Wellsboro Agitator, The (Newspaper) - September 9, 1896, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania AHD ITEMS OF. INTEREST Aim Willie his where does the Hudson don't know Just think of it lick me like account of your No belter medicine than TKH for all irregularities of the cS Jack ain't so There's been here do yon knoW? Jack all them champagne The most violent explosions of Toothache to one where Stephen Crane got for the Badge of has DMM way to be happy is atall times to to tbe comforts of should any one of them catch a COM or al once on BJeT Howd A J M. f. H and get a trial bot of- the great German W We give it away to prove that hW a sure coughs all dis- of throat and 71 and said Mr as they sat the I hat 18 entirely too lake it put snapped Mrs. I that hat in my lip how am I Jf it eri i In- i- Yot On re- n cash or a will of the most and hay fever cure to demonstrate ent. Full size 50c. ELY BROTHERS New York .hn of Great Falls Ely's Cream Balm un emphasize his statement i nre for catarrh if used Francis W. when I'm an angel will I I dear why do M I U WITH A Mj said Miss Maclver did yon that brilliant n It to me that yon tie girl of eighteen in I years Mv r. the lady vim are complimenting bnt wonderful Have v witnessed its i- nothing impossible to its powers a r. Beware of in The fair Rose was nji t. in have 11..- uct that Ifill's 11 ur sives satisfaction n to head as the to the dis- lit safe and In r 1. this won't do Mh that he is to w Ft As a Family rj King for the nerves to -in as a If liver or blood -t a of this v It ii n h. this r ind wijl cure Hyer ami A. J. M. J. the leading and are fr. r Linje 50 n my tu i girl a a notice to creditors II 1 D STATE t training for 1.. f reparation for col- for studies M i -i of three t sixteen Fine 11 tl to normal in March at any fa full DICK'S Ihe beM i l in the n power and it tni in poorer auu i vs ij and t Full r Excellent n r To Pa. Per Year to All Investors on bath Large and Small WITH IN u Irt I II r ire E w I p K LIAM D. A HuKS BROWN NO. 37. A PUBLISHED WEDNESDAY BY TIOGA SEPTEMBER 9, 1896. in the Keystone No. 104' Main tho at aa TERMS One dollar and cents a year cash when In PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. A. B. opposite Coles -t and improvements in a Teeth n .it half former work and at winning J L J HEADQUARTERS FOR FANCY AND STAPLE Charles N. M. IAN AND vi i M Main second floor over i r Special attention given of the nose and diseases of The moet m rti md methods used Dr. Wi Hard G. ATTENTION given to d L- and general Of- ITI H formerly Dr. L. Office hours u- n n A in 1 to 3 p 7 to 9 p. m. Jan. 1S'M> Dr. J. P. PHYSICIAN SURGEON Pa over atoro 1 n Residence comer of Pearl and ris 0, 1895. B. AT LAW AND OP AND I D. C. office in i corper Main and Graf ton No. 507, B S K J. H. AT Pa. Collections m In tho United Money t- in on real May 0, 1896. W Merrick A i RNE YS AT LAW AND t OF P Pa. Office In Law the ground Mam 1 1-1 i. i son J. AND AT W. Pa. Office np 17 Central 1, 1890. H. L. ATTORNEY AT Pa. Office fn 1, 1896. David ATTORNEY AT Pa. Office in Cameron Packer's atone Jail 1, We are leaders in furnishing all of apparatus for private residences or public We can furnish ana put in guaranteeing either or heating apparatus of the Ihe season is opened but we have contracts d for six heating Jf you want in this line we shall be to talk with You are u-i to the benefit of our ex- Our stock of heating stoves for or coal are of great unit our prices Our are acknowledged be is one of the largest of our Call see the variety of fixtures with we are about to furnish of Ihe finest homes in are in the front row on of thin We can with to a great many jobs of We make tin a and ive are to insure perfect in every member that we are always to talk with any person hardware or building that's Cull nee WILLIAM Pa 5. From this time on I shall on a STRICTLY CASH I believe a is bottler than a Hence I am forced to adopt this plan ol Customers will find it tn their advantage to trade with for my goods and for All kinds of produce ln exchange for goods at 1 In- Baking department ontinue to be family We carry the largest and most lect line of Glass and ware in at LOW 1 DON'T FAIL TO SEE OUR 112-PieceDINNER SET for We pay special attention to mir De- buy only the and none bnt tho parent in tho market We take pleasure In thanking our friends ami lor tho shown to establish a purely cash traSie in buyt ine and Thoy see tie many advantages Wo cordially Invite you to and we will for July Have From the Scant beauty nature gave in Bogged and harsh she bade her go about With face save tMe sad Prom which looked bravely out But Life took np the used her face with many aa sculptors two a H a little and lo 1 a grace as a sunbeam falls upon a Across her a heavy sorrow As tidal waves sweep sometimes o'er tho Leaving her when back tt ebbed and Tranquil and like tide-washed And of her face her gentleness grow And all her holy thoughts left there their A great love found its way within her Its root was its blossom in her So when Death came to set the sweet soul free Prom the poor body that wa never We watched her and marveled to soe How Life had carved for an THE BY THOMAS DUNN From Harper's Magazine for Deep in the shadow of her hazel Waiting to capture Lovo lurking Her glances are tho arrows of his Wherewith he lays unwary victims low And un and to Cupid's artful Unconscious aids his purpose by her And knows as hor smiles and glances What anguish these may bring to many a Ah I hapless Innocently No presage of tho future breeds Sue does not know how soon the treacherous Will make hor heart the haven Soon from her he'll And seek a refuge lover's Then from that point of aim a dart To pierce and agonize hor maiden It. is It is It is And it Fits Dime BUSINESS John Pa to H P Erwin Fine custom tailoring at fur prices Clood fits in every over AGITATOR 12, 1806. Brothers WESTFIELD MARBLE The latest of foreign Hnd c marble and pr and Ohio flagging and July Colon W R Pr The and hotel in tow i 70 pleasant E steam and tlin 13, See our window for styles in Fine all strictly nji to-date We have a dandy in Box Calt Heavy Sole at Also a fine Welt Shoe patent in lace or that we are going to sell this season at were from Onr Bargain some a little off on but good cost anywhere from to at half that Good school shoes for the ON SALE j. New shapes in stiff and soft the styles for the coming all the grace and wonderful quality Melville's stands Will give you a better hat for less money than can be had in any store in the It Doesn 't Suit Tour Money iid Door First National rv f r vj EUGENE HAMMOND has out tho of M H in All kinds of Hard and Soft Coal will lie kept constantly on band at the yard on Charleston Orders loft at the store of W. A. Hammond will prompt Pa April 1. 1KW. tf yon want to put in city water this fall remember i WILL TAP MAIN Call and price ou all kimls of fitting and W. S. PA. L. Hardware NASAL 1 LOCAL and Is the result colds land sudden changes cured by r at rom Applied ly Opens ind cleans to Nasal Allay Pain and the Protects brane from the Sonses of and The Balm 13 quickly absorbed and gives at Price 30 cents at druggists or mall ELY 3G Warrem Now L. C. f: i OF PA. 1864, CAPITAL This Bank places between Ita de and any possible a general banking sells drafts on Europe and prompt attention to all at lowest Interest paid on time does business on as liberal terms aa with A 1805. AFTER 4-L OTHERS a constant for over tt II In all u i other where pain If an a ant. Try It. At or lir ma on receipt of and BROWN DRUG U. g. A. By by thu CHAPTER L Hero stretch tlie fresh and breezy antl absolutely unchanged finco eventful A plow has never disturbed tho and the sod that vras uppermost theu is Hero stood tho dis- tinct traces of tho banks throw n up for the horses of the cavalry aud spots tho midden heaps lay ore still to be ob- At night when I walk across tho i lonely place it is impossible to avoid amid the of the wind over the grass bents ami the trumpet and tho of tho to help seeing rows of tral tents and tho impedimenta of the From within the canvases come guttural syllables of foreign tongues and broken songs of the for they wero mainly regiments of the German that slept round the tout poles hereabout at j It was nearly 90 years The Brit- ish uniform of tho with its immense queer ponderous cartridge buckled shoes aud what would look strange and barbarous Ideas havo invention has followed Soldiers were monumental objects A divinity still hedged kings hero and and war was con- a glorious Secluded old manor houses iond lets lie in the ravines and hollows among these where a stranger had hardly ever been seen till tho king to take the baths yearly at the seaside watering place a few miles to tho ai a con- sequence of which battalions descended in a cloud upon tho open country Is it necessary to add that the echoes of many episodic dating from that picturesque still linger about hero iu more or less fragmentary to bo caught by tho attentive Somo of them I havo of them I have ouo I havo never ed and assuredly can never Phyllis told mo tho story with her own was then an old lady of 75 and her auditor a lad of 16. She joined silence as to her share dent till phe should be buried and Her was prolonged 12 years after tho day of her and sho has now been dead nearly 20. The oblivion which in her and humility she courted for only partially with the unfortunate result of inflicting an in- justice upon her since such fragments of her stoiy as got abroad at tho time and havo been kept alive ever since are precisely which arc most unfavorable to her It all began with the arrival of the York one of foreign ments above alluded Bi fore that day scarcely a soul had been seen father's house for weeka When a noise like the brushing skirt of a visitor was heard on the it proved to be a scudding when a carriage seemed to be Hearing tbu door it was her grinding on tho in the garden for his relaxation of trimming the box tree borders to tho A sound liko thrown down from tho coach was a gun far away at and what looked like a tall man by tho gate at dusk was a yew bush cut into and attenuated There is no such iu country places as was iu those old Yet all tho whilo King George and his at not more than Hvo miles off. The daughter's seclusion was greats bnt beyond the seclusion of the girl lay the seclusion of tho If her social condition was his was Yet ho enjoyed his while her twilight oppressed Dr. Grove had been a professional man whose taste for lonely meditation r metaphysical questions had diminished his practice till it no Linger paid him to terp it after which ho bad n it and hired nominal rent the dilapidated manor house of this obscure to mako a of an income which in a town would have been inadequate for their He staid in his garden the greater part of the growing more and tablo with the lapsil of time and the in- creasing perception that he had wasted his life in tho pursuit of He saw his friends less Phyllis became so shy that met a stranger anywhere iu her short rambles sho felt ashamed at his walked awkwardly and blushed to her Yet Phyllis was discovered even hejre by an admirer and her hand most asked in Tho as was at where ho taken up his abode at Gloucester aud his ence in the naturally brought many county people Among these j of whom professed to have connections aud interests with one Humphrey a a neither young nor neither good looking positively Too steady going to fust and d men theu be was an approximately of a mild This elor of found way to village on tho beheld made her father's acquaintance in order to make and by 1111 uns or other she sufficiently inflamed his heart to lead him in that din alnn st till ho engaged to As he was of air local of whose members were held in respect in tho in ing him to her had what was considered a brilliant move for one in her constrained How she had it was not known to Phyllis In those days regarded nither as violating laws of nature tlian aa a more infringement of the more modern and Then Phyllis of the Weymouth was by such a gentlemanly low it was as if she were to DO taken to the uninformed would ser u 110 difference ui tho respective positions of the the said Gould g us poor as a This pecuniary ws his ex- a true their and as winter drew and the king departed for the Mr. Humphrey Gould sot ont for to return to Phyllis in a few Tho winter ar- tho date of his promise yot Gould postponed his ou the ground that ho could not vry easily leave his father iu city of their the elder having no other relative near though lonely in the was The man nod asked her in marriage was a able husband for her iu many w Her father highly approved of his but this neglect of her was if not for him ill tho true sense of the word she assured me she never but she had a genuine regard for admired a certain methodical and dogged way in wuith he sometimes took his valued his knowledge of what tho court was had done or was about to and she was not without a feeling of pride that he had chosen hor when ho might havo exorcised a more ambitions T But he did not and the spring His letters were regular though and it is not to be dered that the uncertainty ol her linked with the fact that was Hot much passion in her thoughts of bred an indescribable neps iu tlie heart of Phyllis The spring was soon and the mer brought the but still no All this while the ment by was maintained At this point of timo a golden anco flashed in upon the lives of people hero aud charged all youthful thought with emotional interest Thia radiance was tho York CHAPTER IL Tho has probably bnt a very dim notion of the celebrated York hussars of 00 They were one of the regiments of tho King's Gorman andl though they vihat degenerated later their liant their splendid horses above their foreign air and appendages crowds of admirers of both sexes w ever they with other had come to encamp on the downs and pastures because of the presence of the king in the neighboring though not precisely a girl of tho was as as any them in this military investment Her father's home stood somewhat and on the highest point of ground to which the lane so that it was almost level with tho of the church tower in the low er part of tho WHOLE NO. froni outside of tho pinion away to a groat it was crossed by a which fume close to the walL Ever hrr it had to clamber up this fonce and Rit on tho feat not HO difficult as tho walls in this district of without HO that there wore plenty of crevices for small She was 8'ttiDg up hero one the when hor attention was by a solitary walking along It WHS oue of the and he moved onward with eyes on tho and with the of one wished to escape H-a hotul would probably have been bout like eyes but for his stiff On nearer view she perceived that his face waa marked with deep Without observing her ho advanced by footpath till it brought him almost immediately under tho J Phyllis was much surprised to see a in such a-s Her theory of and of the York hussars in particular en- tirely from for sho had never known a soldier in her was that their were as as their At moment the hussar lifted his and noticed her on her the white muslin neckerchief which covered hor and neck left bare by her low gown aud her hi to raiment in general in the bright sunlight of summer He blushed a little at the suddenness of the and halting a ment from his pace OIL All that duy the face haunted Its aspect so so awl his wore so blue and and It was only natural that on some at the same hour should look over that wall again and wait till he had patted a second On this occasion ho was reading a and at the sight of her liis manner was that of one who had half expected or hoped to discover Ho almost smiled and made a courteous The end of the meeting that they a few She asked him what he was he readily informed her that ho was re- letters from his mother iu He did not get them he and was forced to read tho old OUCH a great mauy This was all that passed at the present but others of the same kind Phyllis used to say that his though not was quite intelligible to so that their was never by difficulties of the subject became subtle nr tender for such English as were at liis tho eyes no doubt d out the though this was tho lips helped out the In this unguardedly made and rash enough on their developed and ri- Like ehe pitied him and learned his His was Matthaus and Saarbruck Vs native where his mother was still 22, and already risen to tho grade of though he had nut lung to assert that THE BOY ORATOR BEGGING VOTE'S Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report up finch refilled or well educated inun been found in tho rauks of the of these soldiers nither tho presence of our native officers of onr and She by from lier friend a self and his comrades which loust have of thg York far from as gay us its the regiment was pervaded by a dreadful a homo- depressed of tho men to Ruch an extent that they could hardly attend to drilL Iho worst sufferers were the soldiers who had not been over here long. They hated England and English they took no interest whatever in King George and his island and they only ed to bo out of it and never to see it any bodies Avero but their hearts and minds wero always far away in their dear of brave men and stoical as they were in many would speak tears in their One of tho worst of the sufferers from this home as he called it in his own was thalis whose musing ture felt the gloom of still more intensely from the fact that ho had loft a lonely another at homo with nobody to cheer Though touched by all and interested in liis dis- dain lier according to her own account at to permit the young man to over- step the line of mere friendship for a long w long indeed if he con- herself likely to the of though it is probable that she had lost her heart to before she herself The stone wall of necessity made anything in- and he had tured to come or to ask to come inside the so that all their had been covertly conducted across this CHAPTER IIL But news reached the village from a friend of father concerning Mr. Humphrey her cool ami patient mau had heard to say in Bath that ho considered overtures to Miss Phyllis Grove to only the stage of a half and in view of his absence 011 his who was too great an in- valid now to attend to his he thought it best that there promise as yet on either He was not mure indeed that ho might not cast his eyes This though only a piece of and Us such entitled to no ab- solute tallied BO well with tlie of liis letters and lack nf warmth that did not doubt its truth for one and from that hour she felt herself free to bestow her heart as she should Not so her Pie declared htory to be a He had known Mr. Gould's family from and if there was one proverb which expressed tlie matrimonial aspect of that family well it mo love me was an honorable who Mould not think of treating his engagement BO yon wait in will be right enough in From words Phyllis at firstly imagined that her father was in Mr. and Her heart sank within for on spite of her original intentions she had been re- to hear that her engagement hud come to Bnt she presently learned that her father had hoard no of Humphrey Gould than she self had while he would and address her fiance directly on tho subject lest it should be deemed an im- on that bachelor's want an excuse for encouraging one fV other of those fellows io flatter you with his her father his mood having of late been a very unkind one toward see more than I you ever set foot that garden fence my If you want to see tho I'll toko you myself some Sunday Phyllis hud nut the smallest intention Of disobeying him as to her but she assumed herself to be independent with respect to her Sho no longer checked her fancy for the though she from regarding him as her lever in the serious sense iu which an Englishman might have been regarded as The young foreign soldier was almost mi ideal being to with none nf the appurtenances of au ordinary house One who had descended knew not and would disappear she knew not Tho subject of a fascinating They met continually at during the brief interval be- the going down of the sun and tbe minute at which tho last trumpet cull summoned him to his tent haps her manner had become less re- strained At any that of the hussar vas so. Ho had grown more tender every and at parting after these hurried interviews she reached down hor hand from tho top of the that lie might press it One evening he held it so long that wall is and somebody in thefield may see shape against He lingered KO long that night that it was with d that he could run across intervening of ground enter f in t On cf a hnr uot appear in L r usual place at the usual unspeakably Blamed blankly at the like a mail iu a The trumpets mid and still ho did She had delayed purely by au accident When she she vras because of tho lateness of the having heard the sounds denoting the closing of tlie camp as well as ha She implored him to leave he mid shall not go -in you have thought cf coming all you may bo after l' I should have from world eomo time ago if it had not been for two my beloved here and my mother in I hate the I care more for a minute of your for all the promotion in tho Thus he and her and told her interesting details of his native place and incidents of his childhood till she wris in a simmer of distress at his recklessness in It rally because sho insisted on bidding him good night and leaving the wall that he returned to his The nest time that she snw was without the stripes that had ed his Ho had been broken to tho level of private for his that aa Phyllis considered herself be the cause of his disgrace her was groat Bnt the position was now it was his turn to cheer meine he have got a remedy for ever even supposing I re- gain my would your father low you to many n noncommissioned officer in the York She This had not mind in relation to euch an unrealistic person us he and a moment's reflection was enough for it. father would would she answered cannot be thought oft My dear please do forgot me. I fear I ing you and your at said are ing this country of yours just interest to make me alive in it. If my dear land ere here also and my old with you I could bo flippy as I am and would my best n But it is not so. And now is my you ffo with mo to my own and be my wife and live there my mother and I am not a as yon though I entered the army aa ily country is and f is at peace with and if I wero onco in it I should bo how get she Phyllis had been amazed than at his Her position iu her was growing some and painful in tho His parental affection seemed to bo quite She was not a native of the like all tho joyous girls around and in somo way Matthaus Tina had infected her his ate longing for his country and mother and she finding that ho cLd not you buy ho ble in these I came here st my should I Now is the us we shall ioon be leaving and I might see you ho more This is my I will usk you meet me on the t on calm night next week may boi There will be nothing j unbecoming in it or to cause you You ill not fly alone with I will bring with me my de- voted young friend wild has joined the and agreed to assist in We have come from where we have the boats and found one suited to our has already a chart of the and we will then go to Wrymouth and at midnight cut the boat from her moorings and row away round the point ont of aud by the next morning we are on the i f near The is for I have f or the land journey and can get a I will to my will meet us on thn details in reply to her in- left no in mind of of the But magnitude appalled and iC if she would ever havo gene further in the wild ad- if entering h tuso that night her father hud t accosted her in the most significant about the York lie but they arc still at the bi are soon going I is useless for yt u t attempt to cloak your actions that v Yt u have boon meeting one f f those you have been seen foreign much bt tter than the French I have mado up my I havo have made up niy mind you stay hero no Kinder while they are rn tho spot Y jn shall go to Four It her to protest she had never taken ji walk with any BTUI except Her protestations wero fc the ugh ho was not literally correct in he was ly only half r. The house of her father's sister was a prison to She had quite ly undergone experience of its aud when her father went on direct her to pack what would be necessary for her to her heart died within In after years never attempted to excuse her conduct during week i of but the result of her self commuting was that sho decided to join iu the scheme of hor lover and his friend and fly to tho country which he had colored with such lovely hues in her ylio always said that the ono feature in his proposal which her hesitation was tho obvious purity and straightforwardness of his He showed himself to be so virtuous and Ho treated her with a respect to which sho hud never before been and she was traced to the obvious ef the by her confidence in It was on a dark evening of the following week that engaged in the Tina was to meet her at a point in the highway at rho lane to the village branched oX toph was to go ahead to harbor where tlie bout row it the as it culled in those pick them up on other side cf tho which they were to reach by The bor bridge on foot and climbing over the Lookout soon as her father had ascended to his room she left tho handle in hand proceeded ut a trot along the At such an net n was afoot anywhere in the and she reached the junction of tho lime with tho highway Hero she t Ktk up her position in the obscurity d the angle of a whence she cWd discern every along tlie turnpike road without being herself She mot remained thus waiting for her lover longer a though from the tension IK r nerves the lapse of even that was instead of tho expected v stagecoach conld be heard descending tho She knew that Tina would not show himself till thro road was clear and waited for tho couch to Nearing the here sho was It slackened instead of as drew up within a few yards of A passenger and she hoard his It was Ho had brought a friend with him and luggage was ed on tho and tlie coach went on its route to wonder where that yonng man is L the horse paid 1 irer to liis hope we to I told 10 o'clock you t lirr piesi ut is in this I hope it please course it What woman would not bo d with a some peace she deserves it. I've treated her rather But she has been in my mind these lust two days much more than I should care to confess to I'll say nn more about that be that she is so bad as they make I am quite sure that a girl of her good sense bettor than to git entangled with qf those Hanoverian I won't believe it of and there's an end More iu the same strain were casually dropped as tho two men waited revealed to lu as by a sudden ilium mart the enormity uf hex The conversation was at c length cut off by arrival of tho man with luggage placed in and mounted and were driven on in tho direction which she had just Phyllis was so nco that sho was at d to foil but a lur to feel that it would to to vait ho amwd d lhat had her difficult as tho would be when she face to face Sho bitterly 6sclf for hiring f bis from sho now heard from his own she that ho had boon living of in but she knew who hud won her Without him life seemed a yot the sho looked at Ins proposal the sho feared to accept HO wild as it so so Sho hud promised and it was only his d which liad led her to troat as His in bringing her those gifts touched In r promise Inust be aud esteem take the place of Sho would her self respect Sho would stay at homo aud marry him and Phyllis hud thus herself to an exceptional fortitude u f- w utes the outline of Matthaus Tina appeared behind a Held over which he lightly leaped as she stopped forward There was no evading ho pressed her to his breast is tho first and last she wildly thought 03 stood encircled How Phyllis got through tho terrible of that night sho could clearly recollect blio always attributed hex success in carrying hor resolve lover's for jis awn as she declared to him iu words that sho had changed hor mind and felt that she could dared fly with him he forbore to urge grieved as he was at hor Unscrupulous pressure on his how romantically she had become attached to would no doubt have turned the balance in his But ho did nothing to tempt hor unduly or Oil her fearing for his she begged him to he de- not cannot break faith with my paid Had he stood he would havo abandoned his go he must A dark his joined him in tho highway It was his bho could see no Thoy had hastened on in tho di- rection of tho With a feeling akin to despair turned and slowly her wuy Tattoo sounded in tho but thore was no camp for hor as. dead as tho camp of tho Assyrians alter tho passage of the destroying Sho entered the ing and to which her at ly wrapped hor hi a heavy Tho next morning her father mot her at the foot of the is come ho paid Humphrey was staying at the inn and had already called to for her He had brought her a present of a very handsome looking gloss in u frame of silver which her father held iu his Uc had promised to call again in tho course of an hour to ask Phyllis to walk with Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE Pretty mirrors raror iii country at that day thoy arc and the ad- into how heavy her eyes to brighten yhe m tlut state of mind which loads a to move onward in she conceives to be her allotted Mr Humphrey had in his adhering along to the old It r her to do the Bame and to say uot a wt nl of her own her aud and when he at tho hour named she at awaiting J CHAPTER Phyllis thanked liis bnt the talking was soon entirely on side as they walked He told her of the latest ments of the world of sub- ject which sho would willingly have discussed to the exclusion of anything more Ins measured guage helped still her disquieted heart Had not her own ness peen w hat it as she must have observed his At last be the am you are wath my he is that I brought it to and to get you to help mo out of a mighty inconceivable to Phyllis that this independent iu some have a I'll tell yon iny secret at for I have a monstrous secret to confide before I can your L The that I am I hare privately married a dear young and if you knew and I you you would say thing in hrr But she is not quite tho one my father would have chosen for know the paternal idea as as I kept it There will be a terrible row no but I think with your help I may get over it. If yon would only do me this good I have told my I that never could inamed you or something uf that my life it will help to smooth the way mightily I am so to win him round to my point of view and nut to cause any estrangement What Phyllis sho scarcely or how him as to his unexpected Yet the relief that announcement her was To have confided her in return was what her acKing heart to and had been a Rhe would instantly have poured lier tale But to him to and there vas a real reason fur silence till a sufficient time hud elapsed to allow her lover and his comrade to get out of ay As soon she readied home again sho sought a place and spent the time in half regretting that not pone away aud in dreaming over the meetings with fn m to their In his among his own he would possibly soon forget to her very Her was th it cho did uot go out ef the ft r several There came a morning bn ke in fog and behind tlie dawn could be in greenish ai d the outlines of the and of horses at Ihe Tbo fn m the canteen drooped The spot at the M of the lie re she had been m nu d t climb the wall to nu et was inch of English uml in winch took any and in of the disagreeable haze pn walked out there till she n d tlie w ell blade i f with liquid pit and slugs antl snails out n the Sho hoar tho faint noises from the camp in the other the trot rf f on tho road to for it was market day She observed that her frequent to tins comer liad tn the grass in the of the wall and left marks of soil un the li slie over the top till she not consult red That her traces might be visible by day haps it was had reveled her trysts tn lu r she m int re- gard she fancied that the customary sounds from the tents were c hanging Indifferent as to camp doings she mounted by 'the steps to the old she beheld lit first awed and d Then she d her lingers hr oki d to fur eyes staring out of her he r f uco if hardened to On the open before her all the in camp were drawn up m in the of empty ct on the The unwonted sounds h had noticed come from an ing It consisted of the bard of the York playing a dend Next of that guarded on h side and companied by a c i md crowd of who had been attracted by the holy entered and ed beside where tlie two con- men were and kneeling on A now given while A firing party of 12 with levt It d Tho n who had his sword 1 it through some ents of ex- till he the downward firing dis- charged their volley two one upon his across hLs the As the vi Hoy refunded arose a shriek from the wall of Dr and some Ml down the spectators out noticed it at tlie tune The two ex- hussars were Tina and his friend ph. The on guard placed tho in but the of the ride up and exclaimed hi u stern them an to j The w re endwise and J the dead out upon i faces the all were m in hed und 1 when the was over the corpses were again and Meanwhile Dr by of the had out into his w here ho saw his wretched r h against tho walL She taken m- but it was long she ered and fcr they of her It transpired that the luckiest ers the York hud cut tho boat from her moorings in Weymonth according to their with two other comrades who wore smarting under ill treatment from had sailed in safety across tho mistaking their they steered into thinking island the French were perceived to deserters delivered up fej the Matthaus and interceded for the other at the court saying that it was entirely by the representations that these were induced to Their sentence w as accordingly commuted to the death punishment being their The visitor to who may care to ramble to the neighboring lage under the hills and examine the register of burials will there find two entries in Tma in His York Hussars and Shot for Buried June 30, 1801, 22 years in tho of belonging to HLS Majesty's York who Shot for Buried June 30, 1S01, 22 Born at i gravies were dug at tlie back of the near tlie wall There LS no memorial to the but Phyllis it out to me. lived their but HOW w and Mink nearly The wh know the fn 1.1 their still pj u c w the Phyllis near A Simi Ftvm wah a a3 though An he never cut his whiskery bv didn't wear no An all lung d upon a dry goods box AD he d he How ud the country from a Wbj we to Fur the loop ca Si ud talk to I can t quiU jett liow Si fix it But I have iin cat I know all A per .ui I thet he Use to orate mob the s. three Au he then our ry to the I Aii I M IVIL was about teen nne In ibe then he'd fairly When lit d toll tot the nut ine 1 row of I gi must V too macb it wore Fer at he got rely an L u d bra get But he d still n town daily when An feet ut in tbe an he d whittle an- d hf d right on a set there in the On the 15 c rat KII ratios to cue An beared an i an until He dud niie we th r the THF It is nut that the past thirty years nearly have in the Territory of but it IB nevertheless a About ago the United States secured 50 of these animals with a to them as a means for the of freight and merchandise across the Colorado Shortly after their they were turned loose and abandoned because they were not found practical after the advent of the the intervening years they have spread over entire and recently these were counted along the banks of tLt Gila near the White Mountains of At this rate of increase it not be long before the United Government will be in a position to open up a trade in els with rn where these ships the are to as have been in apes almost thV sole means of THE ROLD Tho of Dr. tho bold arctic ought to interest mauy Dr left Korway m m tho of boats ovtr built for arctic tho His as explained in tho Now York Tunes was that currents wt toward and around the and if any one build a boat strong enough to drift with an ice floe aud carry visions aud have patience these currents would slowly drift the boat past the pole and on to the open After nearly two years of ing which the Fram she was to ice Dr found as he was likely to the Fram would drift on to open water m tune He to north of where she could ono he did so u year Ago and after s Lund in June cf It was nor that he could heard reached telegraphic com- nud let the world know of his n r THE WRITER IX Commercial houses in Europe outside of England do not to nse the to the extent that it is in thib firms with extensive correspondence continue to re- in their mail the game neat raphy on flimsy paper as that which their grandfathers received from foreign counting houses seventy-five years The reason for this was explained by a Philadelphia who conducts a very extensive business with a small force of Euro- pean firm with a business as large as would probably employ five the he and the typewriter is s labor saving invention for which have no The large staff of clerks is not for many young men etl work without salary for two or three 3 ears in order that may while the of others frequently pay large in order that their relatives starting ont in be introduced of With 90 many time of no and any device for the saving of this class of labor is tj Here it is for au boy as much salary in a week as a fairly good book keeper in some European IN