6 GRANDMOTHER. She sits beside the window wide, £a wooden rocking chair. Through cap of lace 1 well can trace The snowy waves of hair. So white It shows, so w arm tt glows. A« sunbeams softly pour Through window pane nnd try In vain T® make It gold once more. X love her eyes—dim. yet so wise, And, ah. so quick to see 'T"lw pitfalls deep, the snares that creep, The trials that threaten me! X love her cheek, the lines that speak Of life's long toilsome day. 'Tire. tender touch that tells so much OC patient love alw>ay. So old and bent, so weak and spent. Vet keeping youth enough T« htflp and cheer when skies are drear And ways are steep and rough, a tiwe to sit where shadows flit, Sly tiead upon her knee, AM feel her arm, so soft and warm. Close gently over me. 1 lave to hear upon my ear The broken voice, so mild, "The long, full day of work and play Has wearied you, my child!" A tender prayer is in the air. Oh. sweet, the hour and mood! And sweet the tone: "My little one, I trust you have been good." —Toronto Globe. fj^'Loui^mison TART V. CHAPTER XXIII.—CONTINUED. T dropped upon the thwart again, none too soon, for I was near overboard. S. could see nothing-for the moment, but -these two furious, encrimsoned faces, -swaying together under the smoky Lamp; and I shut my eyes to let them grraw once more familiar with the darkness. The endless ballad h;id come to an eml at last, and the whole diminished company about the campfire had broken iuto the chorus I had heard so often: "Fifteen men on the dead man's chest — Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum! tlrtclc and the devil had done for the rest— Ta-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!" t was just thinking how busy drink «nii the devil were at that very moment ftt the cabin of the "Ilispaniola," when 1 was surprised by a sudden lurch of the «»raoie. At the same moment she yawed sharply and seemed to change &<*r course. The speed in the meantime f.trangely increased. £ opened my eyes at onee. All round ifu.e. were little ripples, combing over with a sharp, bristling sound and slight ly phosphorescent. The "Ilispaniola" liM-aclf, a few yards in whose wake I W.MS still being whirled along, seemed -to stagger in her course, and I saw her spare toss a little against the black neatioftheniglit; nay.asllooked longer, I otade sure she also was wheeling to the southward. I glanced over my shoulder, and my lieoxt jumped against my ribs. There, right behind me, was the glow of the eampfire. The current had turned at Tight angles, sweeping round along w-ich it the tall schooner and the little •dancing coracle; ever quickening, ever bubbling-higher, ever muttering louder, went spinning through the narrows f.or the open sea. Suddenly the schooner in front of me fgptmt a violent yaw, turning, perhaps, - thsryjgh 20 degrees; and almost at the < same moment one shout followed an other from on board; I could hear feet pounding on the companion ladder; and £ knew that the two drunkards had at la#fe been interrupted in their quarrel 4trtd awakened to a sense of their dis aster. C lay down flat in the bottom of itha.t wretched skiff, and devoutly com jmended my spirit to its Maker. At the • end the straits, I made sure we must fait silto some bar of raging breakers, all my troubles would be ended i speedily, and though I could, perhaps, bear to die, I could not bear to look itijacva my fate as it approached. i must have lain for hours, con tinually beaten to and fro upon the bil lows, now and again wetVed with flying ■ »»pca.y«, and never ceasing to expect de&th at the next plunge. Gradually weatciuess grew upon me; a numbness, ma occasional stupor, fell upon my mind *rvra in the midst of my terrors; until sleep at last intervened, and in my sea to&acd coracle I lay and dreamed of home and the old Admiral Benbow. CHAPTER XXIV. THE CRUISE OF THE CORACLE. It was broad day when I awoke, and found myself tossing at the southwest txd of Treasure island. The sun was •up, but was still hid from me behind "fch«s great bulk of the Spy -glass, which on this side descended almost to the sea-fa formidable cliffs. fjaulbowline Head and Mizzenmast Hill were at my elbow; the hill bare and dark, the head bound with cliffs 40 or iSO Cee,t high and fringed with great .•enanses of fallen rock. 1 was scarce a -quarter of a mile to seaward, and it Mil my first thought to paddle in and land. notion was soon given over .Arao,r. .T. C. A YER, 1 Lowell, Mass. i [ What's tie 1 Matter with | KANSAS ? S KANSAS OWNS (in round numbers) • 900.000 horses and mules. 550.000 9 milch cows. 1.600.000 other cattle. • 2.400.000 swine and 225.000 sheep. S ITS FARM PRODUCTS this year in • elude 150.000.090 bushels of corn, 9 60.000.000 bushels of wheat and mil • lions upon nvillions of dollars in value • of other grains, fruits. vegetables, etc. • In alone it has a shortage. • Send tor free copy of "What's the 0 Matter with Kansas?"—a new book of 0 96 pages of facts. General Paaaeoger Office, 0 The AtehUoo, Topeka A Santa Ke Railway, 9 Chicago. e Ifl CURES WHtfit ALL tLSETAILSr £ M Beet Cough tfyrup. Tantes Good. Use P fxi in time. Sold by druggists. |