Standard Bank of Eanada. in. kin ng business trans- " "a"? :5 EMU“? n! d collections made my :zi points. Deposits re- am! imerest allowed at cur- rent rates. inmates: allowed on Savings Bank de- posits of $1 and upwards. Prompt attention and every facility'aï¬'orded zustomers living at a distance. ï¬NDERT AKING PRICES CUT Also a First Class Hearse always in connection. Em- ?)ulming a spvrciaity. States and England. up. 3 .1 3 ‘u Furniture Sno W '3) X. B.~â€"â€"Goods delivered twice a â€$130 all parts of the Town. S. P. SAUNDERS DO YOU WANT ? For If So Capital Paid L. f‘ K. .00... .-\uthcrized.. 'Beserve L5 . mi ....... $2,000. 000 1.000. 000 DURï¬AM AGENCY. HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. ‘3 N CLARK {‘3 R J S Machine Oil, Harness Oil, Axle Grease and Hook , I Olntment. go to sure to please can be purchased here. TEE SAVINGS BANK. VJ .Lk ELLY, Agent. Blankets. Flannels, Yarns, ' weeds, Ready-made Clothing. Prints. Cottons, Flannelettes. Men’s Hats, Caps. Boys’ Hats, Caps, Underwear,‘ Fresh Gro- ceries of all kinds, etc. I) A" . S. SCOTT’S. Call and examine the gOudS and ï¬nd out prices . \J‘ |.: 3“ Lu arucu r) l ‘l 3' ‘ LAW 0 â€.5ng 1.4! O) unafrflnMM _A_T_ W yawn“: .' ‘ "' °‘ .:.::.r...1.....m 2.12:6 gm: \"S and a The Harnessmaker :ti repairs con on hand here atmxm W 31.: e; and Demon: London.onil .‘J 0 we «My 5011 £th u... Ill DUhH k.“ “NT. ONTA R 10. 01‘ ",4 XV In Cigarette colored hotly at the grave, graceful, distant salute. so cold and so courteous, which was offered her. in lieu of the rude and boisterous famil- \iarities to which she was accustomed and drew her hand away with what was to the shame of her soldierly hard- ihood and her barracl; tutelage ve'y nearly akin to an impulse of shyness. IO. .00.... I 00...... 0.. 0.3 own..." 00 0 Mann..." 0 9‘. no “Thhnl'ryou, my little comrade.†he said simply, With the graver thought still on him that her relation and her entreaty had evoked. “You have given me a lesson that I shall not be quick to forget.†“Stud! Don’t humbug me! I am not a. court lady!†she cried hastily, almost petulantly. to cover the unwanted and unwelcome weakness. while. to make good the declaration and revindicate her military renown. she balanced her- self lightly on the stone ledge and sprang with a young wildcat’s easy. vaulting leap over his head and over the heads of the people beneath on to the ledge of the house opposite. a low built wineshop, whose upper story near- ly touched the leaning walls of the old Moorish buildings in which she had been perched. The crowd in the street below looked up amazed and aghast at that bound from casement to casement as she flew over their heads like a blue and scarlet winged bird of Oran. but they laughed as they saw who it was. Cecil looked after her with a certain touch of pity for her in him. “What a gallant boy is spoiled in that little umazoui†he thought. The quick llush of her face, the quick withdrawal of her hand, he had not noticed. She had not much interest for himâ€"scarce- ly :iuy, indeedâ€"save that he saw she was pretty, with a mischievous face that all the sun tan of Africa and all the wild life .of the Caserue could not harden or dehase. But he was sorry a. child so bright and so brave should he turned into three pasts a trooper, as she was. slzuuhl have been tossed up on the scum and filth of the lowest hurmcl; life and should be doomed in :1 low years" time 2:) become the yelle'cc. lun- , {' ll, 1,\ 'Q'.-‘ , ~ , .'.. LUI‘Uil. “31:. “an...“ <1. “mute \‘..( .l “Imp “It is Cigarette.†growled a Turco lndigene. “Ah, hm the devil for a cer- tainty must have been her father!" private i'e::':::'11~ crime-ti 1111:: to vzijoy. for Illt‘ ll":i;':tt'2‘.fli ('};’.':'1l11l}§; :11111 1110 !°11j.:’_'-.;'1'd {1111;421:11» 121:1: 211- always shar- ed willingly 1111!: 1111- lowest of his :501- diers. '1‘2111 12111 1:1.1 windows of the liz‘vtty. low, 511:).1' whit-c. far strottrtiing building were 1121111111 31111 011011. :11111 12111111211 1110 \\'i!d('l'1ll*:~'$ or" cactus, myr- tlt“. 01111130. ('112'1321 i'ut'lisia and :1 thou- sand flowers that 113111051 1:111 iod it 1111- 0.01“ their weigh: or 111:11’ :11111 blossom a myriad of [9.1mm \1‘11'11 gimiming iii: 0 so many glo“ Ui‘l‘ilS 111111-:1' ii the foliage. while from a coda: grove the melodies and overtures of the best 111ilit:y11' bands in Algiers came mellow 011 byt lie distance- and the tail of the bubbling fountains. Cigarette looked and ‘lis- tened. and her gay. brown face grew duskily warm with wrath. “Ah. bah!†she muttered. as she pressed her pretty lips to the lattice- work. “The men die like murmined sheep in the hospital. and get Sulll' bread tossed to them :is it they were pics. and are thrashed it’ they pawn their tunskets for a stomp of drink when their throats are as dry as the desertâ€"~and you live in clover. The (-olonel gives his i‘etes with stars :3le ribbons on his breast, while those w ho won the battle lie rotting in the smulf" Cigarette was a resolute little (lemo- crat: she had loaded'the earbines he~ bind the barricade in an emeute in Paris before she was 10 years old, and was not seldom in the perplexity of conflicting creeds when her loyalty to the tricolor and the guidons smote with a violent clash on her love for the popuiaee ahd their liberty. ' o O ‘CNICHOOOIOOOOOOOO 00$ 0 0' W: S :1 0t L hilllSt'ii V» private 1% for the 1 ragga! pr Hm She looked a moment longer through the gilded scrollwork. then thrust her pistols well within her sash and, push- ing herself through the prickly cactus hedge, launched herself with inimi- table dexterity on to the other side of the cacti. She crossed the breadth of the grounds under the heavy shade of arbutus trees with 'a hare’s fleetness. and stood a second looking at the open windows and the terraces that lay before themdbrightly lighted by the summer moon and by the lamps that sparkled among the shrubs. Then down she dropped. as quickly, as lightly, as a young setter. "Ah!" she said. quickly and sharply. with a deep drawn breath. The single ejaculation was at once a menace. a tenderness. a whirlwind of rage. :1 vol- ume of disdnin.-a world of pity. It was intensely French. and the whole nature of Cigarette was in it. Yet all she saw was a small and bril~ liant group sauntering to and fro be fore the open Windows after dinner. listening to the bands and laughing low and softly, and at some distance from them. beneath the shade of a cedar, the f: .0 .6: O l O O a. . .O‘J°.$o: ....O 0% O . .3 . .0 ï¬:. 0 u: o a o o. a‘ :'o.: . O . O I .1ï¬ O... Q C O O. .0 O. .t« - 0‘1 0‘0. '1 00“. O a". .0 . o O ... 3' ~ 0'. N . . v .. ï¬ 65 ‘ .. S 1(‘1 UNDER TWO FLAGS By “ OUIDA†H (i v ()5 md w in muilim! Hi i: t he ï¬gure of a co '1)m°n'l of Chassuurs. calm. erect. motimfless. as though he were the ï¬gure of a soldier cast in bronze. “A true soldier!†she muttered where she lay among the rhododendrons. while .1er eyes g1ewx wry soft as She gave the highest word of praise that her whole range of language held. “A ti’ue sol- diei. ’ How he keeps his promise! But it must be bitter.†She looked awhile very wistfully at the chasseur where he stood under the Lebanon houghs; then her glance swept bright as a hawk’s over the terrace and lighted with a prescient hatred on the central form of all, a woman’s. There were two other great ladies there, but she passed them and darted with un- erring instinct on that proud, fair, pa- tric-ian head with its haughty, staglike carriage and the crown of its golden hair. Cigarette had seen grandes dames by the thousand, but now for the ï¬rst time the sight of one of those aristocrats smote her with a keen, hot sting of heurtburning jealousy. with a sudden perception, quick as thought. bitter as gall. wounding and swift and poignant, of what this womanhood that he had said she herself had lost might be in its highest and purest shape. “Unsexed--he said I was unsexed,†she mused. while her teeth clinched on the ruby fullness of her lips. and her heart swelled half with impotent rage. half with unconfessed pain. For the first time looking on this imperial for- eign beauty, sweeping so slowly and so idly alone; there in the Algerian star- light, she understood all that she had missed, all that he had meant when he had used that single word for which she had vowed on him her vengeame and the vengeance of the army of Af- ric-a. “If those are the vozmm that he know before he came 1mm. 1 do not wonder that he never cared to \\'111('h oven my dance.†.LS t1)" 1:1t,1tcx 1mm;- knowled: red tho ï¬ght that W3. ‘ so (°:-.::-1 to her; the cmnczcxovmwaâ€"xmlch forced itself in on her While hvt' (we: jealousiy 1011:;W9d the pm “at a: VP of the one in Whom instimt had immd .101’ 1'iv: lâ€"that. While she had Emmi so proud of her rocklvssness and law «Ir-v- 1m and her truopor’s Slang and her doa . c skill as a shot, she had (mly lwcn something very wor bless, Solitu- thing You “5.:in hold by thus-p who li {ed her 101‘ :1 rib aid just. a (‘mm'v and a :Izmllis‘ supper of Dead 1321;; riot and drum: on numb. 'Iho mood (2 Ed not 19.51.8110 was too Cecil obeyed, passed up the terrace stairs and stood before his colonel. giv- ing the salute. The shade of some new cias still fell across him, rhile the party he fronted were all in the glow of a full Algerian moon and of the thousand lamps among the belt of flowers and trees. Chateauroy spoke with a carelessness as of a man to a dog, turning to his, corporal: 'iho mom! ( ‘Ed not last I. She “as; :00 hmvo. too 129:; , 00 dauntiess. too un- {arm-d. “L’ 311' She would faint. I dare mm, at the 11010 eight of those pistols †she thought. v. ith her old disdain “and wrmld stand ï¬lm :10 mayo than a 2'3- “It was you, was it, brought him here ‘2" muttered the Friend of the Flag, with the passion in her burning more hotly against that “silver pheasant,†whose delicate train was sweeping the white marbles of Chateauroy’s terraces and whose reply she lost, though she could guess what it had been. when a 130K917 crossed 11:0 lawn and sumizzozmi the ciiasseur. Crouched there among the rhododen- drons. she lay as still as a mouse, mov- ing nearer and nearer until her ear. quick and unerring as an Indian's. could detect the sense of the words spo- ken. Chateauroy himself was bending his fine, dark head toward the patrician on whom her instinct of sex had fas- tened her hatred. He bent over the hand she held out. zone! They argonly made for summer day Weather, those dainty, gorgeous. silver pheasants." zellel They areonly made for summer day weather, those dainty. gorgeous. silver pheasants." Like many another, Cigarette under- rated what she had no knowledge of and depreciated an antagonist the measure or Whose fence she had no ' power to gauge. Crouched there among the rhododen- A drone. she lay as still as a mouse, mov. ' ing nearer and nearer until her ear. quick and unerring as an Indian’s, could detect the sense of the words spa ken. Chateauroy himself was bending It is like the penny in the milk because it works and ;l;ecause there is something ? astonishing about it. Scott’s Emulsion is simply a milk of pure cod liver oil with some hypophosphites '1 especially prepared for delicate f :ztomachs. “You expressed your wish to see my corporaJ’s little sculptures again, ma- dame,†he was murmuring now. “To hear was to obey with me. He waits your commands yonder.†vomczl that he > hettv. I do not ' tired to Wuw'h th? latent, unac- W. , .I-‘T x “V3 . glad†"victor. the pnnces‘é honors you with the desire to see your toys again. Spread them out.†The savage authority of his general speech was softened for sake of his guests’ presence: but there was a cov- ert tone in the words that made Ciga- rette murmur to herself: “If he forgets his promise. I will for- give him!†Cecil had not forgotten it: neither had he forgotten the lesson that this fair aristocrat had read him in the moraine. He saluted his chief again, set the chess box down upon the ledge of the marble baiustra-ie and stood silent, without once glancing at the fair and haughty face that was more brilliant still in the African starlight than it had been in the noon Sun of the chassenrs’ chambree. Courtesy was forbidden him as insult from a corporal to a n6hly born beauty. The carvings were passed from hand to hand as the niarquis’ six or eight guests, listlessly willing to be amus;-.. in the 'armth of the evening after their dinner. occupied themselves with the ivory chess armies. cut with a skill and a finish worthy a Roman studio. Praise enough was awarded to the art. but only one ;: anced at the artist with a touch of wondering pity, softening her prideâ€"she who had rejected the gift of those mimic squadrons. “You were surely a sculptor once?†she asked him. with that graceful, dis- tant kindness which she might have shown some Arab outcast. “Never. madame.†“Indeed! Then who taught you such exquisite art?†“It cannot claim to be called an art. madame.†She looked at him with an increased interest. The accent of his voice told her that this man. Whatever he might be now, had once been a gentleman. “Oh, yes; it is perfect of its kind. Who was your master in it?†There was a very sweet gleam of compassion in the luster of her dark, dreaming eyes. “Does necessity often teach so well?†“In the ranks of our army, madame. “A common teacher, madameâ€"neces- sity.†I think better.†“Victor knows that neither he nor his men have any right to waste their time on such trash,†Chateauroy said care- lessly, “but the truth is they love the CSIIIOC‘II so well that they will do any- thing to add enough to their pay to buy bra n d y.†She whom he had callcd the prin- (toss iookml with :1 (10111; Eng surprise at the sculptor of the, White Arab king; S110 hold. 6t"l 411111. man does not 00.2" for bran.- dy,†she 11 1;*<)u,11t. “It must be a solace to man} :1 we." 15' 110111“ in the barraoks to 110 111110 to 11:0- 0.12m such 11031111141 1111105 :15: these." who 1: aid :1i(111d.“‘~f £12 11!," 3011 -'.1c-1:111':1ge 311(11 11115411115 0010' “Not 1,†..1m Cl. 1: 131.1 11103:, with :1 dash of his camp 10:10 111:: 110 (3101‘! not withhold. "'1‘ 111:0 {110 but two :1: as or virtues for :1 110mm 10 1113 tasteâ€"- lig’iht {21" and ("WGHV 100 ' “"0 11 should 119 1111110 11111.5 serv- ice, II. de Chute? .2110}: " :2‘. 11 111“]: dx’, with a smile tl::1t.:;iigl1t as it ws,a 111..d1\t11o marquis (ac: 11:? 831 {31' c Children take to it naturally because they like the taste and the remedy takes just as naturally to the children be- cause it is so peifectly adapted to their wants. 1 \Vhen mothers are worriea because the children do not win strength and flesh we sew give them Scott’s Emu}: “\lmost I Wish I 111111 111131, ’ he an- «110101 I1e1'.“.\1011 :110 made to keep their grades there. and privates who 1111111: 1110111solx'os 11110 gemlemen 1'0- ceive the lush 11103510111. †“Haw he hates his 0011311131? 1‘ 111011.111: “\Vhen ' the butter won’t (tame put a penny in the alzum,†is an old time dairy ;:1°0\'erb. It often seems to mn‘k though no one has ever mid why. For all weal: and pale am?- thin Children Scott’s Emulsion is the most satisfactory treat- ment. it does; often. indeed. much id ‘hxv 0. 111037, 22.3 t1) a dash tone that be 301111 not 'I‘Zx :0 {no but two '1 32.2 or :1 txcopm 10 m3 tasteâ€"â€" Chemists, Toronto, Ontario. Be sure that this picture in the form ol a label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. 50c. and $1.00; all druggists. We wiil send you the penny, i. 3., a sample free. SCOTT C“: BOWNE, miladi; while she laid aside the white king once more. “Nay,†interposed Chateauroy. recov- ering his momentary self abandon- ment; “since you like the bagntelles do me honor enough to keep them.†. “Oh, no; I offered your soldier his own price for them this morning, and he refused any.†Chateauroy swung round. “Ah! You dared refuse your bits of ivory when you were honored by an offer for them?†Cecil stood silent. His eye met his chief’s steadily. Chateauroy had seen that look when his chasseur had heard-- ed him in the solizude of his tent and demanded back the Pearl of. the Des- ert. The princess glanced at both. Then she stooped her vtegant head slightly to the marquis. “Do not blame :sour corporal unjust- ly through me, I pray you. He refused any price, but hv offered them to me very gracefully :24 a gift. though. of course, it was not possible that I should accept them so.†"I am not much intereswd in milita- gry discussions.†she said coldly. “but I imagine. if you will [mt-don me for saying so. that you do your corporal some little injustivo hem I shall not keep the chvssxm-n without making him ï¬tting repayment for them. Since “The man is the most insolent fel- low in the service.†muttered her host as he motioned Cecil back off the ter- race. “Get you gone, sir, and leave your toys here or I will have them broken up by a hammer." The words were low, that they should not offend the ears of the great ladies who were his listeners. but they Were coarsely savage in their whisper- ed command, and the princess heard them. “He has brought his chasseur here only to humiliate him,†thought miiadi with the same thought that flashed through the mind of the little Friend of the Flag where she hid among her rhododendrons. Now. the dainty aris- tocrat was very proud. but she was not so proud but that justice was. stron- ger than pride. “Wait.†she said, moving a little to- ward them. while she let her eyes rest on the carver of the sculptures with a grave compassion. though she address- ed hls chief. “You wholly mistake me. I laid no blame Whatever on your cor- poral. Let him take the chessmen back with him. I would on no account rob him of them. I can well understand that he does not care to part with such masterpieces of his art, and that he would not appraise them by their worth in gold only shows that he is it true artist, as doubtless also he is a true soldier.†She let her glance dwell on him with a contemplation that was half con- temptuous amusement, hair unexpress- ed dissent. “I wonder he has not been since you have the ruling or hi 5 rate.†she said. with a slight smile lingexing abou: the proud rich softness of her Ups. â€So do I. " There was a gaunt. grim. stem sig- niï¬cance in the three monosyllables that escaped him unconsciously: It made her turn and look at mm more closely. “How has he otfended you?" she asked. Chateauroy laughed ofl’ the question. “In a thousand ways, madame: chief- ly because I received my regimental training under one who followed the traditions of the armies of Egypt and the Rhine and have. I confess. little tolerance in consequence of a rebel who plays the martyr and a soldier who is too ci’feminate an idler to do anything except attitudinlze in inter- esting situations to awaken sympathy.†“1,330. enough. " :l:l:~\\'l‘l't'(l the mar- quis. “l lmlimu many ‘gentlemnn’ come in our rum-:3 who have fled their native countries and broken all laws from the Dec-31031110. to the Code Napo- leon; So long as they ï¬ght well we don't: ask their past criminalities." "Of what. country is your corporal?†“I have not an idea. I imagine his past must have. been smnethlng very black indeed. for the slightest trace of it has never that I know of been allow- ed to let slip from him. Ile encourages the men in every insubordination. buys their favor with every sort of stage trick. thinks himself the ï¬nest gentle- man in the whole brigades of Africa and ought to have been shot long ago 11' he had had his real deserts.†The words were spoken with a gra- cious courtesy, the clear. eold tone of her habitual manner just marking in them still the difference of caste be- tween her and the man for whom ‘she intereeded, as she. would equally have intereeded for a dog: who should have been threatened with the lash because he. had displeased her. Tim: wry 10:20 struck a sharper blow to (,‘t‘c'ii than the 'nsselence of his (j-01111nn1.de1' hml 1. .'~.’~v'1 “(0 deal him. His face ilurfhml :1 little. He lifted his amp to her \x'izh a grave. reverence and moved away. The Words 10:11:!11'1‘1 only 111:? 031'. In another i11$<tz111t 111' 3.11111 passed away down 1110 1131111. co $101153 alwdiout to his c11iof'sdis111isz.=:1.l “Ah. 111110 110 1131161 5111211115 in keep- "V027: pussibly.†she said. with an in- dolent indifference. “But that man ms 110 :um;, :1 i new? 13' N a gul- tlemun if he has not bum. ('mo.’ “'1 thank you. I if you will so far “Ab, have no kind 5(1'12113'3 in keep- ‘pgz 11mm. nmdnnn-J’ ( 1)::i‘..11"~)ylfldgh- ed to 1101' as 5.1.0 will Iw‘ J in her hand doubtfnliy the white sheik of the chess Arabs. “I wi‘l see that Rub-331' iro- peur. as they 0:111 12in, does not suffer by losiz: g thoqo Hump (Tics. which, I believe, old 2381 0'.â€" flat. :1 \otex‘an of oms and a “"0 dorm} waiver. had real- ly fat more 10 do W ith m'._i.<‘.ncing than be. You must not let vouz' gracious pity be moved by sm .) {alums as these tromucrs of mim. 1110) me the most ingenious ram-:1 :: in the world and know as well lmw to pz'uzinw :1. â€amat- ic effect in your pi'wmn-v as they do ic effect in war pzwmzm as they do how to drink and to swmr when they are out of it.†0 her 3d :1\‘»‘ (121 me 1' H] C. 1y up them, Ayer’s Pills are good livver pills. You know that. The best family laxative you can buy. They keep the bowels regular, Wation. M“ "W Level . In... Good Pills . he declinés money you will ‘to'u me what form that had better take to be of real and welcome service to a Chas- seur d'At’rique.†Chateauroy. more incensed that he chose or dared to Show, bowed courte- ously, but with a grim. ironic smile. “If you really inslst. give him a na- poleon or two whenever you see him. He will be very happy to take it and spend it for drink. though he played the aristocrat today. But you are too good to him. He is one of the very worst of my insubordinates. and you are cruel to me in refusing to deign to accept my trooper’s worthless hag- atelles at my hands." She bent her superb head silently, whether in acquiescence or rejection he could not. well resoive with himself. and turned to the stat? ofï¬cers. among them the heir of a princely scmiroyal French house. Couched down among her rose hued covert. Cigarette had watched and heard. her teeth set tightly. her breath coming and going swiftly, her hand clinched close on the butts of her pis- tols. She had never looked at a beauti- ful. high bred woman before. holding them in gay. satirical disdain. But now she studied one through all the tine, quickened. unerring instincts of jeal- ousy. and there is no instinct in the world that gives such‘thorough appre- ciation of the very rival it reviles. She saw the courtly negligence. the regal grace, the fair. brilliant loveliness. the delicious. serene languor ot a pure aris- tocrat for the very ï¬rst time to note them, and they made her heart sick with a new and deadly sense. She dropped her head suddenly, like a wounded bird. and the racy, vindictive camp oaths died off her lips. She thought of herself as she had‘ duheed that mad hat-chic bamlioula amid the crowd of shouting. stamping. «uni-zen, half infuriated soldiery. and for the moment she! hated herself were even than she hated that nutrient}: yunder. Wanti yéurw moustache or beard: a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use , IIAPTER VII. UDDENLY, as she went, Ciga- rette heard a shout on the still ~ ‘ the lights and the melodies and the laughter of Chatoauroy’s villa lay far behind, and the town of Algiers was yet distant. with its lamps glitter- ing down by the sea. A confused knot 0* horses and 0' for him to totter in time fro: path. Cecil had mined up an“ to them to pause. Theni ._ The shout was: “Help, soldiers! For Franco!†And Cigarette knew the voice, ringing meiodiously and calmly still, though it gave the sound of alarm. “Cigarette is coming!†she cried in answer. She had cried it many atime over the heat of battleï¬elds and when the wounded men in the dead of the sickly night writhed under the knife of the camp thievï¬. If she had gone like the wind before, she went like the lightning now. A few yards onward she saw a confused knot of horses and of riders struggling one with another in n cloud of white dust. silvery and hazy in the radiance of the moon. And she ran the faster and sang a drinking song of the Spilhis all the louder, became still at her mart a dull pain was aching. flUflBKiNGHAM’S DYE The center ï¬gure was Cecil‘s; the four others were Arabs. armed to the teeth and mad with drink. They had knocked aside and trampled over a wornout old colonel of age too feeble grasses and ferns. Once through the cactus hedge her old spirit returned. She shook herself angrilv with petulant self scorn; she swore a little; and I‘telt :nt the ï¬erce, familiar words di (1 her good. like brandy poured down her throat; she tossed her head like a colt that rebels against the: all of the curb; then fleet as :1 fawn she. dashed dox n the moon- lit road at topmost speed. “Ah, but she can’t do what I do!†she thought. had come, but almost as slowly, almost as sadly, as a ham that the greyhounds have coursed d1" gs itself through the grasses and ferns. not 30; 0125!: 11211.1 :11 . had come, but almost “I. know what he meant now!‘ pondered, and her spiritm}. spur brunette face was dark :mi v She looked 0:100. tix'icz‘. Uni": nquiriz'zirly. (‘11 l n 7. an.“ 00.. swungâ€"fl. a. "9 she