A GREAT SECRET. CHAPTER XII. A! Po 1 Buutord'l little olï¬n hoe din- Op behind the hood of the carriole, Genld instinctively mined in the In old home. which ho had been st some pninu to worry into nbnormul Ipoed. But Mr. Shsw. lo- nuoopdhle, touched the lsd‘: Arm re~ "0'198‘3- . . a , ,kL_L -L- -_u- r“ Sh: had good mun for whnt Ibo «ya, you my be um. Dflvo fut. Perhtpl her watd. mu 5 mango. At my rate 1 hove no time to 10000." av .l-I' vv .vm‘ Gould’e ieoe grew suddenly hot. and he whipped up the hone with great energy. Thin vnlinnt Attempt to cover nn emotion which his compenion had not even noticed wne the more unneoeuery u it was already darkâ€"not with the den-knees oi night, but with the gloom of the cloudy close of enun- leee dny. Tnere was no moon, but the could see the light-colored sandy road which iny {or tome diennce straight before them, with ï¬st lure ï¬eld- on either side, end no- thing but en ooonï¬onnl clump of leafless popinre or n tnngle of deed bushes to brenk the monotonoul etreioh of nnintereeting bud-cope between one group of cottage: end the next. Gernld wronld hove liked to \- â€"v â€"-â€"â€"._ telk, but the preoccupied menner of the elder mu: hed to be respected, so he whistl~ ed snftl to himself to while swey the time until L I. Show should think ï¬t to break the silence. This the letter presently did upon the very subject which, in spite of the mysteries ebont his {other end about the recent robbery thnt hsd ï¬lled his mind all dey, wss st the moment first in Gersld's th hts. “ 11 odd little girl," Mr. Show ssid slowl . “ d! Who!†asked Gerald, knowing perfectly :ell I’vho’the odd little girl web. I- -_._u - _.-.......... -_A I'" "l " ' ’ â€" “ Kin Bone-ford. It ion’t u wanna, and it in‘t a child. 3nd it isn't a demonâ€"at lent, I don't think so ; but. it. is 5 little of all three. sudâ€"I liken.†'" Why do you say ‘it’?" asked Gerald ah 1y, not liking, we show than; he was offindod, though his whole heat was in urns. " Bacon-o to any ‘ahe’ would be to do the queer little oorlcoture of humanity grant injuntioo." “Curicoture I" exclaimed Genld indig- nutl_y. “ Why, Ihe'a'yarv Qretty.†_ -dtl j ._.-2_j nun-J. "UJ, ......... .-_, r""a' “ Ye-ee, in o wuy. But it ls 3 wild weird sort of puttineu thee made her, in my opinion, look ton timee better when eh; u‘? e, dulled into the salon ell over mud, with he die] 1; hit hell down behlnd and falling Into he [know i eyes in front, then when she walked eoberly any no. in. All washed end combed like Mine Brown a country or Mi- Robinson, end tried her horde» to I ï¬rst in, 1 be extol}; line may one else." end by n n,_nI_I _J_:s ML- --‘- w“ w‘Wull. I thought-o too," Gerald udmit‘ ted with hesitation. “ But I didn’ t expect {on to uy so, Mr. Shnw. I thong ht you had girlay to be what is culled well- behav- ,,,L_ .I __.._ :_ ‘â€"-_§ no.“ u.â€" -i _, ed, with their heir combed ewny in front, you know, end coiled into e little knob like u ehell behindâ€"like Alisa Brown or Mina Robinson, in feet." “So I do ; in meat respects the or- di well-combed girl is inï¬nitely Min ereeiord’l superior. But you cen‘ eduiire e wild roee ee well no I. gerden; roee, though the one hee e commeroiel velue‘ end the other heen’t. And while I edmit I ehould beeorry {or the pereone to whom thilyoung ledy etoodjn the relation of wife, hon-chm. or mother, end I doubt wheth- er nhe ' ever be even temed down into en egreeehle hoeieee, yet ehe in ehrewd end emu-inn at tea (a on, end when left to her- eel! the in picturesque. An ehe mede thet eeneetionel eutrence,.tho.i h she looked helf like e ecerecrow, she ooked heli like e fency icture oi the north wind. I wonder w t in the world thet unlucky young Frenchmen will do with her i" “ Unlucky! Victor l" stemmered Gereld, emezed end incentione, “ Why, he ought to he etending on_hie_ heed with delight." ,e ‘_,_I_n A- AL-‘ L- u I: he indulged ii‘iioh’pmh" on me he would be a better much for her, certainly," aid LE}! Show imper turhohl ; “ end their 1d would u leeet be ively. An I: is, I een't help pthlnklng they lhnd 3 poor change o_f_ heppineee,e_e er a one eon nee." H, A n__-lj “3.17â€"vi-fâ€"I'goiiit' {inâ€"6;“ bop: Gould in 3 low hunky voioo. ' But he did not any whet he Ihouid do if he thought that ; Mr. Show turned to look “him, It did not uh him to ï¬nish hi1 nuance: end there we: silence for some time, until they peeled n mnn whowu coming in the op in direction. Alena end bentoid men e wee. dressed in the blue hloue of the working clue; he won wolking quickly. end did not lnnee up u the trov- ellen peeled. Ge d ieened out of the conï¬de to look liter him; there was not light enough to I00 much, but the men'- ohniiling. niting suit was unmintehbie. " Wk}, WI 614i Monulor !" cried the yoga; igllow. “ Hemin- been into Cslai: n,,, !.L J2J_'L A-) ,-.. "m... _- W, ,, oo-dl’y. 1 .uppou. Then Smith didn't ï¬nd him 3% his oothgo. '0 of course thnt'n why he turned into the cabarcl, as ho’: too fond of doing. I with he had come with no ; he’s no jolly clover and so popuiu- everywhere, tint you would have trovolled twice I- comfortably if he bod aid 3 word or two to the Mid the nation-mater. Be an no: y olwnyn mange o tide of the curl. a go inimloli, no mutter how crowded the tr 1: "Thu wu not altogether m advantage In: In! 3W In avowed Mr. I,Shmv thong ht- full. "0:: o wholo,I um glgd Mr. Sm ch bu not come. †“ Don't you like him? Mr. Bereeford thinks ve mihly of him." “ Yes. con (1 nee thet.†Something in Mr. Show’e tone puzzled the young fellow, who looked curiouel at him while he sold, " Of course you idn’t see enough of him to ï¬nd out how clover he in 3 but I ensure you in business he is Mr. Ber- eelord'e right hoodflf Gerald we: too much urn-zed by this stutlingly heterodox statement to have any- thing to say in ioiutstion of it. He looked from his companion to the animal he was driving. and wondered by whet strange chonce such It shrewd men of business as M r. Show had failed to be struck by Mr. Bares. ford's hitherto unquestioned superiority to everybody elm. ‘- h ,D,,|,' dlonbo. " .V.__. ._ ï¬rfï¬ï¬ï¬ifmy he. in "Cm than that ; he in Mr. Boreoford’n brain."_ SHALL IT OB. BE DONE. tmvu’d the younger with nlmoet n nigh of relief. “ it innoz ngrncioue tank to lave to spank egninet tho nun who“ guest one bu been within the hour, to mother men who in bi. gueet still. But Iince hell-truths no dungerone. nnd on' m bi your position deeply inherent in the c nectar of this man. I will tell you my 0 inion : it in. that Mr. lisreelord,‘ _ philoeop e1: .. nix-d philan- thropiet, in nothing but a selï¬sh hyp'oohon driac, with just eenee enough to get himself well served, and to know that the lens he says and doee hinueli. and the more he leaves to his clever clerk, the better it will be both for his interests and his reputation. The clerk knows this as well as the employer, and proï¬ts by it, no doubt; he robably has a good deal of business on his and: of which his paralytic employer known noth- ing; but, rogue a: I believe him to be, I confeu I prefer hie audacious knavery to the cold-blooded cynicism oi the other." “ What do you know about Smith? What have you found out 2" asked Gerald deeply interested. “ You nan-t know some- thinLto _Ipeak lilre_ that: ’: 1 I, AL_.___ “366011, you, I do. I learned by chmce while in Pym-i: thtt this umtworth Mr. Smith In mukingp rivato bargdnl of h own with one of his a vsloy y‘or 3 clients." “ Impossible 1 ho was: it with 2†" With M. de Bretonil. " " M. Loui- do Broteuil. ’ One of our best clients. I Inn-t tell My. Bqâ€"f' _ _ _ “And egood thing too. I don't went you to be comfortable here; I don’t went you be stay here. You must come back to} ur old friends in Engleud, and we‘ll soon‘ t mysteries end kmveries end elï¬n girl 9' .of your heedâ€"†W o,Mr. Show," Gerald broke in, very do’ol ly. “ It’s awfully kind of you, and I know it neems beutly ungrateful of me to soy no. But. I no menu to say in this lcountry for more than one reason. The , ï¬rst is, of course, that I must dlscover how and by whom my {other was murdered. The eecondâ€"" The second reason wu not so essily explained, tor the young men Itetzpeé: ,,»__--2__I_. u n: “ You will do nothing of the kindâ€"yet. You only know enough to bring yourself into dingroco with both of them; for Mr. Baronial-d would believe nothing agelnat his oonï¬dentinl clerk without strong proof. And 911 I you tell you 31: present la, that I u “I Q ,, L!_ myself, when I doompanied Blair on his second call u M. do Breteuil's hotel, heard the open-{wed little Smith say, u be and the pllliopsiro pmod my on the shin, thst I! _,__I_.Ll- way u vâ€"mv râ€"___ _,, ‘u but-gain undo with In old psnlytio didn’t mutter much. md would not interfere with their agreement) And they both loomgd to‘enjoy tye jo_ke im‘xyenuly." 1; L__ “I “wish" you huin't hold me». It ha made mo (eelyso jolly uncomfortable,’ and Gould, utter 3 pause. '“ """"'-I"'" "w“ 7,, .- tho futrodueer aid, ' I know I am doing a risky thing in Introducing to you such 3 bad chit-over u this; but thereâ€"I'll hold nay-cl! mponnible for his decent behnvior.†I! Mr. Baronial-d had “ï¬nally pry-only! mo to hie deughtaer. u 1!. Fenrnler did to Louise, I ehenld hove looked upon her a I do upon the Dresden ï¬gure- In the cabinet in the dre -room, pretcy. ellly things, toofreglle to p l with. end whole volne I don't nnderlton But when you um meet 3 girl curled up in e choir like 3 kltten, with erheed henglng downover one elde,end her little toot etnek n in front of her one level with her ehoul ere. yonâ€"yonâ€"erâ€"why, on feel ehe lln’t chino. Andâ€"end thet'e 1 ow I feel shout Pegâ€" Mlle Bereeford." “Well, [think lb a grearplty Pegâ€" Mlu Bereaford, waen't formally reeeneed to you by her papa. We a mil 0 in the long-run for a lad to eee eo few young‘ women that he looks upon them an china; but when once he haa oh to look upon them in that light, it la tter he ehould continue to do no, and, above all, that he ehould notwant a Dreeden ï¬gure for his on cabinet." “ But, Mr. Shaw,L you’re not a bachelor." “ No, In boy. butno right-minded martyr .would win to send other: bathe .etake." vâ€".â€" . “ Andâ€"yliioéaf you said if I mum to Engilnd y_ou_wm_1 d ï¬nd me a. nice wife.†‘,,J__Il‘ -l -â€" “3 Yelxbut not rho promised wife of an- other mun. Gerald, take one what ou're doing 3 for, if you interfere with Mr. ores- ford’n plans, y_on wi!‘ ï¬ndâ€"3' . p ,, ALA v --. r.â€"â€"-_, 1'“ 7H He no ptd. end peered out from the hood of t ecarn'ole. Gerald‘s glance fol- lowed in the some direeflon, but he now nothing except 5 bit of Itre gliug hedge that bordered the roodelde for e ittle way, up to the rough well of a. dilaplduted and deserted cottage some hundred yards in front of them. "Whut was it?" The circumstnnoon of the drive, the subject of their thoughts. were just ï¬lmmy enough for both men to feel aannp clone lumrut in every animate objegt ghoug thgm. " I thought I saw nomothing running on the other I '0 of those brambles." “ A nbblt. I expect; the ouud all round here ls boneycombod with t elr holes." “ It WM 3 nbblt fcnr feet high. then." “ A donkey, perhnpa.†"Very likely." Neither of the man made my attempt to ruumo the Interrupted couvemuon. Both kept the“; 01:. upon {turn of tlao Md Itlll , AA- __ _‘ F'r' . ootno 3E, '11.me mined octagon the! ‘hmï¬mdsmofmllmud u o: banq- on tho tight. aloud In the W Gould gun v.50 old bone 5 In." on. with the vhip. M. M the moment tho unim‘ 508‘“ to qulohn hll pm. A low whistle we dhtluctly hard from the direction of tho J huh;- on the ri ghg cloud in tho Gould gun tho“ old bone 5 unut out with “ Hallo 1†«Id Gould, oohly. gluolng at hll componlon, who gnvo n Ihort nod to lntimnto thot ho hard. nnd I'nng‘ over the front of the carriole for freedom of notion in cue of emergency. For. without ex- ohnnging n Word on rho subject, both men had prepared, during the [on low mlnuhoo. for foul ploy of some sort. AI the carriole wu drown rnpidly into the shadow of the tangled bronahu, the younger man tlghoen- ed his hold on the reins, glanced round at his friend. ond their eyes metâ€"{or the lat time. “ There in something wrong. I em sure of it. Shall we turn buck ? ’ “ No. It in too late. Drive onâ€"iut." A ein Gerald drew the whip sharply over the oree'e now steaming flanks. There was something in front of them, some dark ob ject crouching by the aide of the road, on the right hand, neareet the side where the young men not. The letter had scarcely caught eight of it when the low whistle was heard egoln. nnd Gerald knew ‘thet the crouchin object was a. man. With his eyes steadily ï¬xed upon that spot, he turned the WM in bi. bend to hnve the butt~end randy for eienee, when anddenl he felt the shock of a heavy weight flung wrth force on to the front of the camels, end 3 roaring inrnnoe breeih ngalnnt his neck, while the rgling sounds of a wild bout fell upon h core, Rind Mr. Shnw’s loud cry of “ Help 1" He wee onl just in time. es he turned, to see his idea (hugged down to the ground by the jaws of e greet enimel, whose ion . white hugs, end red, bright eyes shone fn the dnrkness. He was springing u to help him. when he felt the horse, which ed been checked by the nttnek end by the fell 0! Mr. Shsw. stop short; the two-wheeled caniole fell back with n jerk, end just es Gould was thrown beckwsrd over the sent into the interior of the vehicle he saw a men. whom even in the} tepid glance he could see to be very tall and ver slim, spring from the horse's head tower him. A mo- ment later, as, half stunned by the violence with which his head, in falling. had struck against the heck seat of the car-ride, Gerald was trying to scramble up to the help of his friend, he felt I long, cold hand upon his throat, and looking up he saw quite plainly, I even in the darkness, the face of his assail- ant. Only for a moment; as, with strug- gling breath and starting eyes he lay help. less, with a hand at his throat and a knee 1upon his chest, meetin , with horrible, in- voluntary steadiness, t e steady gaze of the man whom he believed to be his murderer, noting on the lnstant every feature, freezing under the frigidity of the pitlless eyes, he felt himself suddenly blinded, then gagged, and lastly bound, still with the cries of his old friend ringing in his ears, still making frantic efl'orts to get free. He knew that he had no hope of escape ; ‘ knew that the long cold bonds were quick md ekllful, and that the inï¬nite torture ho was suffering on he lay blindfold, expect- ing every moment to feel the mmle of a. revolver ogelnet hle temples, was the work of very few minutes ; but the sense of his own den or wee deadened by a strong con- viction t at he was only a. secondary victim, tl‘nt howover it might {are with him, it would fare worse with Mr. Show. _As well as he could, for the hmdketohief which was tied tightly across his month, he mode broken entmtien, gasping out such words 35 cans ï¬rst, in the agony of his heart. “ For God'a sakeâ€"don't hurt himâ€"don't hurt the other 1mm! Hoâ€"he In my boat frlendâ€" ho “goodness itself. If you yImam wont, he’ll help you-I know he will, I swan it. For God’s nkeâ€"don’ tâ€"don't touch him, don' t, I soy-3’ But the men never. weed in his work, never spoke. ‘Heving and Gereld‘e arm! to hie aide, hie feet to eeoh ether, he leept downto the ground, u the young fellow knew from the tilting fenverd of the caniole. Fer e few eeeonde, whether there wee silence or whether he we pert! etnn. ned by this leet rough jerk, Gen] been! nothing. Then lit. Shew'e voice, cieer, loud, end etrong, reng out in tonee thet the young men never forgot. f I bump yet! i" _ Then followed e e creek of the whip. which the eooeileut h wrooted from Gor- \ld on he ettecked hing end thecon-iok went jolting end jerking over the mo h reed et e speed it hed never trevoilod lore, the ocered horoo lleping on in the dork. while Goreld in tried to ireo hie heads from the cord which bound them, end reel- onro the horoo by the toneo of hie voice. which were, however, ohengod end muffled b the hendkorohiei tied eorooo his mouth. e coo-viola hed been drugged Iome hundred yerdo before Gereld hoerd on further ecund but the thud oi the ellopï¬ag horoo'o hoofo end the eroeklng end Inping of the vehicle. Then ehove ell thooo monotonous noioeo hio etreinin eero cen ht e cry that froze hie blood en checked h I breeth, end mede hie ohuddering body cold end wet eo he fell beck e eln, inert end deepeiring, on to the floor 0 the cerriege. For the voice was tint of Mr. Shut, and the cry wu “ Murder I" On went the conï¬de, rumblln and rock- iug; the old horee. hie fleeh eti quivering from the unmerciful end unaccustomed lneh alloped elen the well-known road toward aleie, with neon-covered bit and eteamin flanks. The road wee etralght. flat, an little frequented ; there wee no obetacle to turn aside the frightened animal, no eolitary foot paeeenger to etop him until he drew near to the turning on the rial? hand which led into the town of Celaie. ere the canal iruue aleugeide the road, separated {rem it by a wooden fence and a etrip oi rough ground. A group of loitering gemim ehout- ed and yelled at the hone, attracting the attention of eome workmen on the bridge over the canal, two of whom came running toward the corner, when in the dark they deecried the gray-covered top of the old can-60k, u it came swaying and linking toward them. A: the genie» followed in a elling, booting fleck, the horse, whore pace had rown elower from exhauetion. made a last reotic eflert, and, duhing up to the corner with an instinctive attempt to make the eccneiomed turn, brought the oil-ride wheel in Inch eharp contact with the poet and raile which fenced off the ï¬eld by the canal from the road that the earrinie wee overturned and the ehafte enap d like tin- der, leaving the old home free, ut no effect- uaily checked that he wee eeeily caught by a lad, while agroup oi thoee who had witneee- ed.th_e eccldent gathered round the iallen which. rod under the sly abuse: oovor. â€3 Ho h hurt. Iva. in u ' “ HI dud Period did-mt voles, a men I boysuunnod. pnnhlng nnd pooping. ah the overturned curing. _ A Then 3 voice rose in snthorlutlvo tone thou the to“ : “ Sand back. hoop 03' the qavm'na. If the mun ll branching will, he will not breath much longer if you crowd on: him like herring sud keep 9!! the suit.†L__-â€" VVO. eunu- Ieâ€"v uv..â€"°v ..___,_‘ And two or three "tong-armed workmw {o cod beck the foremost ol the growing crowd, while the mm who had ï¬rst spoken: eided by mother innhloune. opened the door of the carrc'ole end entlï¬odirew out Gould’s prostrate and sense on y. At the ï¬rst eight of the henkerohiei with which he was gegged, now wet end blood-shined, and of the cords which bound his arms, murmurs end exclemeï¬one broke from the nearest on- lookers ; their cries were taken up by those behind. till the road we: in on nproer; men. women, end children Itrug ling, â€rennin? end runniu . some to get I e beet poseib a View of the cka of tho-e persons who hed been lucky enough or muscular enough 90 get close to the wrecked carriege, some to meet the police. who were hurrying to the “ There has been a crime I†" It is n mur- der 1" were the whispers, the cries that ran like wildï¬re from mouth to month, while those about the senseless men out the cords whlch bound him, and did their best to re- vive the not yet extinct life within him.‘ By_ thls time he had been recognized, A, j __2AL end hie neme wu repented with re- doubled sympathy for him. with re- redoubled horror at the crime of which he had been the victim. For Gould Shunton. and the gig, and the fut horse were well known in 0.1515 end 8!. Pierre; end though he had few mull eoqueintenoel outside the factory, is good-humored fooe and his evident disgust At the turn~out he drove hed made him a “milk: And popular feature of the neighborhood. , At the ï¬rst sign he guve of returning oon- sciousness, he was, on the suggestion of one of the workmen from the fsotory who hep- poued to beenong the throng, curried on an improm tu stretcher strsight into the town of Cale s, and to the house of M. Fournier, where the strange story conned the utmost oonaternstion among the family, who were at dinner when the unconscious guest urn-iv- He was taken 11 to Victor’s own room, where motherly adame Fonrnier tended him herself, while Louise, after being refus~ ed permission to see him, went into hyemrice in the dining~room. When the young man opened his eyes he at ï¬rst remembered no- thing, but stared silently at the green curtains of the bed on which he had been placed, and smiled at the kind face of the lady bending over him. It was not until he caught eight of Victor, who was standing behind his mother lookin very grave and anxious that Gerald's face 0 ouded with dull pain and perplexity. The young Frenchmen could not restrain hie eager soli- citude : at this ï¬rst gleam of intelligence in hie friend’s eyes he leaned over the bedside, and asked impetuously : “ Gerald, who was it attacked you Y,’ The yonn fellow suddenly sprang up on the bed, With ï¬re in hiee es. “ He has «been murdered i†he cri hoareely. Madame Fonrnier fell back in bewilder‘ ment and horror ; Victor grossed East hen, and en ported the young to low in 'e arms. " heâ€"Whe has been murdered, Ger- aid 1" he asked, in tones almost as hoarse as those of the injured man. 9‘1- “ 80m. one We l'_’ 011d 9110 gun, a he v v- â€"_v __ ..___ __,,7 But Genld’e heed ennk weerlly', and his eyee grow dull end gentle ngein. ' Who I†he renewed, trying to tonne hlmeelf ; " why --â€"why, it was my tether! No one will be- lieve It, I know ; but they did murder him. Can’t you let me eleep now 1 I will tell you the whole! [toan the morning.†In, I... "av-v -w- .â€" v..- ___ ""Viotor 1.1a {am down. .Eci‘imod to his fï¬ghhnod mother. " Poor follow 1H1: head in not quite clou- yof!†ho whilporod. ehe excitedly, elln g to hlm. ï¬e dleengoged lnuelf by e do“: move- ment. end eddreeeed her from the peuege with o more dremtleelly “Ilene elr then on Englishmen would hove thought necessary, hm with eerneetneu end ï¬re. “What one men can dere enother con, mother. I will not reel; until I hove done whet I on to dleoever who committed thls crime!" Before the could utter one word more, he bed shut the door and hurried down the A Dictionary of laden: Timon. Bubâ€"Ancient! n cobblhhment for the one custody 0 man" 8 ht now for the “Infant ,dinponl of the «mo. "V r.â€"â€"Ho wine In to no dhpooo aim“ the knowlmodgwf the ovum t om . “auburnâ€"Se celled (on an principle of lucue a non («comic 3 int n o locket ll I0 celled booenee It dee- not look), boot-u he cannot call. Din-coconâ€"A vogue term with e variety of moonln . Unuelly u indeï¬neblo II he in Inï¬ndo leâ€"when wanted. â€(muttonâ€"One who endumfl to gether up epl‘led milk or other liquids. Cannonâ€"Those who cry over milk or other llquide thus spilled. Stock:â€"81mllor to I we or time. The Ignorant think it in infln t» and uh“ nog- wll'loso. Tho who know it exists only {11 o m n . Brokenâ€"Ho who has broken 3 bunk. Creditâ€"An extinct “riot? of an ontodl- lnvisu bird o1 ray. The on proofs of Ito :xéatonoo no t o tonsil remain; of than it e on. Diabitsâ€"A vonolom omnivorous anlm‘al, supposed to have count! the death and ex- tlnoflon of the bird of prey above mention- It is on ancient custom to put ecenta ln olotlxee. John McCullou h once bought. gold embroidered jacket rom e Per-lea be. zut In Park. It no a lath: odor to every trunk in w oh ho I It. One dey he looked it our ond and e lum of monk end mother 0! ember-grin, Itlto ed Into the llnlng. It wu e my old pment. (1‘0 a: comma.) He in a sad .bom. It in mud thet the cable on system in about to be introduced in toe ancient city of Rome. Many street: there have sidewdh of stone steps, but no weggon ever nttlee over the puements, and we only menu: of getting from one part of the city to mother I: by walking. A fellow who got out of a Michigan cool with a pair of ahwklea on his ankle. undo m Indian. woman believe that he won die victim of a private insane uyium, and she helped him get rid of the irons. While Ilse L:_ __.._.-.. L... -g..l- I.-- lav-r" â€"-'â€"â€"â€" ave -V was crying over his wrongs he stole her hnebnnd’e watch off its hook. A men has been found in New York who ion “fence" for dog-etenlere, and he deal: only in etolen dogs. lie buys the Itolen creatures for little or nothing, return: them if a reward in oli‘ered and sells them it it isn't. And they do nay he mnkee n very neat little income out at his out of hi: Ledd bunineu. Mr. Pullman ventured all he hnd on hi. ï¬rst sleeping on, because, he aye, “if 1 heel built on 88.00.: ear others would hove uid ‘ they could have improved on it. But when they new ' the magniï¬cence of the Pioneer end that it cost me 818,000, everyone 8|" up the idea. of entering into competition with me.†A Hartford youngster goes to church where the concluding men of the prnycr in sung by the choir. The ether night. door he had sold his payers, he produced a humonlcc from lnn pillow md utonllhod his mother by blowtng n blunt where the men came in, rcnnrking, “ That’s the way Rabin onion." An eoqneintenoe of the writer who he. enacted norer from dyepepue (or e number of yours, end he: tried meet of the numer~ one remedies e host of kind friend: hue recommended for her relief, hende In the following uticle from the Nation! New! with the requeet thet it be printed in the Scientiï¬c American. Our dyspeptic friend has tennd greet relief ln followmg the di- rection, end it is hoped othere my be the beneï¬ted. ‘ “ 1n the morning the etometï¬ oontelnl e ooneldenble quenuty of mucus epreed over and adherent to he wells. If food entete et this time the temione mnene will interim, to Iome extent, with the direct eon- teoi between the food end the etomeoh ne- oeuery to provoke the secretion of gun. trio juice. A glue of weter, teken betore breed-M, peeeoe through the Itontsch into the smtu intentinee in continuous sud uninterrupted flow. It portly distend- the teomsoh, “retaking end to some ex. tent oblitereting, the rngee ; it thins end weehee out most of the unions muons ; it lncreeeee the fulneee o! the eepllleriee of the stomsch, directly if the water it werut. end indirectly in e resotionsry wsy if it in cold ; it esuoee peristalsis of the slimentu'y tract, wskee up (eo to epeek), end given it n morning exereue end wsshlng. Csre must be taken not to give oold water when the droulstiou, either leoel or generel, is no fee- ble es to mete resetiou unproheble. We should not risk it in edmeed ego, nor in the teehle, whether old or young, nor ehould ‘it be given in loos! troubles, like chronic gestneoetsrrh. Intheeeeesee itisbeltto give werm or hot tutor. The eddlflon o! nit it very benefloisl. Such e timehouored custom se drinking soup et the beginning 0! e men! could only nnve been no persistently edheredto become of its havingbeenjound by experience to be the melt sppmpriete time. It deee exsetly whet were: or hot weter. with the eddltion 0! salt due, and more, in that it in nutritive end excites the flow of k A Human In“, A hundud you- cud it I'm a" m. A “to yo Bolfved on. b. . l m u no u an. m .... mgr“? “'1'" m A hundred you! and R «m “a" In» W. In“ D n pus, I â€In“ .11 be over thouâ€"um mm, MY 0 lo In: hem! But.“thon nod than" lo o'eu l0 alsunt. douâ€" 80 Jim sud luâ€" Whllo "bewand now." Wm: needa,ooumnt. a... PM. u not bu. 0 yous, ~11"!me In your onwud night 'l‘ill woo ubdl 08m ; m, um: eto'nuy'n uuchmgilg light. Como. Influx pace I kinda juice." Beylse In time. Check the little cough, cure the little chlll, dispel the little pun, ere the male eilment becomes the strong, unconquereble glen: of dleeelo. Dr. Pleroe'e Golden Medlcel Dhoovery, “ken in time, in n remedy tor then 111.. A weeping roee tree in e gel-den et Kooe- tel-en, Holland, ll eo lam met thirty per- formen lately geve e concert. under lt- bnnohee. ls l- 85 feet in circumference ma It 11... been eetlmeeod am it had 10,006 roeee et the time of the permanence. †Just Hear That Child Cry l" said Mrs. Smith to her eleter, Mn. Dev-ll, u the_lound 01.3 ohild’n Ihrieke came not“. the gerden from e neighbor'e hon-o. " Whet kind of 3 women hue you for e no hhorl Doe. ehe ebnee her children 2" " o. in. deed,†replied Mn. Duh. " She is one of the most render mothers in existence. But you nee she believes in the oldJuhloned styles of (lactating. When a child nood- phyeio, ehe lllle e epeon with some neueonl doee, laws the little victim flat on her lep, holde his nose nntilkhe in forwd to open his mouth tor breath, When down goe- the dreadful meee. Then oomee the yells.†“ No wonder," eeid Mrs. Smith, “ Why doesn’t she use 1):. Plerce'e Plenunt Purgedve l’el- lets! They ere effective without being harsh, and ere as easy to take" auger plum. l elweye glve them w my children.†" And so do 1,†said Mrs. lhvie. A link nod In) In the aunt'- path: A mu. moo: bond in the “to wiod'n wrath : A Hula numb grew. by littoou old fat ' Then u “out I... bnvod I" the winch bind. A mu. cough flutedâ€"Wm only light; A halo chin muted tho hour- ot mum; A little poll name And begun :0 now. Then oouumpuon [dd n: his bravo stung“ low. Quul mohtpicln come from France. Tho Ingest notary in the world In near Pain, where there in an annuul product of 20,000,. 000 quills. The fuctory wu stated to nuke quill porn, but when those went out of no is wu turned into I» Wothpiok mill. The cleaning uni-Que sud mung quslldu of Dr. 530% Cnunh Remedy m unqulloi. Drinking Before Heals. 0008 AND ENDS. Tho Litte Seed.