4 E z 5a pai : ai ee . ot a Pe A es see Bip in me, for } OLD SHOES. j “Three miles.” 0, three miles is atime will come, I think when I Leball you have Paul's Saviour. How long] go an operation, upon the result of iy oe 0 ut you don't | ie HUT QUT FROM THE SUN) cont was Soran old'snan to travel |p over. I wat to seo! what they do wil your Jouraty bal” -At what bout | which dependn whether of not he ill iy 4 ia ty: F Grol T bed reve wait- has been whipped and crip-| there, and I ran to cere they, do | wi ill | be invalided of vice. 17 THE PAINTER OF PARTIA Y 5 e execution. At i pe Se Hever mind thet now, | 4ud s Word About @ther Things O14, In- ane aR maltreatment. But they | it. Ido not want to be looking throug! 5 RS Vee: oh ¢, 50 jr it while you tell the rest of eluding Old Hab: REV. DR. TALMAGE PREACHES ON| Soon got’ io the place of execution | the gates ajar for ever. I want them is eee ore Story.’ 2 is the duen-| “‘As easy as sage sh 's e famili- THE CHRISTIAN’S DEATH. Acquae Salvia—and he’ is fastened to|to swing wide open. There are ten <i ORT in the large'ar saying,” said Mr. Staybolt, “and t Bt thousand things I want Basteined : iated, and if | about you, about myself, al government of this ee abet Gos, : He summoned a new counéil and ap- |easy-chair sl appropria | ene hi THE MAGIC OF A MASTERPIECE. ae af bes aS Bagge Negeri r ing 2 A yy dis ‘. soon as s! t ve i i his whole ‘had thus se J about everything. | We s me ented him, Her ‘aes we have worn the new shoes, close fit- | path of what we know, and Piper With the details % ttled herself to listen, the | ting, hard and formal, how gladly we ute com u ‘against Ve paul of| A man Street was fatally in- she seemed Told ined ber narrative. lout them’ off, and with ‘what’ joy we Merete hedbretcrytiek Ow | jured, and was carried into the nearest Where rol ara Ber pais gtopped utterly, overcome, andyT have given you. Ab! my own true) @ y : 1 never saw the princess again aft.|put on the shoes that are old and worn ta aved city] | rp vn enw es ren errs 4 ried his face in his hands. ew|love! It has been no prize won b} wife,sbetwee er she left Toledo, he had 1 ti ili 1! Old shi On too I moments so, and then he felt those ae Piakan gave you i me. It oa was a hat had to jheard of her. As I think F taformed po Se Be Be io thi bg BA text: “The time of my departure is a oak oa ai tithe face 2) his | like a © tain, is tree, Reter teh va a But be: ing arms onee more over his shoul-] who have won the prize.” warmer as vent | yo good father-—wea,pcttled | ever: Are. Dob the-ealy thing 0 hand."—2 Tim. iv. 6 | executioner, and as the ¢ ‘cia ik i ion ;| fore the ae ee teian ae net and this time around his neck;|. “And I,” added Zanoni, lifting Berjposend he Bad childr b hagena; being permanently at- | tbat we like. We like an old bed, if The way out of this world is sa Nicaun te ovord, Panto s: a e Death was eon vam for him—bat 0 sweet, tearful voice sounded in| hand to his lips as he spoke, “have won 2 . In course of | is not too old, but just old enough, bo Riscksd-ny with Se, Rodaieaceas al am now Bats to be a and che it i figurative. nt for what place s eaven itself! And now, my darling,” a. Z re he made the acquaintance of a|that while still soft and comfortable it be "un | time of my departure is at hand.” But v, after the body is resurrected. Teun, you love me with all your) after a thoughtful pause, “let me sa; er) messenger— 1 pce cenbabtin’ taithe bod undertaker’s spade, and screwdriver, I put my hand over my eyes. I want heart?” Ithink I understand and fully appreci-| der | whose regular traveled route was from pli g ~ a that the Christian can hardly think as not to see that last struggle. One “With all my heart, with all my soul’ ate all you have said of Count - | boy: “ agena to Ma- mee it supports at every point, yield- he ought of the most cheerful passage Sharp, keen stroke, and Paul does go ge SEES HER SOLDIERS): : and with ‘al my abreneth—iny. first love aro, and I thank you for the informa- | dri ing a degree of comfort which not the in all his history. We hang black in-| 0 the banquet, and Paul does dine Rpt rosa’ fromm) ber. chat of woman sinee in cnealgis) ss I find the nobles of His wife and [ttle Stefano at | “Corsiglia walnntactad Madulon: ai PeccOoe hated Sect ae. in al ate) | with the King. a cross to the breast ‘And I loye you ane surat SE Bi Parma sadly deficient in general in-/ home, here in Parma. And now listen. |her mistress momentarily hesitate a es “4 i 14, th: stead of white over the place where} What a transition it was! From the R et yours, now and evermore. If you telligence. A few have gained some-|..\When word 7 eae A ies a king’s messenger |” bdab tpi cmiat eager ofa the good man gets his last victory, We malaria of Rome to the finest ‘climate | c WER MAJESTY PRESENTS THE VIC- ‘ : Toave me, Tsay—and Tsay it once and thing from travel, but very few from| Giovani niin prison, that his enemies )went ‘on guthoritatively. “H te |are not too old, including old habits. stand weeping over a heap of chains, in all ey Apis Brg pse TORIA CROSS 70 BRAVE MEN. * ‘orever—only death shall part us! My|study. The duke himself is the one | Were seeking the dest is 1 nat beauty ‘and health. His ashes were he We cling to them, so long as they, give love is no fleeting fancy, no sudden, | positive exception. He is one of the @d ones, he sent for his wife, who aft pigren ie: ase oes i ud alt ia ‘i val i pat in the catacombs of Rome, but in ll Wetifeead, to | qucen Viclerta Vis the Bick: antl Wounde less passion; but a calm, trusting, best educated men I have ever known,|¢ Much trouble and. Bola per- id cee eh ery and v y man! What one moment the air of heaven bath- ern summer?! cateroes at 4 Netley Interesting Bese m9 enduring love, that has become par e of the most intelligent by na-/ Mitted to visit hil He © what you see, he had towo and pity it was he had to com to this." ed from his soul the last ache. From up t tion of Wh as: ife, a part of my vei ae rd; told her where to find |e it LS blessed thing he me to what? By the time people , Shipwreck, f dungeon, from the vi Th he = Mail th ' love you bee: you are, to me, th this brings me to speak of an-| Money ; and finally obtained from her Deri kth te bled at the obsequies that’ iting pain of the elm-wood rods, from re age ion ‘Daily Mail thus desoritt- ideal'of all my thoughts and dreams| other—of the Marquis Steffano. a uld flee, wit t have assembled at the obsequies, t rp sword of (he headsmén, he is es the Queen’s recent visit: of my hero, my champion, my one man| the way, what is he marqui ra of? WI Bato! young oy, to a and distant | PI ee SS al above all other men. I am glad you|and what is his marquisate and. A true friend w s |Ab! but you can tell it ‘ age 3 i he man has been three days so happy that | goes ini aT uetMbane Romenely. all the joy of earth accumulated would, lage of heaven, a king mong. kings, ween paid another visit to n, - rit rin bon : z a at Victor Hospital at Netley | “She had ling a are beautiful, but far more glad am I Oh!" La: “ 0 of ee high 3 he had lingered so long among the at you are good and noble and true| teil you. ugh dhe princes stress ri ord of qa 1 remember ev- | bis: she one ate be wretchedness beside it; and ‘he might ‘multitudes of the sainthood rushing —@ ‘out |OD Saturday afternoon, and ‘spent an he d that the time allotted for, her and ios yal—a truly Christian gentle-| nines, close upon the confines of Gen-| ery syllable!” anew. ee ae en ei ad the A bills, hour among the wounded soldiers, | Visit had nearly expired, ‘as, man. waa 1m yours, yours, and}oa, is awild, rugged district contain-, 45 possible, he being meantime, enti? ot id Isabel, when she was al- “And some of us profit by thi: me aaa +4 yan aie geod There avere 898 patients in the hose ft herefore, Snel Sxl her Majesty 4 yours alone while life and sense is|ing the towns of Campiano and San jly safe under the protection of capow- | lowed to proceed. > Aba tig Once lifted out of the rut we cause he has to go. It is a fortunate | so on the right hand of Christ is Pani, | where stop the highest peaks of the} pital, and of these 196 were sich and | ened, 62 Bbbreviate 7 mine ; and I hope—I pray—that our love|Steffano. A great many years ago, erful card ft i the plain, where there is thing that a good man does not have the second great in heaven. Alps, and when in that see | there . remaining wards, aabotae or " may live glorified and eternal!” vhen there were supp. WbeLL aia “untertuimts! vtsicges: broken nothing to cramp us and where we can ang . they! He changed kings likewise. Before | is no peri man, doomed to die,| Wounded soldiers from the Indian fron. | patients; but she declined this sug “Amen, and amen!" and hé took her|derful mines of untold mineral wealth| with grief, was assisted to Genoa, and lay about freely in any direction in ac- to wait to see his own obsequies, they: +1. hour of death, and uj stepped on ‘the scaffold, and said, in| tier campaign. Her Majesty, saw the | ton, and patients, except to his bosom, held her close, and their|in that mountainous district, it was| there, it was supposed, she was ag ROvGaa nS WEN cite ae rade atEd. of so discordant with his own | moment, he was under Nero, the thi y: ‘Now in ten minutes Iwill know | greater Speier of the inmates, about sixty lips met in the first warm, ecstatic kiss Dele to the dignity of a marquis-|board a vessel bound for Toulon, in T fa rather welcome the experience. If the Israelites should go necked, the cruel-eyed, the filthy-lip-|the great secret.”| One | minute) 17, tho surgical division were 53 Spee of a pure and lofty love. nd the title bestowed upon the|France. A w after the trial of th feria 3) grow. ol back to Egypt and mourn over the| ped; the sculptured features of that|after the vital inctions ceas- A little time—or a longer—of silent eee brother of the reigning duke.| Prince came off. In another week the yield without much struggling to the Da pire ah left, they would | ™22 bunging down tb us, to this very|ed, the little child that died last} who had received bullet wounds in the PURELY PERSONAL, rapture, heart speaking to heart with) It the duke had a son and heir he|0ld duke had asserted himself and ord- enticements of ease and comfort.” "epee Aaa Rial day, the horrible possibilities of his! night knew more than Jonathan Edw-| Indian frontier campaign, and among — not be any more silly than that Chris- tian who should forsake heaven and come down and mourn because he had to leave this world. the old, old story, as old as ereation| would be Prince of Piacenza. Stef-| ered a new ? trial, with the result as 1) for —the story that found birth when the]fano earnestly besought the duke to| have told you. a ornin, i i i “And now, on the day that saw Gio- gethe: " é .|Vamni set free from prison, word came pearl and holiest sympathies of the|Nonsense. Antonio gave him the mar-| that the Young prign thn princess the Great Folks of World. these were Piper Findlater, the ash of Dargai, nak Private Vicke: dining-room whi it, man of the ‘‘Dorsets,” who Spee The Duke of Marlborough is one of kept whirling day and night with iboats . It is dem -_ Tt ed himself so brilliantly by saving the | the most enthusiastic of amateur fire- CARRIED oR ae THE FRENCHMAN. of he To be Continued. man heart until humanity shall have | quisate, thus’ granting him a title; but |had sailed had beem overtaken by a ter- ighlander and Prene man at the Battle ow, departure implies a starting-| bewitching magnificence, jy. z + soldi. vanished from off the earth! and wrecked, and that every A ENS, vi place, and a place of destination. When | standing in stalls of solid Gotan ac ad apa Aspanerdl a ‘Then, when the first wild, delirious rd badsperished! ‘The news the grounds aroun: q ‘ ‘ 4 and all-absorbing emotion of passion- ti Baoeta ber doubtea: One CAVALRY HORSES IN WAR. At the bettie at Waterloo the Young seaabltae? Wea data SHG oes att ee chia ploticns| weae hadbean fi al 8c itive | hands of the Queen the Victoria Cross. ; iss had ed, the painter led pts er the prince lived after that, a Imperial Guard was a corps consisting starting-point ? was a scene Of} oqaubed with t i ‘i er Majesty, w fe ‘igbied in bho heak ‘ the princess back to her seat, and was 1 he died, a white-haired, de-|They Act Very Much Like a Man Eefore|of young men from 18 to 21 years great physical distress. It was the! set on fire to illumin of neath pial Sarsiertia: Sarat ees aia ea 0 speak coherently and|cipality, he allows him to draw serenlh broken id man. é and Afier a Battle, age. ‘Their officers were men of ex- Tullianum, the er dungeon of the| That was Paul’: ps FO Me) ry ha Batok HE goodly share of its revenues.” fi all upon the aged & 1 mom oes into a d belt My love! my tite! We bave| St a's marvel tte sal ee late laine Wee. under rads cisteoa sd Neteran cavalry horse partakes of | perience and courage, drawn from ee baietr eg es wR cae Him ig pola of white tulle at one side |awkward oyeler ran his byes intl ting much to say to each other. Shall looking curiously into the beautiful of breaking him down it inspired him |‘® hopes and fears of battle just the | other regiments. They were sent to was bad enough—it having no means of] courts are payed with love, and whose geology. astroni ©; | and a black and white aigrette, was the ‘Emperor's carr while we speak, go aA with my work?! face before him, “that Steffano has not| With a new energy and a new ite, e | Same as his rider. As the column} Waterloo, as were indeed almost all ingress or egress but through an open- | th: i nm pila ill accompanied by Princess Christian,| Verdi, now 8 years old, rides a “You might take your palette and/asked his brother for your precious sent to Rome and had his ing in the top. ‘Through that the pri-| whose sceptre is adorned with jewels x ros ER td ane! i ice ars 4 o ti dson, | Swings into line and waits, the horse | that ined the F: hea . brushes,” she said, flushing slightly in| hand—a hand that would be doubly pre-| Antonio brought to him, and thereaft- | gr, ea Stine selii Hebe Hero yee ni view of the implied deesit; for nelther cious to him. ‘Teabel! Have I hurt er bad of them believed that the work could’ you? I did nm suc vhose fa r Princess Henry of altered and horseback every day. He Rat ve a ‘ “ 4 with love, and whose lifetime is an |! st fies the mark of exclamation. | Princess Victoria of Schleswig-Hol- | little every morning, plays cards with wait is spun out he will tremble and| forward that he waited, expecting to came all the food, and air, and light eternity of love. When Paul was| All ie Mi solved. Who will fear to co i ; fs t pe y 4 stein. his family in the afternoon, and in the go, 0 cessfully . |) Hush 1 jie trembling girl implor-| sweat and grow apprehensive. If he| be able to do without them. The young received. It was a terrible place, that | ieaving so much on this side of the |go out on that discovery; when all the |"). Cov sr asopnns, evening Deo chat cae pia Certainly,” returned Zanoni, with ed, putti Your |x has been six months in service he knows] men grumble most as much as the upper dungeon; but the Tullianum was} pillar of martyrdoy avin ie Oe a tose to be di ee | ager gs La Washoe ire senotet tener: fearon aa a yom sie pews ee eee sharply vibra every bugle call. As the call comes| old Guards. Why did not the Emperor the lower dungeon, and that was still| 0p, ‘he olter wir ory af the Tet | ean coe cimethe henge ante | ae Hotes the covet train arriving at |, Ligut-Gen. von der Goltz, better haps nothing de ual nas oceucred HaGaD Marea to I to advance, the rider can feel him work-| send them forward? At last, at about more wretched, the only light, and the| “The ‘time of my departure is at anticipation of that blessed country, if |, veh iy : e gna ra srevdih soa Divowsias Woh aawGolte ean hates “a so ate calculated to put them at their guardian; but, ling at the bit with his tongue to get | four o'clock, they were sent to the only air coming through the roof, and| hand?” it be no better Pi through holy cur- Naas oa ee B in ha organizer of the Turkish Army, 4 pee and eeoyperiaaient hcl a call im andj found hi: “a if e lit between his teeth. As he moves out| front. Many were the struggles they that roof the floor of the upper dun-} Now, why cannot all the old people a Mes: de Aah ae sf ChE ee jeans he been appointed Inspector-General of rsd | expression in his evil face which could | plaudits of a well-pleased and | he will eith es (b: pret? faster | had. They in front of the High- That was Paul’s last earthly|of my congregation have 5 bunting ofl colors,’ Lea Fortresses in the Ge The first thing the lover did was td’ hi e - | Latanial asia: Mtg lteel Wa rlpmecthvna temic leant & eon cata maneah % a 3 ps ’ -| Trei in; we ought to have the i 4 a ga Bee ccaee nd Make ah Mean Gut nothitis ise than 6 yestn-, conten! pesn it | than he should or bolt. He cannot bolt, | landers, and the fight was fierce, and residence. It was a dungeon just six| holy glee as Tena coming tia sak, | joy of the omens ‘because leaving this | 7" nee of na Ba Ge place of Gen. Vogel von er meeting with the count and marquis on! ow sealled Father Paul | however. The lines will carry him for-|at last came to a hand-to-hand fight. feet anda half high. It was doleful| ;3nj Sarey ‘hair, and hevsent it to|world SR ea che ceiuaee eevttin ceed to Oblaf ar the General Beatle the previous piean He knew she! “Oh, my soul! Heaven itself would the‘city from Spain. He | ward, and after a minute he will grip| A Highlander perceiving that there place. It had the chill of long cen-| the Queen as a great joke; but old|of the universe. You see a great crowd the hall to the courtyard o! Vouci | Gaay elias man? Sis aathaie Salk must hear of it, and he preferred that | intoriogs to. prevent such a consum-| had been here but a few days when he: the pit, lay back bis ears, and one can| wasa gap Found | the standard-bearer— turies of dampness. me skillful | age. i Ly joke at all. For th rest, @nd you say: | tion, Her appearance was the signal | i it one iced cmeeeany nie oan ees| { h. if 4 , Pps gap rou He le ilar Nae dampness. "Tf some skillful | fast forty years you have been dread- 4 What gener’ | for whearty outburst of cheering, and |Purton, late Permanent Secretary of e, ¢ this the painter turned and | of the Genoese vessel, with the wife and | fee! his sudden resolve to brave the 5 5 . L mnrepon. ebould: soe B ing that which ought to have been, an | al, fae oe ince, is going up there? nee d handkerchiefs | the War Department, was made a peer DHA wiapileallel wore slowly across tl ma. B i ion board. At | worst and have done with it as soon | musket down aad rushed fo jechaee where Paul is incarcerated, we might] exhilaration, You say you most fear |‘Well, I see a great thron, mag in heaven, | the waving of hats and handkere n the Queen’s birthday, and is said s | altered the arrangement of one or two anantole Pouninla A Wham ihe Siidapers Woputh oe CMe ee ae find out what are the prospects of|the struggle at the moment the soul|! say: “AWho is the focus of all that | from the thousands of people who had a v will’ curtains, and when he came back h 7 Bie re dette be pm Paul's living through the rough im-|anq body part. But millions have|edmiration? Who is iu “centre ot congregai-d outside, A gaard of) by the Court Journal to have selected wield’ gat'd ipa bac princess\to cheer and the sabres to flash the | gle began ; each sid j each: t. In the first place, he is} 2™' sl that litt ring compa eh the title of Baron Halibu: He is lown within reach of the princesa’s in the vessel for Tou- feari Sat insleoon hero: ab last ptisonment. In the first place, endured that moment, and why may|that glittering honor consisted of the Mercury train- rit : AN ~ eventing Steffano from fur-! hai hid f: he 1 hat-| horse responds. An eéxultation fills his| fearing to kil ir own hero. A an old man, only two years short of vell. They got through with | Jest ampion of fall worlds, ‘is, a native Nova Scotian and the first l faci er. bs i d been told to that, 1 ot, he will scream out, and his eyes| the Highlander, impatient and angry . i not we as well. They got through ow | ing ship boys. Blue Nose to enter the House of Lords. thes er outrage.” e said, with simple, by her bus. | heart, he will scream out, y i i vi Abe Rb aay that very time when he] jit, and so can we. Besides this, all Tevenrite, of all ages, Do you. kn ‘Ahl” said the thoughtful girl, with! straightforward earnestness, “ol the eribtl dieieaniGtla) {ease ene eremimed, BieR ey in ein pve ke Leap mah Ree soos ds the warmth, and the sun-| medical men agree in saying that |what is the first auestion the soul will} ‘The Queen was conducted to'alandau| M. Celicourt, a lawyer 0? Mauritus, a dubious shake of her head, “I see you Marquis I’ know literally.” nothing.| boy, had sailed in the care of this very Tee ee tee ee ee broad 6 ioe ena’ Pha ied Vea. Tent, ‘and the fresh air, he is shut there is probably no struggle at alllask when it comes through the gate| drawn by two grey horses, and after | who was the last advocate in the island do not know Count Guiseppe Denaro.|I have heard that his earliest years| man—Father Paul—for Spain, and had | te start he will not fail as the lines | OVe bread shoulders, and Caprio bi from the his ankles? | &t tbe last moment,—not so much pain |of heaven {| T “think the irst question}, fey minutes the royal party drove |to plead in French, ‘has been made a He is a gentleman, possessing very/were spent ‘abroad. I have won-| arrived safely at Carthagena, and Minere jcurry, the last fifty feet. of space. If] over, on his side; and then, What are those scars on his ankles? | a4 the priok of a pin, the seeming signs | ill be: jesus, the Saviour | ‘ret the hospital, followed by many | Knight of the Legion of Honor. When many good qualities; and those good] dered a how oe and’ Antonio Farnese | the priest had been obliged to separate |* Volley comes and he is unhurt he will | 67S and Drcnchmen | notre and. then Why, those were gotten when he was] of distress being altogether involun- | that tite my sin; that carried my |) 4°, : conveyances on 0! 8 qualities are uppermost. They are to could be brothers. But are they own|from her, she having determined to lower his head, and then take a Bes Fee tind /Hght “redeubled in’ rigour Ppa ree ent: / rita eben ARS ah Res Me ae | “Te is the uncer. |sorrows; that fought my battles; at leyolea’ pePoot Beery house in| the British Government many years be seen of all men. But, I am sorry es a Overs itheye not two moth: |ssek frierias of fauom ehet had heard in |< Sree aa ral Akiuced abatene onl Tpemmext ae few of the young Guards time he turned, eee free He oohiae ge Netley was gay with flags and stream- | ago ordered that English should be the tosay, he has bad qualities, which are Toledo. The good father said he had | infantry he will thunder straight at)... the sun rise. ‘There they lay on staited ee eee ers, and along the whole of the route jofficial language of Mauritius after e not so apparent. Juan, I fear the “The princess sllook her head aidly.| |seen her under the grotection of the W Trawcpaikeetvea Beit icine the field of Waterloo, “and the little Hirer hese te Pang thityeaine to the hospital the road was jined {certain day, NE Celiconrt dn the ‘lest count could be somewhat treacherous| she replied. “The same fath-| bishop of Toledo, who chanced to be at | * line of horsemen he will Lift his head) 7 chman was found with 17 wounds. pisses ey 4 eae liner He cern spect day talked’ from noon till midnight, occasions. - He is proud of bis ranks| er and the sa me mother were parents|Carthagena when they arrived. and front feet as if going over a fence. | FEM a Ot covered to tell the tale. strokes—one hundred and ninety-five he Breda Tot the hospital | winding up with a farewell to hig proud that he was born patrician; and/of both. Did you never hear the story | visited her once at the former city, and | , 4 Man seldom cries out when hit in)“ ‘on the erg ne Mygealos aestied the there was, another great crowd, and | mother tongue, rl sensitive ie lal a oF ot, the “childhood of those. two brot-| only once, about six months after her Het ee ee eee we ee eee Be The haetianitied: ‘aot iaery-tive See ca neceatti cied privilege of 2 er a pa i a Sa : s eh Fi reelf ii ‘ pr rs settlement there hed cone taMbencia, [when struck by~a bullet, are out of THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE. strokes bringing the blood. Look at| have more friends in heaven than |what will you ask Hk firs Pidgin nc isis ep sek reek ROMANTIC. BUT UNHAPPY. ‘itskencw fiat he has been, to oor i Reese ig latranbe) Aviat ety arta ai) | Tie nuear senvr Beermente but hetheard | their saddles eis nar rene par hit! 4 gentleman who surrenders himself nee eee oe ruses? think. hore. Just take the census; Take some | know I an think what T would ask| fer tour of the wards, first men! 4 “Chinaman, on being asked why it me—to wateh me while with you. 1| think, considering how. inverse are the ator RaBiribe aerate pa Ry eek Sinn all it jeneirey for Rumiinee? Aan look olde gesaanipen Hea oe stnaalng sabese feord the names of those who have | think I would like to hear him describe | 8" Ps, her Maiesty were tues top discovered it.this morning while we |i ie tae plage ANT WEAE oat ot or arm, they fall for-| than his years, m curious for mid the shivered timbers.of the ship- emigrated wo the other shore; the | the storm that came upon the ship | (Onvslcoren Teed slowly along the were getting ready me hith oo: met ee” ward and roll off. Even with a foot cut| some time to learn how one of his wre see a gas ‘aul's side. | companions of your school days, your | when there were two hundred and sev-|ji00 Gf canvalescents, and during this | yo, ough to shy he i him e duke himself y a jagged piece of shell ahorse| snhours, twent: hi Where did he get that? I think he] Csriy business’ associates, the friends |enty-five souls on the vessel, Paul, be- EP ene ihe auitienis suede really unhappy and miserable with fear rk the tars “aie vi. It is only when shot | B&@2Dours, twen! y aces got that in’ the tussel with highway-| of mid-life, and re |ing the only 01 rd’ cool enot Peak able tb hes, everything i ope f you, | He hins spoken with the dul, eve Isabel’s abrupt pause in her narra-| through the head or heart that he| managed to retain his youthful spir- en, for he had been in peril of rob-| Yecontly wei nit | to describe the s here is a fas-| Were years ago, as|tive and the e: sees in wHInEAYDN ow i be fatally wound-| its and activity. TI id gentleman: bers, and he had money of his own. He} be that they have bet me ng |cination about a and the sea that BH 14 VERY or ACIOUS Fi nzo Farnese was|ed had been occasioned by a nervous |ed, but he hobbles out of the fight to|has a florid face that seems to belie was a mechanic as well as an apostle, | yon do not care, any more about them, |I never shall get over, and I think I iS f pe ci a yas well{and impatient knocking on the door | right or left, and stands with drooping | 14, and I think the tents he made were a8/ dnd you do not want their society? ©|would like to hear him talk about that | Upon reaching the end of the corri- fortunately for him ng nev icating with the waiti iI’ oss of blood brings him | the crown of snow-white hair. His eyes good as his sermons. There is a wan-|1o. ‘There have been days when you|first. But when I mest my LordJesus| dor her Majesty sec in the lift me a single sentence If a dozen course it could be none other than vn. are sparkling, his step is elastic, his ness about Paul's looks. What makes) have felt that you could not endure it wii words that revealed to me thi te ott he horse that loses his rider and| form erect and his laugh contagious. that? Ithink a part of that came from] another t away from their tor, srs | Yes, oe a that these ie aauge ay eee ea _aritnout ol unwounded eng “vill continue es When asked for the desired explana- fe, ete beg ro (Pa trges tone ed Spon poeenpap aang ae he i Gees ee yah wer me ae en he| tion he blushed like a schoolboy and Sea, suffering terribly, before he was ede AE is WoL: OE eeu ble: even If mana Che anWsT Habe zation! aueih corner Jani ohe atti ras vateh. Sha took it out and| goes ga h- | occasionally stammered in his explan- e801 “I was you had the power. It would not do iously. 5 i he ex-|ing wi . | to tr God would not give yo on AS ne can learn he only ; inj utten@hatont T had | of leave the field. - J his racing about “OL oburse,” he inughed, “Lim re jated old man, surely | resurrection power. Before, to-mortov laughed “at the ides, ae ridieutous and. rous to a fault.|no thought of the passage of time! I! he may get among the dead and wound-| guiar im my habits, get out. of doors -| morning you would be rattling at the j z " t ible, siete tion could endure this and be cheerful; 4 was. the, danger of my jew ng yeu it that t! iis heart vas idndnes ites He bee weNol ‘Tapia But: Spe one : ny ol pee thers ‘When | @ good deal and try to take things just ress my way through the prison bree a Be Gmndgioe fo the cradle | a he laug! not su) iberall cated. sulting his own time-piece he found | he has come iipon. res or os eee as philosophically as I can. That is, e up close b le is,| where you slept! come back to the ball fer. We shail ifs ‘ar ‘away when ight. rid “ fall I won't permit myself to worry. But e faint light that streams | nore you used to play! come back A knows it; and when he realizes that x be iaidone, ‘past the power /of montal man: is e should abdicate, and that th fanding aside for Moe Mon aaa the “rally : ; fo must blame me | may bring the iene SPtuenjtara the I wouldn’t be telling you the whole truth if I withheld what I regard as the chief secret of my being so well “Aged can : you keep cheerful amid all this gloom you with resurrection power; but He anne spoke . Singe “laying aside my | ranks in a 8 the dark othe very nearly related. ‘The cousinship| this feeli i eae 5 sabaite A horse th a4 has es uae a alot havecourted bipowite ewe His voice startles the darkness 0! compromises the matter and says f the bode sever). geucratfons ng2,and on| spre: rig ; a Fe Renin none hich 1 {battle unwounded is fret wiv el Place as he cries out; “Zam now ready | “You cannot bring them where you |chestra will rise up. finger on string| 1, was. when her Majesty reached this ono rbsavia kiddos 180 ot | seas, : g ss to relate to |nervous—the same as 2 car ‘ ince I married her, and that was more a hes peo and the time of my de-| 475, but you can go where they are.”|of barp and lips td the mouth of trum-|t1.¢ part of the ‘corridor in which feel the ties of blood particularly next three or four days. His tet bat- than forty years ago. I pay her all the pert Aa eine es ee: hae Pia ‘They are more Jovely mow than ever. | pet, iy there yaa roll f forth the orat- Findlater and Vickery were stationed ‘ , are a Mei ete ay brightly, an Wy Boal Ble'aiitstin fo a ba | Weve can, Boegiral Bers, Shey are] to aa os r Juan, you must beware of hi shed irs quet, and he is going to dine to-day |") a again; all those ought to|ing and mec ne cin ceeita, Vickery wan the first T.do not mean that you have to fe Baad varie waar toacire, aly fev Uptie wecntioamt tier eral aad This. joy of the text. who have a|S0d power, world without decorated. At Sarun Sar he attacked, |brought from ‘college and the lady Not at a jut, should he discover | would grasp at the opportunity otfered| minutes more. Dear old mamma, I of the executioners. , Ther, come, and! Holy curistty to know what ts beyond| “What He endured, 0 who ca tell, |single-handed, (four Afridis, One be) trom the nursery for the ceremony. The our love—and he will strain every|by the speech of those ill-advised | have been telling to him the sad oe an eee oocyte oldman is earthly terminus. And who has| ‘To seve our souls from death and| shot, the second he bayoneted. and the |bride was amazed and silent, but the Cidade stint et fs epe Spee ae met |e el and ye Je Se ae ee eee eas tends Pun ent Ss Bunt os es eee eth uae [BN Yn a ny ea ey thoughts of vengeance. He is not a|_“J can not. tell youtall ee was done. ee von wi Fe arse s | ing from his mouth as he thunderaaver| country eid rave over ‘its beauties, just was ready. He had nothing to pack) Pele n, and he says: “It doth not run away. After this Vickery assisted /me to that dowdy?” Married he was, large-hearted man, nor can h n-| You can imagine it. I need only tell |S00, Yt i ek ee conn here on as we have always up. He had no baggage to. He eae oitiat wre aba bette like qiwounded comrade into camp he him- | however, and his tutor instantly carri- ‘{, ishly | generous. If you could|YOW the time came when men occupy tga bes Nesters ib inter, with i Tn that way,” dont! see, we had been ready a ie see] woking through a broken telescope: | swo Self being wounded in the left foott|ed him off to the Continent, Three : know how ignorant he is—how lack- fein orca neatese Pees ee an earnest smile, “it seems to me NOT NECESSARILY. oe to note the 'passage of time. She _ soe Niches pati bank his| “Now we see through a glass darkly. ak ti at y : ae ee ieee claim eo gentility: jaumi the eharge of treason! Yes, he | though I should ‘not sleep if 1 aid er ae Ee ra tie ietkive lover, af we have a little ate ite hair from his creviced forehead, | Can you tell me anything eg en the ‘hottest part layil e mY mused and arrested. . Then’ he | 20t hear the cmisaiaion © a Receiver is it fair to regard the cad im looking up through the| place? You me usan you would be better able to estimate |TEo Ori mnined by a tribunal made up| “I have reached the arrival iw Parma President Of the road as incompetent 7 | 9 act very much a8 we did when fool- fole ‘in. the | roof’ of” the dungeon | tions about it that T cannot shot through | inate OA eax prensa Festal are tad sis cae tcites you because you are sojentirely.of his enemies and fully com- |of ather Paul.” explained Isabel, “and f depends ost whether "he Hisd') 7 7 ne wayicdny it 1a the secret mto the face his exeontion-| I ask you a thousand quessions aoe ing coveted decoration. Vickers, who is @|night of his arrival to the theatre ieve he ha i a oe ‘ou cannot answer. : tted for His_situatio: told how hei visited the unfort foe Bakes by the operatio ” er, and hear him T ami x the terri-| There he lady of such fi dinmeasurybly. (Shore bia in ere ve ate Princess al lo, and never saw af reset ae wor ready to, bs offered, and the time| wonder that Paul was so glad when Sat little fellow e ere he saw a lady of such fine ap- thing that: constitutes inborn aeek. meena sehen OVAL Stipe Peee mae oon Lee : iG 4 reagan dire) ey joaxtyndom gave” Bi ce to go torial regiment of “his native County | appearance that he MASA WHio Siig we i the world; with a love for his old| her again thought he had heard from ‘MATTER. ———_-_--—— y departure is at hand.” Then they y) ‘ago. The | “Tih Soaiit, ti d native ing {12 d . : = id.” aly shay ss d make ‘discoveries in that Bless: of Dorset about three years agi igning e utiful i thus in the outset, what must be|father, and a devotion to his interests |her as, Gren'k or told hia about the rratic kind of a DURATION OF LIFE. Tite bin ont, ot of the dune, aban & eter depes ound from which he is suffering is|Lady March,” was the reply. He hast- his feelings when he knows that you|that knew no swerving, he had suffer} on prove Hin eboGt ie. Sate ee rattlag iat ele mines x ; start with him to the pl fea ike reiate he the hare been "caused by an ened to claim her, ¥ lived to- I tie teen the prize that he would give|ed himself, when in conversation with | wonderfull coming to. life of the boy, | fo ersrain isnt het The average duration of human life 5 “say: “Hurry along old| I hope some day, by ieee ie aa sents ai mie time, after it |gether so affectionately, that one year bie going to say life; his zealous friends, to admit that the bees ene e old woman with oe Tou can't prove it by me. He|in European countries is greatest in man, or you will feel peo of | to go over arse for myeell bat not not oi for ebay ill forss depart ¥ ft con-|was inflicted he continued his regi-|after his decease, in 1750 she died of ‘ would not give that. He would give aged duke waa scarcely fit for the ex: | Iaret of cathasaam: | nen you | never scattered any of "pis brains any- | Sweden and Norway and lowest inTt- q Soe ee, Ty aaa gf travelt”| P'think, wants to" go now, But the| not be up the way Paul went, unless | mental duties; but now bas to under- | gri ’ a portion of bis wealth, however, and, |alted station Mises th, ice knocked and interrupted me.” where in my neighborhood. aly and Austria. rf it,” says Paul Serhaps his reputation, for that which ‘need not recapitulate the points of ev- " i id d ‘ 4 J ; : ‘ i ere sia ws ia , i eee ihe i a ell