.SaEfc-afaT C3Krow'Mr'-wr wwwfcAwrta 1 ( : 1 1 it ir p Xt atOH. p rb-tticsS v.-ny at j sr7j,7. C-aMtBSl-l COTTVTY. PA Tea larre and rlit. MrMl,, t OaT w t kmi if antmrrendi H to t kCkTrwMt KtvrstloQ ef a4rertter. wnr Mtvra nn M la ser! it tba fellcrriD t"w rate : 1 iTVh, tlOM .....LaO 1 " moethi ... W- 1 I OKtBtha Aaa ,00 : " reset.. I nxMttli. X Tf 44 t moatbtu ... (Uw W 1 1 :. tilt Flu. 1 RAMS. V (n!i In a-lfe n f,, j ( nn! piM within 3 ui.ir th" . 1 76 i i: n.-l w'thln 6 tnonUlj. 2 .jq , .! fi"t imd wUhin the year.. a.i t " I TAf M 0 si sol'n nooihj .......... M.ro " month. fn. ' 1 Tr ws ! " ' r-M'tir nat-'l.le of the rounrr i t dxmiuia. 7. ....... 4i On " t Jr TBCO Haia ltmt. Crtt tBMrtIn lo.. p.r 11b. ; L- rahteqnoDt tnacrtioa t. pr line. A dram t tr tor t ad Kxeeator'i Ifotto..... IV Aodlur' NottPM .C PtrnT nd Umllur Kotle l. r ortty. 4 r"llwilrfiu irHfrd 10 riii -txm an -vf rr tf hxit4 arn.ii.Mlllfn "lf ; r mdrrrt urmntt. Job Pkiktik cf all ktnn. CMtly bd4 xr4lt mHj cremtcd t lofl vrlee. Ic't ye fnrv( It. .! '(. .nil Pr ear chartrM to f ' tpn' will " ats"f t.rwia -'.n jr..! t who lon't eotnalt th.ir JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and Publisher. B1 r, .,.-,.: 7 f.1..tV.Z in 1UBUI-B tuuii not er. ' 18 A FKKKMAN WHOM THK TKUTH MAKES RKK, AND ALL ARK SLATES BRSIDR." 81. SO and postage per year. In advance. ,i . n !!" ra' footing- than who . '..i .liMini-iiy unoTiool trom r".r.i! " r:-ro Ton step It. If Mop Y'OT.TT'Xfli" YT V .. i ..it -.ilnwir to otherwise. j ' yiitlUIj -.VIA., lit-I !' ' '"" "hnrt. I EH ENS BURG, PA.. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 13, 1S85. NUMBER 41. iMfell Jot . 1 , . C . n J ,7fiR n 'c "a' fcjvi "" "ti aaaajaaaBaaaaaBtaB ' a i mini m 1 1 .. MWM I , .mHWIIIIH I LI .1 li I. for Infants and Ciiurlt i o well -f urt-.! to chilire thA Hawatof " H. A. Ar::r.:i. ?: D., LU Bo. Qxtori Li., L.-Ow,:ja, N. T. Tm A i0CAN Th3 BEST In the World 1 t- r f & 3 ; r - UJ r iHsn. Whlt hare derated their llr.a n it' f'.atSj of dfTtluplaf tba Elecd Orgaa, tke (B:r h3'lo mnuf. tired Orf an for 3a fears. POSITIVE S i ffl PLE URABLE anj will not (fct out of Repair or Tuna OVtSR 8 O STYLES i&:nrjdn ORGAN d. n't be led Into pumhaalng tA -Jul o-tituias a cit A RRA T OF STOPS iU FEW REFl'S ant write to a 2ri MDI C DEALER IlLLI H U L or Manufnotitrer le. fin. li yon it n money a Irrt-dait 81 CAN. tif"S:o; 5 co; t :t ft few cent each f r ojr CATALOTJ T and diagram tkvisj ,jr. ruction of thi INTERIOR of JliAKS, SENT fHKm TO ALU. uvj i43eT 3 Li!3C0U.";rS i:5 .v-3 where we frt to Afe-t. Wilcox . Whits Organ Co. JSERIIJEN. COIir?. K2T DEAD YET jVALLIC LUTTRINCER, ! a Mrri,.m,i or 3. DMH AMI SHEET-IRAN WARE Al 7.V HOOFIXU, hf nttentl.in 01 hi Irlenda r..; tt. ti e fuft thst he if till it t.,- c.l Jtun.l cppDniie the n'iirir. tin.l l prpred to i t -ii inii fn.-turi an to or liti". r. m th" .tTialla.ot to t 111 ir.nr nn I Ht the loweit N ;-n '.av iry work eithrr nia.le or (old kdoi inc. n si'i:ci.irY. 1 su.l .;itisfy youreHs ai to my v . LC" ri'KIMUEK. April 13. S3-tl. i 1 . r-t-rovEO HICH ARM, -' '"iiCAL PRINCIPLES 'rl?-TAr:Y MOVEMENT8, AU ;"iTiC.j?ECTAMDPERFECT 'V--:. CrLINOEn SHUTTLE, -t:jg needle. po8I- ,1,- - . N3 SPHINC3, FEW m i.WtrflUM WEIGHT. NO '0e-H' MO NOISE, NO Wt 4R, priTvU.S' f, " TANTRUrV. V1 1 t i'A ' ' 3Ui-v ORNAMENT' iPrtrrEi-FUTf-D'AND GIVES i,?.ET SATISFACTION. t.. Ai.irr?., ERY MACHINE CG . 212 Eroii-fly, i:w York. J-(IES. SI'UINO WAOOXS, j Villa-, rtaetong, I "r nrf, .. J.. . . hAi.sVIN(. holV-Li.l-S i.l L? i "u Uhl ' r ' ' ' f-. ."'id anrrwir t. .11 ..t. z... ... !$3!J:liiJiri!iLH . ( Tusjain'i .r 01 i j-r ujoutn . Cm rn...., n, IO...I our - . ' . '" ""nU w,iy. & 1 wl , MI ( 2 1 ShllHr.r: Kill. V V ormj, give, sleep. And pruuiotea (- T lion OBWva Cokfavt. 19 Pulton Street, K. Y. FOR MAN AND BEAST. j THE BEST EXTERNAL 3 REMEDY EHEDiliTISIi, NEURALGIA, CRAMPS Pmieot? ScIiMf 3, Eactade, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. It it a tare, ittre, nd eTectual Remedy for GaJli, Btralni, EaratcheB, Scret, &c, on HORSES. One trial will prore it merits. It effects are in most cases INSTANTANEOUS. Every bottle warranted to give satisfaction. P. nU ad ores for pamphlet, free, giv. iiiff full UirectloD9 fur the treatment of above di.eaa. Price H eta. and 60 cts. per Lottie. Sold everywhere. Hear;, Joaaua lrd, rnprittora, Birllnrton, Tt. Sl1 PT V . S. UarVer k. Bro.. Kben.-burK, fa. RIVINIUS' BLOCK, EBFNSBURC PA CARL RIYINIUS, Practical Watdiraater and Jeweler HAS alwayi on bajd a large, varied and ele it atportment of WATOHKS, CLOURS JKWFXRY.SPKOTACI.FS. ETtflLASSES Kc. which he offers for sale at lower price than anv other dealer In the county. Persons needing nnythlnir in his line win do well to rive him aeall before purchasinr elsewhere. Prompt attention paid to repairing Clock Tatphes. Jewelry, Ac., and satisfaction ituaran eed In boh work and price TUTT'J POLLS 25 YEARS IN USE. -' T8 W $4 - I Its Greatest Medical Triumph, of tU Acs! SYMPTOMS OP A TORPID LIVER. Loa. of appetite. Bowels eeattve. Fata la the head, with a 4all aeaaaitlea In the back rare, Pala aader tke akealdetv. blade, Follreaa after eatlaa, wltk adls lurlinatlon to exertioa ef kedr or Bilad, Irritability ef temper, Laweelrlta. wlik n fcclinarof kaTtBraealeete4 eeaaedatr, AVearln.., Plzalaeee, Flatterlaa at Ska Heart. Io'e before tke area, Heaaaeka r vrr the right era, Baatleaaaeea, with t.:ful dreams, H iehly ealered friae. aa4 CONSTIPATION. vrrrs IMLLSi aro eapeclally adapted t 3 .th catpi, one dose eAteta an oh a . tfr -of irie;n.toaool.b thetmfferer. T Inereaiethe A ppettfanq eauae the r ti Take oa Kleakithiu the ayMera la ourl.fed . am tytlxilrTaal. Actiea oa .... lestlt-eOre-e.aa,1t4rlaa te-elae ; ' .du.-"). t't i'-e irje. 44 Worray at,,w.T. MTS HAIR DYE. - ...-AT Hair or Waiuist ekanared to a ' 1 'ir Black by a ainc-le applioatloa ef 1 islns. It imparts a uataraf oolor, acta : .vctitaneously. Sold by LH-axflata, or beipntMOn reoalptof 1. .rioe, Murray SC. Now Yoriu The GREAT JUMBO ENGINE ? DIM (ri't.MJ, f n-r.;r. 4 vptraril , ftiejtest riir In the msrkt 'ordrtv ln llirht machine rv"rJi)st the tbln '"r 'urmer.' nie. Ice Cream Iealer' Print,- lrese. 1 hresliV M.vhlot' AC. Slannfai-torer all ktni of Ma chinery A -Fot.hlnsr. Sen t.-r t'atalOKne and Price I.lst. H.P. KANKIN, SI hf A m 1 tt j-? .23 ? Ikhix Ave.. Allbohkkt. Pa. - ,Uit) -it. is5.-lyr PATENTS OMalneit. ainf hi: PA TRST P. VS1SESS at ieiittl rr. for MODKRA TJC ffCKS Our fflce ia ipu.tit th tT S Tatfut Of flee, anl we can obtain Pi-nf l tun, tdair thou- r..t..t.. from WAXHIVOTOX. S!d MODEL OR DRAWIXO. We ad HSf thin inti-iit'.! .ivlr f I'll ire.-: arid wk m-lr.- XOCIIAR9E L'XLEXS PATEXT U SECURED. We refe-r, hfr. to tltf Supt. of Mnnsv Ord-r Iiv. fifth U. S Patent OfflRf. Tic. t-fuis and rffeifiicps Iitnirtser. thf . nnd to officials For clrcu'nt, ad- t' actual cllonts In your own Stat or County, write to C. A. HXOW & CO., Opp. Patent Offire. ft aatilnsrton, I. THIS PAPER FII.K AT co. r. HdWI J.I. Ai. -0M TV.wspaper AdTerttalnfr Borraa (in Hrftvcu rrmirri, whkkk At iiMrri iiaris Uuty luaUo lor It lu Iff IWIIila A TRAGEDY; on THE STORY OF THE CHAIN PIER. CHAI'IKII XI. "Yon must listen to me." I said: "I want yon to see how truly this is the work of Providence, and not of mere chance." 1 told her how I had been attracted to the pier; I told her all that was said ly the crowd around; of the man w ho t arried the little dead child fc the work- . nouse; 01 the tiny little body tliat lay in its white dress in the hare, large. ! desolate room, nnd of the flowers that the kindly matron had covered it with. I told her how I had taken compas sion on the forlorn, little creature, had purchased its prave. and of the white stone with '-Marah' upon it. "Marah, found drowned." And then, poor soul poor hapless soul, she cluntr to my hands and covered them with kisses and tears. "Did you did you do that?" she moaned. "How good you are, but you will not tell him. I was m:id when I did that, mad as women often are with sorrow, shame, and despair. I will suf fer anything if you will only promise not to tell Iance." "Do you think it is fair." 1 asked, "that he should be so cruelly deceived? that he should lavish the'whole love of his heart on a murderess?" I shall never forget her. She sprang from the ground where she had been kneeling, and stood erect before me. "Xo. thank Heaven! I am not that," she said; "1 am everything else that is base and vile, but not that?' "You were that, indeed." I replied. "The child you Hung into the sea was living, not dead." "It w as not living " she cried "it was dead sui Lour before I reached there." "The doctors said for there w as an inquest on the tiny body they said the child had been drugged before it was drowned, but that it had died from drowning." "Oh. no, a thousand times!" she cried. " Oh, believe me 1 did not wilfullv mur der my own child I did not indeed! J,et me tell you. You are a just and merciful man. John Ford; let me tell yon you shall hear my storv. vou shall give me my sentence I w ill" leave it in your hands. 1 will tell you all." "You had letter tell Lance, not me," I cried. "What can I do?" "No; you listen, you judge. It may lx- that when you have heard all, you wili take pity on me: you may spare'me you may say to yourself that I have been iiioih sinned against than sinning you may think that I have suffered tnouc!:. and th.1t 1 may live out the rest, of inv hie w itli Unt-e. Let me tell you, and ou shiili jr.Jee me." Siie fell over on her krees again, rock ing backwards and forwards. "Ah, why." she cried "why is the w oriel so unfair? why, when there is sin and sorrow, why does the punish ment fall all on the woman, and the man go free? I am here in disgrace and humiliation, in shame and sorrow in fear of losing my home, my husband, it may be even my life while he, who was a thousand times more guilty than 1 was. is welcomed, flattered, courted! It is cruel and unjust. "I have told you." she said, "how hard my childhood, was. how lonelv ami desolate and miserable I was with my girl s heart fuil of love, and no one to love. "When I was eighteen I went to live with a very wealthy family in London, the name I will not hiiie one detail from you the name was Cleveland; they had one little girl, ami I was her governess. I went w ith them to their place in the country, and there a visitor came to them, a handsome young 110 bient.in. Lord Dacius by name. " It was a beautiful sunlit county. I had lilt r to do. plenty of leisure, and he could do as he would with his time. -We had met and had fallen in love with each other. I did not love him, I idol ized hiur. remember in your judgment that no one had e er lovx me. No one had ever kissed n.v face and said kind Words to me: and 1, oh! wretched, mis erable me, I was in heaven. To be loved for the first time, ami by one so handsome, so charming, so fascinating! A few weeks passed like a dream. I ' met him in the early morning. I met him in the glor-ming. He swore a hun dred times a day that he would marry me when he carue. tf age. We must wait until then. I never dreamed of harm or wrong. I believed in him im plicitly as I loved him. I leiievel every word that came from his lips. May Heaven spare me! I need tell you no more. A girl of eighteen madly, passionately in love; a girl as ignorant as any girl could be. ami a handsome, experienced man of the world. "There w as no hope, no c hance. I fell: et almost without knowing how I had fallen. You will spare me the rest I know. "When, in my sore anguish and dis tress, I went to him. 1 thought he would marry me at once: I thought he would be longing only to make me hap py again: to comfort me; to solace ni; to make amends for all I bail suffered. I went to him in I'iidon with my heart full of longing and love. I had left my situation, and my stern, cruel grainf inother lelieved that I had found an other. If I lived to be a thousand years old I should never forget my horror and surprise. He had worshipped lue; he had sworn a thousand timfs over that he would marry me; he had loved me with the tenderest love. "Now. when after hours. I saw him at last, me; there was 110 kiss. he frowiittl at no caress, 110 welcome. "'This is a idee piece of news,' he said. "This comes from country vis iting.' "'Hut you love me? you love me?' I cried. " "I did, mv dear,' he said, 'but of course that died with Summer. One does not sjeak of what is dead.' " 'Do you not mean to marry me?' I asked. 'No. certainly not; and you know that I never did." It was a Summer's amusement' ' 'And what is it to me?' I asked. '"Oh, you must make the best of it. Of course, I w ill not see you want, but you must not annoy me. And that old grandmother of yours, she must not be let loose upon itie. You must do the best you can. I will give you a hun dred pounds if you will promise not to come near me again.' "I spoke no word to hira; I did not reproach him: I did not utter his name; I did not say good-bye to him; 1 walked away. I leave his punishment to Heaven. Then I crushed the anguish within me and tried to look my life in the face. I would have killed myself rather than have gone home. My grandmother had forced me to be sav ing, and in the post-ottice bank 1 had nearly thirty pounds. I had a watch and chain worth ten. I sold them, and I sold with them a small diamond ring that had been my mother's, and some other jewelry, altogether I realized f.ftv pounds. I went to the outskirts of f.ond'-'U and t"'k two small r"nr. "I rerneinlier that I made no effort to hide my disgrace: I did not pretend to be married or to be a wi.!w. and the mistress of the house was not unkind to me. She liked me all the better for telliug the truth. I say no word to you of my mental anguish no words can descriln it. but 1 loved the little one. She was only three weeks old when a letter was forwarded to me at the ad dress I had given in London, saying that my grandmother was ill and wished rue U go home at once. What w as I to do with the baby? I can re member how the great drops of anguish stood on my face, how my hands trem bled, how my very heart went cold with dread. "The newspapers which I took daily, to read the advertisements for govern esses, lay upon the table, and my eyes were caught by an advertisement from some woman living at Hrighton. who undertook the bringing up of children. I resolved to go down that very day. I said nothing to my landlady of my in tention. I merely told her that I was going to place the little one in very good hands, and that I would return for my luggage. "1 vacant. so truly as Heaven hears rue speak. I meant to do right by my little child. I meant to work Uard to keen her in a nice home. Oh, I meant welt! "1 was ashamed to go out in the streets with a liltie baby in my arms. "'What shall I do if it eries?' I asked the kind landlady. 'You can prevent it from crying,' she said; "give it some cordial.' 'What is cordial?' I asked, and she told me. 'Will it hint the lit tle one?' I asked again, and she laughed. j " .o.' she replied, 'certainly not. ! Half the mothers in London give it to , their children. It sends them into a j sound sleep, and they wake up none the j worse for it. If vou'give the baby just ! a little, it will sleep all the wav to I lirighton and you will have no trouble.' I I must say this much for myself, that I i knew nothing whatever of children, j that-is. of such little children. I had j never lieen where there was a baby so j little as my own. j ' I bought the cordial, and just before 1 I started gave the baby some. I I thought that I v, very careful: I j meant to be so. I would not for the ; whole world have given my babv one i half drop too much. ( "It soon slept a calm, placid sleep. and I noticed that the little face grew : paler. 'Your baby is dying.' siud a 1 woman, who was traveling in the third ! class enrriage with me. 'Itisdving. I i am sure." I laughed anil cried; it was ! so utterly impossible I thought; it was ! well and smiling only one hour ago. I ! never remembered the cordial. After ; wards, when 1 came to make inquiries, t I found 1 had given her too much. - I i nei-d not linger on details. -I "You see that if my littie one died by 1 my fault, it wa most unconscious on I my part: it was most innocently, most j ignorantlv done. I make no excuse. I I tell j 011 the plain truth as it stands. I j can -c.l my baby's death, but it was j most innocently done; I would have i given mv own life to have brought hers I back. You. my judge, can you imag j ine any fate more terrible than standing t quite alone on the Hrighton platform j with a dead child in my arms? I "I had very little money. I knew no soul in the place. I had no more idea what to do with a dead child than a I bnby would have had. I call it dead.' ! she continued, 'for I believe it to have been dead,' no matter what anv doctor says. It was cold, oh. mv Heaven, how cold! lifeless; no breath passed the little lips! the eves were closed. the pretty hands stiff. hdiVrrtj it lra,l. I wandered dow n to the tach, and sat down on the stones. "What was I to do with this sweet, cold body? I cried until I was almost blind; in the whole w ide world there was no one so utterly desolate and wretched. I cried aloud to Heaven to help me where should I bury my little child? I cannot tell how the idea tirst occurred to me, the waves came in with a soft murmuring melody, a sweet sil very hush, and I thought the deep, green sea would make a grave for my little one. It was mad and wicked I know now; I can see how horrible it w as; it did not seem to be so then. I only thought of the sea then as my lest friend, the place where I was to hide the beloved little body, the clear, green grave where she was to sleep until the Judgment Dav. I waited until it is a horrible thing to tell vou! but I fell asleep fast asleep, and "of all the hor rors in my story, the worst part is that, sitting by the sea. fast asleep myself, with my little dead babe on my kilee. "When I woke the tide was coming in full and soft, with swift-running waves, the sun had set. and a thick, soft gloom had fallen over everything, and then I knew the time had come for what I wanted to do.' JIAITKlt XII. AND LAST. "I went on the Chain Tier. I had kissed the little face for the last time; I had wrapped the pretty white body u the blat k-and-grey shawl. I said all the prayers 1 coiild remember as I walked along the pier; it was the most solemn of burial services to me. "I went to the side of the pier I can not understand how it was that I did not see you I sbwid there some few minutes, and then I took the little bun dle; I raised it gently, and let it fall in to the sea. I'.ut in v baby was dead I swear to that, t )h. Heaven! if I dared if I dared tling invself in the same green, briny waves! "I was mad with anguish. I went tack to mv lodging; the landlady asked me if I had left the baby in Hrighton, and I answered "Yes. I do not know how the days went on I could not tell you; I was never m self, nor do I ro inember much until'soine weeks after wards, I went liomn to my grandmoth er, who died soon after I reached her. I need not tell you that afterwards I met Lance, and learned to love him with all my heart. "Do not "tell him; promise me, I be seech you, for mercy's sake do not teH him!" "What you have told me," I said, "certainly gives a different aspect to the whole affair. I will make no prom ise I will think it over. I must have time to decide what is lest." "You will spare me,"' she went on. "You see I do no one any harm, w rong, or injury. If I hurt another, then you might deprive me of my husband and my home; as it is. Iance loves me and I love him. You w ill not tell him?" "I will think about it," I replied. "Hut I cannot live' in such suppense."' she cried. "If you will tell him, tell him this day, this hour." "He might forgive you." I said. "No, he would not tie angry, he would not reproach me, but he would never look upon my face again." "Would it not lie Itettcr for you to tell him yourself?" I suggested. "Oh, no." she cried w ith a shudder. "No, I shall never tell him." "I do not say that I shall." T said, "(iive me a few flays only a few days and I will decide in iny mind all about it." Then we saw Lance in the distance. "There is mv husband." she Raid. "Do I look verv'il). Mr. Ford?" "You do, indeed; vou look ghastly,' I replied. "I will go and meet him," she said. The exercise and the fresh air brought some color to her face before they met. Still he cried out that. I had rot taken tar? of brr: thai. ehr. was over-tired. "That is it.' she replied. "I have been over-tired all flay; I think my head aches: I have had a strange sensa tion of dizziness in it. I am tired, oh, Ianee. I am so tired!" "I shall not leave you again." said Lance to her, and I fancied he was not quite pleased with me. ami thought I hail neglected her. We all three went home together. Mrs. Fleming did not say much, but she kept up better than 1 thought she could have done. I heard her that same evening express a wish bi be driven to Vale lioyal on the day following; a young girl whom she had been instrumental in saving from ruin, had been taken suddenly ill and wanted to see her. "My darling." Lauce said, "you do not seem to me strong enough. Ijet me persuade you to rest to-morrow." "I should like to see Hose Winter again lefore In-fore I " then she stoped abruptly, and her face grew crimson. "He fore you what, Frances?" asked her husband, w ith a smile. "I mean," she said, "that I should like to see Hose before she grows worse." "I tlrink you ought to rest, but you shall do as you like, Frances; you" al ways do. I will drive vou over myself." I saw them start on the following morning, and then I tried to think over in solitude what it would lie liest to do. Her story certainly altered facts very considerably. She was not a murder ess, as I had lelieved her to be. If the death of the little hapless child was at tributable to an overdose of the cordial, she had certainly not given it purpose ly. Could I judge her? " Yet. an honest, loyal man like Lance ought not to le so cruelly deceived. I felt sure myself that if she spoke to him if she told him her storv with the same pathos with which she had told it to me. he would forgive her he must forgive her. I could not reconcile it with my conscience to keep silence. I could not, and I believed that the truth might Ik- told with safety. So, after long thinking and delilteration, I came to the conclusion that Lance must know, and that she must tell him her self. It was in the middle of a bright sun shiny afternoon when thev- returned. When lance brought his wife into the drawing-room he seemed very anxious over her. ' "Frances floes not seem w ell," he said to me. -'IJiiig the bell. John, and order some hot tea; she is as cold death." Her eyes met mine. "! in them I read the question fiat are you going to do?" J ws struck by her dreadful pa1 nr- "Is your head bad ag:iin to-day," I askd. "Yes. it aches very much," she re plied. The hot tea came, and it seemed to revive her: but after a few minutes the dreadful shivering came over her again. She stood up. "Lance." she said, "I will go to mv room, and vou must lead m. my head aches so that I am blind." She left her pretty drawing-room never to re-enter it. The next day at noon Lance came to me with a' sad face. "John, my w ife is very ill. and I have just heard bad news." "What is it. Iince?" I asked "Why, that the girl she went yester day to see, llose Winter, is ill with the most malignant type of small pox. I looked at him in horror. 'I)o you thiuk." I gasjed. "that the that Mrs. Fleming has caught it?" "I am quite sure," he replied. "I have just sent for the doctor, and have telegraphed to the hospital for two nurses. And my old friend." he added. "I am afraid it is going to be a bad case." It was a bad case. I never left him while the suspense lasted; but it was soon over. She suffered intensely, for the disease was of the most virulent type. It was soon over. Lance came to me one afternoon and I read the ver dict in his face. 'She will die." he said, hoarsely. "They cannot save her." and the day after that he came to me again with wistful eves. "John."' he said, slowly, "my wife Frances is dying, and she wants to see you. Will you see her?" "Most certainly," I replied. She smiled when she saw me, and beckoned me to her. Ah, poor soul! her judgment had indeed been taken from me. She whispered to me: "I'roniise me that you will never teil him. I am dying! he need never know now. Will you promise me?" I promised, and she died! I have kept my word Imce Fleming know s nothing of what I have told you. Only Heaven knows how far she sinned or was sinned against. I never see the sunset, or hear the waves come rolling in, without thinkingof the trag edy on the pier. Tin: KM). m DISENCHANTED. A charming domestic picture the dining-room brilliantly lighted, and the silver and crystal, the gold-band china, and the. snowy napkins, the white table-cloth and the dainty little feast spread thereon, the cheery tire in the prate, the crimson carpet, the flowing drapery, pictures and flowers. And pretty little Mrs. Norton sitting behind the urn. as fair and Iovelv a two year matron as ever smiled over'a table at her lord and master. He was a tine-looking fellow too. that husband of hers, ami it was very evi dent that there was no lack of warm af fection between them, for all the sub ject of conversation was one of very decided opinion, at least upon Mrs. Norton's part. Just now. she sugared and creamed Mr. Norton's second cup of coffee, and handed it toward him, w ith a little in dignant remark. "Hut it's too bad. Frank, and I be lieve you think so as much as I do." And she looked suspiciously as if there were tears in her pretty eves. "Indeed. I think it is just as bad as it can be bad enough for us. but a thousand times worse for uncle Tom." "It is ridiculous! .The idea of him falling in love at this time of life; but more than ridiculous in falling in love with such a creature, as Aura Vane! Frank laughed at Lottie s emphatic remarks. "We musn't forget that of course the old gentleman has a perfect right to do as he pleases with his own, dear. His being sixty years old does not pr-clud him from even marrying Miss Vane, if he chooses to. Lottie looked very earnest indeed, as she answered "I know all that; but irhi can't uncle Tom see her as she is. as pvervhodv else Sv-es her? She's forty, if she's a day. "A very suitable age, you must ad mit, for him. Lottie." "Frank Norton! How can you. when you know just as w 'II as I do'that it is ouiy uucJe Tom's money she ia after' And to think he promised to leave it all to baby if we'd name him after him, nnd I wauted the darling called Roland so badly, instead of "Tommy!" Oh, Frank you never wi'l ki o v . hai a sac rifice I hiade! And ?' I '':ui ' . baby's name yes. I v I ; f Tom mar ries that horrid old ;. '. who never life! How ever she contrived to entrap hiiu. I'd like to know." Two bright little red spots were flam ing in her cheeks, and despite the pas sionate bitterness of her protest, Mr. Norton realized there was a great deai of righteous truth in it. and he was looking grave and thoughtful, just as the front door was opened, and in a minute or two uncle Tom himself came in. "I am sorry to have been so late for dinner, my dear," he said, brisklv, with a smile toward Lottie; "but 1 have been driving in the park with Miss Vane, and really it was dusk before I knew it." Somehow Mrs. Norton glanced at her husband as she turned the urn, just in time to catch the quiewk glance of cau tionary warning he sent her. "Are you personally acquainted with Miss Vane, my dear?" he said, present ly, after dilating upon the tteautv of the park in its late autumn dress. "Not at all intimately, uncle Tom. When I was a little girl she was a grown-up woman, and of course I never had occasion to associate with her. As a child, I never fancied her, how ever." He laid his knife down in the act of slicing off a delicious piece of brow n meat . "You mean to insinuate that Aura is as old as all that?" Then Frank took up the cudgels in his quiet, udimpassioned way. "I don't think my wife would 'insin uate' anything, uncle Torn. She simply knows it to be a fact, as I do. and any one else w ho cares to think at all aliout it. that Miss Vane is past forty years old. Hut, then, of course, no one ever troubles one's self about it." "Fast forty! Frank, I alwavs thought you had uncommon good sense, and judgment, and perception, but past forty! Hut perhaps you don't happen to know how delicate and lovely her complexion is how soft and luxuriant her hair is how girlish and charming, yet dignified, is her manner:" He spoke as if in great triumph. "That goes for nothing, uncle Tom," Lottie said, more mildly than Frank had expect of her. "Complexion and hair can loth be tiought nowadays." "lam perfectly aware of that fact, my dear, although I must admit J vl not thought vou capable of siWj such Well, ihe "less said tr- 1 tetter, per haps. Hut I assure .'fu I have satisfied myself that A", 1S "ueof those rarely- fu-'eservei' onien who at thirty for I iav ft from her own lips that fier last I'irthday was her thirtieth are more charming and mature, and everyway suitable to a disceyning man's "taste, than when young ami girlish." And he looked straightlv, defiantly in Lottie's eyes. "Oh. well." she retorted, btubbornly, "you'll find out some day!" "Yes." he answered, "I exject to find out that the woman who w ill honor me by being my wife is iust what I have said she is in all respects. Frank, don't you want tickets for the opera to-night? I've a couple to spare, if vou want to tak" Lottie to hear l'atti. Miss Vane and I are going ." Of course. Frank accepted the tickets; and after dinner, when Lottie went up to the nursery with him for their usual half-hour of baby-worship, she declared she would never call him by his odious name again. "He shall In: mamma's darling Ro land now." she said, holding him in her arms, and showering kisses on his sweet, laughing face, and bonnv dark eyes. Frank laughed. "You'd lietter wait a little longer, Lottie. Thirtv thousand pounds is worth being called a worse name than Tom. l'erhaps the old man's disen chantment will come even yet." "It's disgusting," she said. And then she said good night to her year-old boy. with dozens of kisses and nugs, and gave him back to his nurse. "I want vou to go on an errand, please, Frank," she said, suddenly, as they went into their ow n room, "lip to Hlandford's. for an invisible net and hairpins. Will you, Frank?' "An invisible net! What on earth is that? Can't on see it? How shall I know when I've got it? I'll inouire." She gave him a little push towards the door. "Nevermind, Mr. Impudence. You simply ask for what I tell you. pay what they charge, and bring it home to me." So goodnatured Frank put on his hat and started off to Hlandford's, the fa mous hairdresser's, where he was to buy the "invisible" net, to meet uncle Tom on the doorstep, impatiently wait ing for the carriage that was to take him to his lieloved. "There's plenty of time." Frank said, as he stopped a minute, "f.et your cane, uncle Tom. and walk ud to Hlandford's with me." I'ncle Tom looked at his watch. "Well. 1 will. I shouldn't like to keep Aura waiting, though." "There's no need to," Frank an swered. Ami they started off. even bit ot Frank's determination and tact kept continuously on the alert to prevent the old gentleman from discussing Miss Vane. However, bv violent effort, he suc ceeded, bv talking about the lYemier's illness and the' Irish Hill, till they reached Hlandford's. where an obliging shopman gave them seats, and begged them to wait only one moment, as they were so busy just then. Ami Frank and uncle Tom sat down and waited, close by them being a tall Venetian screen, which neither partic ularly noticed, until, in alow, yet clear ly distinct voice, thev heard a sentence or so that startled them. "How will that do. Miss Vane? I have applied nearly an entire bottle of the enamel; but pardon me the hol lows and wrinkles are so deep that it is almost impossible to obliterate them." "It will have to do, I suppose. For tunately all my new costumes have longer sleeves than the old ones. Now if you will make haste with my hair. I shall wear the 'Ferfection' to-night. I think: and. oh, please remember the touch of pencil on my eyebrows. Tliey are getting so horribly thin and pale lately." Heyond doubt of mortal comprehen sion it was Aura Vane's voice, and Frank actually pitied the look that was on the old gentleman's fare. Ami then no one in aH the world ever knew how such an unheard-of, awkward catastrophe haponed, except uncle Tom. w hose foot reached out and toirched the door the door in the screen (lew onen, and revealed to both gentlemen the startling sight of a woman with a head almost as bare of hair as a pumpkin only the merest w isp of gray hair, tw irled in a little pig-tail on the crown and on the dressing-table beside her a head of soft, rippling tresses, and a bottle of lella donua. and a pot of enamel, and vari ous sponges and brushes, and other paraphernalia. There was a shriek of horror from th bald-foreheaded lady, a series of "Oh-o-o-o-h's:" and then it all seemed in less than a minute Jhe attendant threw a shawl over Miss Vane's pate. Uncle Tom gave a groan of utter horror as he got up ami took Frank's arm. T am going home." he said tersely. "I don't want any opera to-night. I've seen enough, (ireat heavens! what an escape! For all these nunies I am more than thankful. To think to think I ins s. near """irTv'iig t' I think the story is told. Mi83 Aura ane did not secure her rich husband. There are lots of fellows, old and young, who are daily being deceived by v..vu t,v.i-tt iiij.r-ui women man sne only, sometimes, aw av down under all the vain little artificialities, there is often a true, loving heart. Hut even worse than this is the fat of a woman who finds that her ideal mains only a bundle of tailor's clothes and dentist's skill, and wig-maker's art. Dou t you believe it? Or that there are men who put their hair in papers and wear gloves at night, and then tali themselves "lords of creation!" Ahem! Well, the baby's name was not exact ly changed, but Lottie inserted ' Ro land for his middle name, and as once in a while they chII him, in iest. of course, "T. Roland," I shouldn't won der if, after all. the little fellow has his pretty name and the fortune, too. e m ALL HASH TO HI3I. Xlie XVektrm Tlan Vnrn, (be T- I h t f I HoMotl It ilKinrt. Th" daughter of a Hoh n merchant of gretit weali h. w ide mercantile connections and Umudless hospitality, was married. The 'West'Tii agent of the merchnnt happened to be in town, and, tu, the proud father was inviting about every body to his dnuhter's wedding, be in vited the Westerner too. The Westerner came. He was uneasy and shifted aiout from place to place in the hou.-4-a if he were hunting for sjots that fitted 1 11 in (tetter than thot-e he had been in. He put his hands tionchalantly on things and took them off again mid denly, as if be found th'-tii hot, tnii grinned familiarly at people he bad never seen Iwfore, and then suddenly drew his features back with a ghastly solemnity. It seemed to ! an occasion of prat and overw he;ming novelty to him. When the refreshments ram- around he v.:w inclined to tight -'.J of pretty nearly everything. t was ns if he pro OMod to take ' little Ho--ton formality, now- thtit ' in Ho-ton. and require an introduction to every dih. HLs host siw that he wasn't eming much and came .-notin.l to see altotit it. "Why. you aren't enting anything. Mr. Wrs.." said he. "Ciin't I help you to something;" "No. 1 thank you." said the Westerner. "I (tin t very hungry to-night. I reckon I've eat enough." Just then 3 waiter came along with sonw criKjiit tte-. "Mr. We-t. take 0110 of t htf-e ci tllett-s; I thi'ik you'll like ih.-ni; take one, teke one." The Westerner took ... He punched it with Id-! fork, laid it open a hit. and ex amined it criti.-nily. Then he tasted it aixl exclaimed: '(iosh: lla. hr tilting llouxwlie I'otnte. A cart i .il .,:tew if,. 11;. ;i entering her kio dieti the c,.ok: "Tt-e.it i n .-ss. Jam-, yr.11 tnii-t l more ciii-ft:;i. You are mil clean enough in jour ,.tti.' "Lady," ft piled the cook, as sdie ttiok up a piece of Iteef that h.id f.-ult n on the lloor, "I sees dat yer's gwine ter nek foolish wid me. Ain't yr jot not bin' terdoVcpt tei-fool roiiti' oui heahr" "It'sniy business to come out here oc casionally." "All right, den. hah it yer own wt,v, but I wanter say one thing: Lf yer w ants to i"' yesse f at !e table .111" eat w id or' comin npcrtite yev'd better stay oulea dis kitchen. Ya.s." she added, as ?h wiped h dish with a dirty rag, "yer'd I etter not nose rmm' heah, fur cookin' is er hus'ness w id inc. an' when er pusson w "gaged in business, f.jolishness Ls awful troublesome. Arkajisaw Traveller, lie Stil Pon a. We were running tlirough South Caro lina when a great big giant of a fellow with a terrible eye and a voice like a foj horn hoarded the train ut a sinall station. 1 think most of the ja.sr.engei-s sized hiiu up as a chap w hom it would be dangerous to argue with, but the ginnt wasn't satisfied with that. Ho blustered at the conductor, growled t the brakeman and looked around as if peeking sonic one to pick a fuss wih. Evci-yiody answered luni civilly, and he had two ot three seats to himself, but the man w ho uanln a row cun generally Hnd wiine pretext. About the center of the car a p:de-ixking chiip about jears old occupied a seat and w as re:uliiig a newspBter. After a time the giant rubbed along to w here the young man Kit and growled out: 'Vstranirer. w hat may be the Jirst -.t of such a hat as yoursC-" The young man looked up w ith a flush in his big blue eyes, and then turned to his paper without replying. "Hey! Did you hear mei'" roared the other ;u he leaned oxer the seat and lifted the hat off the young man's head Quicker than one could count six a f-hining revolver came from you couldn't teil where, lifted itself oil a level with the big man's eye, and the white lingers clutching the butt never t rem hied a hair's breadth as a quiet voice uttered the words: 'I Mop thru hatr The hat fell from the giant's grafp, and the quiet voice continued: "Now you sit down or I'll kill you The muzzle of the weapon was not six inches from the man's eye, and I saw him turn from red to white in t'ii sec onds. He backed away at the command, pat down in a ceat opposite, and never Htood up or spoke another word during hi.s ride of twenty milvs. He hail a "navy" under his coat, but Fomething in that quiet voice and blue eye warned him that the move of a ringer on his part would crash a liullet into his head. ti lie Itrntrmbrrrd It. Sain Ward was once seated opposite a well-known Senator at a dinner at Washington. This Senator was very bald, and the hght f-hining on the breadth of scalp attracted Ward's atten tion. "Can you tell me," he akonl his neigh bor, "why the Senator's head la like Alaska!'" "I'm sure I don't know." "Because it's a great whita bear place." The neighNtr tm immediately tickled, and he hailed the Senator acroas tba table: "Say, Senator, Ward's just got off very fmart thing about you." "What is it?" "Do you know w hy your head la like Alaska?" "No." "Because it's a great plc for white bears." How He Mettled It. 'Colonel, have you tattled that affair with the major yet?" "Yea, I haves" said the colonel. ' 'TJow f " "Why, Las week he ki ked me off hie Btoop, aad since that he's let me aiaoe lackj ia" htm, tw" f ZAT1X0 l "WAfHUrOTOaT. tanrh XI roe to the Hre rata eat. 11k-part rue 11 1 II ow the Ene plojes are Served. Every day about noon, write a n irises pondent frora Washington, a Urtls red wagon with a dairy Kign on it sidea, draws up at the Treasury, sod by tba time H has been there a minunte or faro you see it surrounded by a lot of lre headed mn and women. Some of these carry tin cups and other have their hands full of pumpkin pies, pinger bread and other delica.-ies of this nature. It in the property of a thrifty dairyman of the city who cultivatee the department trade. He hustles around to th various departments about the lunch hour furn ishing milk ar.d pies and this sort of thing to the hungry and thirsty clerks, many of w hom eagerly eize this oppor tunity for a frugal and healthful mid-day hinch. Dinner at 1 2 o'ekxi in a thing almost unknown in Washington. The popular dinner hour with the massee is 5 o'clock, or thereabouts, and from that on untd 7 or in the evening. The result is that "lunch" ir an important feature of the half hour given at noon in the departmentH. A pood many of the clerks carry with them from their homos a little box or hakt with their lunch. In narly all thfi dep--irtmerit there are arningementK for serving lunch for th-se desiring it. In the ha.e meut of the Trea-sury, Post Oflioe, Interior and State Departments there are regular lunch rooms, with tallies, bills of fare, etc In the War Iejnrtnient there urc' iiuiu ler of lunch stands scattered through the l-senient. at w hich ttioee w bo lo not carry their li"ch with theru regale theinselv- j ?ie new Pension Office a caterer ifoes through the rooms at the lunch hour dealing out coffee, milk and eata4b of all sorte to those desiring them. As a rule it is only the more ariHtocratir of the clerk who go out to lunch. The heads of the bureaus and officials with salaries alove i.'Mtfl feel that it is Ihw neath their diimity to carry a lunch with them or to eat at the lunch rooms pre pared in the department. So you may see thetu scattered a! "out at the restaur ants and cafes in the vicinity of the d' IHrtnientH at the lunch hour. One of the most interesting aad curious of these lunch establishments is ju.t op posite the Treasury. It di.sjietwe milk with coffee and sandwiches and pie. It has a long counter running bitv. the end like a liar, and a row of cbsirs alone each side of the room. The c-un-tormers walk up to this bar, seje-t their sandwich or pi. as the case may be, raU for their mug of milk or ooffiv, or "half and half." which means half cream aid half milk, and, having been served, fall bock to the chairs along the wi,U and di cuj. their lunch and the ern-ip of he day with their neighlors. Go in there any dny between 12 aad I o'clock and you insy see Trea-sury digniUiriee of all eorts ami sir.es. below the Sfriary him self, ranged in nmn alrni; the wnlls. holding a mug of milk in one hand and a "hunk" of pi in the other, and dis cussing meanwhile the litest phaee or politics or the result of the las' game of bae-ball. The Cnlnnet officers are gen erally a little more dignified about their enting. Most of them go borne to their luuches. having their carriage call for them at the lunch hour. If they are too. much hurried, however. thy have a hinch pent to them from some neighbor ing restaurant and lolt it in the privacy of their office The President usually lunches a I tout 2 o'clock or a rkw as the Cabinet meeting ends. He often takes CoL Lamont with him. and nometimes some member of the Cabinet or a friend, from New York. A BUBIKX9S OT S2TAE.ES. Perlla of toek Mpemlatore - the bam tn Table a mere Crrtata Uaantltr. The New York Sun nays: If there he any need of an additional reason for ! outwder to i-tay away from Wall Ktreet it could eauily be found by the farts dis closed by the failure of WUlmn Heath 6 Co. If old Wall street "ooorw" like ttould, Cammack. Moroiiii, or Low , can be caught for the large amount of money that they were caught for, what peb ble show could an outsider have cxtuing with hia savings arid trywg to pet a re turn for them.' Here you have a firm w hich w ai alw ays rated "A 1," w IJcfa w-ae supposed to te worth several millions of dollars, and w hich goes to pot without showing any aetwte. That Mr. Gould or Mr. Cajnmack might have bot-n caught in thin "torru is int-Uigilile enough, for they are great stock manipulators, and for all we know might have loaned the monty to the firm in the hope of bridg ing over itw difficulties. Many a ease could easily be imagined in which it might have been cheaper for them to loee two or three hundred thousand dollars than to see a great form fail. But what business liad men like Morosini or Low to intrust nearly half a million apiece to a firm w hich they must have known (for every body in Wall street knew it) to be heavily short of the market and an heaviJy dependent upon the solvency of one spet-ulator' Is it posnible that the tempati'si of rcoHving 7 por cent for deposits can le eo great as to bind such men to the risks which they run of losing the principal. In any ccse and what may be the issue of these two failures, it lieooiiiesi more evident than ever that the Itest thing for an outsider is never to tome near Wall Ftreet. Hut if his oarurHl dis position oom'K-1 him to do so there are but tw-o ways for him to deal One is to buy his stock, pay fir it and take it away; andthe other is to play the mar ket on the seme basis as the prof-isi.iil gamblers do their play in a j.and4.ng hou.se. They don't nek margin of csch other; they play on word of month uiiwl the game t through and they see w bo w the winner or Ikvst. If they hate t confidence in each other the-r wt,ti t play at aU, but the moment they s-t .i..w-n they consider thit t'jey nr" .-'. y cjunre and reef.ori-.iM... Tin... !ti t the stranger coining into a ftnl 'ti'r b.iv-e has to pay rn.-h for his f l.ips. I.- : I l,n the luoisl cert.ntityth.it i -1 p nvs cash thetu when he 1. m-,, i.i Wail i-Treers however, rt is not m. 1 oarrn SJplriteall.na. A weJJ known illuminated us it cri a Liang medium, who bad gullel tbusaniLi of persons by her tricks, wa fully exposed in an Eastern Ciry. She was caught during her dark seance and ennipeJed to make affidavit to a statement. She said tba rols were soaked in a solution of pb'-s phonis and tqwittered with lrifrht paint w hich produced a luminous effect in th dark. These were concealed under her dress w hen she entered the cabinet Tall figures were made by raising the armi also e the head and small figures kneeling flown. She had rare vocal owers which were used to pood effect. The wnruaa. ;tr".. ris" tp-'t sli ' pif-Kiiex art rrntrds