AS FORTUNE SMILES. A TALE OF THE OLD AND NEW WORLD. CHAPTER VI. to Miss Lucy, simple daughter of nature, coursed in all th rankness of the -wild West, and taught from early infancy to calla spade a spade,and, being a natural woman, a true woman, Now, it is one of | and child, brot! Lord Cleve smiled; he was rather pleased rom joins mother , in mutual of ey that merely ether oan ing er and sister, “woman’s most highly. prized attributes—be | a! “eee! ‘the fair onea e,an English aristocrat ora Turkish odalisque—to ob. tain fron simple man what ee) face, end just as much as she wis! smarkable Gah me female supremacy sover the helpless animal man. Miss Lucy set her a wits to work the | ‘moment she had recovered i wonted Hew ion, to extrac ypossessi i by A vinsinuatory wheedling, and fe Retocy ae her father and Lady Evelyne. She had no trouble in eliciting from the young man that he Evelyne Wynter, and thereby started Her- bert upon the idea that he must needs, in his usual slep-dash manner, writea letter ‘of apology to the lady who had once upon a time consented to be his wife. The thought was no eooner born than it was d upon, and young Cleve sat down at the old-fashioned mahogany bureau to pen his apology, while Lucy stood behind his | hair looking over him. “The Earl of Cleve presents his compli, ments to Evelyne Wynter,” he wrote, “(and desires to explain a circumstance which, aks afraid, must have surprised | P Lady Evelyne. Lord Cleve is afflicted with Joss of memory, the result of some wounds in the head, ise hopes ne this apology will be his ex- ady Evelyne Wynter will aces sual goes chova esd oe possibly have acted towards her in any spirit of jest a bit sons aint it?” Mis: Lucy eal n the young gentleman ad dotted all hie “i's? and crossed. all his t/a,” a it’s a little smeary, like maple augar, when yew get too much of iton yewr ‘spoo he’ man. ‘that she danced away, ‘burdened by thoughtfulness or care. he That was all outward show, however; all nervous determination not to show to -cover! felllike a Pest shower around her. -sobbed, sobbed and sobbed, as if her pa ~would bi ie On a sudder ped uy fury, both catia Ditelneslh ase foreaae swhich oppressed her. She gnahed her have I done, how have I sinned to deserve and she gradually sank on her knees an esa ir lnscana efigure | vofagprat dal is ther rabble pe murmured: ‘‘What have have IL here ‘3 i done? hat Idone? jiss Lucy at “havo deemed her the most hardened of -oynies. ‘ Waal; it’ jost another alice o” my luck, ,” she said, as she splashed and ‘s Pata wasatrest. = ‘th from other ‘i as well as trom Lord Cleve's lett he was not to The writer capt d wi most likely she wool meet Lord Cleve, and ald je personally to assure him that the jetty had passed from her mind. “«Pbat’s a downy young woman,” Lucy _ exclaimed when bye en which Lord Cler breakfast: table. “She Kiave : cater- over her with the, brass-earring dodge, ‘But I guess she’snice,none the less, else.yew'd-never bin fond of her.” gaged to Lady | a It was, therefore, his misfor- | 9°! tune, and not his fault, if he did not recog- nize Lady Evelyne Wynter this afternoon, | im ‘he paroxysm of her griet prostrated her 4 »» What have | os i fel, he strolled 4 ino ~~ Roy: ils yaa oth e letter | hi ner eyes raised, and 0} asap tee pointed with and Herbert,to escape es of the coma ee Foal fom the carscwhareatoel nie, and was about to express to his companio his satisfaction at who resultywhen be beard himself aidressed by name. *« Lord Cleve, won't you bay something fro Ho turned and found that’ the speaker was no less a person than Lady Evelyne Wynter. {Do bay something, Lord, Cleve,” the lady chatted on, exhibiting a basket wit ed about town than he was inundated By d it profusion of Saaiten and uaclesmnenses, ‘It is for a charity, you ital rsuaded that his person- ly of importance to society, wonder,andsociety nquire, who was ae the Tovely girl ia that | ac- ciety knew, ister or relatives therefore Soolety, without farthec ado Luoy & wanton, snd con Fe Lord moat | young men,” the Da Merchioness, “ii T wes Evelyne [should rel fea kar poe ie ioness comfeased that her views coincided i ge ganic and polished leader ot T will not go so far as to say that either dy Evelyne or wendale went purposely out of their way to throw them: elves across the young man’ th, ntime, Lord Cleve had endeav- ored to learn from Lucy, why she had held no communication, and wished to hol: wiaie and! Snat Dick A away with the ir. ‘ad= irers came to the conclusion be the girl after all, turned out a woman lik: he | of the prairie wenches, and had fallen a|BeW, and to prey to the insinuating speeches of a hand- some young stranger, From that momen! h as the Mac- intentionally abortavan oat those di plains ewallowed great sea migh 3 E aft . neither | ¥°! id gee ier cacher of the three gommunication, with her father and Si reply was simple enough, She said that she hated her coxa, s that she bad had adeadly quarrel with her father, and vowed ries to live ag Hh C cay lant In answer to m ine she turned uy er big tlge eyes se him gad’ looked dav! his eyes with such a tender pleading, that | ed, and he 70 get spp ee thle Gialike tothe ‘after tii Quenthelm, as they ater the teat « lea erafuned idea, bat still an vie, make, ‘via oe yen that a ays, the t, and unless by chance, oF a wrWvich ther the young a dipped into her red 6 “Only five pound im Lord Cleve, and it’s such a deserving charity. I know you wont Lord Cleve naturally neither could n did refuse, He counted out the five sore eigns, and as he did so be looked it lndy’s languidly smiling eyes. They and the re blue, and sichough | ther just for the fan of the thing, both Lady ou notwithstanding, looked uj Evel lyn d Herbert smil sa much injured and ee young| The reams sey: hhad no difficulty in ad- man, and found excuse for his life—a la | mitting thar earl was a handso: grand Turk—in the circumstances that he |¢xample of ished man! he Ps 30 maay years among the sav- | harmony of t between ages . ‘Hl make ae good a husband as bin quickly so far established that they ‘chess said to the | began to apparently in fun, of their, ti as they called it,past and forgotten engage- ord Cleve found Lady Evelyne’ society her sider oy his long residence abroad, and bis man- towards her simply selightfal In the her presence, wendale sat cautious genetal ;ahe neither appeared to rebuke ; she did not, even fro ould by misconstrued by Mr. therefore endo barrassment by sai “My dear, Me. Maclane has been lookin B ther presence of the. two cold gaze seemed to something uncanny or inexplicably loath. ene—he knew not why. ed a HUNT ON A SHIP. THE PATHAN’S STEWARD DIES OF THE BRUTE'’S BITE. 1 Broke out of Its Cage and Ran up to the e Crew Made for I With Bamboo Poles and Finally It the Sea. cargo of tea and a log book full ot sea tales arrived at New York the other day on the British steamship Pathan, a long, narrow, rakish steel freighter from Japan* ese, Chinese, aud East Lodian ports. oddest of the tales relates chiefly toa nameless baboon from sn Indian jungle,and The Pathan arrived a! pion ae after countrymen, all of lied on ship-board while bound Ta.ee from Uhair nadlye land, A BUFFALO } SAMSON. Four Hebrew Chinaman from Hong Kong, who was chief steward of the Pathan. The Pathan arrived at Singapore on oe hs and Lam Tuck and several of the in the crew went ashore. Pity ita bought five monkeys intending to sell them in America, big baboon 3} teet high, with eam like a wild boar, ata-native dealer’s shop, muchee, He got it ie about $5. He knew '— | that it would be worth at least $50 in New York. On the ship the baboon was kept in a eavy wooden cage about four feet square, with stout bars in front. It was no hand- somer than most baboons, and was subject is moods which indiceted a lack of mental alance—even a suspicion of insanity. dle of the Red Sea,on Feb, 26,her command- ir | er,Capt. W. H. Wright, who isan amateur photographer, decided to group the five monkeys and take their bite The sky was cloudless and the them to look pleasant. Tuck noticed is right hand ‘boo! pond fe ant mn he rope, ing iy a Deokoe the Cainamen’s grip and sunk ite ick’ SIN attra apie throug ‘The Chinaman. yell ran to the a himeelf for chisnoomingly unreason- ” continued him reasonable, excuse for dis- liking the young, Weste a was hortly es Erslyae Wynter, and, ried ona iff seem, the young “ carl suddenly shaat bere this a personal in} his daughter, having left the parental roof Doia Maclane, in return, looked at the 0 | without his authority, might lie on the bed | Young Englishman as if he could have poi- soned him. “I have an idea,” said Lord Cleve em a were walking by d the mhoranbouts of Leay and Herbert could As | aeeucsine having taken tke toe rip bis ive every semblance of truth ad been wise enough theie qentcatin to el asufficient ret on go and see Sir William sted Mr. Quenthelm. sf “Teis sory vrorth laumed before droclaiasiog thelr i dtconery to the id | world. 1n the meantime they had taken all the necessary steps to secure to them- selves the safe and Sadiapated possession of the land that thus The red-handed Fortame smiled, and, by her guilty leer, Lucy was, and 8. epee Bar win Gathvertson te-morrow. BE CONTINUED.) A Glimpse of Balaclava. which marks the entrance to the Valley of Cleve's arri and he hea co fora pest pre ayes on ie a "ygre be m | Wynter or the Macl Part in none of city eee! aa afternoon, pany with Mr.Quent- t South Ken: fom persons, generation Dea unds ich the eee <i Pe salu tance with most. Cae buzz of excite- Saad wanted to have s look at the young nobleman, whose romantic , and, perhaps, also bis bachelor copdlsiea made him so very interesting. Eye g —— A billis i the eles, York Legis'a- lature to co eet car companies boot The at the stick: rail “CP go aon aa ‘At Balaclava there is a marble obelisk | Gown Death, down which the Six Hundred rode hroug! the pulselea yihneeee was startled from his siesta by @ noise on deck He saw the big baboon, looking bigger i in the open air than he sppesred in a moment, perhaps to size uy of the opposing foree,, and Shgalalemberda masthead swifter than the * in int e of the cures he has made maint are nothing short of marvellous.” ing ink there is mush cbance f ng answered. “My injuries, 1 am afraid, are permanent tw “Tt cannet arm to try,” yn’ ‘and running down tothe port it caught rushof feetit ran out pee “igs Saeed fora moment. They | a doomed to de | either death or captivity. "Beto the near- with his light is ‘still burning. t went to the kaboon’s cage and fread out ber it had excaped. It had twelve sits wide apart a tefarve ouly half fare%o pascengers who td dan Fach thick: athe back of fail to obtsin seats, geri the Pathan was about in the mid-| 4 to jooth that | j t. | appointed time, st nimbleat aallor man that ever lived. The] ie pe e | Pi rt and | o; 5 hia flocks ‘numbering a little over 100,000 ite pursuers coul a bamboo stick pe parsed. ed and leaped into om Clerk: ‘His Strength econ me ‘A despatch trom Buffalo saya: The examining surgeons of the Sixty-fifth Regi- nd asked how | thi ently without any great effort, Bartram a his legs until they stood like parallel ben and held ona doctors in the air for w clerks in the icine sthing 7 hone of Warner Broth- ers foun They knew ey Ze rae himself a job on him. 7 nissan /acoount ram was deliverin; and do the tek trode ve to the case and took hold of it. It didn’t budge. * Sure there’s only 7 money and afte for the atttempted fraud went away. Thi carpenter bill of $8 was paid by the crest- 8. a SHEEP INDUSTRY Of PATAGONIA. Immense Flocks Owned by European Companies—Ravages of Animals. m in Punta Arenas, a port on Terra” del Miedo Island, there is much enthusiasm over the sheep industry. A manager for a French company, owning something over cents) on every head clear of all expenses from the sale of wool alone, The increase of the lambs averaged about 90 per cent. 0 Such helpless beings need great care, though after a week or so they common ewe wili weigh from 160 to I pounds in the fall. The lowest averago of wool sheared is sai sheep. the manager carried show in range was considered the average, but it had sus- tained two sheep per hectare (two and r 3,500 at cost the company 200,000 francs ,000) per year, wilicccia alec me ie “clip yielded 500,009 francs (about 100, eer S. gold a year Atrap sud ot van years, —_>_—_. A Lightning Phonograher. pga Man— ou write short- ayes ow man ereaiis I never counted ’em ; but testes day, when my wife foun: You'll do, iD a Job to Test $28, vantage sooner than that. If enough skim THE FARM. [ini catctis hed, make an ostmeat por. ridge to add to ‘i i a Lime as a Fertilizer. Many persons in whose good judgment | gro and sense everyone has confidence insis' that lime is n0t a plant food, and is there- being may be appplied to the soil to contribute thesun shines o1 to the supply of it for the crops. When we 2 see that when such an element of plant | shi substance is applied to the soil the follow. ing crop is greatly helped, we can hardl Agree with the opinion that it is not a food for plants, writes correspondent. He says: If we study the composition of plants, we find that lime is the most important part of the mineralelements of nearly every | Wasbingto one, The ash of a plant is made up of | which he has compiled the oe f no use to mankind a1 adding meal, which will keep Pigs ae sleeker ‘than any ther s assisting their Gentleness, docility and speed are like e n the value of their possessor beyond 8 measure, Mr. in of repo atomic at ton, has rece’ jived advices from A NOVELTY IN SULKIES, THE INVENTOR “CLAIMS THAT A HORSE hd, base FASTER gence to the New * ae ‘Tired Rac! vt in Use—The Driver's Seat ts Placed Above the Horse's Hips, and the axle ts oie to the Middle of the Animal's The votarles of trotting are jost now ia- terested in a new and somewhat novel style great an eaten over the present e latter has been be in poets, with the high- wheel sulky that was in use prior to 1892, ‘The new contrivance is the work of a well- known horseman, and its design is so well set forth in the pase wae Laan these miheral elements, and by examining ment of the number yak wounded and ore pega for ge, proportion, to be not li e same applies to potash Ei pnepueeis acid, and reasonably Why, ‘eke et Time aplant food aa Berely meee The bes pisuet localities in the world | o | I ry 9 be seen if some of egar, This will foam up | Ste* a larger quan- ch a8 ewamp land, in siis acid prevents the growth of an . Tewe ae some lime ona dead animal or any other organic matter, it I d kille cates of lime a 4 produced in the a quick: lime is applied, as it ual fall, pate the land ii Reales | for wheat | recor i But th yr othe! | matter and a with it and then add | wounded, icate of lime, and by| March 6— ‘water, forming 8: taking the silica irom the potash or the nal hosphates or magi ly sap original | 82°%e alumina,| The num! September 16—At Ping Yan) 162 killed, 439 wounded ; Chinese, 2,000 killed, 511 prisoners. Wer tore | , September 19—At Hai Yang To, China: In the ash of | Japanese, 80 killed, 186 wounded (this was The} a eee fight) ; Chinese loss unknown. tober 24—At Chin e Aes 29, at Hawang fg . | Japanese, 35 killed, 111 Sok iaeds Chinese, seer Japanese, iar idlled 25 wounded ; Chinese, 100 killed, eral battles of the Chinese-Japanese wai Tuly 24, 60 tate of Phung Do, | Korea: Japanese, 3 wounded ; Chinese prisoners, July, 29—At Songwan : Japanese killed, Time, which | 83 3 wounded, 60 ; Chinese, 200 killed : Japanese, Lien Neg and Chen; Kim Ha Hwa Tou: Hey Mo Chen; mes £ December 12—At Japanese, 11 killed hand ‘wounded; ics 3--At Hai Cheng : Japanese, lec casualt d. ember 19—At Hong Hwa Chai 6% killed, 357 wounded ; Chines 5 Miited eee 6 wounded ; Chinese, 40 killec i: Jay 1805-—Ac Hai Ping: Japanese found, 50; Chin Hal Cheng: Ja} pan killed, 49 P godast Chinese 50 Kile February 1— At Wei 8, 83 a 219 wounded ; Chinese, 700 rae VieAs Hel Mo Cheng one ; Chinese ‘ine, ruary 24—At Ta Ping Shang « Jap- " Febr anese killed, 29, wounde killed, 200. February 28—At S a in. tho | anese killed and wounded, 98; Chinese, no 245 ; Chinese ha Hwo Yuan: Jap- —At New Chwang : Japanese ties, ut the) led and wounded, 200; Chinceo killed and 1 1880 5 Chinese prisoners, it At In Kow, no record of cas- ber of Chinese wounded is not ets., that the soil i is Date ay spe the lime | known with accuracy. nts that scarcely an; necessary in order toteenni iteethed to form an opinion as to the merits of the invention, One of the chief dsarat ate by his notion is that it relieves the horse of much of the usual draught i aba any sulky which he is forced to drag along behind him, Every trainer recognizes the fact that the closer he can hitch his ‘* bike” ib horse the lighter the draught will be, to ae knowledge that the ex- mn male high t Some of the prints ian depict the old- time trotters in action show them pig Ait Heel roea sirikinyc aut Gobind at full speed, “all veteran drivers agree that this melon hag tremendous balldera pee Cia? slightly bent ax! loser nite withons danger ot atcikingy: ey by deg this departure has beon earried further and farther until the modern truss axle machine, 0 close that a driver can sit on'the dock 2 a hor been evolved, cane ae vention ply followin; out to the \d by placing be, a ne pied fy. ‘THE NEW BIKE SULKY. in front of the middle of the snimal’s bod; g the driver's seat direotly above upright bar gui learned to take introduction of Mane prnall-wheslo od renders and available for the crops, small part of she natural history, o used in good farming. And ich nerd a history we must value to the farmer quite independently of the fact whether it is actually eed go Sean whoa ¢ in in the best condiion for the applica- ‘as lime is most soluble in cold soc and the wh he fruics of it had been Disraeli’s Marvellous Career. had With the dawn of anew ze its polities in 1832 Disraeli’s strenuous publio life began; and when, half 9 century later, 1 of life men began | cli he | + appreciate how full the intervening years of indomitable strife, devoted to is fever convert the gradual conquest of the ear of the House ai Lit] of Commons, of the confidence of the Con. | servative Party, of the good-will of the to| sovereign, and of the support of the nation. era in English and honor, 40 bushels per a it It is left in heaps in the field, preferably | ordinary child of Israel, who: of one bush in a| were few days i Veni action of the moisture of the air or a sho oor it of rain, ily ep himeeif 0 as just to whiten the surface, with a long | ho wr the wheat it is not advi be used to Veterinary Notes; name, ani Never, in breaking a colt, hitch him by | wien a Sali she haede cl the surmounted the side of « slow walking horseyanles you the gait of the colt, rite know how disagreeable it is to ride possible to “change his gait, or shades: jaan it. In feeding live stock,i “S Ba me Ey 5 ae r hostile conditi A Door Cushion. above that which is required for mainten-| an ance which yields a profit to the feeder. Do not try how little you can keep the stock alive on, but rather how much you can get es to eat and ehoroaghly digest. fany horses could doexcellent service as Peres or for the carriage or were it not for the fact that they are used up, 30 to speak, in trying to make fast) *' trotters of aoc when 50 very few of them brought ap to the desired m: For farm purposes weight is a pas pes aa leration ; especially when he can get | ral {it without clumsiness, and neko ee hardiness and qualities of en g the kind ‘deta ete aw piaster id the es aa its € is always toi widch and » pose eto use| representative of the English race among |i superphosphate until the pring. Tteanthen| the assemb) antage. itain into the hollow of min ee Sota as wel a natior Toft behind ‘im Scie Tdennited Sieh ne strong enough to defen xample we Tithe tclumph of individual capacity sulkies so od the wheels are dir iy. be of the driver, they. “tilt the 1orse, ae id which » experie vel, aiacance in the aoe lt I oft ae ave a tendenc; his action. A corsfortably fitting aural small foremost ministers of Canada. He, ‘in looking after the temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of mankind, publication : “TI have much pleasure in re- commending the Great South Ameri- can Nervine Tonic to all who are afflicted prostration and indigestion. d very great relief from the very first bottle, which was strongly recom- mended to me by my druggist. I also induced my wife to use it, who, must say, was completely run down and was suffering very much from general debility. She found great relief from South American Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it to her fellow-sufferers. “Rev, W. 8. Barxer.” It isnow a scientific fact that cer- tain nerve centres located near the base of the brain have entire control over the stomach, liver, aa bie and indeed all inte: J. Torrance, AN EMINENT MINISTER REV. W. S. ~ OF PETERBORO. Mr. W. 8. Barker is a young| force is diminished, and minister of Peterboro who has by his| the stomach will not digest the food,| great earnestness and able exposition the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys! of the doctrines of the Bible earned will not act properly, the heart and. for himself a place amongst the |lungs suffer, and in system becomes weakened and sinks: with his most estimable wife, believe | on account of the lack of nerve forges) } on the foregoing scientific discovery, hence the following statement for|and is so prepared that it acts directly on the nerve centres. It| immediately increases the nervous, energy of the whole system, pei enabling the different organs of tl body to perform their work petfealy, the Society of Friends, of Darlington,’ Ind., writes: “I have used six bottles: of South American Nervine and TL consider that every bottle did for me: one hundred dollars ie ie good, good! think there has ever been a medicine: introduced into this country, which will at all compare with this as a weakened or deranged the nerve |cure for the stomach and nerves.” BARKER fact the whole. i South American Nervine is based | I J Agent, Going to Sleep. the farm| the door at three differ | poin farmer is ly. If m al 4 fitted for feng Tis tty Sakon available “take aoe strip farm to the best ad’ me | that tack vo ‘The art of closing the door with a ban, is REE not only to nerves but to the and ceiling ofthe building the easini time he is getting about him the kind of | the edge of woolen cloth, cut to the proper horses in for the t costs nothing but a and will prove a valu- where oe sto] also eecures the way wil water book. The driver's feet reat in e 8 e horse and just beneath the s Illustrating What He Meant. Latter day speakers of English are get use of our language, according to the ting to be very wordy and pompous in the | sions fi tings linguist, Professor Whitney, he thinks we ought to get back to the | sen: “Order is Heaven’s first law,” and the truth ia manifested even in the process of| ray, th Darwin’s Modesty. Writing in Good Words, Mr. John Mur- London publisher, relates an inci- going to sleep, When a man drops off to| dent illustrative of ie ‘extreme modesty of bits his body does not do so all at once,s0| , pad distin gaiahed ea ant Some senses become dorm: d always in the ‘As he becomes drowsy the eyes cl and | ¢h, the sense of on is at rest. it N quickly e di fea with him a Met Re laie tote my father, and As he Inid it om the table he sai ir. Murray, here ism appearance of the sent | abr sss te sene fbn eel iano discriminating power or sense first to return awakening, Then hearing follows wait mater oe ne tate and nae Torey hough i it is sy no means fmol jinews, ae th Slumber ioelint at the ye and sees \d_to be clear, pure and simple in dictic employs the following words Avoid A polysyllabical profundity, pom- y: ity, whether obscure or apparent. words, speak truthfully, betaaiy, cleay, purely, but do not use large The Way to Learn. pant, an ty an plicity of our ancestors, iar rh itney i ly spreads up tl tine Be in advising us not to use big | it Feacheathe brain, w limbs and tran! i a antl complete and the wide bod is as pory Th tah sleep if impossible when the feet eee ay Prices of Meats apres, es A despatch from Chicago sa, summer than they have been for ten “a had a sign op, Deaf and 4 to his companion, but how am I to rage im. po iiedigs Give thia man something, be e tign, air, whispered the beggar | and od ate iy on account of the increased de- bool eaices aust Darwit Ab istenpin what toucl ingen This sense is also the | edition.” obec made not probable that much relief | $89! ge pree cog had ade Mr, Murray, “rae id bye th book was ‘Earth Worms,’ venice | ms ol chee aiscl by cece aa sestee LAREN SMES hs Combining Duty With Pleasure. hh parish clerk, seeing a womam her ther Tices | grave pi begreen of all kinds of meats will be mice this | that may be,” she 3 hads good offers t fettlnrettes ee keep as a | longer than I can To Suit the s the Subject. Hew Mick: volume on the cow, so tone hee qallloos ta 'o a is le! fe meat it be bound'ty call