— ————— ——— —— The Change. Before she went to boardim’ school she useter romp an’ play, druv the cows from the field an’ helped take In the hay, she don’t do that any more, be cause of this, you gsee— went away as Mary Jane an’ came back Jeanne Marie. [ ine Bessie in love with any but an or- 1 dinary man, even though he was an artist, She was not ten minutes in Fred Wilkinson's company until she was wondering, nay, asking herself In amazement, the secret of his devo. tion to Bessle. Fred Wilkinson, on the other hand, thought he had never seen a more handsome girl, and concluded that Bessie had not overstated Ella's per sonal charms. Her carriage, the poise of her head and its shape, were all alike striking. What a model she would make, he thought, and before the evening was ended he had asked her to for him. Bessie was de- lighted hear them talk, delighted plate on thig sad anniversary of the end of her love story, one letter had slipped out. The sight of the familiar writing caused her to sit down very quietly and arrange her dress very carefully. When, at last, she stretch: ed out her hand to touch the letter, a thrill ran through her. What could a letter from him mean? She turned it over. It was carefully sealed with Ella's seal. A bitter smile: passed over her face. It was a joint affair, A letter from them seemed the per fection bf cruelty, She tore open the cover and drew forth the letter. ! It was In Ella's handwriting. It ran: 1 Z Raked id “Dear Bessle. = A “, i : a - a . ; ATR : Ar : Bweet with hay; “When you get this I shall be dead. wy VIE, Fr A | rat ¥ + Were It is not to be sted till di SA IR SAT a, WIN. IT DOESN'T BOTHER 1 JUR UNCLE ist y LIFES LITTLE PLEASANTRIES 8he useter wear made-over clothes, an’ always with a smile, now her dresses every one must be the latest style. don't ride bareback any more, nor climb the apple tree— went away 4s Mary Jane, but come back Jeanne Marie. EXPURGATED, ik LTT 5 1 " Maud Muller on a Sumner a fw ay meadows git to iL after my hair is all in crinkles now-—she calls 'em Marshal waves; 's up in all the etiquette, stylish she behaves ma and me are mighty proud o' all she's learned—but gee, ymnetimes wish for Mary Jane in. feanne Maria! Figie Duncan Yale in the Wo- Home Companion. real td nn eo I§P57 5 SPER R52 5ASR5P 52525252 TheMas- terpiece 28E52505252525052525252525252525 253 £ Cala you w like st not fall «cw what 1 mean i her least ill | ¥ in love with want Dit Je ever so much i with her, fore she then I suppo: charms Fred Wilki girl he loved an: and ifown at the ed mockingly. His sweethearts her relief in American cousin and of n to conquer worlds and he could resi + nol » absurd $ stupid boy! » f 4 y fear Of you ot only want to fascinating you ita Ella shall the r of the One ymoon wedding is will stay three knows find cinating un your heaps at her intere Of course | know nose and nerfs ial BUDETIICIAl le a movemen and, jumping ir, a tiny table and a hin I. fs the ded yon ever m should yoman And lover's neck kissed her and the subject and Eiia’'s charms dropped The brigh™ winsome, simple-minded Bes sie was Fred's ideal of womanly per fection. She knew nothing of art and the beauty of living for art, or, indeed, the of living for anything but fove.s Fred was tolerably well off and gO she, Fred was an artist prefeasion Bessie accepted 88 she acespted everything else in the univer matter of course, To have nfierqocn tea in his studio and hear al! his funny, clev I 1k was ono cf Dessie’s greatest dolights though cfton sas the about. up to the time she cousin Fl'a. After that her hot was divided Ella presented #0 ly perfcztca and Fred that of oppesit want to marry her, and Pes Jos to marry 1 want gie's arm and Fred gtole and Ella $ret 8i0D} use hy this was - ”y “half a8 a totale ta 1" dida’t un 1 re fa Degaln's sat what they ot very w Po he passion vi on ¥ the 80%, ¥1la Lad arrived. Hazel Lodge was | in a ciate of congestion and suppress. | ed excitement. Bessie’s presents and belongings crowded every spare cor | ser. The best bedroom refused ad mittance to seme of Ella's huge boxes and they stood in the hall, Mrs fen wha was housekeeper at Hazel focdge, pnd the nearest appreach to a mother DNesgle had ever known, was | Jeelirz the strain of hounsekeepinz | falrle Varvv but her good nature was equal to it. Mr. Maver went Into the city every day. His dauzhter’s marri age cooeerped him Httle. It would fc a ro'i-f when It was over. Satis actory settlements had been ade. He felt he had done his duty ms a father. Pessle was happy. Mrs. Pullen knew how to manage things, and the easygoing man left matters 4 take their course. It was the day after Ella Barton's arrival. Fred was due to dine at Ha» el lodge. The bell rang. Bessie sprang to her feet and scampered off to meet her lover. Bila smiled. There were no subtleties about Des. als. Her devotion was open and hear: ty. Flla expected to meet a certain type of man—the kind of man who is Battered by a blind devotion, She lov. Text Bul- 25253in e5cses od ber cousin, but she could not imag- & with Fred's appreciation and admira tion of Ella, and it was also arranged before the evening was finished that Fred shou ke Ella about and show her the sights, as Bessie was much too busy with preparations to spare the time. Together Ella and Fred walked, cycled, visited picture exhibitions and studios each day they devoted for which Ella w Three weeks wns not wedding model. The weather, 18 passed working Fred if his life d exactly was too hot. pleture as Never thusiastie vas to be pended upon it known him 50 en vear and his isted him and model talk Once or he wedding of Fred's 18 brave Ii astonished 8 of the ignor of 1Vine a going to be just at tiresome for today until Don't sit in wait we zitting todavy™ with must go into the ts the toast | yu walt til ur headache je. It have might made an u are to be In | n't expect me for | nversation dur. breakfast Somes rance troubled $51 $y Hig 0 sone HOVer expec from when ye epariure ssileas and Fred would and we ne whila LiF and Fred did n mbered he and tor} minute the next va gpirits had three o'clock, | ride econld be, i yw of the her head agains: ming, ars one wind Te Ive od 4 1 ; drawing-room resting he cool a aud pgae had gone to the back of the she felt gzlad srything look so bright A to be rid of telegraph Her heart 1 turned and It would from t coming to dinner gervant brought In two messages, 1d read be The Sh ul and pity us. We hate ourselves Peasie felt dazed She the second, ran thus: “] cannot be present on Tuesday. Jorget and forgive an unworthy man, Fred.” Bessie did not shriek or faint She to the couch and dropped | down on the edge of it. clutching the | two bufl.colored messages that had tore open which Her breath came siow and her limbs | scomed paralyzed. Her eyes fell on | the postal mark. It was Newhaven, | She understood. They were going | abroad beyond the reach of scandal She must bear all, and alone. The day that should have been Bes sie Maver's weddingday was a year old. Bessie was a year older, too, and most people sald sweeter and prettier than ever, but the sweetness was tinged with a sadness that those who knew her story understood. Her manner was quiet and subdued. Tho busy, bustling Martha had largely given place to the dreamer. Her face shone with that sympathetic light which js born of pain and to which the sufferers always turn. The trag- edy of a year ago had turned a pretty, thoughtless, light-hearted girl into a large-hearted, noble-minded woman, with eyes and ears sensitive to every ery of humanity. From amid the pile of correspondence which lay at her death. 1 have been 11 leaving England and no the end is near. vd sake, He never loved me you vet. 1 charmed him, not teach him to me, Charmer’ must be finished. make him a famous painter. a masterpiece. Without never have been begun he will nev finish it Love him so much that die, and 1 write to vou, wronged, to him a | the dark, created. leaving ever met ever w | for He but I could know I'm gli Fred's ny ove It w will be me would Without ill It it you er Engla me, me. Not on d 1! vat | yet it time they the man is =» and love the sum te aiyre ppree of 111 + oe elreun hyo tb i A PARIS HORROR. Cheaper to Starve Cab Horses Than to Feed Them. TIAA DAL Trev fie cab horses kind meagre ir the hearted proprietors of the cab ments find that it fs cheaper « when it drops js to keep and than a horse, ancther, fed. A Paris cab horse, she states, it hard oats, je n and hay or kept on roils moldy bran and bariey fuse that comes from that one extabli poor he ly ever ilasties just alive potatoes #9 the Tre breweries She declares shiment keeps even ree for the It to a sort of treadmill, among other things, on p a purpose is harnessed | and is fed unded wood y reduc ed. in order to find out the minimum limit to which a horse could be use fully starved. Among the company’s drivers this horse iz known as the “Chairman's hobbyhorse.” Mme. Lutgen tells other diabolical gtories of eabmen keeping irondip ped sticks wherewith to prod / their worn-out beasts, and driving wound ping them on their If such fendish cruelty as this be orieticed, oven by half a dozen eabmen, the only thing will be to give up cabs altogether. dvery one has pitied Paris horses, half of them lean, weary, heartbroken jades, which, when they are down, wish only to dle. Mme. Lutgen’s conclusion {s that the unfortunate Paris horse will have a better chanee of a decent existence with a cabwoman than with a cab man. —Parls correspondence of the New York Times, sores Even Such Restrained. Man of the House—You will get one mark after you have cut the wood, . Beggar—Yes, and get fined two marks by the beggars’ union, eh? Not much. —Fllegendo Blaetter. About 1.200000 people are always afloat on the seas of the world declined 400 in dividual of there was pearly 50 pe he of meat animals to population f to 79.4 in , compared wit abont thre lawed Ly a rise ther woras ee, €A avers rise pita in and more the even the coun consequel was consist stantly enlargi 11¢ people tr ad pt away fron: the country. on ng abr are drawing WOMAN POSE ; ‘nl Ct woman who for sity Years and sheep herder, died at San She was born In i when eighteen Lge, rely living, She found that she After wandering around the country male garb and applied for a mans § Joplin, Mo., and worked there 23s a 1 All this time she kept her i man She d an exeeilen! she was offered a position in a St cepted this, going to St. Joseph be A few months later a young wi man who had promised to marry posed marriage and was arcepled rance ei vears of POSReug hoe he After their marriage they came A year or two afterward the “wife Vosbangh received more or less soon forgotien, Miss Vosbaugh forty ranch, near Trinchera. was given to her. Later, Years ago exp wetly # 3 a m for two 3 28 a oaitit obtain: yok keer sOTCTral & doubled yn, and while she {Mo.} banking she was thirty al ang no on ucat 5 Us decos Vosbaugh sought girl Miss Vosbaugh reveal the secret to Trinidad and opened a restaurant The “husband” declared effort to find her. Miss Misa To this divaiged aring her secret would be discovered, at the Sam Brown hers she protectsd her secret, attendants, Some velop Into pneumonia. time later she contracted wien she Even do so without the presence of that threatened to de- would be necessary IQ a severe cold and then, the second time in sixty years, Viceroy Lord Minto Says If is Im- possible to Ignore India's Unrest. Simla, India. ~The Legislative Council adopted a bill designed to prevent seditious gatherings. It em- powers the provincial authorities to prohibit public meetings. Lord Minto, the Viceroy, in a speech in support of the bill, said it was im) to ighore the warn. ings of recent mouths—the riots; the insults to Buropeans, and the at- tempts to inflame racial feeling. pax & Insane Soldiers From Philippines Will Be Brought to Washington. San Francisco.—BSeventeen insane patients, belonging to the United States Army, who were hrought trom the Philippine Islands to the Presidio General Hospital, will be taken to the Army Hospital for the Insane at Washington. Colonel Geo. H. Torney, Deputy Surgeon-General, will have charge of them, A car has been especially arranged for the convenience of the patients. “The “What “A dollar down and a dollar when ever the collector keiches me Washington Herald pavments ain't so hard” ye terms - TAKEN AT HIS WORD. Master Walter, ared five, had caton the soft portion of his toast at break fast and piled the crusts on his plate “When 1 wes a little boy” remark ed his father. who sat oppogite him, “1 plways ate the crusts of my toast” “Mid you like them?" inquired his off spring, cheerfully “Yea” replied the parent “You may have these” sald Master Walter, pushing hiz plate across the table. ~Harper's Weekly, GOOD JUDGE. “You're a good judge of horseflesh, aren't you, sir?™ “1 ought to be. taurants all Leader, 1 ate in Paris res summer.” Cleveland THE CORRECT TIME. “Speaking of myself,” sald the elig. ible bachelor, “1 do not belleve In early marriages.” “Nor do 1” replied the fair maid “High noon Is the correct time Chicago Nows, em