelyn Sernebody and
grateful to you for year wttlingueaa, Bet it Fergus Somebody,. 1 do not know who the
will be letter so," iSoreebodye were. The lettere were not
"1 hope you are not offended,' said he, miae. I pet them away."
somewhat roedly. "YAM mem) to he die- "Where diel you pet there? Where are
the now /1'
"Where 1 They ere in ray seta at the
Amicithie, I weak I ktiew where they 00gItt
to be."
And Edith was beeself nein. "Mr
Blake, 1 think It is for me to turn ever to
50n SIUDID property el yours I have here
belted, I dld not steal it. Bat are no
these Cattereugue bonds Yours, oud this
houdred dollars, perhaps, too r And she
bended him the well known parcel.
teessed, 're are not in a novel. I wanted
to be at use, bat ie
" Offended—how eauld I he e trawled ," geld
aim, "1 asked for intermetion and allele*.
0.0 WO gleen me both, I atoll get ant et
ray treuldee new, I etre, Aud I Oval thank
yea/or thewleg me how. Will you not mere*
in? lie? Geed night, then," MA ehe
geve him her hand. "Flew tle not think
I am ellehdedg,"
It Was very qneer. If they hed rally
known, all would. have been well. For Cali
president
of the Chautauqua Circle was An- 1
may Blake. Ato It was thOY both went home
__..„(1 for two or three holm neither of them Mr. leere's absence in Eagleud was pro.
went to Sleep, "Ought I have sad tide': lagged, and it WM September before he re -
Why did I sey tha t V in all peaelble formtureed. Edith met him at the Temworth
*pleesant mornieg, aa it was. But it oscine CHAPTER, VII,
ree E eith that they looked en her with an appened theta WA the cereals%
ingedriug Ai if they wondered that the
dared to come. S she braced herself to 1°r.tidard°,tiug tha (.113"014111"n Cir°1°
tom
deer duty. She gthe wade number and. w.,b1,4 Ellth belonged. The girl had tether
S
eite produced her hey, at telltale the bolt now tweet et gay today, Atter the tet two
wintere that followed her " ceming out."
reac k at the tight moment, jest AR it does la
be "Forty Totowa" She mewled the tin She had danced gaite well, the had. received
the had tested twit
box oat to the very same cell she lead a good deal of otteation,
occapied before, She felt as if the wore a oupPrattY thoroughly, and them witletiat
been.; comical at all about it, she thought
nun ea a convent. She opened the box and
there was nothing there. Inmate waited r'll° bad timkabutas much it as ab°
wFated. Oa the other hand, .SOTOO near
a little—poor child, tide was to deceive the
warders. Then elie looked the box and friends of hors had engaged in the Chauten
it back. She dared not look them quell °earn of readino ; the was sitting with
nerried
day, but them one evening when some reading
dm the fete as they bade ber good felt ?loud went om and found bona/ intereeted
neer in every bone that they disepproved
ea her and even corned her. sadly and in the :gelid and practiced work which they
elazietfully she bade John tab° her home had engaged in. She thought rightly that
am" he did fedi elm had time to mare up some back work,
An idea had craned bar in the cell, The • and rent to Pialefield to connect handl
deoude ettehad in place of here were not here. - with the circle, and had become one of the
n. But they took emplace of hers, Row, t most diligent of the readere.
This accident determined her now in the
rem she could not eat eff tier own caopoes and
deposit them in the Waverley Bank as her choice of her advieer.
tether he.dtaugbt her, might not elle honeet. 1 She bad meant to day to make some after -
Ey cut off then coupons and deposit theta ' mon vial°. But tho day was hot and the
when the mantel:it mime, by her ownl alt sultry, and she trade this an excuse for
.It is (lithe clear, dear reader, to en in- sending William with her carriage back to
atraeted conscience likeyours and mine,that
the stable. She would go to Vincent Chapel
In the evening. And to Vincent chapel she
elm might not ; but Edith had acoustereed
hermit to think of then coupons as so much I went. lb was the last meeting of the circle
,
money, and as she certainly would have before the mutineer raceme
She had been °hooey secretary and record -
OU somany greenbacles had she left them 1
er of the Gill Circle at the meeting in April,
In hoe Mx and found. them there without
to tee if they were the bills of one and her record was carefully prepared. It
doeskin
was the year for Englieh history, and they
bank or of another, se she etipposed, though
had set alien the subject—always interest -
aim suppond wrozgly, that a coup= of the
cuteteugue and opakma erso =nay „ ing to young people—of Mary Stuart, for
their evening diecussion. That happened,
tray es a coupon of the C, B & Q , if only ,
which is apt to happen, that all the women
i•te, were &led mghtly.
were very bard on poor Mary, while all the
She was A little confused when she found
theta° coupons had been cut off the Cettexe.. men defended her. As there were more wo-
and Opeloneas bonds for five years
meg than men, the men had to stand well to
ages
butt little did she know of the weaknesses of their grms-
"I understand the president very well,'
that enterprise. She didknow that her quer-
said Edith, firmly. "I meant to do justice
%sea eenpone on her own bonds would have
t
se -laded her Veen ; she made mat that amount to his argument before. But it seems to me
to mean this— thab because this woman was
,as well as the could from the Cattarangue
and Opeloueas conpune, took no mow) than pretty she is to be excused for being wicked,
;
and that because she was a woman ib is to
.‘rbd, =cad, wrote a memorandum of what
alee had done and pinned it-npon the comma
elm said, "1 may die," and ehe re-
x/leathered that she had heard her father say
that some written memorandum must be left
Tor the 'benefit of executors.
;She then ordered her carriage again and
be expected that she will act like a fool."
They all laughed heertily at this, and the
president hestened to say that this was not
the centre of his position ; that Mary cer-
tainly had been very badly educated, &o.,
&e., &c., and that Bothwell had, ent., &3,,
&a, and that John Knox had &3., , &O.,
Deride to tbe TtiTaverley Bank. She handed her
bank book to the teller, as she had done
doefoem and the man bowed, as the other
men bowed, and said it was a fine day. She
-oleo said it was a fine day, but the apell did
mot work, When he looked, at the empties
dm made no entry in her little book. Indeed,
he thought, he started, and he oroosed the
rroom and spoke to his chief. The attentive
chief at once came to the window.
-"Miss Lane," he meld, "your father has
=Ede 0 mistake. These are Cattarengns
Opelousas coupone, and you know it is long
ninee those could be negotiated. I think
worm coupons are C., B, and Q., C. IL W.,
and from United States betide, are they
meted
"Are these not just the something?" said
Eaith, feeling as if she should sink through
the ground. know nothino about it, only
found them in my safe." Here she held
relasely to the truth.
She could see a vague male of contempt
mass over tha cashier's face as he said, "Well,
/don't know what hopeful people would say,
Wise lane, only them things have no value
-en the market. Bring es around your C.,
ge. d Q.. and we will wall them for you
J1
41 -
Then, as he was turning away, the teller
*Whispered to hive again. ma he said, "Do
motgive youreelf any trouble, but you have
overdrawn your mount a litele."
Poor Edith cua not known what this
meant, and he explained that she had drawn know not from wliom, lt i lyang
10.011!want simpl.,y to say that you are unmet are to poor to buy one for her. The young
=ore money, from the bank than she had in
desk —mewed. *Shoal You thin might to me if you think so. I know that from the woman's name is Judwiga Janina Bogus
tit, that this would be made clear to her as On that, as af it were 'lent to rue, and standard of the novel writers of fifty years Tawska Plotatow Trybuneaski Utica Moe
mho looked at the cheche which the teller -
pay it when my father cones home l" ago my proposed was no.,13 to be heard of. kiewskadoneDolinekiogo.
and. 00 013, and so on, as may be imagined.
"Still, I cannot see that bhis changes our
opinion on the question whether she did
right or wrong."
This WAS the unflinching reply of the
stern Edith. "It shover' why she did
wrong, bat it deem not show that he did
right—unless the president means that when
a woman dresses her hair in a becoming
way, and invents a new headdress, she may
do as she chooses." it to market. It is true that the gradual
After this it may be imagined that the Very truly yours. introduction of Eoglith, American, German,
president and Elith were very good friends EDITH LANE. and even netiveemade machinery has done
John found Antony at the St. Clair, where much to aid him in his harvest operations,
till nature and youth wetted themselves
and the provoking converseelon was forgot.
ten.
etetion, with the carriege, Wining hlealionie.
"1 hove ne much to tea yen, papa, and I
do not kuotwbow to begin."
"It ia clear Wit it is good news," eatti he,
"You look so well. And you are %good ere.
CHAPTER VIIL man of butiloess---thet has eppeared all
iitle retie the next morniug With A AWN threuvh item your letteree,
solution, She went to her omit ris aeon ae "That yea wUt home to tuede af, pa,ps.0
brealefent vvg4 over r'nd wrote thf° note At thee moment as they crowed the atation
"LETT NOS LOST,—.& parcel of aix let -
with a white ribbon. The fluter will
tern, dated in May, I893, and tied together hand, warmly end lurked him to emu) and
thee:divined liberally rowarcied if he 'era gland
a note to G. R. at the Rost Office."
This advertieement she inserted in the
Argus of that day. The hope *he had was
welt enough founded: Bute alas Autony
hated the polities of the Argus, which pre.
tended to be an independent paper, and was
on any aide which the proprietor thought
proftteble. Antony novet looked at any part
of the Argos, least of all at the advertiew
rants. Se poor Eitel not= aught hese are and all of thorn are pram? about him.
been published a month and he would hew) "Bat,
been none the wiser. Edith, he Is no otrangerto you; you
need to know him. He is the sarne main 'who
On his pub, he went to the Waverly wae in your reading club."
Bank and asked the °latter if he would lend 'Tea
pape—end, papa, he has asked me
hem $24O, "Whet vollaterale said the
cashier, who was his old ally and friend.
"None," amid Antooy, =len you will
take the* In the ftelt-Aoting Coupler Cor-
poration, not yet organized. But if you
woad endorse my note I think the direct-
ors wenld pass it."
"Nonsense," said tbe cashier. Bank
rules will not vermeil that. Bat if you
want 5250, old fellow, here it Is. Give rae
a memorandum and pay me when you like.
Make it to me. This knot the hank's mon-
ey, ib is mine. Yon knove I am glad to RU"ia:8 tnorroons 'Wheat Crop of 1888.
serve you." A British Consul General in Benda writes,:
Antony thanked him and said, what was ((The harvest of South Russia in 1888 was
true, that he would do as much for him oven larger than that of 1887, for not only
gladly. Then he went to the Amicable was there an abundant) fall of snow to pro -
reading room and wrote to RIM this let- tact the growling crops from the icy blasts
ter :—
Ate Iszr BLAKE TO EDITH LANE.
her father sew Antony Blake'
preseed his
ahwthem, which Antony mad he would gled-
ly,do.
*That young ran," eald Mr. LA1103, 5,1 they
entered the =nag!, one of the most sue-
ceseful young moult, this State, Whynoliffe
has beau Wring to me about him half the
time AO we came on from New York, Why,
Edith, he has an Invention which will save
thousands of lives andmuut ba wed on every
railroad. He has cetabliehed A new maohine
shop here to mato biaconplinge, end Myra -
to marry him, and I have told him I 'would
aek you. But redly, paps, he is the beet
man m the world, and .1413.0 never marry
any one else."
Thus was It that Edith made her revela-
tion. It was not n ntill the wedding day,bow-
ever, that she told her father that the now
machine shop was built with the proceeds of
the sales of her governmente and C., B, and
WEDNESDAY MORNING July 3.
MY DEAR MISS LANE—AEA absolutely
have these Mlle in my hand 1 take the lib-
erty cf asking you to use them as you will.
There is no reason why you should have the
annoyance of eddreseing the officers of the
bank. Please imagine me to he epresidenb
of the Waverly Bente, as well as -tresident
of the Chautauqua. Circle. Very truly
yours,
KE
BLA.
So poor Edith aOtIlOaly EltiW her way clear
to pay all her debts by incurring this one
very pleasant debt to this one very gentle-
manly man. She asked the eervanb if the
bearer were waiting and Wati told he had
gone.
"Send Johla to me. I want to send a note
down town." Y
EDITH LANE TO ANTONBLAKE.
DEAR Mn. BLAKE—YOU are most kind.
Bat already I see my way out of my embar-
rassments, and I return the notes at once.
em a raf
The hark Gettysburg of Aberdeen wao Ofl
.her way trent Mentevideo to Peneaceiti
when, on a dark and stormy Aight, she
etrack on a reef outside the Iderent Keys,
and in e few minutes sank in deep water,
Seven of the crew were drowned, bat Capt.
Stewart and eight men, after clingleg_to the
wreekege until daylight, sacceeded in get-
ting athore, BaU eterved, terribly b'istered
and burned by the bet sup, and wine of
them so weakeeed by their struggles in the
sea as to be almost helpless,they were from
gree to last ie a meet pitieble eeedition,
There le no telling how long their aefferiega
would have continued if they had net at IRO
Bee meded in reeking A inkit vat tbait bore two
et the mete eafely to &titmice.
Oula et an eld piece of haegieg, some bite
of blanket, and a Mattress that had washed
shore they oontrived to the some oils for
thele retie It was get three week's after
they lencled on the bland that ammo and
Allan, two sailors, aterted for JAMAIOAe
trtg PAOVISIONS
they carried were all the coemmute that &
were left no tee bland, apiece of pork that
bad washed up on the beeoh, end mile pints
el water in old bottlee they bad found 00
the Island. The raft eank eighteen inches
below the water in the centre, hub at the ende
it was alightly elevated above the surface.
The meu were too weak to stand, mod during
the forty eight holm requieed to oil thirty
mike to JiMalea therwere constaatly m
water up lo their waists, Lending near
tlerent Bey, they were pieked no nearly
dead iv= exhauation teed taken to Hie/eaten,
where they were kindly coxed for. Relief
was promptly sent to their coreredee, and
the whole party were landed In England a
few weeks ego.
The Pacific has of late yeere been the moat
prolige eceuts of eutaway stories; but the
thrUuug edventurce of the crew el the Get-
tysburg *how that sailors along our eastern
shores may aitql meat with experlencea now
and then of the "Robbie= Crime" order,
The OR Etyptian Encaustic Process.
of winter, and copious rains in the early
summer when the grain was approathing
maturity, but a favorable autumn had allow-
ed an unmet breadth of land to be town,
and the peasantry had plenty of seed corn
to spare from the previous abundant haw
vesb. Everything had conduced to bring to
maturity the largest crop ever raised in this
region. Two other apparently fortuitous
circumstances conspired to render the sit-
uation exceptionally favorable, both to the
cultivator and the exporter. It was an-
nounced that the American crop was deft -
°lent, and it also happened, from causes
foreign to the present subject, that the
paper rouble had sunk to a lower value than
it had touched even during the Russo-Turk-
ish war. Never had fortune seemed to
smile more benignly on the Runtime land
owner than now. But ib was the very ex-
uberance of nature which brought into
stronger relief the difficulties of his pesition.
With acres of waving corn around him, he
had neither the hands necessary to reap it,
nor were means at his disposal for carrying
through the rest of that evening, and the
reader will not be surprised that, in the
simple and admirable code of Tamworth
and of that oircle, Edith asked him,
as they ate their ice cream together, if
he would do her the favor to walk home
with her. She had not liked' to fix a time
for the carriage, she eaid. He gladly agreed
to do so as any young man in Tanteworth
would hiave been glad to do.
So soon as they were well in the street,
away from light, Edith, who had etudied
oiat the whole =verso:time in advance
said to him, "I have a question of con.
science, on width I want the 'relviee of a
man—of a business man, My f ether to eway a yon nale
1. Vent
for six weeks. I find there is a misteke have at bottom, the fooling that you think!
about my money. and I have overdrawn at have taken a liberty and presumed on the
the bank an my account. Now, it happeee confidence whioh you gave me so generously
bhat I heve received 8100 by aocident ; I lust evening,
he had been bidden to go. and the extension of railways bee tended to
Antony did not quite like the note. It facilitate the transport of produce. Bob
seemed to Mm a little shorter or more sharp neither the use of labormaving machinery
than it need be. Anyway, if she could be nor the laying down of railways has kept
proud he could also. He put the note in pace with the growth of cultivation. In -
his pccket and turned it over in his mind, stances occurred to farmers leaving hundreds
all through a long interview which he had of acres of corn uneut and abandoned as
with the Iturarills, who had rient'for him fodder for cattle. 17Vhile grain has been
again. pouring into Odessa, and has been conveyed
Then he determined to call on Missplith to the -United Kingdom and Mediterranean
that eveniog. But lest she should be out he ports by a larger fleet of steamers than ever
wrote the following letter before visited this port, it is believed that
WEDNESDAY Aerharroora July 3, more than a quarter of the crop still re -
MY DEAR. MISS LANE —Liasb I do not mains in the bands of the producers, and
;uro to 't F I the local granaries are full to overflowing."
ale
An Eeglish newpaper has the advertise-
ment of a young, Polish woman who oaks
assietamme in buyeng a panto, as*her parents
The Best Precaution.
Charley (visiting a friend and surprised to
find him with his head tied up and his arm
in a sling)—Why, what in the world is the
matter with you, Harry?
Harry—Run over by a cab while I was
coming home from a dinner party.
I say, old boy, you ought not to drink so
much.
Thatanot it, ()holly. There's no harm in
drinking, bub I ought to stay in.doore wheal
an Ugh%
Cow and Battler Fight to a Finish.
A fight to the death between a fine mulch
cow and a large rattlesnake occurred recent-
ly on the farm of hlr. Joseph Carter in 13ibb
county, Alabama. Mr. Carter had turned
his cows into a fresh pasture where there
was some very fine graze, which they began
to eagerly devour. A small ditch ran through
the pasture, and on its banks the graze was
very thick. The cows were feeding in a
bunch on the bank of this ditch when they
scented a rattlesnake and moved away with
the exception of one large bleak cow. She
stood for a moment looking in the direction
the snake was supposed to be. The grass
was very fine in that direction, and the cow
soon made up her mind. She ventured wat-
tle further forward, occasionally etopping
and looking about her, evidently trying to
discover the snake. She had moved forward
perhaps ten feet from the point where the
animals &at scented danger'when without
the customary' warning reettle the snake
Week and buried its fangs in the lower jaw
of the cow. The cow did not rue away, but
backing slowly a few feet the stood still sev-
eral moments lashing her tail from side to
side. Then, with a mad bellow, she plunged
forward directly toward the spot where the
ratelesnalre was lying hidden In the grass.
The snake was on the alert, and again struck,
burying its fangs in the animal's nose this
time. This seemed to madden the cow, and
she plunged forward, trampling the snake in
the ground with 13er fore feet and trying in
vain to pin it with her horns. The snake
was moon out and trampled to death, and the
oow died from the effects ef the two bites in
a few hours.
Proof Positive.
Miss Moneybags—lalalcona, a suspicion
lurks within me that you don't love we, but
want to marry me only for my money.
Malcom—You are so silly. Don't ryou
know l'r0 & member of the Amateur Athletic
The feeling seems to be that wheat should Union! ,
advance from the low prices at which it is, Miss Money baga—Well, what has that to
selling in Chicago, but there hi libtle evidence do with it
of it as yet, The crop Proepecte are report,MelCono—A great. deal. It bars me from
ed as brilliant • • taking pert in any event for motey. • • ,