6 AN AIR-CASTLE. 1 built a house In my youthful dreams. In a sunny and pleasant nook, W here I might listen, the whole day long. To the voice of the gurgling brook, A cottage with wide and airy rooms. And broad and shining floors— A house with the hidden charms of home. And the freedom of out-of-doors. Fair morning-glories climb and bloom At will by the eastern eaves, And on the doorstep and window sill The roses shake their leaves; And fair, old-fashioned lilacs toss Their purple plumage high, While honeysuckles drop their sweets On every passer-by. Down at the end of a pleasant path Is a group of evergreen trees— Fine and hemlock, and spruce and fir, With their spicy fragrances; And, sweetest picture of calm content That mortal ever saw, Under a low-houghed apple tree I* a bee-hive made of straw. I have pictured it all a hundred times— I shall do it a hundred more— But I never shall own the pleasant home With the rose 3 over the door. Never a dream of mine came true; (It is Fate's unbending law), ? never shall see the apple tree jNor Ihe bee-hive made of straw. But yet, in the airy realm of dreams— Where all my riches be— I enter into the heritage Which is else denied to me; I ha ve but to close my eyes to find My Eden without a flaw— The home, the garden, the apple tree. And the bee-hive made of straw. r-Elizabeth Akers Allen, in Elliott's Mag azine. IK stirring siorv of* Lij-e in the {Whines. [Copyright, 1899, by F. Tennyson Neely.] CHAPTER VII. Billy Gray was indeed in close ar rest and the grim prophecy was ful filled—Col. Canker was proving "any thing but a guardian angel to him." The whole regiment, officers and men, bar ring only the commander, was practi cally in mourning with sorrow for him and chagrin oyer its own discomfiture. INot only one important prisoner was go i\v, but two; not only two, but four. No man in authority was able to say Just when or how it happened, for it Canker's own order that the pris oners should not be paraded when the .guard fell in at night. They were here at ta'rtoo and at taps all right. The of ficer of the guard, said several soldiers, had quite a long talk with one of the prisoners—young Morton —just after itattoo, at which time the entire guard Jhad been inspected by the commanding ■ officer. But at reveille four most im portant prisoners were gone, and such -was Canker's wrath that not only was Cray in arrest, but the sergeant of the guard also, while the three luckless men who were successively posted as sentries during the night at the back of ihe. wooden shell that served as a guard house —were now in close confinement in the place of the escaped quartette. Yet those three were men who had hitherto been above suspicion, and there were few soldiers in the regiment who would accept the theory that any •one" of the three had connived at the es s statement that it had been there and had been waiting for some time, and must have disappeared while he was temporarily around at the oppo site side of the building. This was about 11 p. in. Then when Gray appeared at reveille Morton had disappeared. "It's not the sergeant let them fellers out," said the regimental oracles. "This is 110 ten-dollar subscription business." And so until late in the afternoon the question that agitated the entire range of regimental camps was: "How did those fellows break away from the prison of the —teenth?" Then came a clew, and then —discovery. By order of Lieut. Col. Canker a board of officers had been convened to investigate the matter, and after ques tioning everybody whom "Squeers" had already badgered with his assertions, threats and queries, they went to the guardhouse and began a thorough in spection of the premises. The wooden building stood in the midst of a waste of sand blown in from the shore line by the strong sea wind. It.was perched on something like a dozen stout posts driven into the soft soil and then the space between the floor level and the sand was heavily and stou t!y boarded in—thick planks being used. Between the floor and the sand was a space of about 18 inches vertical, and a dozen men could have sprawled therein—ly ing at full length—but to escape would have required the connivance of one or more of the sentries surrounding the building and the ripping off of one or more of the planks. In his keen anxiety Canker accompanied the board on its tour of investigation—a thing the board did not at all like—and present ly, as was his wont, began running things his own way. It had been found useless to question the soldiers of the guard. Not a man could be found to admit he knew the faintest thing about the escape. As for the prisoners, most o? them reckless, devil-may-care ras cals, tliey grinned or leered suggestive ly, but had nothing to tell. "We'll have this boarding ripped off," said Canker, decisively, "and see what they've got secreted under there. 1 shouldn't be surprised to find a whisky still in full blast, or a complete gam bling outfit—dash, dash 'em to dash and dashnation! Send for a carpenter, sergeant." [To Be Continued.] All Alien from Arknnsn.s, "When I was on the bench," relates Judge J. J. Dußose, "we were once making up a special jury for a murder trial. The lawyers were examining the venire, and 1 wasn't paying much atten tion to what was going on, till one of lawyers attracted my attention by saying: " 'Your honor, this man is incom petent for jury service. He's a for eigner.' "I looked at the man under examina tion and didn't think he looked like a foreigner, lie looked, anyway, like he was acclimated. So 1 asked him: " 'Have you ever been naturalized?' " 'No, sir,' he answered. " 'And you say you're a foreigner and not naturalized. What country are 3'ou a native of?' " 'Arkansas.' "Well, everybody in the courtroom laughed. I told the man he could go. He wasn't much of a foreigner, but too much to sit on a. jury in my court."— Memphis Scimitar. Tliey Would Stay. A new military prison chaplain was recently appointed in a certain town in Scotland, and, entering one of the cells on his first round of inspection, he, with much pomposity, thus addressed the prisoner who occupied it: "Well, sir, do you know who I am?" "No, nor I dinna care," was the nonchalant reply. 'Well, I'm your new chaplain." "Oli, ye are; well. 1 hae heard o'ye before." "And what did 3 011 hear?" returned the chaplain, his curiosity getting the bet ter of his dignity. "Well, I heard that the last twa kirks ye were in ye preached them baith empty, but I'll be hanged if ye find it such an easy matter to do the same wi' tliisone."—San Fran cisco Examiner. Ilouiteliolil Frnttallty. Mrs. Youngliusband—Do you notice any difference in the milk, dear? Mr. Youngliusband—l should say so; this is a much better quality than we have been getting lately. Mrs. Youngliusband—lndeed it is. I got it of a ntw man, who said he would guarantee it to be perfectly pure, so 1 got enough to last for a couple of weeks. —Chicago Dally News. Not H Showman. Bobby—Are you in the show busi ness, Mr. Wedder? Mr. Wedder (with eight children) — Why, no, Bobby; what made you think so? Bobby—Oh, I heard papa tell Kate that if she married you she'd have a whole menagerie to look after. —Brook lyn Life. WfOman's Refuge when slok is Lydia Em Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Nn other medicine in the world has done so much good. No oonfldenco has ever been violated. No woman's testimonial was ever published by Mrs. Pinkham without special permission« No woman ever wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for advice without getting help. No man sees these letters. Her advice is free, and her address is Lynn, Mass. She is a woman, you can tell her the truth. No living person is so competent to advise women. None has had such experience. She has restored a mil" lion sufferers to hzznttia. You can trust her. Others have. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co., Lynn, Mass. Use Certain Corn Cure. Price,lsc. HTIR..\ v»srn.\(} 10 AUVSKTISEKH please slate that you saw the Ad vertine* went In thin g»aiter. 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