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The Huron Signal, 1885-3-6, Page 2
r IIS LETITIA'S HEW. Wel, Mies Letitia, what de you think oaf er fresh antral 1' 'Yee meas, Madame, what du 1 think of It Taylor r 'flimsily,' 'Me has given sees a view idea. Pre- • toga to hoe edema 1 had uu ceueepasua d what meld be accomplished with an utter want of taste, and half • million of •Now, Letittia, you Image Ler toilets are elegant.' •Exlraveant, you meat., Madame. Madame tau„ hted and shrugged her shoulders. Women do lint t.aterally lose other women who outdrew thews. and though Mies Taylor was worth half s minims. and occupied Madame s beat rooms, she ranked in Madame's good a*iaioi considerably below Mies Letitia Betels, •hu only taught marc and sing Lag. Letitia could net dress extraveant• 1y, and Madame c,uld not dress extra, aeaatly, Let they had p:o.d taste acid clever fingers, and these two things re present money when cumulates come to be calculated. Madarne looked at Letitia bitting in the morning sunlight, and ad inirwi her. 'How well that girl understands her strong 'Matey she thosyilit. 1 great mtadit,-telLiat ebuttl.-it._ Hesk, and so trive her a chance above all the rest.' But Madame seldom acted un impolee, and so she wandered rousid :he handsome parlours, adjusting a certain, altering a picture, and throwing into a care(uLy arranged confusion prints and L ,.. s a..d dowers. Letitia seemed to he reedi:i., but she was not. Her eyes were ab -ate the level of her Look, and were idly watcbii g the groups sauuteriu} di'wn the street. She was thinking : 'I Isiah I did nut have any lessons to gine today; I wish i did not have any lessons to give at all.' Then she blushed, and smiled a little scornfully, shut her book with an emphatic little clash. The next modest she had stood up, and. bowed sigthtsy to an elderly beau who was lifting hie.hat to her from the t-ppssite side of _th_ street. Madame saw the w h..:e pantomime - the gentleman's chit...rate courtesy, the lady s conflicting express:0ns She saw also how beautiful Letitia was at this moiueut, for she stood in the open will dew, and the bright sunshine fell all over her white robe and pink ribbon,. and turne 1 her pale brown hair into a kind of glory. And Letitia was yet )dung enough to bear this white light : her cheeks had the delicate tint of a wild ruse, her eyes were Deft mud lerigbt, her form slender bet perfect. 'I will certainly tell herabnut this Mr. Hesk,' thought MadMie, and then, as Me was goiug to .peaky a .,uick Impera- tive tap at the d, or arrested her. 'Come ir,' she said, and with the per- mission a gent...man advanced with a rapid tread int.* the to„vii. Not a hand- some man, if the plates in the tai:ur e windows were the standard of mascuhue beauty, but still a man whose claim to it rested en something better than reveler features and atyliah coats and cravats. His face was one of great power, and bronzed as if he had set it far lung years against winds and weatl,tr. His t:ean- ahaae,l chic was square and tine, his eyes intelligent, deep set. and glowing with the spirit that indorsed than. Very tall and musettkat, he hada rapidity of moti•.n that was remarkable when taken in combination with the keen, searching Nick that accompanied it. Ile had a re {neat t.. male .of Melanie, and he made of in a few clear. lucid sertences, it regarded simply the put - tint up of some shelves in his easel, and the (earful handling of certain hexes that would arrive that day. About the latter he was very eml•hatic. On no account must anioue apt'r'ach them after they hale been de;.usi'ed there.' 1Imi'une received the eriler • little oddly, and dwmdid su.ranrly that alts would net introduce Mr Heal to her favourite ; but in the same uxmeut as she spade thus dcrsuou Mr. Hesk looked •t Letitia, mud l.ety:.a a;:ghtly tonne. The 1••ung 'eau did net speak, but Madame _ meteor understood him to say •1 wish t • i.e IIItt•,o,iceil t o the young lady, and the nett nim , , nt he use bow - ins: ',elan. Letitia. 1 have celled bin young. but hes was at least tiurty, and penally thirty rite, yrf'rs old ; it was the look of power end the at at•.aphrre of pnesibi.ity sheet him which iwusrted the idea of youth. He made a profuuid impress n ..11 Letitia. For the tint time in ail her soca memory elle lost her self Imessiiion blushed, and in a roust embarrassed alinn.r said a few commonplace words. Weyer had she felt so sahased t 1 her- asil : never, probably, in the eyes of any Haan had she looked se charming and so womanly. The interview was m•'men Lsry, but in that moment Mr. John Hak flashed over the eirl one vivid, Tepid glance, which trenbtsd •atitia's mesnry all day afterward. 'Whir is that. Madame r 'A gentleman who took the beck smite of par'oers last nigh. 1 was jest ruing ' to 1e'1 you about his when he came '1 really coma* say. 1..e aimaida sem, 1 presume, t..r Prelims Hymns introduced him to me. What de yea think .•f Lim r '1 should say he was as earnest, bard to beat man , very likely owe els.. has had to tight Lie own way through life' 'Handsome '' 'lies, I think su-very.' 'Still, Letitia, be is very likely pour. New. Cel.atel Selby is -' limn so the fifties - • personified serasgbt live.' ' .A very polished gentleman, thuagb.' •Ituultermbly polished. fie has nut aa angle left ; the angle. giro the diamond br !Iai.ey. It is the same with sive read women. Madame ' 'He has been rather attestors to Mies Teylo r lately. Yea trust mks care.' 'Likely, fee i have kept out u1 his way • Id it is embarraesisc for the Cutoael to to alums with iniuso1(. He has we one to act bus panto.' 'He is rich, Letitia, and ynu could wear costumes like Mies Taylor.' 'Ilestone, Madam. ! what have 1 done that you sh•teld bespeak such a fate for nee 1 1 prefer lay white merino robe, and pink ribbons at tae abiding* a yard ' 'Ile is building • beautiful residence, and when it is 6ueahed -' 'He will he for ecer .inpjag : le ii the hoose that 1 bMMI bow MMi the ,eau that Uvea r 1M t.' k you, Madame. b 11 have l osA elf desire to be the worrsan that married the man who lived i.a the b.eW., etc., eta, 'The feet is, Letitia, (het you have fallen in love with this Mr. Hoek, and nobody knows anything about him, child.' •You said Frofeset•r Symonds--' 'Oh, yes, certainly. that what does Profeesa.'r Sy monde know about anything but acids and sub -settle i My dear, the C'elonel is your best card.' 'Then 1 throw up my hand, that is s1).' •ineorritilale,T > a 'Yes'' la lure 1' •Nu ' 'Going to bei • Perh aorto ' 'You had tetter got* bard work.' 1 am going to give Cecile Meyer a music lesson ; if that is not herd work, will you give me a eta tgeetion t' •Nonsense ! t... away about your busi- ness, and see you dress yourself prettify for dinner. 'I intend to do so.' And Letitia fulfilled her intention. In fact. elm bought • new ev.sius dream of ewe pale rum -colored silken tissue, and when she had added to it a me pretty laves and a few white flame's, alio felt quite at peace with her own sense of self- respect. 01 course she had ae, advantage over the ether ladies. Their toilets were not fresh, and Mr. 'leek, laving a ready established a speaking .cgeatntsuce, naturally felt it a relief among sin many strangers to devote himself to her. Letitia was delighted to observe that he mute as profound a sensation en all the rest of the company as he had dam. on her The gentlemen disliked him 'on instinct ;' the ladies fell in leve with hien on the same unreasonable er••und. Letitia felt that it was g..it.g to be a battle worth of her steel, and her heart ruse to the occasion. From this hour she was a restless. anxious, and by no mean. a happy itrl. Thu fact wae,iu trying to win Mr. gesk's heart she had 1..t her awn, and at the end of tw , weeks felt that she was not sure that she had trained one step toward her desire ; for, though Mr. Hesk hever ed round ber choir when they wore alone and looked the things she weaned he would say, he Weser dad say • word ; and when the parlours were full, he paid her less attention than he paid t., others. Mill Taylor, also proved a more den genius rival than she had expected. She was rich, and she loved hugs and butter - lies, or at least pretended to do so, ano Mr. Hoek was a lunatic, Letitia thought, so that subject. Maur Taylor's ridiculous toilets, he elliteaid utterly oblivious to her want of taste and her odd mixture of colors. '01 course,' she thought. a little unjustly, 'when a rirl has half a trillion she man mix ctlors,and crucify i.'od taste every hour of the day, and still he 'so nice.' if i were to woar a crimson velvet drew to breakfast, everybody would say : 'What • horrid taste that Letitia Berne hes !' Rut 1 am not going to be beat --no, indeed '' it is tt'•t pleasant, either, for • girl to low publicly eves • boeu that she did not want. ietita certainly did not mire for Colonel Selby, bat his attentions in some respects had been s cceptabl , and, at as'y rate, had given her • kind of refit f. Th. Colonel wits a rich man, and most of the ladies looked forward to a time when Letitia would be mistress mf his new hoose and give splendid reeept• dorso, vitt the grandame ..f such a pentane had oast a eomi.oy glory beton her. While Letitia stood in the sunshine of the C'olonel's favor she had revived many attentions that mer withdrawn when he transferred his smiles to Mies i Taylor : and Letitia, being nary a *mean mimed the Sowers and Mealiests and opera tickets that the Colonel so Iwvisb ly .hod upon the tidy whom he delight ed h•wnwr Often Letitia wished that abs bad Isom 00 with the new love be THE HURON BIONAL, FRIDAY. MAR. 6. 1$85. teem the W threma ell the ttM arra de.ehos. too, Mr. Heat did set grow is laser as eertsistly as might have loess impeded. Madame was u6sded at his ktekise N his parlour with a palest look and aellsri.R ao one to ester IL tete was "tot in the habit 4 having any room in her bus.. disobedient to her 'open sasses,' and .he felt that at least she ought to km* why this thing was w. She talked over this (rimmed, wttb all her lady boadess aatil they all consider oil it to be aussewhat of an injury. Thea n..ua were open to Madame's pars -key. Mies Taylor had very valuable drweade e, hers ; Signora Salves was mostly wealthy in preuwus stouea It was k,wwn that Mr. Hunter bad • collection of pottery alimet equally tempting. If thew rooms were lett subject to Madame vaita, why abuuld Mr. Hesk's be closed against her 1 '1t was an open insult to M•da.ae,' the '+ignura thought. 'And if she were Madame. she world submit to It never!' But Madame was nut the Signers. Summer was coming on ; the back parl- ours were profitably let ; she could not eIwd to humor her honour at • flied loft ..very week. At length • young gentleman atudyinp in one of the colleges hit upon a sugges- tive, which ready seemed to offer &chance hK investitatiug the tucked parlour sub- gd S& («il1thi-rrttlmoge chemicals. Protheses' Symonds br,ught Mr Hutt lin the house, and everybody knew what Pr,fessorSymonds war. This young gentleman had heard :hat, as a matter of choice, he amused himself with nitro glycerine and other daugen,s explosives every hour of the day, and, in his ..pinion, Mr. Husk waa engaged in the came pastime. He really espeeted to find the house bl'wn through the windows seine afternoon when be came hack from allege. This idea had an air ef prebability,and the ladies talked it ever in little coteries in each ahs a rooms till the thing was as clear as Holy Writ to them. The house became as thrillingly interesting as if it were haunted, and the licked parlour was note fascinating than if of had contained a ghost 01 c. arse this eous•ent examination sof Mr. Hesk and his motives insensibly in- fluenced peer! -'s intercourse with him. Ile was co• schen et a chinas which he *add slot an alyze. an which annoyed him in an indefinable way. Even Letitia he thought s lent and abv, and then it struck him all rt once that Letitia*. shy- ness hurt hill, more than all the rest. • Was he in lei o with the girl 1 What folly 1 Mies Tayl..r had t Id hint that Letitia was eIt aced t,. C. lone! Shelby. mud the Cetonet was rich. That, of curse settled the natter. Ile must crush the feeling 1i:tilrsly out of his heart' Ecu he was thinking one day as he went ak•wly d'.wn the street ; he looked up, and Letitia was Lefere him. Her music roll .o. ni her hand, and she looked pale and weary. Mr. Hoek told har 'Yes ' she' ~tared ; 1 have given fire music lessons, all ..f them to very stupid peep e -people who want to play Chopin and Weber,and understand them vie snore then they de Syriac or Chinese. Can yen conceive ,.f anything more ex. haunting 1' 'Yea give music letoams 1 Theu you are- pour 1 1 mean, net rich.” 'lees, I ane poor. I wetk for wy lin- ing.' •1 an very glad, Pard.•n,M,se Berne. able t . .1a as ore's neighbors do, and I hate said what appears to be • rude weary and disgusted with her cotnmun- place life. gladly accept the roleate he could offer her. It he could have known what a heai- enly eutemer Letitia was haying, if he could have seen the long Mb -a p , in the dim parlon.and the lung rambles upend down the silant street, he would have bed doubts about Letitia being •weary and dlage•ted' with life. indeed, Leti- tia had neer been se supremely happy. Only one thine annoyed her : Hesk Then Letitu,in • bunt of confidence, • sever said a word about his family.or his told hltu alt the ttisp;uaitlols and doubfatlaraillIM", or lits mains - and fears connected with himself and his her asa wife. Two or three times be hocked parlor. Indeed, their converse- had been on the point of cluing it, and tion was se interesting and so prolonged' then relinquished his intentiou. that they simile.' d,ewu to • famous res- I One hot day in July, Letitia was eith- taurant, and finished it over a chi..ken air unpleasantly surpnaed to receive a salad and a strawberry ice. %i.It from a country faintly with whom Mr. Meek, upon the whole, was high• she had once stayed • simmer. They ly amused at the sensation he had wee had come new with a friendly invitation .d, and, acture on Letita's advice, rte to her. and though they broke in upon naval to btnach the subject at the din. her happy life with John Hesk ; she ser table, and offer the assembled cute. 1, could net but try and ineke their visit at pony • peep into his Bluehe•ard chamber, pleasant as possible. She went .lisp* The dinner table was unusually gay ping with them the first day ; the aee.d that evening. ft was gale night •t the day they exhausted the pictnre-reinvri.; opera,and many o1 the ladies were dress• l the third day they went into the effete ad Ger at. and in c.,,rreamewingly high ( noon t•. a famous zoological garde*. spirits. Mies Taylor, h...eeer, was an 1 Up and down the long avenue of age ezmeptien to the genera' rule Her pet ; a lions and Bengal tigers and chatter. dog had died that day. and she was !set inn monkeys they wrist. ! .ttta think - in tender recollections of the h,•levred , ing e.f .lohn,and -wearily trying tn Le po- creature. Every..ne had last • net, and I lite and tolerant under the asntinnal ex - all had something to remember en the • ciamatiosi ..1 her friends All at once subject. Suddenly Mr. Hesk raid • there was a fr ebtful cornin.diuw 'masts •Talking of pets, ladies, yuu have nee- and shrieks and the tramp of rushing er mien mine, 1 believe.' multitudes. In an agony of terrnr they 'We did not know you had any. Air { ran hither and thither, and Letitia saw Hoek,' remarked Idadame. !an immense Libyan lion tertiang down 'Oh, bat 1 Lar.. gum. very va:able the svelte*, lashing hie tail from gide In ant inviter omen If the oompeny will i side. and growbwg nrwinee*wly. ro with me to my parlor after dinner, i ( As he aperesehed Letitia there wee a shall he glad to exhibit them ' 'shoat of • different character. a sharp No pre perinea (meld hate been mess; wham through the air, • law round the in.' 'Whet o. her asaoaplabla, Th. spa a inwimilisg, bet Mr. Hese • melee w etsperlau.ely interesting, aid whoa he mimed toward st,be had a tool train of Momently dram sod ladies and gondolas.' lelionise him. ♦ carless sight met their eyes when the dour was &wag open. The marble chimney -peace was crowded with staffed birds of the rent brilliaat plumage. 'utast a sbamo !' as little Johnny Lawmen rewiaeked, 'when they might have been no lovely velvet hats, which was their natural plane.' The shelves which had been pet ap were also full of staged birds and animals, oases of beetles rad butterflies leaned agaaust the walls, and ort • largo metre table was a glees case which sassed every lady present to salt 'Ohs' and 'Ake' and terrified Lob shrieks. In fact, it contained several live snakes And opening • closet, Mr. Hoek duplaytd utter varieties of his pots, some small, brilliantly marked onus siairmine about in large gimes lase, others whom voiced length was only in • state of semi existence. 'Yea perceive, ladies,' he said, 'why 1 have thought it necessary int look w se- curely my private little paradise. You know that when serpents have a notion to exeite the certainty of lovely woman, then "'amen lose all fear and become reckless. I thought it better not to lead rotation." having ahowe them all the cur oa`tlis et the plane, he dismissed his audience to the opera. Madame was now seriously afraid that she must lose her boarder, but there was nu talk of such • thing. In the mono- tony of boarding house life a roam full cf snakes and centipedes was felt to be an excitement of the most thnlliug and delicius character, and Mr Hesk was the hero .t the house. if made bad wondered before, they speculated twice seek of the waw sal a load, audios de - five mice caling : 'Creech, Caesar " Letitia bus. that voice, though she hod weer hoard at set to such a kingly push, and, quite .•cewscios et her preamme, Jena desk appreacbed the ereecbing brute, struck it powerfully with • large whip he held w his head, and feared it to ester the cage frees which he had escaped. An ilssenea crowd followed the wan aid the lios,aad Letitia, with glowing cheeks and boating heart, was anwue their. The Iwa's escapade bad amused • kind Rrs►dy•" ami Rktpper lgw Netwa, .1 laegdin b1ui hi. A cbaptrr .1 hymn of itmaarreet►.a among all the russets 'sandier, and hie Meath et the late Dr. within his influence, but John went fro.. Richey, and .atter artioburs, mile up en one to the ether of the moat fierce aim ' eaceneul nu'aher Kaek numbers cam brutal of creatures, and compelled theta stiII he aut•plre i. all to whine and cower before his rye 1 WIWI BMW Commingle i . i Hellman 1M telt. tto a W a ear 1110 vents per camber slum. There .re four well illnetrat.d articles in dim uesber "Woodwinds is. Spada," "Hew Tilos are Made.'• "The Croism og the Challenger,- and • Ltfe Sketch of /ies.esl Gerd.•n. with pert reit I)r. Daniel !'lark, Medical $..periutesdent r4 Ihe 1'revtnciel Lunatic Asylum, wean. butes an admirable paper wt "W.nry," and Ken W. H. ltlsck.teck •.u, Bailout Aspectael American Methodism," Two capital steno ase ghee"Bible Thr test toseamemeo. and voice. Stets among the restless ehe ; The dear crmiliati..nm of R ,.J !rein} ph•nts,whese keepers leak anxiously to cull, iverulguwg, health glvti g herb.. roots ward him, his voice and presence had the same .float, and lastitia noticed that not only the brutes, out the men ir. attend• mace en them paid him the one uuc.i• steertiee. wws h.omme. - John never saw her. His eyes were There is no 1.vnuel in a wemaa'a life fixed upon tie wild creatures they con- when eke is in happy as wh, n eta is be - trolled, but Letitia welshed him with ak ing c.•urted That matelots for the °act admiration that made her heart beat and that a greet mane et then prior them - her eyes flash aliment to a level pits) salve• t.' ho eoertrt by tutu who haven* right r.• do They like the gallantries of oourt.h'p, the playful .cord of a salter, his emettaot ac.wation, his hull din's 101 Ilam Me. , nae fir. nae aid agility in eateeng Fria 1•nnd w'eth-v it ie,eode•I er not, his self sacrifice and unvarying devotion. Wiser is there that and barks enter into Ru. deck !Thud toa--a purely vrtmtab:e 1. atoll) that cures dimmers .1 the t,l...4, lis er with kidneys. t - with her lover s. After a little while peace reigned sue room sad Juba disappeared within the glarden. could not bring herself to leave the plow without satisfying herself new, and very sown she found an old an able partially as eagerly now. Who and what could this man be A great traveller 1 A treat naturalist 1 -A great here of some kind, Letitia declared. She invented for him all the noble qualities which she supposed necessary t such a character, and carefully rear up the hist,.ry of South American republics, since his pets seemed twist likely to have been collect: ed there. The Culenel, who considered the who!. duty .t nun to lie in the accuwu- lation of money and the pursuit of pleas ore, war seized with a profound cou tempt for a man who locked up snakes and butterflies ; but, apart from this de- fection, John Hoak kept the position he had gained, until the summer weather came, an Madames boarders scattered to their various watering places. tine menthe holiday so a year was all Letitia could afford. She was going with Madame in August until then she eould be very comfortabie with Madame in the city. Eapocally so as Mr. Mei) spent every evening with her, and her alone new. .And what delici,.us evenings they were in the warm atili drawing-room,nr riding slowly tugether in the mnentight ! Leti- tia knew now that she had fairly won this great, strong heart. and poor or rich, she felt willing to abide 'by her thous -yea, though Colonel Shelby hal tnagnan iuiosly given her the summer to review ber refusal i.f him, and had promised to retain his band and his new house for her recunaideration until his return in the fall of the year ; for he thea ght by that time Letitia would have tpl:y realized the misery of not being thing. 1f you uo Iet.taud, y. a would nut think so. Itut you .ill be rich when you ars married to C.donel ...helhy 1' 'There is vii 11,luesti..n of such a thing. How could you think sae meanly of me l' 'Forgive ole attain. One hears such things in a house full of strangers. Per- haps ynu have heard vary absurd thin;!. •'f me.' 'inneed I hare.' to grattfy her. He was an std gardener,a man will nut J•o when hu .. io lone i and Was carefully tying up au .ter- What else attt drier hi:n to .incl leivthe weighted rem -tree. ' of Rriliian:v and daring t it is then that he ieevaLes the c•ck h ird rel► .'n hie taut bnittant plumaite a 'd enemy stout in Luc gni-stem eery and temoes .he per- feetion . f lode natant. He writes l..ng lett. re, spends ha money lilts plod ,al, 1. rrat'y to ce i. ere. then., sritwhere, 'Know the geaticw.n who caught the lion". iie said. 'Indeed, ma am, I du. It was the t'refessur, no douLt. Profen .r Reek is uue u( the teen have power over the beasts of the field.' 'Dees he stay here always 'No, nu. What would he de that tor? rain or shine, at the Mck alai 4'411 of his He is j, st come home from the Kant young nmistre'se, wean hie brat 111.0thts, Indies and inc hurtling deserts of Africa walls with •h• erectoe:.• at.' elasticity Ile brought with hint you brute Caesar, of a train«I ath!rte, swihw oa all wan - and mon; than him, I can tell you. He is a grand heater, end a grand scholar end a burn king over brute 1111111 01.11.' 'Ho must 1.e a brave man.. kind, sol is m heave roach ►,eye nod and Ain* *be oonumoo ri'.0 • t else ,ace. All this bis :o the woman t., slim ha i. plarmg the Myer. i1the ts# attt, lar whet Tie asems to he tare fir •baht. im 'Brace and gentle toe. 1 un marry nay Per Laps lin clay turn nut ' 1n her equal self that he is wing awe) again. itut perhats not zenrro'ly :not. Mod hue - he brought ate wine rare new flowers, tamely are diujIwinhng to .I.rir w:vis and he Il bring more next time. because they immediately after anarrtai•e 'Is „it a trade to catch and 'elides eohapae- oer'nj.se ,,a., not to . -atter of. thew wild creatures r' fact, plain, ti,•ry .lar men. w)t•. seem to 'Well, it is, and it isn t, ma'am. He is think a mut v. leech i:f .ane thio: as fend of travel and Uniting out all al.,ut anothet strange countries, and net being a rich tkl.hssstO.Uas. • man, he catches these wild armada t'• I Vela,. ' W. is per .xdlersi'e• the rrwtedy pay the expellee vii his vCplorati•ms. ' for i a,o, :an.eneras, the .a.=stiae.. ri,up, At least this is what 1 bare heard tin2, Lnni., frwet brie►, stiff 'mints u.J all firs! wo:nvda ? toy mrAictse ma'am. He is a ;;rated man. is Pi•.f. desire tau turna.h .. ,, Hesk. 'He is a hero, one of sciences nrbleet A Roston hatrerrst trate. sot .dd !eke heroes,' thought Letitia, proudly. `Ment new when Lir emetka of the mastiff When Letitia arrived at Ilium ► .ru •'eliminating the tuir ;latch itt the she found that her friends had been kr. (1. paling,. t tt• a . be s'tumtrted to scale ' and their carriage was waiting. That-.__�- • - fortunate circumstance left Ler aleno Dr. 1. w"a C, or:.. ••••, reit h+. n•apayeel with John Beek at night. H. was sit•! tape 's• ttit tr..w 1:''. :-Yi 1.•..' It, 1; uile ting by her nide in the twilight, mall' It ala° destr,y. alt i:'n1.. t•f virus. I'm again he seamed vi the moat of saying, ►•i.tid L-gbtntnr • Newra>w's to eve acmethrvig, but only ventured ••n theesirur.. + Fhs..f 1 4!•tn,n1; . Ln• T.al!a.'t.e• to u•e commonplace inquiry . -What have you I in=unto'. l'lu'd Lisle ate,: eaters Fax A. t:e :o nue been doing today 1' , minute, •1 was at the Zoo:egttal Gardens. minute. l.tgbw.nz men 1 .m'. . o .■ cane Ile 1„oked her ateedt' • in the ales,blw.t hitttsr,u u Lientev-. Itt.•iten .n mese n.,nutr. and said : 'At what timet tla,d lame atm .e : sir any pa., • r robe in• 'Front one oclock till femur. I stauu:. Prim. o eau - par b,dtic stt:••wyte R:rnaw' Brae urce 2 wrs %cry tory mucin frightened -and _ —� ry much delighted, 11h, John, 1 was happy and to proud at what I saw '' I 'Really ?- 'Beall), John. I if wen mud beasts you were ling this afternoon.' 'Very ge,d. But of one dear little we- ' man's heart -what of that, Letitia 't lvcr that you reigned supreme. 'Now and foreter 1' 'Now and forever, John. 'Even if 1 should ask her to go with me ta strange, wild ceuntriee She will ge with yuu to the poie or to *And never lava me '`either in time nor eternity. . s s s s s 'lees, she ailed with hint yesterday,' said Madame to her .4.1 party one day the ("Hawing November, 'and 1 never saw a couple so infatue'ed with each other.' Where are they gene to asked Mus. Taylor, in tke siddls of a tet -der sent encs from Colonel Shelby. 'T. the &sat Indies. 1 believe. rr.,f. Heel has resolved to explore the forests of belts in search of rare planta and ►ird. and snakes, and some mythical white elephants.' 'What an idea cried pretty Jenny Lawson. 'Letitia alwayil used t•, say she meant to spend her honey -Imam in Paris.' 'Honey mane v said the eogunel,acern• fully. 'Honey myon among snakes and tigers ! 1 aheuld net think it wariest loom.' 'You are out of reckoning this time, eulet♦el,' said the ysan% collegian. 'ile you ksow, 1 believe Mr. and Mn, Oeak-s homy -mem will last to their har- veer meed ' inti haw*pia Madame said, 'You du my such queer things, Mr. Alfred rad the whole table looked at hies inenisitively, as if he Led propounded • c.oandram. A MARVELOUS STORY, • TOLD TO TWa LITTIIIL FROM THE SON •: Y .m. m. I u.srJes.rs- )ty father residue at filmes, N Tie has been • great se8.rer from ewf. uta and the Infused letter will tett maim a u.arv..eea effect Ayer's Sarsaparilla ce Lae had In DV sere T think his bleed tra Lave metalloid the bwtwor for et WA tea year' : but it did sot stew, swept le the ties of • aotulowe sore as Ow wrist, saint dosis{ Sys Jeer, sena From is few spate whet sew peered at that time, n grs.dealty areal ss se to tier au !erre SOOT. I iliums yea Mauve terribly allietwl. and se calleet et pity, when be betas tiMat your nosdimaa 1sow, taus sew M mo of W aye idso'soy as psi beaus as be Ise I easy wally Dams Arty passes who would tasttfy to the tars table ase► • Tours truly, W. M.1!llsriOOw FROM THE FATHER : pleseere assa a 401t for me to sate le roe the beth have derived tram tbe els ar Ayer's Sarsaparilla. its mss neo I was 'marlin/0y osv'.M tttfil a winds hauler sad sestets. semi. 1!s Maw same sa Wsemat W bels s sib tI.35.t, sed tbs has erected w as Menses tb• bled to low la array passes .!Menet 1 mora& 11y e.l.lset ewe peek ma >y Nis a lama I eseses.ssi IMe um of alms aaasusarm& H *ere ism, esti Mee set It 'sisterly daee that thaw IV eenlinelt Wigan Oa improve as crew no sues bare •N healed, and 1 test perbryy min to emir remove- beteg sow awe to M • psi l4'a weft, although T3 yawned mew Ma*y bpso whet has wrought verb seem 1. ley sew, sad I toll tt•era, as i have lyre triad to tell you, ATta'. S*syara*ILLA. Osier. 71. Oe . Li, IIIA Yours gre.etely. Sura pial sae ', Area's esestetaa.t.a emus /weeds seW all neref.loes Osemptelw/s. Wryr1[t- alas, tropate. :Lpwees. illet.Mse. Seer+. nom.. Tamara, sal 1{swatl.sa er[ Y. litho. It clears Maio Noel er all Isapr CIO*. ahs dMietams, etlasetsees the Deets et fk• te.w*a', sal farm terroro Math mit Mret=theas the visas ssina Mee /MID Of Dr. .1.0. Ayer & Co., Ltlfiu*sl- lble br ap Drsersk el. se awes ter es. • d a Bei oWI •wa 1i M, F. •o re ole 1. N.14 s tern i• hand L ed by Now y bit on lit r The hi the at. and P 11.0- alma tate, plate -t sheets red - h., work laws 1 Jm•:av man til load to wiutu. It i that t. Wert. encu. gam" bail•' was .0 of a t w4,•• pe..es. hat a team rely c loin fw are pl Btu eimpl prep• until AU each 1 on wi hake Maps tail y, Lave acct h asany abie u iia tit If chi 11s g. l Uell eland bred De hang dtlopl. door ©e 1 eine L* ed is roan sed sows wd se. nit that mei bob fed eas tee stet Tin ed' loin the .sn tab ties NI tin ire that be the wl air 6.1 rrretl gr! 1 ti