WINDS, Vous, THR FOUR Dr. William O'Meagher, one of New | York's new Coroners, stood the annoy. ance of his office just two days. He lost his time, his sleep, his patience and concluded the worriment was not worth 85000 a year. He had eight her here to-night A nt one of her n-irembin children wax ill, so Miss with eazer monial hopes for her ido! Asketh ro slowly at th lady's entrance. “Miss Voss ha “I am Miss Vous" Held the Fort Alone, As might be expected, the roads in | Marshal Canrobert wasa very brave, Southern China are not remarkable | albeit a very vain man, It seems cdd for their excellence. In a town | to think of a general who could warn streets is seldom wider than from five his barber, “Don’t ent these locks to fifteen feet. great | of maine, six let them be where they A Roadless Empire. Voss came The wind - " i} his alone. Extraordinary looking giri, is | ove it boast . Vad she not? I never one quite like her. 1 was almost certain that Mrs. Aspinwall said that wis a | SAW Any The wind o’ t} the 1 love it loast, aho Between cities deaths the first day and twelve the gecond, EE — snd slaughter are nowhere terms than in last six seasons Sport more synonymous Austria. During the Prince Camillo shot with his own gun yn his estates Austrian 1009 bucks and A Bank Failure. in x0 A 529 does, AN INVESTIGATION DEMANDED. A general banking business the human system, because the b posits in its vaults whatever wealth we may gain {rom day to day This wealth is up against anv dav asar »'re in a condition of healthy pre A 2 if we lone by A lood de erve | per have draw upon in There is danger in § ing thin § { lettin lown heal vAYS way capital reatest need because it To gain n in whole or of the prieumonia, 1 our 1m briow a | bl Mi ced nired rengih du 18 Te Se I Dr al Discovery enriches it wholesome Ate ine whic Anse NaAKes tog aud at 1 rid ot the bl rmanent at alue went th wi Ad PART 408d REY ceipt of address an ix cents in tam ps HIGHEST AWARD : J WORLD'S FAIR. TED 10 al "0p ak Cn GED PERSONS T1..SAFESTFOOp THE SICK ROOM FOR INVALIDS ‘NO CONVALESCENI * sul yi ¥=- -™ NURSING MOTHERS, INFANTS *° CHILDREN weERIAL GRAN, DRUGGISTS. CA c Pf CARL ) i 1} Raphael, Angelo, Rubens, Tame The "LINEXE™ are the Best and Most Econom! eal Collars and Cufls worn; they are made of cloth, both sides Bnished alike, and bein ne collar is squad to two of any other kind y At well, wear well and | we A box Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Calls for Twenty-Five Conta A Sample Collar and Pair of Coffs by mall for Bix Cents, Name #tyin ar Address REVARSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, 1 sine Why pay #0 to 86 fends when you can host Woven Wira ¥ earth horse higo.b Ce Ctaingrue Free. Address, [THRELMAN BROG., € RUPTURE Cured POSITIVELY HOLDS RUPTURY Worn night and day, Has an Ad ju table Pad which can be mate larger of smaller to sult changin a condition «f RUPTUR PAYRYTED Hine, Cat, aout securely sealed by OV, House MPy. Co, 744 Broad way, N.¥.City DAVIS HAND OR POWER CREAM SEPARATOR Onethird mors butter and of higher quality than by other known systems BAVED MONEY AND LABOR Hinges from | to 1009 Cows, Pamphlet Mailed Free, Agents Wanted DAVIE & RANKIN BFLDO. AND MFO CO. Bale Manafaetiurers, Chioago. 11 RE 2 Treated free. Positively CURRED cured many hou sand caus pre nounced tess, Prom first dose mptems rapidly disappear, ' i yo at beast twGthirde of » teatime aly of I iy Re " JS TREATMENT Th Co NSION WL whe | A tes Clpl ner hn udicatin The wind o' the South Has sweet in its mouth; The wind o' the North Sends great storms forth, Taken together, all sorts of weath Ihe four old fellows are Hurry and flurry. rush and sure t hrinz Surry. Sighing and dying, and fitting and flying Chrough summer and autump, and wint | and spring. ~Margaret E, Ban; Young Meopla | set, I —— THE CRIME OF JANE, | DY EVELYN THORP, i od | ~/_ ANE eaught her wi breath ; then she fired such a resolve as never before had Poss assed her. was with She was out of the room, up the stairs and in the shabby, pretur- old bed- » of fad i chintz that she shared with her sister, before her quick heart could ‘take twenty Then she paused and she Bpre ad open the note that she held. Let her read it once more carefully—and make no mistake. Yes, Mrs, Aspinwall said distinetly that she could not | unt ball that nddie " Carriage an i Bure 1 Demayn and the had been apprised introduc ‘ sque room beats, cro ip. to go, al her patronesses er coming an 1 Ad fusion disap; it? “uh quishe dinor and her mother had driven in the dilapidated one- horse Voss buggy to the station, leav- ing Jane in sole possession of the old | house. And now Jane snd had nd tarbualer AAs C ndship who € 4 re would times tO a And what n ’ 2 Gsiy with r touzled mane ¢ tawny hair, her green eves, her month thst her n grown ane wus too large, ye it was She had up almost in isolation, and happiness was not for her She knew that. And yet, how would j to 1 be pretty and and loved of men? Oh, Oo short? be like admired taste once ust one or? : ' loved of men Jane WAS nine teen, and man save the doctor and the country cler ever crossed her path no country ryman had i. | The hunt ball had fallen on a night of full moon, and one whose breath was unprecedently, unaccountably balmy, and warm as that of a night in May. As the cotillon went on, figure after figure, the long windows had opened, and, couples, straying from the dance, wandered under the Chinese | lanterns, and amid the plants of the encircling piazzas. Asketh leaned in a doorway and | looked atthe maze within and breathed | heavily, Impossible! Impossible! | And yet he could have sworn that that | which had not happened for years had | happened to him to-night. That | which had not happened for years! Bah! Nothing like this had ever hap pened before in his life; a life of thirty-five years. He could have be- | lieved that he had been dragged ; had drank a philter. In his veins was an | ardor that was that of a wild boy, but | in his brain and heart were voices that no boy's heart or brain could have | harbored. That absurd thing that people still persisted in writing and been | able impatience. i together of all | alone great Leanty.” “‘S0 she is," said the man. “H'm--do~yon think Mra. Demayn co 1ighed a little, *‘I thought, that I had heard that But evidently that was a mis- 80? too, sha dark. take.” “Evidently.” Asketh had a movement What The moon Wis Wns of intoler time of the night was 1t? wis not yet though it and the hunt-ball guests had come at 9 o'clock. So few hours since he had first seen this girl? Why, he felt as if he hafl known her ages, as if they had talked things under heaven and in earth, That men should stare at her as Mrs. Demayn's interlocutor WAS doing, that these worldly women should have, in speaking of Ler, the tone ol patronizing con le scension adopted by that lady, wis something not to be borne. He pushed forward through dancers. The last figure had spun its the ns setting How the motley whirl through ballroom One more waltz, Paul ¢ fronted Miss Voss's partner, abont to relinquish her, without a word. took it, He led her said: and shoulders and nl he offered his arm Without a word she to the piazza, then he thing { | s wrap.” “(et some “I am going home no plied. from But a moment later she is the {, and when again he offer cloak shawloed \ hoods arm, she took wut pr test Where are yoo aking mi same tone, other been, never, neve bh, how glorious it is to dance, to live, to enjoy, to feel, as I have to-night, and as other girls do so often—s0 often! I mind gothing to-night. Time enough for - will not think of it now. Let me be happy just & few minutes more—just a f It will en 1 80 8000 fow minutes! of Mre, Demayn, wotmen, was wisi! be ind 1 fron serted b ’ “Ah! nded now!" bre raed towar i h i the “I was | ing for 3 Miss Voss, remarked Mrs. Demayn icily, aad the Asketh at which she best ! riance she gave was almost as withering as th wed yn the girl “Yes, I know ; I'm goir nd my being the last atter to-m . “Is that girl mad?" excitedly queried Mrs. Demayn of her husband an hour later in the privacy of their own apart- ment. “Did ever you hear of amazing conduct? And the way in which Paul Asketh flirted with her all the evening was disgraceful —disgrace- ful. What can Lunoey thinking of to take She told me very sweet and quiet and modest and ladylike. Heaven knows where she sees such qualities in her! I thought her prodigiously bad form lingering ont there, when everyone had gone, with Asketh, whom she had never seen in her life before to-night! That is what comes of picking up per- sons not society. The girl is a savage,” “A mighty ITOW such Aspinwall be up such people? that this Miss Voss was in handsome one, then, and one not too slow to have obviously | enmeshed the best parti in town,” said her lord and master, buf he said it to himself, having saequired wisdom in twenty years of matrimony. “Yon said two nights ago that you were not like other girls! You need not have told me. To me you are like no one on earth. I am com- ing to your home to tell’ you this and other things, If I hear nothing from you I shall know that I have your permission.” The note was signed Paul Asketh. Jane had received it, and three hours later Mra. Voss and Elinor had re- turned from the bedside of old Miss Voss, who this time had concluded, after all, that she would not die. In the course of the afternoon a ecard was brought to Elinor. She was “Miss Elinor Voss?” “I am Elinor Voss.” “Ah--a thousand pardons! that there is a cousin, a “a wildered, “Ah! ym 1 had the meeting at the hunt ball “The hunt ball! Impossil She turned as the door wi open. Asketh stood trans was Jane, It was the gir! wound him in inextricabl yet it wasn't? Th tawny hair was drawn the strange, ont « her (FAY © alluring eurves had left the lips vightly, I fear some mistake, Yon have Sister, pi rhaps.” marmiu? sister,” wie marvelous mass straightly wonderful life orreen vias back ; had gone £1 : 14 noobie, and almost as pale cheeks, “Not the hunt there, 1 the part Elinor, once, 1 40% of her cooks within two. Some new life | come into her. { bilities, sud sister w t I have changed my og 1 i the Inst day or seems to have She has great possi- if only she and her mother | give them a eof They sav that she ball Perhaps ti lavs later Mrs Aspi criminal face Three the country lanes leaned far out « n 1 Jane “Call that girl an ugly to face 1a one of was driving were | 14 1 to herself exclaimed the la well. See what eando! Elinor, will never hold a candle to her. I prophesy that Mrs, Paul Asketh will be in time the greatest town. So mucl for the erime of New York { Mercury. We hannpiness J ly lov and poor child, beauty in J ane HS —— . Amusing Form of Misspeech, In the Contributors’ Club, ir Atlantic Monthly, a writer speaks | a form of misspeech to which most of | us are occasionally subject——the ex change of syllables. A certain young | Indy, who, to her intense mortifica tion, often reverses her vowels thus, {says she is entirely unconscious of it, even after speaking. One summer evening was sauntering with a friend towards the village postoffice of the MNttle town where they were staying. they encountered an with a handful of letters, “Ah, good evening,” she said, in her peculiarly gracioas, suave man per. ‘‘Are you strailing out for your mole?” | The mystified young woman made | she acquaintance on. As soon as the friend could re exalting and cousuming at once, had | with her mother, and at sight of the | cover her gravity, she gasped, *'I struck him to-night, or else he was | going mad or some fever was upon | him, and to-morrow he should be in his bed with a trained nurse at his pillow, He laughed at these things inwardly to cheat himself, even while his eyes | followed connclessly the girlish figure | in the yellow gown followed the girl | with the mass of tawny hair and the | green-gray eyes. Ho caught a fow chance phrases | about her now aud then. Some man had asked her name of Mrs. Demayn, | “Oh, a great protege of Mrs, Aspin- | wall, She was to have chaperoned | namo she flushed a vivid erimson, Paul Asketh! She had not for { some months known Mra, Aspinwall, | and some of Mrs, Aspinwall’s friends, withont being intensely conscious of what that name represented, Why, hero was the man whom she had burned to meet, whom sho had hoped to see at the hunt ball, because of whom her disappointment ‘at her in- ability to attend that funotion had been keenest! How had he happened to come there that day? Excited anticipation ren riot in Elinor's charming head while she pnt an im proving touch to gown and hair, sided by the fluttering tingers of poor Mrs. ! | suppose you intended to ask Miss May | if she was strolling out for her mail ?" | The same young lady was relating a | | sad story of varions misfortunes which had overwhelmed a dear friend. | *"Think,” she concluded pathetic ally, “‘of losing husband, property and home at one swell foop!" | And a how! of laughter rent the roof. | cosai——— A Merchant’s Decline, He started a sixstory store, Then dropped to five and then to four; Could searcs baliove his eyes, And now he has a store no more, He p sddies goods from door to door, He dida’t advertise, «Boston Courier, On the way | | some inarticulate reply and passed | talking about, the flash of divine fire, | unpacking her satehel in the room | children, ! there runs what is called a “great | road,” kept in moderate repair and sometimes exe oding eight fect width, Half a journey Amoy lies the ‘“‘great road” that run day's almost straight from Pekin to Canton, The peculiarity of it corsists consecutive thirty yards same description, One part shing le, of 18 posed loose another paved, here it monnts on the top of a into a farmer plows up mudbank, there it descends narrow diteh I'he the highway to the size his field, or he will take into his for purposes where the road use South the Yang wheeled vehicle is out of North t Are among a variety of methods of tray ing the wheelbarrow pl part as a of locor na INCrense to coustruct a pond of -ste-n ‘ f DiIACE In t roads ue Means alol [49 hi a jelly, pushes the to kee ime to ti ’ WMITY A Inan in Wr « 4 rough district. on Standard. The Modern Baby, It seems that the dense, mby, content nouth, has given i ; round thambd in its * 10 thie with its highly ywrganizeq Jel us, 3 4 10081, stamp of Babies " nights to make eatnip ¢ ary of solic, but hysteria babies unnatural to tre: svinpiom £0 accom of the body Here He where wo avail and a heroic.— New panied by and other the ives NO remedy in | 100 teria, ~ Ou learned bread pills wonld be of lash of cold water too York Advertiser “{abie Telephone, The making ¢ ble telephons gine, and it bel rtment is 1 a porta- ry fire en- the sch cfliciency me will of the The pian is very sim- When thewngine arrives at the t will connect telephone which only weighs a pound, with the fire alarm line. In this way immediate reports of the fire can be sent to head juarters, additional engines ordered where the vas department. ple. fire one of the tly increas @ vy N 0 ireimen yt fie ONS, oceasion does not justify ealling ont an ent ro relay of apparatns and thus ancovering additional territory. The ase of the telephone will transfer the setive managemement of the whole fire department to the scene of the fire at which the department is at work. Chicago Herald. in being of the etter, and from “ in no 18 are—they be France!" and yet be the innt leader of most zouaves in the bril ariay. On one occasion, after several har struggles with an enemy io the de he found himself hi diers surrounded talion of Arabs snd havoe among the the 1 and by a Cholera was makin zounves, fift to & shook man without 2: nn Experiment. Mrs teeth Winslow { tion, aliays | Court Chamt | to ass the Karl's ( vives freshines Would Not Just ce Lawrence Pass a Brother® Accounts, , sitting in Supreme was asked the inate Will iam T. Lawrence, the Judge's brother as receiver, The Justice, after hear ing the application, denied the ers, vesterday, nocounts of | motion, add ing | brother. i “My brother John was a practicing atiorney in these courts for years, and in the twenty-one years that 1 have been on the bench I never appointed him a receiver or referee. 1 do not propose to issue an order, therefore, to pass the accounts another Make the application be fore another Judge, sod he will probably grant it.” —New York Times. of et eed ie Se Yoo WUE i ol Yc SAE poet pion pices HE U. S. Government offi= cially reports ROYAL Bak- ing Powder superior to all others in leavening strength. (Bulletin 13, ALI Depl) 500.) It is the best and most economical. ROYAL BAKING POWDER ©O., 108 WALL 8T., NEW-YORK, ger! Fi, weary sol long to the history of French 1 massive bat u f
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers