Wellsboro Agitator, The (Newspaper) - April 22, 1884, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania Je so common to write th in an into some advertisement I call attention to the i as honest terms as eople n one which so proves will never use anything 3f so noticed In id secular j is and is supplanting denying the virtues of the proprietors of Hop great shrewdness Iding a medicine whose ible to one's itl She 1 and suffered pining le for t doing her no was cured by this Hop say so much deed we should be for tbat rs out daughter suffered on a of liver anil nervous rare nf the best her various cf. she is restored to OT in good n as Hop tinned far years before using is netting V since he used Hop loog suffering from a- wr A 91CAL WORK OS TV and Physical u of and the from middle-aged arid r. -i r for all chronic which ic iu So fi for years ia to the lot of any in to be a finer IM- and sold in for w be tn every awarded the to the IM- by the for for Hwill benefit iN r ot to whom thw book 1 her Medical H. who may requiring inaw that have Cases are lure was invented in business in 'A it. b by i case modt or the in- v thit the waa not a or nf -Ol ilie to make h pTt on the the LW Gold Ii I lie parts arv mf to year without ordering and and to Y 4 1 OB Good Borpee and at alt OSES A CONARD CO r. of ed OU m HOP LARK'S nr I 1. 1O Horse me hu cnt 10.000 ft. of burning alaba from the saw to rt of hemlock in 10 cut ft. In MOM ower on other an Automatic or Saw either or 27J 1883-lj. WANTED err Stack for Hooker SALARY Permanent r 17. i public Jonai published by A b a In tome Spanish book Atom a at Bet their In the Pa. Entered at the at u TWO per will be allowed on In Tbe paper will be sent for one year free to any ioa who us the names ot six new Norman i TTI iRVEY AT Pa. Office block 5, Mary E. M. D. firms residence corner of Central avenue and Wei Pa. Office 2 4 Shine tnm a and climbed up to look within the hanged to His own Feasting his In if And aa a Past His nobler with coils of tin I j t I have a sort of fancy of my play quavered mournfully in to silence under nature has and He nodded as he male this her and she run back cabin and cry there solicitous He said much more to the same effect; er followed The absent O'Hara had and if the men smiled and took it an listened to those merry and their Irishman's good-tempered and flattering way cadences called up the sad phantoms of re- of saying things pleasant to the people in but nothing maiden lady could 1 could his mind er followed I The secret came when was built and the Colonel's sister broke a bottle 0f champagne over ita bows f at the and named the of resolved itself into l hod the dismal and complete V1 said Mrs. Dodge when the ex- m w ia little the Colonel had the whipped fasti owned when he was and had tened and painted own hand in af it's all a Fanny doesn't want look Why be aghast fresh does her no She's y Perhaps when a breaking her heart over whose society he happened to find you may be pretty sure that middle-aged dles thought the worse of him for these For me own said Mr. I think it said the Colonel in There is so killing is moonlight when you want to make and the In- sinuating O'Hara was fully aware of Luna's favorable Mr. Dodge had not You really meant 'the note for Mr. said the maiden lady If she die not blush she hid her face behind her and that did aa She certainly had some sign of emotion to others for some peculiarity of wh lethe is looked for In certain instances and the grotesque In One of the most perfect models we ever knew was a man who had not a single yel than relations though I am an of the oy O'Hara disregarded it If Mr. Dodge was denoy that a woman's chief is grumpy Col. Dodge was wonderfully suave j but was nursing his wrath to and O'Hara knew no more was a condition so the retired stock broker in his ith his daughter's that Mr. r H. L. AT Pa. Office in second Pierce No. 118 Late Hugh M. ASD Pa. Of the drag store ot B. B. Kan. Residence on of and Wain 16, 1883. E. B. East Water N. Y. plans and public and vate and the work ed B. 1884. S. F. AT the A 1, 1884. E. B. EY AT Wellsboro Insurance in Law second 1, J. W. ATTORNEY AT Pa. Office on made In any part of 1, 1884. W. ATTORNEY AT Pa. Office In Law Main ground 1, Horace B. ATTORNEY AT Pa. Office .In Cameron Packer's Stone Main Jerome B. ATTORNEY AT attend promptly to bns mess care in the counties and Office on 1. 1884._________'____________________ Mitchell ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND INSURANCE Pa. Office In Cameron Stone 1, 1884. Planing WILLIAM will do all kinds of the novelty and Shop near the head of at low June 5, 1883-ly. F. C. dealer in and of all All kinds of ir. Located iu Parkhurst House Coles convenient to t Pa. of hute to their comfort and for commercial men on first A trusty at thy 1, 1884. George M H KCH ANT Craf ton Pa. foreign and domestic goods and ready-made constantly on I bay for and will not lw Perfect fite and done 1 1884. George and Goods constantly on a 300 East Water 10, 11883.' Lyric from -ie and tempest Mid winter's I and I the boon Eternal Oh how is thy troth confessed Who seeketh part shall the I asked but the wanderer's And found tne traveler's I asked some kindly floor to ope tor I My weary v Tie heart of Love I dared not for wide i I how ls thy 1 Wno for all hie that would thy whiter Was thy beloved i Madcap of the she a merry So full of and That every onie who knew So blithe and gay was That if a came to wop This madcap of the His fate he'd for well knew Tbe sweetest music was her That ran In Half like a song of and aalf Like downward To melody her voice was thong a the world t She did not bnt yet Too soon settle down A lover sought the maid td wed. And what Was blushing rosy softly whispered v With many a and know ng glance The gossips of the town I Said in a chance Perhaps to settle down t Bat happy is her wedded With gladness She made her home For those in Her children gayly frolicked r Her husband held her sick a welcome Within this honse of Time stole the roses of her With had to of in sober troth She kept her merry Such graces Who wore flue The gossips The merry maid Is the wife la town The Lively OK ON tAND AND WAT Colonel Walker O. when he made was ore Qf the and of choose to be generous and friend or two get a glass of reasonable claret a good my wife may have a man loves his sister aa the Colonel did he is out for an old perhaps when a woman her brother as the Colonel's sister did sbe is cut out old they were top fond each er and too to each happiness to but they could each have told a mental story had they been so a which would have involved no ery to brotherly or but would yet have shown that once on a time had been willing to parted from each were both aged by this gray and gaunt of Neither of them had ever been very pretty look and they were to be safe from the blind boy's as if Cupid shot at none but handsome target 3. When the yacht was named and it became known that the net had it christened after his Miss Dodge's tall and somewhat grim figure demanded the miserable her The chief beauty of and arid his sister and at hour I Brit beheld Can re doubt said good whose cold lo me call ye have fallen in love so soon as you profess to have she am I to believe cried do ye I loved you from the say my Go I'm a cruel to be That's a isn't He indicated the is a isn't He indicated the yacht and the smiling scape which lay in view through the saloon I'm enjoying ain't Mrs. Dodge relented a little and put her wifely arm about bis You don't mean to be she crying 'a that's how she feels poor and she's breaking her heart over it. if you don't relent she will sweetest She could go no Have it your own said the cruel Marry to any blackguard she chooses to take a fancy I won't have it said I killed my He had to gulp a and though he tried to perhaps he the cheeked little his and would provoke in a and ed to see her natural roses bloom disrespectful people The end of it all was that they put about goes the lively aa the into Belfast and thence stalked gravely along the street or wired to Mr. requesting him to a woman IB her intuitive understanding and her power of Te these the to be but Forty is the true marriageable At forty a lady knows her own a general laugh at and erybody admitted that Mr. O'Hara was a gay and agreeable with a ble gift of conversational ed to nobody in it passed lightly and Miss descending to the was particularly well ed with the barrister's Before to rest she a call upon Mrs. and Miss and among other of Mr. The ple elderly lady and she an diate and the story of Mr. ra's devotion was Miss Dodge the younger Icy looking exceedingly pretty with her flushed face and brown hair on the white under the softened light of the and Miss Dodge the elder was naturally interested in her The identify of the younger lady's name with her own naturally appealed to her sense of I reckon you may come down times They music on deck that evening in the and Mr. said Miss sai said the Colonel's O'Hara did his insinuating There are men in the world voice in and as Mr. O'Hara turned an expression of whom it 4ould not have been easy to slip wilh a jump he saw a gaunt figure toward sk away from the side of confiding little 1 woman who clung to Mr. arid up him with so tender and timid a je found no difficulty in it. It was but to say Excuse me for a me and to slip away td the place elder Miss Dodge stood ex- 08. leaning her hard on rail of the vessel and looking at thb re- of tne moonlight as it danced and in this The little and with a misgiving of which she was more than half Surely she could trust their Interview of that and all the kind and reassuring words be had He had called the wealthy Miss Dodge elderly and unattractive and though the little Fanny was disposed to like the wealthy M ss the words had been sweet to she with exaggerated angularity of and the little learning interest and The Dodges of to of all womanly at from tier and the Colonel the reason their course from were of old English and tractions but her After what he had both in the name of the her by the had the 8ame may have been said she would never be bride received as a. wedding present such a was a painim 01 is J j in hall the ole time L on the rock below all his ardors had been poured into the lady's Tbe Colonel came leisurely down the stony I suppose I may corneas said Mr. tLe retired stock in accents which be ied the mildness of bis said the had better is a case in which no impression can be hoped for the aid of gu ta It was jne thing to that Dionysius was true ind breaking his heart in and another to know that he was a who had been deservedly An honest young gentleman on the Stock may be something of a but there he a good heat a decent and an unex e has long since found a way to console the little and when the two were married the other day the and entire to sink personal and de- vote himself to the cause really This spirited person has posed on a broiling July heavy over a dle which illuminated his heated represent a Christmas traveler cowering over the and that no moan escaped him U to be recorded to his and on a fine day in June he posed In bed as a very sick aa wearing patient which ceased to be en- tirely This as it is the otherwise a sporting being converted by some traveling be abandoned a very ing and exciting career for the life of Bud years proved his patience and sincerity An inborn hopelessly though ohi independent of he had a streak of fun in him which itself and under no circum stances required the aid of a He boii a grave way of telling funny which illumined many a foggy after- add his staid endurance of the most hopeless cough we added to the impression of strength he How he sat for a old gent on the Brompton who the and how the old geot basked and then never took don't you and how he went to florid artist of the kept him posing as a Turk six one because it was a sign of erly and the because it pleased his and the satire from i the populace never ijt never hurt In fullness of Lime the splendid craft was splendidly fitted with such stores as no craft ever held ed away with her full complement of her of her picked her and admirable baud of And no it would be a ant since we are sailing in extremely summer weather to make ance with one or of linger on a moonlight evening in the to keep it a and could so to blossom and to smile and to play and sing so sweetly her gay old ditties that Mr. Dodge blamed his own cy in yielding more than a In a brief space Mr. having con- trived to raise the came over and was aboard the yacht and carried away the happy maiden sailing with him to the land of. love's full But papa began to have all manner of base not in his dull male how the sudden change from sickness to health had come and in- to think that a pretense had been played upon That loved Fanny was beyond a Where is the son of Erin who found for the English add American jealous Bat why did he stay so es of the and why did he lean in an attitude of The yacht lay at with the Giant's so much tender interest over the figure of like a great stretching out She would not be to sea in the near distance and An- was a wicked and sure trim coast lying beautiful in the solemn ly there was nothing wicked in this sick aboard whose business it sinking af the was to sleep slept well and with the exception of Mr. whose spirits were perturbed by the loss of the yacht and Meanwhile not greatly caring to know what emotions troubled the ish his made warmer and the singular behavior of Mr. to the Miss Dodge's ing it all thought so ill of Mr. hia company of a pair at a marking all not jove of a thet lit tin tho onn the pretty little ways of the lady and the tender and demotion of Ihe gen obedience to that growing spirit of cynicism a lynx-eyed himself being Or for that is the son of Erin who can resist the soft influence of feminine charms when they are brought near to er has discovered in present no wrong to Mr SUB tracing the growth of the canker of unfaith fulness and showing Clifford net and Walter left and so on until the whole posse lovers But the opportunities for ment and cynicism must be alike He would have loved any woman who had a prospect of two sand a as Miss Dodge and he could have loved Miss herself out a penny if be had been a and could felt that he could afford it. courage band and politeness on the Mr. ra i might have inquired after Mr. Dodge's well-being if he had remembered to think of he meditated a formal quarrel With him iu the and was prepared to brave wife and child in the cause of The knowing nothing of to sleep and dreamed of and the little so lately dreamed of Mr. she Tosy and in morning she ly knew what to blame for dashing her high but somehow they were as flat as palled soda and Just as Impossible to stir into renewed It would bo too silly to be jealous cf an old lady like Oi aim said the insinuating young lest should catch cold Miss Shall we the deck for a There was so tender an interest in the tone that the simple aa it spoke volumes to Dodge's The vessel swayed ever so and when Dion ed the lady his arm as a support there was no reason apparent in the world against her acceptance of his The little Fanny stayed behind with her and there was beneath The promenaders paused and somehow by cunning accident Mr. hand touched the rested on his M ss Dodge made no motion of re- of pearls as no retired stock broker ever gave his daughter in this This was a toien of friendship and from an e. derly maiden of whom Mr. Dodge speaks except as the Lively Paper HOW THEY ARE MADE AT A FACTORY There ie a factory in New that is intended to turn out 500 paper pail 3 per The Syracuse Herald describes the process rff making them as Hags and paper are steamed In vats for a few hours and then thrown into beating which are partly filled with The is done by a revolving cylinder with fifty set at different The knives reduce the rags to a c purple pulp and change the wrappers to a soft mass. About 400 pounds in material are put under the paper and rags are reduced tc pulp the opening of a trap lets it into the in the One part of lo three of paper is run in- to the When pi from the stuff chest into thp trough of Ihe winding the future extremely exciting Mr. Dionysius a native of the a succession of city of had migrated to the land of may receive a succession of expanse of generosity in Jry bosom tia lead to larger results than but w Col. Walker O. Dodge be mil cent people heard about The Color the Saxon oppressor and after a residence of some in London had made ance with a ret ired one John William of a good old gentleman of tLe true G. M. The largest tnd newest line of a quarter otf a million those prodigious private wl used to bb heard of or ini til the citizens of the United States of Aff ca took to raising In the Old a firm or family or a may and you be good enough to fancy the To giri and Lively Fanny at on the heels of an g year free ters in a yacht and to do all this by putting an arm around one willing and yielding waist and Mr. O'Hara was He talked and he was of deep and dark-blue and O'er the glad waters of blue recited those verses with finer emphasis or Everything was gay and bright and until at an hour out from a slight haze came tbat majestic the of New ran straight into Mr. Dodge's small craft and cut her There was a prodigious sounding of horns and boats were lowered with all possible The big after describing a liberal got back to t ae little one and took her in but Mr. 1.U uu Wl tUC the other Miss a lady old enough and the gentleman dared to allow tMn A be her and Dionysius tainly devote himself that withered en with a wonderful Perhaps it his fingers to rest for a Still Miss madb no motion of and the t arill of assured annual income amounted to something who knew everything that needed to be tf T. Ma WRR known about Us own and was more ignorant of everything outside it than is easily possible to Mr. Dodge had a a girl with rosy cheeks and bright eyes and red lips and a bountiful armful of a girl with an i offered outside the Tooth Flesh Clothes Nail An immense assortment at lowest OP WRIGHT'S FUMES IN Physicians prescriptions accurately prepared much money in a single affectionate a healthy a thing has actually been J natural laugh ind a very of a private and unaided individual grows heart in home Miss dollar tree Dodge had a only on life sweet-natured old was a other side of the The wonder rustling tree grew am speaking of the 1's in and was transplanted to a forcing louse m it let fill such a crop of f i every quarter-day quite body of men to keep ground though they swept shoveled ii all year It had more than once occurred to Dodge that it would be a b essed and j prophecy of what her daughter hired until come to ia the space of MrJ had been by the of Miss Miss Dodge in been attracted by of Mr. The retired being appealed had made strict inquiry Mr. position and and finding the result of that in- eminently had ed Mr. O'Hara aot to call Then had the roses faded from the Miss ous thing actually to expend in one and kindly from his life a wholt year's but he and the merry brightness from her always been a busy and had nj Then had her natural found time until lately tq think the saken her and the pearly teeth to He at ii nes of fa inS nothing but the pale lips to them uuu uia a tp from and to hold in her below to change their be could never make up mind father's the fountain of tears O'Hara remained on deck which played so freely in his v v T I making which were S them at Reduced NOW IS THE something and he had that it would fee pleasant to go down terity as the of a cathedral or wwe such but he and had conscientious dame to year or two as a ant to the magnificent and gorgeous ever and in with the society of fifty ell ii make the tour cf the navies He that if he hit i out to do tils with real for in go near the fulfil his When Dodge made up his about anything it was not his habit grass under hip and four and twenty hours the fancy he was in conference with a A later were li fore modified and ai Colonel and his maiden fister were discussing tha guests said the en a real elegant Suppose we bad the ence comfortable Mrs. Dodge grown the wretched Dodge himself had upon bis pillow at her grisly of early Talk of cried the unhappy wish I was in 1 snail never be allowed to go to sleep until I get i go to Mrs. Dodge re- with natural and excusable What you by all means go to Perhaps it's natural in a father to of nothing but going to sleep while his only daughter's sinking Into the all go to It is characteristic human nature ways to for the now that Mr Dodge had permission to sleep he did to avail of it. He began to think in the silent watches of the exercise to which he had never greatly accustomed in his mind's eye he saw his hearth erybody had got aboard Col. Dodge's ark of refuge and most of the valuables been she gave a and went down in twenty I am not casting any imputation on Mr. manliness when I the fact that was dry and that Mrs. ancl Miss Dodge were all wet and it is a fact that magnificently kicked the lent sailor who declared that he was too frightened to get into the and clung to the wreck in a panic of alarm until the vessel came Mr. gave him an tage waich others and while Mr. Dodge and his womenfolk were hurried ing deck and his card with an air of great Mr. at Pump Temple from which fact sprung up a habit aboard the Lively Fanny of alluding tp the wrecked dies and Mr. Dodge as manifestation of that politeness on which his so much plume and indeed urged as much when the Colonel's sister once or twice led him to the poor little waiting and little while he strayed away again and took anew to paying compliments to his hostess and throwing admiring glances at and behaving altogether in a way ly to flatter the feelings of any susceptible virgin lady of forty Mr. ra's Irish blandishments not without effect upon Miss Dodge's as was a little conversation she held with her Ihe that she that Irishman's bad What's the matter with inquired the He's against her father's and drew them further through his It was scarcely worth while to finesse any aid he took to kissing the with said alarm Loveliest of Mr. with Irish set an arm her and kissed hand Miss Doc ge trembled a little and escaped the the startled mu it leave said the value Mr. don't follow I a bitter to hear you is to obey He knew the siyle of love-making he em- ployed wks a little so the 1 and the style could that pretty -er mas Dodge went Mow and do vou see how he s be- a and said the Have you remarked his the What's he the maiden lady with a slight I am getting a little I but I do feel a bit. ashamed for all He's making eyes at your Now be it said that the Colonel was miliar with this and was disposed to give it less ready credence than he had once Not that ever professed to u doubt but be thought sometimes that his sister had grown a little too suspicious of the male I'll lay an eye upon said and he did so. Miss Dodge presented herself on duty where two or three young ladies were busy with sketch and colors transferring the Giant's and his scenic accessories to and one young gentleman an easel set sunned h in the most splendid ferous The rapidity of his success astonished and might have led him to of its reality if he had not had experience It was an ly maiden lady permitted to be squeezed or her hand to be That was common enough in his varied edge of the he had kissed more hands ard squeezed more waists than I should Hie lo The thing that him was that a lady so susceptible and so prodigiously well to do bad never carried by love's assault before Now while he ogled and sighed and the lady yielded to his blandishments he ed a scheme so safe and easy that he ed to think of He knew very well that cylinder covered with wire splash around and the pulp fast to thf After the cylinder has half revolution it comes in contact with another covered wilh i hat takes off the As the large cylinder goes down on the return and just before dipping into the trough all ittle particles pulp sticking to the a-e washed off by streams of water from a On the inside of the cylinder is a pump that discharges the waste From tie cylinder the pulp .is paid on the forming so is the shape of the paper caps worn by bakers and made of wood and covered with the small or bottom part of the the The forming roll drops when pulp of the required thickness is around it. From here the now promising pail is put in pressing looks Lhing like a in six perforated brass wire upper The sections move from and to a common and the frame is the exact size of the pail The workman dropped his damp skeleton of a pail into the touched a and the sections moved to their center and squeezed the moisture out of the The pail s still a little and spends a few hours in the at a of. about 150 The sections of the mark the bands which are seen on the finished After it is dry the pai is or as it is Tie pail is like over a stee which is and is ironed by another revolving with steam thrown on the pail to it as it a shirt The or its is pared at the tte QD knew very well that if once he I and Canvas on o. nv young and ig and he anathematized the insinuating m did not in the least relent toward with much but told him shining assortment of new tubes fully that the wreck of the yacht must be of color and brushes as Vet made the subject Board of Trade in- The little Fanny smiling and the Colonel responded by de- near was at her Glaring his intention of paying for the tne 8Un shone as it does in Mr. O'Hara that he was to make good all damages and to estimate them The Irish was the center of interest on the deck and in the and all vied with all in paying courteous attention to the Now it goes without ing that everybody had heard of and that the voyage of the Lively Fanny was a matter of public news and in- her various places of Call being ified by special telegram journals and most of the pro so that when the Coloni withdraw his for a chance to There was just the and or for the on of Ihe iron A wooden large enough to spring the ma 1Uc1D the bottom can be put is in- risk of losing but of P under conditions tender-hearted young But the sunshine without and within was doomed more to be for the polite Dionysius lost not a moment in ing to the side of the lady with the of the dollars received him with unexpected and and the names of the two ladies he thought he saw a wiy lo perfect I wish it were in my power to give you the was a masterpiece in its but ily the Colonel burned it. That night sat down penned an which might fell into the hands of either lady and seem addressed to it he ged for the companionship of the most paper bottom held under a weight drops and knocks the bottom where it The hoops are then put The factory has a machine of its own in- vention foi the bending of the hoop into Al ter it has been cut to 'the proper length and width the straight strip of iron is run-over a edge of on Which it ii firmly drops on the she moved away from the knot of loungers who surrounded the teurs of Mr. O'Hara following and to say on which the whole happiness of his future if he was too pre- in love with each other ana all The Colonel shook his head U c 111 a the There's John i and there's and there's i He did not IQ the least relent toward Bodge to the gentleman who had been so 8ink 8icken waen the aad a maa with no strangely added to the ship's Mr. 0'- dy coquettishly smote Mr. w ey to fall in with the daughter of Hara at once knew that he stood in the tired and what pity did a girl presence of a lady who was probably deserve who allowed herself to fall in love fer match than nine in ten the heiresses Mwi with man she fiad made sure that and he gazed upon her face Mother paiU claim that they are he could main Am her in honest nhon that which is too cood to be at- 0. ter was wun ne sne and durable ihan lared dy coquettishly smote Mr. O'Hara with her The with his against the mainmast and a cigar between his lip smiled outright as he watched the pair was while he was aboard the same yacht with his show his letter to the it be pretty easy to declare that it had been intended for the younger anil ether the recipient of a waterproof composition is put the is baked in a kiln for about a temperature of be- It is dried after and and then takes two more of drying and a coat of varnish which is baked o with its wooden handle and brass the pail is ready for the hand of the dairy hostler or Tbe was with the details of both are tales that to be ated should be heard from those pale while his eyes were full of suppressed When such a follower of the arts falls ill his employers contribute toward his But at best it is a hard and old Bge rarely finds such a one with any the life as model having entirely destroyed other aims and powers of so that until a Model's is formed there must always be the sad spec tacle of the old and decrepit model going from studio to studio seeking the Only em- ployment he understands but finding U The Irrepressible THE STORY OF BETTY'S from Magazine for years ago Mrs. of Ame lia had In her employment in the of nurse a colored girl named Betty was a abounding in terly irresponsible and entirely self Unfortunately these qualities were marred by a habit of which was looked by her soft-hearted who sad to rather given to excusing any morality which did not inter- fere with the happiness of the denizens of the ope fine morning Betty took twenty or thirty dollars from the pocket of a drunken Through some law satisfactory to the jury and the Commonwealth's as the man was asleep Ihe public Betty was transferred from the nursery to the penitentiary at There remained two One bright day in June the family twere startled with screams of joy from the playground and a shout of welcome from the hack Mrs. to the kitchen to find Betty sitting on the table surrounded by an ad- miring and holding her former charges in her We have high authority for receiving the but to welcome a penitentiary convict as she was a a romantic ad- venture was putting too high a premium on vice even for gentle Mrs. In as dignified a tone as the general ity would she now you've come from tbat dreadful that you will try to-be a better Miss utterly unabashed ary ain't so bad ez folks you gits lles fire ef but Miss ef you was to go you must to den when you come dey gees you dollar dey gees you Miss An- bad whar I pome So the to improve by a moral drawn from past experience fell to the j a ten-year old scion of who gloated over and in his inmost heart envied Betty's superior they put you in a cell all by yourself and did you have on ymt did have on with a toss of her in a nice wid a nice colored I ain't tase corn sence I lef dis here But arhat did the lady do to put her in the she steal you mustn't crowd I don't but I hear folk say she gwine stay thar some She her head I ask no questions; but dey tell me she burnt Miss she burnt up five of her And stayed in the cell with such a can call her a nice Miss dey her cud burn urn up ef she Hiram four he could main Ain her IQ honest looks upon that which is too good to be at- happened to at the fc for the female heart fittle hQW pale would pleasantly provided for He found the elder Miss Dodge's own start and WTC settled to ask Then t is and we are offering the of oor of clothing at But though Mr. Dodge was fortified against by these he was not Clifford and and Horace and and as he stood before and I do forgotten his mirror next staring at his own and and therms and ind with a in either that makes said the he turned upon his wife and en figuring bar ivory I have been thinking that eight young ladies with a father and be ths better of a and twenty ght and I have things over my young gentlemen with and has a yacht he lean how she grew and come how woebegone pretty face He i It was k halcyon day for Mr. and he tipped her with warmed eign Jd badb the he had Hara's bad been wide and and his impudence was A woman's heart naturally pines for this his plain woman is likely to meet with less of it than a ty and therefore value it the more able He was so and con as to cast soma of his own joy upon the little for when tier elderly sake had withdrawn he himself his fiancee as warmly as girl in tremulous to Miss Doege to her mi for he j must be in view of to declare that be was ed with the woman's special simply Miss The woman smiled and too i the tip and the She had and more durable than of ti 3 or THE OF THB FAITHFUL FOLLOWERS OF AKT IK From Harper's In London the model can and very an extremely respectable member of society and if his or her work is well done the pay is not as wages go in and sixpence a or a A Peculiar Chemical THE OF Prom ttu An event of considerable interest red in the chemical department of Amherst College a few days Once in three years the experiment U made of condensing carbonic So difficult and ous is the undertaking by this process that it is forbidden by law in all countries except the United and probably Amherst Is the only college where It is Twb iron cylinders are used one the the other the K They resem ble howitzers fitted with strong iron bands and peculiar Bicarbonate of soda and sulphuric acid are placed in the ator in BUCU a way as not to mingle until the cylinder is securely union of the substances generates carbonic acid and that makes either to let on hire or to Now ana do you pay to taken many tip's and many as it ling an is the price paid a costume gas wRh about a and me makes I think a bit oil a when A middle-aged woman attention to that old for Dodge's dollars were no I for wUe those in the life classes or ton to every foursquare this Alexander i and good always still first time approached that and ing models earn half M much passes into the which is packed in because the child to see the he facing a little of inspiring a grand If he trust I am a 8he gave the Met to her mistress Some men and women have grown ice and talu The process is repeated twelve J 0 and there's luck in odd change of might drive that Irish could only secure a footing he would dare body that seta yes OD him's bound ti Jove scoundrel out of ler if something he declared to though he was J LA. 1 FROM FORMER She a littie out of triumphant and in flex Tie looked solemn for a and an elegant you are a remarkable to be something a I to isn't you'll drive me QUt of mine be- With no great on mamma's part and the necessary and before the not such a fool as to drop the steak while he plunged into the stream iu search of its hope that me future wife love me none the less that I deny meself old in the know every artist and his or her are well versed in studio unc erstand costumes and even thing of periods m and not in contribute valuable until the gas in the receiver is forced by pressure and cold into liquid When this is allowed to flow out it rates so rapidly that it forms a like having the surprising all them young aad I take it Dodge's I'll knock him overboard this of her society in order fo be polite to an said the i derly and unattractive lady brother said Ihe maiden ture below g to Miss Dodge from the first When and BO likely to to him un- written to the other Miss Finny somebody among a knot of the more tney softened by the ameliorations and where the scoundrel has ly of the Colonel's guests started playfully of gentlemanly But you see that point of our stock will convince one and all to one cruise among the and the Orkney Bhi Colonel artist without having acquired the faintest the chance of much 3a, or were three Se mournfully and when five and and supported bis position am pleased to have a sister capable so charming a I do not say it may not to be but the lines are And let tell pursued the Colonel with a i What could any girl say to that? the felt that she had a right to and confessed tbat she bad been of land this side the Giant's lines after years of ly i tiff and we have kno ivn of an instance where a young woman sat three years for a tea legs his sea stomach with Irish was s a prisoner in her At last she came on s woeful a pursued the Colonel with a last sue came on a V 6 I sea-green she could 1'IUU.IJ. LJ I- a very yery pleasing of manner take no in earthly thin and the brand-new Spring has its he summer is and approaching autumn is lovelier At a true woman has entered upon the full possession of her It she boot him if you like to follow and to way that she should j be jealous of onel smiled and lit a fresh anything or anybody who came between her and her and her Dion answered take it as a particular sympathetically that knew the value of said Colonel Dodge to Mr. you her affection and appreciated Ua and daughter would and where they are not too knowing Atthe pace said the Colonel's pany nte upon this 111 Ue they are valuable idea of hat he was doing or what special style he worked and would as placidly pose for iau escaping slave as for a lady of without taking the smallest interest in the or its enter with very deliberate zeal into their DONG for left or the gay tunes and If mere outward beauty has been leng to dp the and who capable of a the poor Joung thing tried to denied her heart and mind are at so capital in his Some are noted for others for the pose ot the upon it freezes and the effect of touching it is about the same as hanfTling a red-hot The great danger in the ex- periment arises from the tremendous thus the liability of a bursting recent which was in charge of Instructor Fond the senior chemistry great interest to the entire Other men's pains are easily It Is easy to undertake but more difficult to finish the Between the Yes and No of a an I would not undertake to thrust the point of a NE