GH&NFm$&SFWHi . r .tHO OV "BOBBBT tLBNBBR," VWyilM .Everything tSt Uqttrl " Ja?."""? tMd broBghtte bear -y-rr pw see scene wdU- work of Mm write and leer, the . taiisetries, the emrf work or a Braaieh palace of b wlin 1J - "- n WHwIfcgpce; ae4 the crowded -liMMilheM divided Ita attention and ap phsja Atria Um Bret aceae between Um beagly aad eUboraMen ct Hi setUagaadthe pUyottMtwe tolerable acten wborepre wberepre ststtd Bhrire's father aad the rival et Macias, VenaMPere. fcsrnen Bene, baring set Um Intrkrae en feet wUck is te wreck (be lore of Mactas Md Mvira, had jett risen from hi Mt when Wallace, wbe was watching the stage la a tniMirtet alUdiatWaceaanddttpalf, tekened Mrae.leCeteanvieux. arm. , "ffewr beiald. "That deer te the left" Kewlal, catching the tfenal, row from hie Mtbehwd lima de Chateeuvleax and bent forward. Tbe great deer attheead of the palace bad slowly opened, and gliding through It with drooping bead and hand chiped before her came Elvira, followed by her little maid Beatrix. Tbe eterm which greeted her appearance was inch as thrilled the pubei of tbe eldest habitue in the theatre. Tear came te Mme. Chateauvisux's ere, and (he looked up at her brother. "What a scene! It Is orerpewering-lt li tee much for her) I with they would let her goenl" Kendal mads ber no answer, his soul wai Inhte eyes: he bad. no senses for any but one person. She was there within a few yard of him, In all the sovereignty of her beauty and her fame, Invested with tbe utmost ro mance that circumstances could bestow, and about, if half he heard were true, te reap a great artistic no less than a great personal u iiuupu. uaa no leit toward ber only as tne public felt, it would have been an experience beyond the common run, and as it was eh, this aching, Intolerable sense et tlcsire, of sep aration, of irremediable need! Was that her voice! no had heard that tene of despair in It before under ever arching weeds, when tbe June warmth wns in tbe air I That white, outstretched hand had ence lain clese clasped in his own; tbose eyes had once looked with a passionate trouble Inte his. Ah, it was geno forever; nothing would ever recall it that oue quick moment of liv ing contact! In a deeper souse than met tbe car, she was en the stage and be among the audience. Te tbe end his gray life would play tbe pert of spectator te hers, or else she would shiii have passed beyond his grasp and touch, just as Elvira would have van ished In a little whlle from the sight of tee great audlepce which new hung upon her every movement. Then from tbe consciousness et bis own private smart he was swept out, whether he would or no, into tbe general current of feel ing which was stirring tbe multitude of hu man beings around him, and he found him self gradually mastered by considerations of adlirercnt order altogether. Was this the actress be had watched with such incessant critical revolt six months before! Was this the half educated girl grasping at results ut terly beyond her realization, whom he re membered! It seemed te him impossible that this quick nrtlstle intelligence, this nervous understand ing et the demands mede upon her, this fac ulty In meeting them, ceul I have been de veloped by tbe same Isabel Drctberten whose earlier image was se distinctly graven en his memory. And yet his trained ejb learned after a whlle te decipher in a hundred indi cations tbe past history et tbe change. He saw hew sbe had worked and where; the in fluences which hed been brought te bear upon her were all familiar te him; thy had been part of bis own training, and they be longed, as he knew, te tbe first school of dra matic art in Eurepe te the school which keeps alive from generation te generation tbe excellence and fame of tbe best French drama. He came te estimate by degrees all that she hed done; he saw also oil sb had still te de. In the spring she bad been an ac tress without a future, condemned by the in in in exorable logic of things te soe ber fami de sert her with tbe first withering of her beauty. New she had, as it were, but started toward her rightful goal, but her feet were in the great bigb read, and Kendal saw be fore her, if she had but strength te reach it, the very highest summit et artist L- success. The end of the first act was reached; El vira, returning from tbe performance et the marriage ceremony in tbe chapel et the pal ace, had emerged hand in band with her hus band, and, followed by ber wedding train, upon the great hall. Bhe had caught sight of Macles standing blanched and tottering un der the weight of tbe incrodlble uews which had Just been given te him by tbe duke. Bhe bad flung away tbe hateful haixl which held her, and, with a cry Instinct with the sharp and terrible despair of youth, shehad thrown herself at tbe feet of her lever. When the curtain fell Edward Wallace could have had few doubts If be had ever cherished any of the success of his play. He himself escaped behind the scenes as seen as Hiss Bretberten's last recall was ever, and the box was filled In his absence v Ufa a stream of friends and a constant murmur of con gratulation which was musle in tbe cars of tMme, de Chateau vieur, and, for tbomemont, silenced In Kendal his own throbbing and desolate consciousness. "There never was a holiday turned te such geed account bef ero," a gray haired dramatic dramatic critle was saying te her, a man with whose keen, geed natural face Londen hed been fa miliar for the last twenty years, "what magie has touched the beauty, Mme. de Cbateauvieuxl Last spring we felt as though oue fairy godmother at least bad been left out at the christening. And new it would seem as though even bhe had repented et it and brought her gift with the rest. Well well; 1 always felt tbcre was something at tbe bottom in that nature tb.it might blossom yet Most peoplewho are younger at the trade than I would net hear et It. It was commonly agreed that her success would last just as long as the first freshness et ber beauty, and no mere. And new the English stage has laid its bold at lest upon a great actress." Mine, de Chateauvlcux's smiling reply was broken by tbe reappcarance of Wallace, round whom the buzz of congratulation closed with fresh vigor. "Hew is she!" asked Mme. de Chateau vieux, laying a hand en his arm. "Tired!" "Net the least! Dut, of course, all the strain is te ceme. It is amazing, j ou knew, this reception. It's almost mere trying than the acting. Ferbes In tbe wings, looking en, Is a play in himself I" In another minute the hubbub had swept out again, and the heuse had settled into si lence. Macias was tbe central figure of the sec ond act. Iu the great scene of explanation between himself and Elvira, after he had forced bis way into her apartment, his fury of jealous sarcasm, brekeu by Hashes of I he old absolute trust, of the old tender worship, had been finely conceited, and w.is ncll ren dered by the premising young actor whom Wallace bad himself chosen for the part. El vira, overwhelmed by the scorn and ihvpalr ether lever, and conscious of the treachery which hed separated them, is yt full of a blind resolve te play the part she lias as sumed te the bitter end, te save her awn name and her father's from dishonor, and te interpose the irrevocable barrier of her mar riage vow bctweeen herself and Macias. Sud denlv they are Interrupted by tbe approach of the duke and of Fernau IVres. Elvira throws herself between her husband und her lever, and, having captured the sword et Macias, hands It te the duke. Macias Is ar rested after a tumultuous scene, and is led away, shaking oft Elvira's efforts te save him with bitter contempt, nnd brt-aking loose from her with the prophesy that in every Jey et the future and every incident of her wed ded life the specter of bis murdered leve will rise before ber, and "every echo and every breeze repeat the fatal name, Macias." During the rapid give and take of thl trying scene, Kendal saw, with a kind et Incredulous admiration, that Isabel Brother Brether top never once lest herself, that every gesture was true, every word struck home. Iler ex traordinary grace, ber marvelous beauty, were all subordinated te. forgotten almost in, the supreme human passion speaking through ber. Macias, In tbe height of his despair, while he wasjitUl alone wfthjier, bad flunj he of ta anreadi eC Us.riry.OM soleW.bisirvivsi:hlia: hecalUfer wHNHVBsSf gwV RWHW BCT Kfwa ra Werer vwenlfl BtiNL I I Ah I MiriNhm. ItiatmUtat iTkm dot He Meed shall flew fnr mn. Oecae no nearer or I shall ihwtte It in tfaU AH the desperate CBergy of a loving woman driven te hay was In her attitude as sha re pelled Marias, wkcrea la the agony of bet tatt dinging appeal te htm, as hU guards led hlm off, every trace of ber momentary hero ism had died away. Faint nnd trembling, recoiling from every harsh word of his at from a blew, she had followed him towards the deer, and iu ber straining eyes and seek ing, outstretched bands as sbe watched him disappear, there was a pathos se true, se poignant, that It laid a spell upon tbe au dience, and the curtain fell amid a breathless silence, which made the rear that instantly followed doubly noticeable. But it was in tbe third net that fcliewf-n her highest triumph. The net tiaied with a scene between Elvira and her huslaiut, i-i which she Implored him, with tliu humility and hopelessness of grief, te allow her te re tire from tbe world and te hide the bea.ity which bad wrought such ruin from the li-tit of day. lie, la whom jealousy has taken fierce root, refuses with reproach and Insult, and In the full tide of ber passionate react ion gainst bis tyranny, the news Is brought ber by Beatrhs that Fenian, In his determination te avoid tbe duel with Macias en the morrow, which tbe duke, In accordance with knightly usage, has been forced te grant, has devised means for assassinating bis rival in prison. Naturally, her whele soul Is thrown into an effort tesare her lever. Bhe bribes his guards. Bhe sends Beatrix te 'denounce the treach ery et her husband te the duke, and, finally, she herself penetrates Inte the cell of Macias, te warn him of the fate that threatens him and te persuade him te fly. It was, Indeed, a dramatic tnoment when tbe gloom of Macias cell was first broken by the glimmer of the band lamp, which re vealed te tbe vast, expectant nudience the form of Elvira standing en the threshold. searching the darkness with her shaded eyes; and, In the great love scene which followed, tbe first sharp impression was steadily deep ened word by word and gesture after gosture by tbe genius et the actress. Elvira finds Macias In a mood of calm and even joyful waiting for the morrow. His honor, is satis fied; death and battle ero before him and the proud Csxtilian Is almost at peace. The vision et Elvira's pale beauty and his quick Intuition of tbe dangers she has run in forc ing her way te him produce a sudden revul sion et feeling towards bar, a flood of passion ate reconciliation ; he Is at her feet ence mere ; he feels that she is (rue, that sbe is bis. She, In a frenzy of fear, cannot succeed for all ber efforts in dimming his ecstasy of joy or In awakening him te the necessity of flight, and at last he even reoenta her terror for htm, her entreaties that he will forget ber and escape. "Great Heavens!" he says, turning from her In despair, "it was net leve, It was only pity that brought ber here," Then, broken down by the awful pressure of the situation, her leve resists his no longer, but rather she secs in the full expression of her own heart tboeuly chance of reconciling hlm te life and of persuading him te take thought for his own safety. Elvira Boe, Macias, tbose tears each one is yours, is wept for you I Oh, If te soften that proud will of yours this hapless woman must needs open all her weak heart te you, If she must needs tell you that she lives only In your life and dies in your death, her lips will brace itself even te that pitiful confession I Ah me I theso peer checks have been se blanched with weeping they have no blushes left. Te her this supreme avowal is the only means of making him bclieve her report of his danger, nnd turn towards flight; but in him it produces a joy which banishes nil thought of personal risk, and makes sennra. tlen from her worse than death. When Bhe bids hlm fly, he replies by ene word, "Cernel" and net till sbe bes premised te guide him te the city gates and te fellow him later en bis journey will he meve a step to wards freedom. And then, when her dear band is about te open te him tbe deer of bis prison, it is tee lata, Fernan and his assas sins ere at hand, the stairs are surrounded, and cscape is cut off. Again, in these last moments, when the locked deer still holds between them and the death awaiting them, ber mood is ene of agonized terror, net for herself, but for him; whlle he, exalted far abeve all fear, supports and calms her. Macias Think no mere of the world which has destroyed usl We ewo it nothing nethlngl Come, the bends which linked us te it are forever broken. Death is at tbe deer; we are already dead I Come, nnd make death beautiful; tell me you leve, leve. leve me te the end! ' Then, putting her from him, he gees out te meet bis enemies. Tbere is a clamor outside, nnd he returns wounded te death, pursued by Fernau and his men. He falls, and EMra defends him from her husband with a leek nnd gesture se terrible that he and tbe mur derers fall back bofero ber as though she was sorae ghastly avenging spirit Then, bending ever him, she snatches tbe dagger from the grasp of the dying man, saying te him with a voice into which Isabel Bretherteu threw a wealth of pitiful tenderness: "Thcre Is but ene way left, beloved. Your wlfe that should have been, that is, saves herself and you sol" Andlnthodeedellenco that followed, her last murmur rese upon the air as tbe armed men, carrying torches, crowded round ber. 'See, Macias, the torches hew they shinel Bring mere bring mere and light our marrlage festival I" "Eustace! Eustecel There, new tbey have let ber gel Foer child, peer chlldl hew is she te stand this night after night I Eustace, de you hear! Let us go in te ber now new quick, bofero she is quite surrounded. I don't wnut te stay, but I must just soe her, nnd se must Paul. Ah, Mr. Walloce has geno already, but he described te me hew te And her. This way!" And Mme. de Chateauvicux, brushing the tears from her eyes with ene hand, took Ken dal's arm with the ether, and hurried him along the narrow passages leading te the deer en te the stage, M. de Chatoauvieux follow ing them, his keen, French face glistening with a quiet but intense satisfaction. As for Kendal, every sense in him was covetously striving te held and fix tbe ex periences of the last half hour. The white muffled figure standing in the turret deer, the faint lamplight streaming en the bent bead and upraised arm theso tones of self forgetful passion, drawn straight, as it were, from tbe pure heart of leve the splendid energy of that last defiance of fate and cir cumstance the low vibrations of ber dying words tbe power of tbe actress and the per sonality et the woman all these different impressions were holding wild war within him ns he hastened ou, with Marie clinging te his arm. And beyond the little stage deer the air seemed te be even mere boa vily charged with excitement than that of the theatre. Fer, as Kendal emerged with bis sister, bis attention was perforce attracted by the little crowd of persons already assembled around the figure of Isabel Bretherteu, and, 03 bis oye traveled ever them, he rcalized with n fresh Mart the full compass of tbe change which bad takcu place. Te all the mere eminent pcrseus In that group Miss Brethcrten had been six months before an Ignorant and provincial beauty, geed enough te create a social craze, nnd nothing mere. Tbtir presence round her at this moment, their homage, the emotion visible everywhere, proved that all was different, that she had passed the barrier which ence existed between ber and the world which knows and thinks, and had been drawn within that circle of individual ities which, however undefined, is still the vital clrcloet anytimoer society, for It Lj the drcle which represents, mere or less bril liantly and efficiently, the intellectual life of a generation. Only oue thing was unchanged the sweet ness and spontaneity e that rich womanly nature. Bhe gave a littl cry as she saw Mme. de Chateauvicux enter. Bhe ceme running ierwaru, ami inrew uer arms round tue elder woman and kissed ber; it was almost the greeting of a daughter te n mother. And then, still holding Mm. Chateauvicux with ece hand, the held out tbe ether te Paul, ask ing him bow much fault be had te find, and when sbe was te take her scolding; and every gesture had a glow of youth and joy in it et which the contagion wai Irresistible. Bhe had threw n off the whlte bMd dress she had worn during the Jast a?t, nnd her delicately tinted Wrt aMwW.f Hs Mm at sssht m mitAtim mt Btummm MW 4 - - ' - ----- Fast as the talk lowed abeet her, Kendal noticed that every one teetaed te be, test of all, ceasclcws et her Mighborheod, of her dress rastHng past, of her reke In all ha dtf -ferent shades of gayety sr qjHek emotion. "Oh, Mr. Kendal.-sheeald, tenting te him again after their first greeting-was H the magnetism et his gase which had recalled hersl "if yen only knew what your sister has been te met Hew mach I ewe te her aad J I should hare been se disappointed if yen Baanii' Then she came closer te him aad said archly, almost la his ear: Have yen forgiven mel" "Pellvl VOHl fflre tahawtn .. "i: . -.- - -T "erjav kvtna IkftAjtaMltjtta'lM afaaM Vim timet hare tbeaght me a rash and headstrong person wnen yen nearu or it. en, I worked se hard at her, and all with the dread et you In my mind P This perfect friendly openness, this bright camaradorie et hers, were se bard te meet. " Yeu bare played Elvira," he said, "as I never thought it would be played by any body ; and I was blind from first te last I hoped you had forgotten that piece of pedan try en my part" "One docs net forget tbe turning points of one's life," she answered with a sudden gravity. Kendal had been keeping an iron grip upon himself during the past hours, but, as she said this, standing close beside him, It seemed te him Impossible that his self restraint should held mach longer. Theso wonderful eyes of hers were full upon him; there was emotion in them evidently tbe Nuucham scene was In her mind, as It was In his and a great friendliness, even gratitude, seemed te leek out through them. But It was as though his deem were written In the very candor and openness et ber gaze, and be rushed despe rately into speech again, hardly knowing what he was saying. "It gives me half pain, half pleasure, that you should speak of it se. I have never ceased te hate myself for that day. But you have traveled far Indeed since the 'White Lady' I never knew any ene te de se much in se short n time I" Bhe smiled did her lip quiver I Evidently his praise was very pleasant te her, and tbere milSt llAVn tmnn amnAf Mnir ef MtniTn anr! stirring te her feeling in the lntepslty and Intimacy of his tene. Her bright leek caught bis again, and he believed for ene wild moment that the eyelids sunk and flut tered. He lest ajt mtiArIniiTiAa nf tl. a crowd; his whole soul seemed concentrated en that ene Instant Surely she must feel It, or leve Is indeed impotent! But no it was all a delusion! sbe moved away from him, and the estranging present rushed in again between them. "It has been M. de Chateauvlcux's doing, almost nil et It," she said, eagerly, with a a change of voiee, "and your sister's. Will you ceme and soe me seme time and talk about seme et the Paris people! Ob, I am wanted! But first you must be introduced te Macias. Wasn't be geed I It was such an excellent choice of Mr. Wallace's. There he Is, and tbere is his wife, that 'pretty little dark woman." Kendal followed, her mechanically, and presently found himself talking nothings te Mr. Hening, who, gorgeous In his Spanish dress, was receiving the congratulations which poured In upon him with a pleasant mixture et geed manners and natural ela tion. A little further en he stumbled upon Ferbes and the Stuarts. Mrs. Stuart waa as sparkling and fresh as ever, a suggestive con trast in her American crispness and prctti ness te the high bred distinction of Mme, de Chateauvicux, wbe was standing near her. "Well, my dear fellow," said Ferbes, catch ing bold of him, "hew is that critical demon et yours! Is he scotched yetP "He Is almost at his last gasp," said Ken dal, with a ghostly sraile and a reckless im pulse te talk which seemed te hlm his salva tion. "He was nevcr as vicious n creature as you thought him, and Miss Bretberten has bad no difficulty in slaying him. jut that ball was a masterpiece, Ferbes 1 Hew have your pictures get en with all this!" "I haven't touched a brush since I came back from Switzerland except te mnke sketches for th is thing. Ob, i( "s been n terri beo business! Mr. Worrell's lialr bes turned gray ever the expenses of it However, she nnd I would have our way, and It's all right; the play will run for twelve months, if she cheeses, easily." Near by were the Werrells, looking a little sulky, as Kendal fancied, in the midst of this great inrush of the Londen world, which was sweeping ineir niece rrem them into n posi tion of superiority and Independence tbey were net at all prepared te soe her take up. Nothing, indeed, could be prettier than her manner te thorn wbouever she came across them, but it was ovident that she was no longer an automaton, te be moved at their will and pleasure, but a woman and an artist, mistress of herself and of her fate, Kendal fell into a conversation en the subject with Mrs. Stuart, who was as communlcatlve and nrausing as usual, and who chattered away te him till he suddenly saw Miss Bretherteu signaling te him with her arm in that et his sister. "De you knew, Mr. Kendal," she said as he went up te her, "you must really teke Mme. de Chateau vitux away out of this nolse and crowd! It is all very well for ber te preach te me. Take her te your rooms and get her some feed. Hew I wish I could entertain you here, but with this crowd it is impossible," "Isabel, my dear Isabel," cried Mme. de Chateauvicux, holding her, "can't you slip nwuy tee, and leave Mr. Wallace te de the honor.! Thcre will be nothing left of you te morrow." "Yes, directly, directly! only I feci as If cleep were a thing that did net exist for me. But you must certainly go. Take her, Mr. Kendal ; doesn't she leek a wreck I will tell M. de Chateauvicux and send him after you." Bhe took Marie's shawl from Kendal's arm and put it tenderly round her; then she smiled down into her eyes, said a low "Geed night, best and kindest of f rleudsl" nnd the brother and sister burried away, Kendal dropping tbe hand which had been cordially stretched out te himself. "De you mind, Eustace!" said Mme. de Chatoauvieux, as they walked across tbe stage. "I ought te go, and the party ought te break up. But it is a shame te carry you off from se many friends." "Mind! Why, I have ordered supper for you in my rooms, and it la just midnight I hepe these poeplo will bave tbe sense te go seen. New, then, for a cab.1' They alighted nt the gate of the Temple, and, as they walked across the quadrangle under a sky still heavy with storm clouds, Mme. de Chateauvicux said te her brother with a sigh: "Well, It has been a great event I never remember anything mere exciting or mere successful. But there Is ene thing, I think, that would make me happier than a hundred Elviras, and that is te soe Isabel Brethcrten the wife of a man the loved!" Then a btnile breke ever her f ace as she looked at her brother. "De you knew, Eustace, I quite made up my mlud from theso first letters of yours in May, in kplte of your denials, that you were very deeply taken with ber! I remember quite seriously discussing the pros and cons of it with myself." The words were said se lightly, they bc- t rayed se clearly tbe speaker's conviction that bhi bad inadt a foolish mistake, that tbey btuug Kendal te the quick. Hew could Marie liave known! Had net his letters for the last three mouths been misleading enough te deceive the sharpest eyes! And yet she felt unreasonably that she ought te have known there we3 a blind clamor In him against the bluntness of her sisterly percep tion. His silence was se prolonged that Mme. de Chateauvieux was startled by it Sbs illpped her band into his arm. "Eustacel" Btill no answer. "Have I said anything te snney you, Eustaoe! Won't you let your oil sister have her dreamsP But still it seemed Impossible for him te speak. He could only lay his band ever hers wrlh a brotherly clasp By this tlme they were at the feet et the stairs, and he led the way up, Mme. de Chateauvieux following in a tumult of anxious conjecture. When they reached bis room! ba put ber carefully into a chair by tbe flre, made her take some sandwiches, and set the kettle te bell in his bandy bachelor way that he might make ber some tea, and all tbe time he talked about various nothings, tiU at last Marie, unable te put up with it any longer, caught his band as he was bending ever the fire. "Eiutacel" she exclaimed, "be kind te me and don't xicrelex me UkethhL. Ob.mr.noei- aM hey, are fim m lore Wtti IsaW wttii VCMIl He drew himself te hit Ml heighten the rag and gased steadily into the Ire,, the Mnea of his mobile face setting into repose. "res,' he said, ae taengh te Mmsetf,"I love her i I believe I hare loved her from the nt moment" Mme, de Caateaavkmx was tremblingly silent, her thenghts traveling hack ever the past with lightning rapidity. Could she re member eue word, one leek of Isabel Breth Breth crtenV, of which her memory might serve te threw the smallest ray of hght ea this dark ness In which Eustace seemed te be standing? Ne, net one. Gratitude, friendship, esteem all these bad been there abundantly, bat nothing else net one of theso many signs by which one woman betrays her love te an other 1 Bhe rose and put her arm reend her brother's neck. They had been se ranch te one another for nearly forty years; he had never wanted anything as a child or youth that she had net tried te get for htm. Hew strange, hew Intolerable, that this toy, this been was beyond her getting) Her mute sympathy and her deep distress touched him, while, at the same time, they seemed te quench tbe last spark of hepe In him. Had he counted upon hearing some thing from her whenever he should break silence which would lighten tbe veil ever tbe future I It must have been se, otherwise why this sense of fresh disaster! "Dear Marie," he said te her, kissing her brew as sbe steed beside him, "you must be Osgood te me as you con. I shall probably be a geed deal out of Londen for the present, and my books ere a wonderful help After all, life Is net all summed up lu one desire, howevor strong. Other things nre real te me I am thaukful te say. I shall Uve It down." "But why despair se soenP she cried, re belling against this heavy acquiescence et his and her own sense et hopelessness. "Yeu are a man any woman might love. Why should sbe net pass from the mere friendly intellectual relation te another! Dent go w7 irum uonaen. ewy ana soe as much of her as you can." Kendal shook his head. "I used te dream," be said huskily, "of a time when failure should have come, when she would want seme ene te step in and shield ber. Some times I thought of her protected in my arms against the world. But newp Sbe felt the truth of his unspoken argu ment of all that his tone Implied. In the miuds of both tbe same image gathered shape and distinctness. Isabel Bretberten in the baloefhor great success, In all the Intensity of ber new life, scorned te her and te bun (b stand afar off, divided by an Impassable gulf from this simple human craving, which was crying te her, unheard and hopeless, across the darkness. CHAPTER VUI. A month after the first performance et "Elvira" Kendal returned te town en a frosty December afternoon from the Surrey lodg ings, en which he bad new established a per manent held. He mounted te his room, found bis letters lying ready for him, and en the top of thorn a telegram, which, as his man servant informed him, had arrived about an hour before. He took it up carelessly, opened it and bent ever it with a start of anxiety. It was from his brother-in-law. "Marie Is very ill. Doctors much alarmed. Can you ceme te-night P He put It down In stupefaction. Marie ill I The doctors alarmed I Geed heavens! could he catch that evenlng train! He looked at his watch, decided that thcre wan tlme, and pluuged, with his ser vant's help, into all tbe necessary prepara tions. An hour nnd a half later he waa spoil ing along through tbe clear, cool moonlight te Dever, realizing for tbe first time, as be leaned beck alone In hU compartment, tbe full meaning of the uews which had hurried him off. All his tender affection for his sister, and all his stifling sense et something unlucky and untoward in his own life, which had been se strong In him during tbe past two months, combined te reuso In him tbe black est fears, the most hopeless despondency. Marie dead what would tbe world held for him? Beeks, thought, ideas were tbey enough! Could a man live by them if nil else were geue! Fer tbe first time Kendal felt a doubt which boomed te shake his nature te its depths. During the journey bis thoughts dwelt in a dull, sere way upon tbe past He "saw Marie in ber childhood, in her youth, In ber rich maturity. He remembered her in tbe school room, spending all her spare time ever contrivances of ene kind or another for bis amusement He bad a vision of her going out with their mother en the night of her first ball and pitying bim for being left be hind. He saw her tender face bending ever the deathbed of their father, and through n hundred incidents and memories all beauti ful, nil intertwined with that levclv self for- gctf ulness which was characteristic of her, his mind traveled down te an evenlng scarcely a month before when her affection had ence mera steed n frail, warm barrier between him and tbe full bitterness of a great renun ciation. Ob, Marie! Marie! It was still dark when be reached Paris, and tbe gray winter light was only Just dawn ing when he stepped at the deer of his brother-ln law's heuse in ene of the new streets near the Champs Elysecs. M. de Chateauvicux was standing en the stairs, bis smoothly shaven, clear cut face drawn and haggard, and a steep in his breed shoulders which Kendal had never noticed before. Kendal sprung up the steps and wrung bis bands. M de Chateauvieux shook his heed almost with a groan, In answer te tbe broth er's inquiry et oye nnd lip, and led the way upstairs into the f orsaken salon, which looked as empty and comfortless as though its mis tress bad been geno from it years instead of dajs. Arrived there, tbe two men standing opposite te each ether-In tbe streak of dull light made by tbe hasty withdrawal of a curtain, Paul said, spooking in a whisper, with dry lips: "Thcre is no hepe tbe pain Is geno, you would think she was better, but tbe doctors say sbe will just lie there as she is lying new tlll-theend." Kendal staggered ever te a chair and tried te reallze what be bed beard, but It was Im possible, although his jeuruey bad seemed te hlm ene long preparation for tbe worst "What is It-hew did it happen!" be asked. "Internal chill. Bbe was only taken ill tbe day before yesterday, and the pain was frightful till yesterday afternoon, then it subsided, and I thought sbe was belter she herself was k cheerful and se thankful for the relief but when the twp doctors came In again it was te tell me that the disappear disappear disappear ence of the pain meant only tbe worst meant that nothing mere can be done she may go at any moment" There was a silenee. M. de Chatoauvieux walked up and down with tbe noiseless step which even a few hours of slcknSn develop In the watcher, till he came ifA steed licfere bis brethcr-Iu law, sayftig, In the same pain ful whisper, "Yeu must have seme feed, then I will tell ber you are here." "Ne, no; 1 want no feed any tlme will de for that Dees she expect me!" "Yes; you won't wait! Then ceme." He led the way across a little ante-room, lifted a curtain and knocked. The nurse came, there was a little parley, and Paul went in, whlle Eustace waited outside, conscious of tbe most strangely trivial things, of the passers by in the street, of a wrangle between two gamins ou thepavemcut epnsite, of the misplace ment et certain volumes in the book case be sieo hlm, till the deer opened again nnd M. de Chateauvieux drew bim in. He stepped evr the threshold, bis whele being wrought up te be knew net what solemn pageant of death and parting, and the reality within startled bim. Tbe room was flooded with morning light, a frosty De cember sun was struggling through the fog, tb9 curtains had just been drawn bac'r, and tbe wintry radiaiice rested en tbe polished brass et tbe bed, en tbe bright surfaces of weed and gUtss with which the room was full, en the little tray of tea things which the nurse held, and en his sister's face of greeting as she lay back unlllng among her pillows. There was such a cheerful home peace and brightness in tbe whele set no In the crack ling weed fire, in the sparkle of the tea things aud the fragrance of the tea, nnd in the fresh white surroundings et tbe invalid; It seemed te him incrcdihle that under all this familiar household detail tbere should beljlng In wait thit last awful cxperience of dnatb. Marie kissed bim, with grateful, affection ate words, spoken almost la her usual voice, aud then, as he Eat beside her, holding her hands, she noticed that be looked pole and haggard. "Has he bad seme breakfast, Paul! Oh, iioer Eustace, after that long journey I Nure, let hiu have mr cud. there U seme taaUtti 5L"frIWl f pwi jest te leek after yen once mere," Be drank It mechanically, she watching him with her loving eyes, while she took one' hand from him and slipped it Inte that of her hatband as he sat beside her en the bed. Her touch seemed te have meaning in It, for Paul rose presently and went te the far end et tbe buge room; tbe nurse carried away the tea things, and tbe brother and sister were practically alone, "Dear Eustace," she began, after a few pathetla moments et silence, In which leek and gesture took tbe place of speech, "1 have se longed te son you. It seemed tome In that awful pain that I must dle before I could gather my thoughts together ence mere, be fore I could get free enough from my own wretched self te say te my two deer ones all I wished te say. But new It Is all geno, nnd I am se thaukful for this moment of peace I made Dr. DoCbevannes tell me the whele truth. Paul and I have always premised ene another that tbcre should never be any concealment between us when cither of us came te die, and I think I shall have a few mere hours with yen." , Bhe was silent a little; the veice had all its usual intonations, but it was low and weak, and it was necessary for her from time te tlme te gather such strength as might enable her te maintain tbe calm of her manner. Eustace, In bewildered' misery, had bidden his face upon her bauds, which were clasped In his, and every new and then sha felt the pressure of his lips upon her Angers. "Tbere are many things I .want te say te you," she went en. "I will try te remember tbem In order. Will yen stay with Taul a few days-after? Will you always remember te be geed te him? I knew you will. My peer l'aul eh I If I had but given you a chlldl" Tbe passion et her low cry thrilled Eustace's" heart. He looked up and sew en her face the expression et the hidden yearning et a life time. It struck him as something awful nnd sacred ; he could het nn wcr it except by leek and touch, and presently she went en, after another pause: "His sister will come te him very likely his widowed sister. Bhe has a girl be is fend of. After a while he will take pleasure In her. Then I bave thought se much of you nnd of the future. Se often last night I thought I saw you aud ber, and what you ought te de seemed te grew plain te me. Dear Eustace, don't let anything 1 say new evcrtwn bunion te you-don't let It fetter you ever but It is se strong in me you must let me my It all. She is net in leve with you, Eustace at least, I think net Bhe has never thought of you In that way; but thcre Is everything tbere which ought te lead te love. Yeu Interest her deenlv: the tlinuMifc of you stands te her as the symbol of alt she wants te reach; and then sbe kuewswhat you bave been te all these who trusted you. She knows that you are geed nnd true, I want you te try te carry it farther for her sake and yours." He loekod up and would have spoken, but she put her soft hand ever his mouth. "Walt ene moment Theso about her are net tbe poeplo te make her happy at any tlme It things went wrong It sbe breka down she would be at thelr mercy. Then her position you knew what difficulties It bes It makes my heart ache sometimes te think of It Bhe wen my leve se. I felt llke a mother te her. I long te have ber here new, but I would net let Paul send; and If I could think of her snte with you -In tbose true hands of yours. Oh, yen will tryi darling!" He answered her huskily and brokenly, laying bis face te hers en the pillow. "I would de anything you asked. But she is se likely te leve and marry. Probably there is some one already. Hew could it net be with her beauty ami her fame ? Any body would be proud te marry her, aud sbe bes such a quick, eager uature." "There Is no one!" said Marie, with dnrai conviction in the whUpcred words. "Her life bes been tee excltlng tee full of ene lu lu terert. She cteld with me: I get te knew her te the bottom. She rfeuld net bave hid den It Only say you will make ene trial and I should be content." And then her Innate respect for another's individuality, her sliriuklng from what might prove te be the tyranny of a dying wish, interposed, ami she checked herself. "Ne, don't premise; I bate no right no ene has any right I can only tell you my feel ing, my deep sense that tbcre is hepe that there Is nothing against you. Men geed men are se often evcr-tlmld when ceurage would In best Be bold, Eustace; nsmecfc your own love; de net be tee proud te show It-te offer It" Her veice died away Inte silence, only Eustace still felt the caressing touch of the thin Angers clasped round his. It scorned te him as If the life still left In Iter were ene pure flame et love, uudiminFAsjfcx any thought of self, undisturbed by any bWntli of pain. Ob, this victory of the spirit ever the flesb, of soul ever body, which humanity achloves and renown from day te day an 1 from age te age, in all these nobler and flnorpcrbenalitlo" upon whom the moral life of the world do de pendst Hew It burns Its testimony Inte the heart of the spectator I Hew it makes hlm thrill with the apprehension which lies at the root of all religion the apprehension of an Ideal order the divine suspicion That we are greater than we knew I Hew it impresses itself upon us as tbe only miracle which will !car our leaning upon, and stand the strain et human questioning I It was home In upon Eustace, as he sat bowed beside his dying sister, that through this fragile body and this failing breath tbe Eternal Mind was speak ing, and that In Marie's leve the Eter nal Love was taking veice. He said se te her brokenly, and her swoet eyes smiled back upon bim a dlvlne answer olpaace and faith. Then she called faintly, '-l'aul I" The dis tant figure came Kick; and she laid her bead upon ber husband abreast, wbile Eustace was gently drawn ewny by the nurse. Presently be found himself mechanically taking feed and mechanically listening te tbe low voiced talk of tbe kindly, white capped wemau who was attending te hlm. Every fact, every Impression, was misery theso details se un expected, se irrevocable, se charged with terrible meaning, which the nurse was pour ing out upon bim that presence in the neighboring room of which his overy nerve was conscious aud in front of him, looking llke a frowning borrier shutting off tbe vlew of the future, the advancing horror of death t Yesterday, at the same tlme, he had been walking along the sandy Surrey readi, de lighting in the lest autumn harmenies of color, and conscious of the dawn et a period of rest after a peried of conflict, e( the growth within him; of a temper of quiet and rational resignation te the conditions of life and of his own Individual let, ever tbe development of which the mere fact of his sister's existence had exercised a strong nnd steadj ing Influence Life, be hed per suaded himself, was for hlm mere tlian tolor telor toler able, even without leve and marrlage. The world of thought was warm and hospltable te hlm; be moved at oase within its friendly familiar limits; and in thp world of personal relations ene heart was safely his, the sym pathy aud trust and tenderness et one human soul would never fall him at his need. And new this last tender bend was te be broken with a rough, Incrodlble suddenness. The woman he loved with passion would never ! his; for net even new, fresh from contact with bis sister's dying hope, could he ralse himself te atiyllattcring vision of the future; nnd tbe woman he leved, with that lutinute tenacity of affection which is the poetry of kinship, was te lie taken from him by this cruel wastefulness of premature death. Could any man be mere alene than he would be! And then suddenly a consciousness fell upon him which made him ashamed. In the neighboring room his car was caught new and then by an almost imperceptible murmur of voices. What was his less, his ugeuy, compared te theirs! When he softly returned into the room he found Marie lying as though asleep upon her husband's arm. It seemed te hlm that slnce be bad left her there had been a change The face was mere drawn, the leek of exhaustion mere defined. Paul sat bosideber, hlsojes riveted upon her. He scarcely seumed te uo ue uo tieo bis brother-in-law's cntrance; it was as though' be were rapidly losing consciousness of every fact but eue; and never hed Kendal seen any countenance se grief stricken, se pinched with longing. But Marie beard tha familiar step. Bhe made a faint movement with her hand toward bim, and be resumed bis old position, his head liowedupen the bed. And se they sat through the morning, liardly moving, interchanging at long intervals a few words theso sad, sacred words which well from the heart in tbe supreme momeuts of existence words which, in the case of such natures as Maris de Chateauvieux, rep rep rescutthjntiiiiate truths and fundamental suiOTtsrssmMetaaessMsnaeoeterer mere was nothing te hide, nothing te regret A few kindly messages, a few womanly com mission, and every new and then a few words te ber husband, as simple as the rest, but pregnant with the deepest thoughts and touching the vastest problems et humanity this was all. Marie was dying ns she had llred-bravcly, tenderly, simply. Jfarfe teas living as the had litttf. Presently they reused her te tale seme nourishment, which she swallowed with dif ficulty. It gnve her n momentary strength. Kendal heard hlmtclt called, and looked up, Bhe bad opened the band lying en the lied, and be saw In it n small miniature case, Which she moved lnwnr.1i lilm "Take It," she said-eh, hew faintly "te , ner. is is me eniy memento l can think of. Bhe lias been ill, Eustace; did I tell yen! I forget I should have gene but for this. It is tee much for her that life. It w 111 break her down. Yeu can save her nnd cherish her yen '" It seems as it I saw you-te-gotherl' Then her eyes fell and sbe seemed te sleep gently wandering new and then, and men tioning in her dream names and places which made the reality liefore them mere and mero terrible te the two hushed listeners, se differ ent were the associations they called up. Was this white nerveless form, from whleb mind nnd breath were gently rebing away, nlUhnt fate had grudgingly Icftie them, for a few mero ngonlzed moments, of the bril liant, high bred woman who bad been but yesterday the center of en almost European network et friendships and interests! Love, less, death eh, hew unalterable Is this es sential content of life, embroider it and adorn Has we may I Kendal had been startled by her words about Isabel Bretherteu. He had net beard et any illness; it could hardly be serious, for he vaguely remembered that in the news papers he had tried te read en the Joureoy Lis eye had casjght the famllar advertise ment of The Calliope, It must bave bap. pened while he was tit Surrey. He vaguely peculated about it new and then as beset watching through the afternoon. But noth ing seemed te matter very much te him nothing but Marie and the slew oncoming et death. At Im4. wltnn lit., wImImi 1I1.(t m.mh fAtmr lW n IIVII UU I1IUH IIUH 1.IU Wllll when the lamps were being lit eutside, and thobustleof tbe street seemed te penetrate In little intermittent waves of sound Inte the deep quiet of tbe room, Marie raised her self and, with n fluttering sigh, withdrew her hand softly from ber brother, and laid her arm round her husband's neck. He steeped te her kissed tbe sweet lips nnd the face en which the lines et mlddle agcajiad hardly settled caught a wild alarm from her utter silence, called tbe nurse and Kendal, and all was ever, (Conclusion next Hstrtrdsy ) The lte It. W. lawntliend. Representative K. W. Tewnshcnd, et, Illinois, who died (n Washington re cently, after a weck'u illness, bad just completed his twelfth year of ecrvice in the house of representatives. Mr. Towns Tewns hcnd was born In Prlnce Ooergo's county, Md., April 4, 1810. Until the age of 10 uu life was that of tha average American boy. IIe secured the position as page in the heuse of roprescntatlves, when it sat'in what Is new Stat iuaryliall. Thcre the aotive boy llcarned hew te court favor and censtrue the rays rays tcrlce of politics. Afc 1Q tin ittAnf Ia n. vr. xewKsaxKD. linne,B;;Vd paused through various chapters of ex perience as a country school teacher,' farm hand, law student and practitioner and banker. IIe was admitted te the bar In 1603. Mr. Tewnshcnd represented a very strong Democratle district, and Ids successor will probably be a Democrat Tlie Yeung Felks' Friend. A pleasant fneed old gentleman, who leeks ea if he had forgotten ns much as seme pcople knew about editing news papers, comes ever from the peaceful bhadca of Newark new and then te mlngle in the buny metropolitan whirl of which lie was ence un Important figure. IIe Is Nail i Uroeks, long tlme an editor of the Tribune, a conspicuous journalist lu San Francisce during vlgilante times nnd ene of the most popu lar writers for children who wield quills today. Mr, Uroeks is a tall, well built man; his while hair has thinned out en top, his eyes keep their light, nnd his bhert, white side whiskers and inuiitnclie give him n vcncrable nppcarunce. He is well ever sixty and carries his nge "llke n major." As editor of Tlie Newark Ad vertiser Mr. Drooks continues the act he intellectual work which lias char acterized his life. IIe has given that journal ene of the eldest In the coun try, by the way a standing it was un likely te get otherwise. IJesldcs, in St. Nicholas end such periodicals, wheroeno leeks for the lighter touch and Hid finer fancies, his name is always welcome, net only te the editors, but te hundreds of the little ones who have learned te leek forward with eagerness te his stories for children. New Yerk World. Water Tlcht Match Hex Wanted. Bishop, who made a thousand mile voynge in n paper canee, says that R. D. Ferbes, of Hosten, ence gnve him a water tight pocket match ber, that he loot it, nnd was never uble te find an other. Thousands of hunters, canoeists, and ethers have hunted and longed for a match box that would e water tight ene that would prescrve its contents dry even though the owner wai com pelled te take a swim with Uie box in the pocket of his pants, and tljp pants en the swimmer. An upset In tne 'wilderness or en the coast, awayfrem dwellings, often dcbtreys every ihalch a man has with him, nnd placca him in a position ei great danger.' Though match boxes are made in In In nuincrable styles, we have never been able te find ene which was suitable fox carrying matches in the pocket and would nt the same time protect them from water. There nre seme Uifllcultlea lu the way of inventing such an article, becnuBe when carried in tlie pocket the air within the lox is rarefied by the heat of the body. When the lox is plunged into cold water n partial vacuum is formed, and this aids in forcing watci through the joints. SctenUile American. Koptere core guaranteed by Dr.J.U. Mayer, 831 Arch street, Philadelphia, Case atenee, no operation or delay (ram business, attests 1 by thousands of cures after ethers fall, advice free, tend ter circular, inarlO-ly a w s4Tv SaaaSaaa - ' ' A aaaSaaaaaaaaAaCj.'s3 tV9BtsL araKjaaaSPlrlrW ylft yfir VJ f OOiTi UkMATAMlLLk. &'$$& T i .wS THE PLAIN TRUTH Is that Heed's BaraHWitHtM saaAs of Mente who es rheumatism, it aeutralteea tkelaettai Ihahlnnd. wtilnli nanaaal aal a laeHaSa and aches, aad aim tMeIUm and Saafaaaksa ska -- bleed, Utneprevsntlas; the nearnMadt tt ? disease. These facts warrant as Id ink yew. vf , If yen sutler with rbeumattssa, te gird stddtra ; rarsaparlllaatrtal, '"",; l-nr SB a.ra f t,aa "- aaSaaaai ' A Bhatimallaaa. Iil StMaaahaa. aaSaaaaY '"" . wen e than ever, aad was usable te getatd'';' ineneuse. I was almost ., it hi I.PLM9 redie Date . . Ji''- tnlKavlMM M. m f n imliilair -.--a. kiwi. mflii M iwi...wia-f meneed takina Heed's earsanarHle. ArUresd.", second bottle I was able te be eat add ann attend te batteese. 1 tee Td and ass new se free frees rteawasl ""'I waa"WHf a laaa lb angaatr W liniVMV den change nf weather, t have treat -'. denee in Itoeit arasparllia. teAauds.a am, Christie, uiarke Ce wtt. 'J l-IXaslataTORT HKUa(a.TM l: MHaviDa-bcen troubled with Im rheumatism for many years, my siTefdhea jc attention wsa called te Heed's BarsasjarBmesT '! anadrertlsemeatefcnirts It had ssTsetsd. I -v have stew used three bottles of HoenisrJ -....-11 Isa BH sm atsfeasiilas lutllat " - -.-. 1 - F"iw awl ajfatq Wimmy IUH W WSsmsjBrBapBBSjmmj resnlta. lhUjblrreeeameaditasableedim. rlfler." J. C Anas, West Bloesafleie, st. T. Heed's iMMpariUe. sctd by aU druggist 1. 1 six fore). rreMMd only ey C. L .HOOD CO, sVawetl, ass. 100 DeMdt Om Dellar. , YER'B CHERRY fKOTOKAI HKKT lUll H-H III KB. - rer all diseases et the Threat and Lwaffd, no remedy Is se ssfe, speedy andeartalaaa AYBU'S OUKKHT rBCTOHAU AM ladle. pensabte family medicine. I And Aver's Cherry Pectoral an Invalua ble remedy for colas, coughs end ether all all ments of the threat and lungs."-!., a. staa dall, ail Broadway, Albany. N. T. I have used AVer's Cherry Peo'eral far bronchitis and , LUNG DISEASES. for which t believe It te be the ereatett medl medl clneln the world." James Miller, Caraway, .0. "My wile had a distressing oenh, wKh pains In the tide and breast. We tried vartema medicines, but none did her any geed nam I mnt a tin. .Ia a !. ..a. m - nwvw wunwvw. a.i .. r vsiunH, wans i i has cured her. A neighbor, Mrs. Siena, had vne measles, and the cough wsa relieved ? lh MM At Awaia tftiarr PantAMl I h.a. m hesitation In recommending this medMae." CV-1 Oebert Horten, Foreman lHaMlghl, Merrftt Merrftt ten, Ark. "Aver's Cherry l'eeleml eared meal a se vere cold whteh had settled en my lnasje wife says tbe Feeteral helps her mera tfcea' any mner msaieine she ever used."-. ciar, ML Liberty, Kansas. Iyer's Oherry Pectoral, raarAsas sr Dr. J. O. Ayer Oe.. LewU. Utm. ?J Beld by Drug f UU. Price, II t six bottle. . ai,vbtJ4 VJ ''ST.: pULMONIUBx'ltUI'. DR. arOBBNOK'J Pulmenic Syrup, It the eldest and best established "THrtsji ' ter direct treatment of CeaiamsHleet and all affection et lnngs M C't rtrBSsjid loosens ths tubercles, -v 3 I Hlfls the Langs of purulent matter, V b I (lieaes and heal the sere spots. t Make new bleed aad helps eireataU, B ifraveau ether deMlUelYnbeMeaT 9 I Helps the retaraet desk aad splriE " (.Cure where ether remedies tali. De net fall te send (Or Or. neheneklaew nd admirable treat It ea the lasga, th Liver, and th Stomach, with iTnlr Ilium sndenre. It abounds in exeelleat laJsjrsa. tlen, and will give yen Ideas about that vMel organs aad the laws et health you har nevat had before. Bent free. DR. BOHINOJt'B M1DI0IHM, PimsLv Vkestasls. PULUOniOBYUUP, SKarTXIDlOmU AMD MANDIUKiriLU are for sale by all DruggUU. mil printed directions with each pscksge. Addrwa all communications te Dr. J. H. rchaek Ada. Philadelphia, P. maylT-lf dAw H UMFURKYB' Bl'EUmUS. nnuDDDavsi liB.lluKrRasvs'Brseirica are scientifically and earelully prepared prertsH!eass . for many year In private praetlea wHCne cess. and. for ever thirty year eted be Us These Bneeiaca eure wltheat drenlag, purging or reducing the system, and areTa net and deed the Hovsssien KaiiiBe'Tn Weeid. List of Principal He. Car. m 1. y.vsas, congestion, Inflammatteu .j . UaviBeGotie.es-Teething of Iatdt.,.J 5. UrsssTBSV. UrlDlns'. BUIetu Cnlie .1 Miuuta,viilllJluwcir Jaamisa.i J SiUUUaaUS Slf .aBVBSl aaSBBB . ... ....1 . Cneusaa Meaatns. Vomiting j M I. wuww. VUN, cuawaua......i . Nsnraauu, Toothache, raeeache . UaADeaB,Blek Headache, Veriag daatddl :S I, lekHetsihe, Vwoige . mi ions stomach , nor PamitoFbbiem ... wi PfAfnM VarfAi. T am )! iv. UTirsrsiAaJ 1L, BcrrsssssD 11. Whitbs. Uie Prefnaai Partvia ...... .... a. uauur. WI VUWUI anuiiBI .m II. Bir kluBCM, erysipelas, eruption . IS. KusuBaTiSM. lUMamaUe PsIbTTTT::"": ....-..---i: ii.irrT-5jrrT--v:-"' JB in. lavaa ad jtauav wauls, ataiana ii. i-ii.a, nunu or sustain-....... 10. CaTABBH, Indnen, Celd la lb a. WBoeriao cocoa. Violent Uoegha JB ?. GBBBBALOBBiLrrr, Physical Weakaees.J V7. KlDBBT 1IISBSS ...........a .....M !2,f1,"VO0,ii"",UTTii W. Ubimabv Wbabbbss, Wetting Bed M DISB.SBS OS TUB HSAST. PipltAU0a....l M Beld by druggists, or sent postpaid en re ceipt et mice. Us. lltmrnasTS1 Mssumi, (IU pages! richly bennd In cloth aad tgeld, mailed ten Bt A. Mw 8PI01FI0S. Tn,Th.8Aw(2) T KETHINCI SYRUP. TO MOTHERS. Kvery babe should have a bottle et DM; AUUMKY'S TIlTUlall RVSUP. PuraaaU safe. Me Opium or Merphia mixtures. WW relieve cnlle. uriplng la the Bowels aad Pro mote Dimenit Teething. Prepared by DBS. u. paiiunby a aen, UgerstewB,Mk Drug gists sell It t cents. Trial bottle sent by mall 10 cents. -"' Janl-lydeedAw w KAE UNDEVELOPED FAKTB Of the Human Bedy Enlarged. Developed. BtreDgthened, ote , Is an Interesting sdverslee- menv long run in eurpsner. in npij w w iiulrles we will say that there Is no nvldense of humbug about this. On the contrary, IB) advertlsers are very highly Indorsed. later Mted persens may get sealed circulars gtviag 11 narUculsrs.by wrlUngtotheBBia MIDI. ea!. i:e , a swan St., Buffalo, M. T. rwu Vaily Bte. fU-lydAw MawMrvMMiauuarw lAALftjVWW"tfWM'"1'11 !! I r- fa -! a ! ,-ll 1 QAI HDBaa ROCHESTER LAMP Btzty Candle-Ught j Beau them sM. Anether Let at chbap dLOBM ter Cm a. ouster. im "raBraovxeif", MBTAL MOULD W(l A IUUU OUBHKMI WRATHBR STRIP Beatttheaall.hUtUlpentwfSaaaUeijhMji 'AMa.m N,. ...wit Ht.in r<llnB Of VfaaSiaaa. OT . a . k.. ..?.. InnMllllneAft Biciaa the dust, ftcep out SBewjsadralJ; Anyone mtu upir ! wmmm v. wetmw in applying it Un be gtte aaywhese.a holt te bore, ready ter us. It wW ae MM, warp or shrink- cushion strip M Wiat "erfrnt. At the Stere, Heetef - nere.1 Jehn P. Sehaum & Seu, 24 SOOTH QOaUN 31 UAMUABTSB. rd, 2 i1 Ki : ,- & Jm .a i &t. i AS Stf a 55! "! .S m i ?. m 4 m .a ivi m S3 .J8H ' M ffl Ji ,!- - 9 - ..-jjb. &L$&ts$ i &3i3w.y;fiasfejj & - ,.iJ.i'v,S:' .. tw..-v. ?.&&. uSt i i'-ft. 'SsaBstWih. -iW'!sht- aM5tfr'' vf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers