sShH i3SK! fcf' L 10 i the Old World to share the hardships :,the new: but the Teckless soldiers, traders adventurers "took them so-called wives i the West Indios and Caribbean Jands. women often as wicked and dancer- bin as ther were lithe and beautiful. Dona Hortense felt with all a woman's sensitive- sets to such surroundings the unuttera- lfcle sufferine which might come to 1'au 'line de la Chasie on account of her falling .Unto the power of Captain Cortes. True, .iCortes was apparently an exception to tne general rule among the men of Pensacola, so far as she knew. He had never consorted -with the most vicious even of the officers, and his life had appeared to be clean and noble. Still the danger seemed great; and besides she had taken Pauline at once into her heart as her child, and felt for her all the suddenly kindled solicitude and tenderness that such a relation under such circumstances could not fail to engen der in a breast so long deprived of every softer experience so dear to a true woman. It was therefore a matter to start hope in her over-apprehensive breast when the young man, instead of assuming the atti tude of a libertine, began to treat Pauline with all the delicate politeness of a consid erate and high-minded gentleman, who might become a very gallant and by no -means unsuitable lover. She had never yet t inquired into the antecedents of Pauline, ' nor had she so much as sought to know by what current ot destiny the unfortunate girl had been cast so far away from her native land; but it was not in the nature of things for Pauline to keep her secret. Indeed, Dona Hortense was at once surprised and dis mayed when the whole truth was poured into her ear. "Going all alone to Mobile to marry a French soldier?" she exclaimed, when Pau line had ended her story. "Dear child, do 70U dream what you are trying to do7 You can have no impression of the misery that you have escaped by falling into my hands instead of into the arras ot a brutal " "Hush!" said Pauline, with such com mand in her voice that the old woman lnnbpd nt her and started perceptibly. "Hushl Louis Doucet is not brutal. He is the very noblest and best man in the world. I would follow him all over the earth I" She sank back upon her pillows pale as a lily and trembling with the intense emotion aroused by her thoughts. "Pardon me forgive me, dear,' crim Dona Hortense, taking Pauline in her arms and kissing her. "I would not wound you for all the world. Doubtless your lover is all that you sav; but oh! my child, mv child, it is a dreadful, dreadful life. Think of dear France and the joyous existence ot even her working peasants, and then look at the desolation and the despair which hover Et. -overnsherel" As she spoke her shriveled C :!, .J Ami t. EnllnnrniiB, irIO lace was pmuicu u . , wj . touched with a hot, flame-like glow. "If I could go back if I could go back once if -.1 .......1 if i-n,i1il Ko tolintmia ar more, sue iuuwiw, .. ... w .-....-. E, to die and be buried beside my motherly Oh! little jraunne sweet cuiiu, uu j. jiu j. could save you, could bear you back to Prance " "But I do not wish to go back to France," Pauline interrupted. "I wish to go to Louis. I do not care to live if I cannot go to him." As if the mere suggestion of being taken back to France had given her sudden strength, resolve and courage, Pauline threw off the arms of hr companion and raised herself again to a sitting posture. "How far is it irom here to Mobile ?" she inquired in a voice so changed that the poor eld woman caught breath, as if almost suffo cating, and, could not answer. "It cannot be far," Pauline continued, "and I must go there. Who can take me?" The Dona clasped her hands and held them out with a gesture of supplication. When she could speak she said: "It is impossible. We are at war. Even now the commandant here is planning an expedition to capture Mobile." The girl sat for some moments gazing thoughtfully out of the window. Pres ently she turned quickly toward her com panion. "Please send word to Captain Cortez teat I should like to see him." She uttered these words witb the steadi ; ness and decision of one who has a well- defined purpose in view. The Dona recoiled. "Surely, no!" she exclaimed. "Xon do , not mean it. It must not be." f"Yes, I wish it immediately." "But, my child " "Lose no time,,but go send for Captain i Cortes." The old woman felt the sudden and great change in Pauline's manner and knew that it had a deeper significance than she could I comprehend at once; but although she more than suspected that it might be the begin- I ning of bitter shame for the girl she could t not refuse to grant her request. f "Don't, don't do this!" she urged with a piteous weakness in he voice. iou are too young to have any idea of the step you are about to take. Let me be your mother. my dear, dear child, and save ou from the t dreadful life you would plunge into!" , 1 Pauline answered with tender firmness, )- insisting upon seeing Cortes at once. f ''Well, well, it is always so," the Dona went on reflectively and sadly. "I was a girl not so very, very long ago, dear, and I gave up all for a man, all for love. Look i at me and at the life I live." She felt that her words were without ef- t feet on Pauline; she did not wait to hear the reply that might have followed, but arose and went to send a messenger to fetch Cap tain Cortes. An hour later the young officer, evidently not a little embarrassed, was shown into Pauline's presence. He stood before her, tall, respectful, handsome, his fine head on t covered and his clear eyes fixed inquiringly upon her. She moved her lips with a soundless ef fort at speech and made a motion lor him to sit down. He took the designated chair with the prompt manner of one obeying an ' order. Looking into his face gave Pauline cour age to say what was upon her mind, but even when the courage came the task was an extremely difficult one. She ielt that the request she was about to make must ap pear very strange, if not impossible of per formance, still she did not hesitate. In the directest and simplest way she told her story to the young officer, leaving out nothing, aud then in conclusion asked him to help ber. 1 "I know you are noble, kind and good," the said, looking at him steadily but with eyes whose deep and tender purity sent a thrill of inexpressible pity throngh him, "and I feel that I can trust you. Oh, sir, will you not help me reach Mobile? I have no one to turn to but you. It was you who ' saved me from the terrible danger, the hor rible death in the sea; save me now from this life which is worse than a thousand deaths and take me to my dear to my friends at Mobile!" It was hard for Captain Cortes to say what ne bad to say; but there was no honorable coarse for him to pursue sive that ot perfect frankness. He felt keenly his own situa tion, while his chivalrous nature burned with deep and strange sympathy fcr the sweet, brave invalid before hiin. It abashed him to thine that he had been nursing tender dreams in connection with this beautiful being whom he had snatched lrom the tumbling waves of the G ulf. Now that he knew her history, and understood her desire he saw, how fruitless, aud unmanly as well, would be any further thought of claiming Pauline's love; moreover it seemed , to him the very refinement ot mislortune , that he must acknowledge his inability to t aid her as she desired. "I should be glad and proud to do what you ask," he said with a sort of soldierly oluntness in his voice and manner, "but it is utterly impossible. The French do not ; respect us, nor we them. There can be no exchanceof courtesies between ns; so you V tee how my hands are tied in the matter." k Pauline clasped her hands and great tears dropped down her cheeks. Cortes saw her bitter disappointment with a sense ot 6ome- " Ihing like contempt lor himself on account j tf his powerless condition. "Believe me, Mademoiselle," he ex- pr claimed with sudden fervor, "I would riadiy give my me 10 serve yuu cicii fa the least degree." "I believe you, sir, and I thank you from Ihe bottom of my heart. You are nobly f - 1 c rrt l there Inifpwl no w.iv? Must I choose Jietween death' and the ac ceptance ot this-life now afforded, to me?" Something iifher tone and manner sent a shock throngh the young's man's breast "Within the past few minutes there had come, upon him the sweet, rich and yet sad dening experience of love and loss. Before him sat the fairest and loveliest apparition that had ever blessed his vision. In his heart she had set the fountains ot spring to flowing the song and the bloom to gush ing. The old, old story of the sudden com ing of passion and the sudden realization of its hopelessness had been told once more be tween the soft pulses of the sub-tropicbreeze. He bowed his head until his dark forehead touched the plume of his hat which rested on his knee. For one moment he gave way to selfishness,and tbethought swept through his mind that he might have his own way with fate. "I am sorry to have pained you," said Pauline presently. "I owe my life to you, and I fear that I have appeared ungrateful. Pray forgive me." Her words sounded to him like the rebuke of an angel He looked up and said, as if in seir-delense: "You owe me nothing but execration. It was I who sunk the vessel which was bear ing you to yonr lover. It was I who de prived yon ot'more than life. Oh, Madem oiselle, Mademoiselle." He checked himself with great effort and rising stood before her quite calm but pale, his eyes burning almost fiercely, his sun burnt cheeks showing thelinesof suppressed but almost over-powering emotion. "You did but your duty; I have thought all about it," she said, "and I do not blame you for it; but I am no prisoner of war,. be ing nothing but a poor girl whom fate has cast into your hands, wherefore it seems to mc that you might let me go in all honor." "I would not hold you one moment," he exclaimed quickly. "Yon are as free as I am; but there is no possible way for you to pass from her to Mobile. The thought is utterly untenable the thing is impossible and not to be dreamed of." No interview ever was more depressing and unsatisiactory to the parties holding it, Pauline ielt that it ended all hope, at least for the present, and she lay upon her couch disheartened and purposeless. Cortes went away thoroughly wretched and at war with himself. He was in love with Pauline; his warm, arrogant Spanish nature had broken the bounds at once and now there was no limit to the passion that possessed him; but his chivalrous sense of honor, though over whelmed, was immovable. The impression haunted him that, for the reason that Pauline was in his power, he ought to free her, and because ot his love for her Be ought to re store her to her lover. It was well to harbor these sentiments, but what lover could act upon them? SDays and weeks passed by, during which Cortes brooded over the situation. Now and again he resolved that he would at tempt to send Pauline to Mobile by some clandestine method, but as often he remem bered his duty as a soldier. The French at Mobile were the very incarnation of all that was hated by the Spaniards at Pensacola, and to do any kind act for one of them was repugnant to every pulse in a true Spanish soldier's veins. Doubtless the young Can tain's passion for his fair captive made this repugnance all the more fierce and bitter, for the thought of resigning that enptive to the arms of Louis Doucet, of the hated French garrison, was the refinement of tor ture Still he acknowledged in the deepest caves of his breast that duty of the highest and most sacred sort demanded that he should never rest until Pauline de la Chasie and Louis Doucet, separated by him, should be united by him. It is easy to see how, ordinarily, a struggle of this sort would end. Love, extol it as we may, is the hot-bed of a certain kind of unconquerable selfishness. Rare indeed are the instances where love has been self-sacrificing enough to turn over to its rival the object of its de sire. There were moments when Cortes would have made the sacrifice, and at all times he tortured himself between the flame of passion and the hot iron of conscience; but he was human, he found excuses for faltering and hesitating, nay even for what appeared to him harmless deception. Almost every day he found time to see Pauline and to offer her some delicate at tention. Meantime as the summer passed away Indian couriers began to bring word of preparations going forward among the French at Mobile for an expedition against Pensacola. "I have not a doubt that Bienville will at tack us soon," said Cortes one morning in September. "And he will take the town, and then !" exclaimed Pauline, clasping her hands and flushing suddenly. She was sitting by the window. Return ing health had made her form and her face doubly beautiful in the eyes of the young officer. "But he will not take the town," he re sponded. "Our force is very strong and our fortifications and fleet are far superior in guns and effectiveness to anything he can bring against us. No, we will destroy him, almost entirely." "No. no!" cried Pauline, "the French are always victorious. Are you sure they will come? Oh, butl pray that they will and then I shall be free! Ther will destroy you." Cortss smiled, but there was a deadly pang behind that smile. "You will be disappointed, Mad emoiselle," he said. "It is not possible." Pauline saw the smile, and instantly a flash of indignant resentment made her checks burn. "When my people come," she said, "I shall see how you will destroy them." "We are nearly 2,000." remarked he, still curling his lip a little, "and they are scarcely 600, Indians excepted. I tell you that they can do nothing, absolutely noth ing." Pauline sprang to.her feet. "You do not want me to be free J" she cried, her voice rich with passionate accusa tion. He arose and looked down at her with a curious mixture of tenderness and harshness in his face. At that moment he realized how fully he had determined that this girl should never go away from him. What would life be worth without her? Who was Louis Doucet, that he should hold the exclusive ritrht to such a prize ? Would not the water of the gulf be now rolling over f her it he, uortez, nad not saved -her I Mow ungrateful she was 1 Pauline, looking steadily into his eyes, read his thoughts. She saw the change in his features and manner, any felt that all hope was gone. "And not1 long ago you said that you would give your life to help me I" she cried, a bitter contempt ringing through her trembling voice. "I did iay that; yes, and I spoke truly," he replied, almost fiercely. "Even now. Mad emoiselle," and here his face swelled with the pressure of violent embtion, "even now I would acrifice more than life. I would cast away honor for you." He did not wait to hear what she would say in response to this, but turned and left ber with almost rnde abruptness. CHAPTER HL The 17th day of September, 1719, dawned on the bay of Pensacola with a slight fog, dim and gray, hovering over the water and fringing with fantastic trailing festoons the shores of the island. The fort on the hill behind the town loomed up quite grandly, and showed the projecting mnzzles ol its heavy guns, while the fleet in the bay and the earthworks on the island gave -an ap pearance of great military strength to the little Spanish post. Doubtless a feeling ol- periect security possessed the garrison, tor there was no sign of unusual vigilance, albeit on the evening before some Indian rnnners had come in to assure them that the Prench were advancing by both land and sea. The commandant at Pensacola was not aware that the Comptede Champmeslln had reinforced Bienville's little army at Mobile with a fleet ol three ships of the line, nor that a strong torce of Indians had been in duced to join in an expedition against Pen sacola by land. The routine of military discipline was kept up in a perfunctory way, while both the officers, and men of the Spanish garrison gave themselves over to, the dreamy and relaxing influence of the' rVmMK Wn rff rltur ther l-nrd Jn Vrj picturesque groups .under the grateful "shade of the trees, or sought the rude amusements offered by the low-roofed buildings wherein gaming and drinking were indulged in by the.verv officers whose orders prohibited snch indulgence. To Pauline life grew irksome and depress ing day by day. After the interview re corded in the foregoing chapter she saw no more of Cortes for a long time. The Dona Hortense, after exhausting everv means in her power to distract the girl's thoughts from the subject of going to Mobile, had given over the task in bitter grief and dis appointment. This gave Don Alphonso most excellent excuse, as he seemed to think, for much sarcasm at his wife's expense. "Your daughter," he was fond saying. "is certainly a model of dutifulness and gratitude. Just see how she honors all your wishes." "She is a girl, Alphonso, as I was once a girl. She has seen a man to love, as I did. He has beckoned, as you did, and she would follow, as I did. Will you tell me how much X honored my mother's wishes when " "Not much when you married me. That is true," he interrupted with a laugh which was devoid of mirth. "But after all have you not done fairly well?" "Perhaps then Pauline might do fairly well if she could go to her lover." "Let her go to him, her lover is Captain Cortes." "She does not love him." "Well, but she ought to love him; her life Is his, he snatched it from the very jaws of death. It is base ingratitude, it is soulless perfidy in her to reject him." "You do not understand women." "Yes, I understand them. This is no very rare instance ot their utter lack of a high sense ot obligation. Every dictate or conscience, every impulse of unselfishness would force' a hign-souled woman in Pauline's place to give herself to the one who so nobly earned the right to her love." "But she loves another." "Loves another! There is the gross self ishness I spoke of. She is thinking all the time of herself. That's the way with a woman. True gratitude, noble unselfish ness would address itself , to considering the happiness of her chivalrous and brave de liverer. All she cares for, however, is to gratify her own love." "And what a terrible mistake she some times makes by so doing!" "Granted," said Don Alphonso, rising and making a superb obeisance before his wife. He took his departure without lurther remark. Pauline was compelled to overhear most of this conversation, as she sat in an adjoin ing room, and it came just at the moment when it could affect her most strangely. With the swiftness of lieht her thoughts flashed back over all the kindness and un selfish nobleness of Cortes, from the moment when he took her in his arms, there amid the boiling waves, down to the pres ent, and something like a chill of self-abhorrence ran throngh her breast. She had not been kind to Cortes, nay, she had been bitterly unkind to him it now seemed to her. She had been absorbed in herself without room in her heart for any thought save that of ''gratify ing her own love," as Don Alphonso had said. How far from home she was, and all alone, with such a burden in her heart! The tension upon her nerves was greater now than at the time when she was clinging to the splintered spar in mid-sea. Again and again the words of young Cortes came to her: "I would sacrifice more than life. I would castaway honor for you." His proud, fine, passionate face, with its sudden flash of strange pallor after its heat of momentary anger, haunted her vision. She had not ex pected to see him again; but early on the morning of the 17th he came to the house and asked to see her. She met him with distrust of both herself and him. He "was pale, and his eyes showed that recently he had been suflering. "I have come, Mademoiselle," he began at once, speaking in the maimer of one who acts nnder the force of ill-suppressed emo tion with the necessity of haste upon him. "I have come to do what I cannot help do ing, what I have struggled not to do, but what cannot be resisted. Mademoiselle, I love you." In the old knightly style he went down upon his knees, his sword clank ing against the floor. "I adore you and I must tell you so. What word have you for me, Mademoiselle? Speak and let me live or die." Pauline could not command herself. She sat silent, the stupor of an overwhelming embarrassment upon her. "I have tried to Btav awav from vou." he went on, "but I have not been able to do it. You have filled my whole life; I can think of nothing bnt you. Oh, Mademoiselle, Mademoiselle, do not hate me, do not spurn me when I love you so." "I do not hate you, I do not spurn you, Captain Cortes' she exclaimed, the effort sending a rich sympathetic timbre into her voire. "You have been so noble and so good you have done so mnch for jne." His lace took on a look of hope and he reached forth his hand to take hers. In those days melodramatic things did happen. The jarring thunder of a heavy cannon rolled up from the bay and shook the house from root to foundation. Another and another crash were followed by the heavy pounding sound of falling round shot." Cortes was too good a soldier not to respond instantly to the summons of battle. In a moment he had sprung to his feet and was standing in a hearkening attitude. Like some perfect actress in a tragedy, more than like a startled girl in real life, Pauline sprang forward and flung out her arms with a cry more of joy than of terror. "They have come! They are here!" she exclaimed. "They have attacked the town!" Cortes did not hear her words; he saw only her wondrousiy lovely face and her arms outstretched toward him. "Darling!" he cried, and clasped her close to his bosom. Again,like the bursting of a thunderstorm, the cannons roared out their startling detonations. Trumpets were sounding, in exerv direction arose the noise and bustle of soldiery making ready tor battle. Cortes pressed one long kiss upon Pau line's lips and rushed forth to do his duty, leaving the dazed and trembling girl stand ing in the middle of the room. The fleet of the Compte ae Champmeslin had sailed into the bay, and was pouring broadside after broadside against the slight works on the island, while, at the same time, Bienville, at the head ot 600 men, was hastening bv land to attack the fort on the hill behind the town. The Dona Hortense, very little excited by an experience not in the least new to her, came into the room and put her motherly arms around Pauline. The girl returned the caress with a fervcr born of the emotion that was making a wild tumult in her breast. To her every cannon shot, as it hollowed and boomed, told a sweet story ot hope and love. She fancied that it was Louis Doucet's hand that was firing every gun; she even imagined that sho could hear his voice, vague and far, but clear and sweet, above the general din, calling to her to have courage. "He is coming! He is here!" she cried, with her head on the Dona's shonlder. "Be quiet, my child," was the calm an swer, "we cannot know what may be the end of this." They went to the window and looked out to see the heavy ships drawing in toward the town and firing as they came. The Spanish fleet was at anchor close to the mainland shore in such a position that its funs were unavailable. Soon enough the attery on the island was quite silenced. while at the same time arose the sound of guns and musketry in the direction of the tort on the hill. The Dnna recognized the battle yell of the Indians who were fighting under Bien--ville. She had heard that savage cry be fore, and knew well its meaning. "The Holy Virgin shield'us it they suc ceed." she murmured, showing excitement for the first time. "Oh, but they must succeed, they .must not tail !" cried Pauline. "And see! the ships are taking down their colors the French have won! Oh, Louis! Louis!" In tne hysteria of her joy she turned and ran oat of the house and down the little (treat toward the strand. Boats well manned were putting but from the French vessels to come ashore. Mean Jim fh' firing nHh f"rt on the h)IlWM iiAa , THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH?- -BCTNBAY? '-JWjZ thick and heavy, and the Indian allies of Bienville were making the air hideous with their howling. Pauline had rarely been abroad in Pensa cola, and the streets, such as ther were, were quite unfamiliar to her. She .had run forth without any definite object in view, though a vaguely outlined thought of 'find ing Louis Doucet among the assailing sol diers was certainly uppermost in her mind. The Dona followed her, but so swiftly did the fly she was soon out of sight. "Oh, my poor, poor childl" wailed the old woman, stopping all out of breath and wringing her hands. While she stood there Captain Cortes, leading a small body of men, approached her. The intrepid young officer, seeing that his vessel must fall into the enemy's hands, had hurried his crew into th.e small boats and brought them ashore with a view to taking possession of a small block-house in the upper part of the town. "You herel" he exclaimed, with the blnntness and sternness of authority. "And where is Mademoiselle Pauline?" "She is gone I do not know where she ran away Oh! Ohi" moaned the trembling and weeping woman. "Gone!" he echoed. "Gone! which way? Where? Tell me be quick!" Dona Hortense simply lifted her hands and closed them over her ears, as if to shut out the dreadful sounds of the fighting. The earth seemed to rock and palpitate; the air was sulphurous with the dritting films of powder smoke. "Yonder is the young lady," Exclaimed one of the men, pointing with his cutlass. Pauline was standing in the middle or the little street apparently bewildered. Her head Was bare and her long, bright hair was floating on the wind. She was an apparition to make a man forget battle and danger and death. Cortes ran to her and laid his hand on her arm. "Mademoiselle," he said, very firmly, but with infinite tenderness, "come with me' Then he turned to bis men, and bidding them follow, he started toward the block house. Suddenly he thought of the Dona. Delay was full of danger at the moment.bnt he halted again and sent a man tobring the old woman, who still stood weeping where he had left her. As the little company resumed its march toward the blockhouse a great increase of the din was observable up at the fort, and at the same time a body of men came charging down the street that ran from the hill to the beach of the bay. This was a small detain ment of French soldiers headed by a tall young officer, who swung his sword around his head and encouraged his followers by the most vivacious example and spirit Cortes saw that it was too late to reach the blockhouse. He quickly put the women in the rear and formed his men. Pauline's eyes had seen and recognized the young French leader. "Ob, Louis! Louis!" Cortes heard her cry out, "Here I am! Cornel Cornel" Did the French officer also really hear her? It appeared so, for with a loud shout he leaped forward and hurled himself with his men down upon the now closely mar shaled Spaniards. In an instant had begun a close and deadly struggle, a hand-to-hand combat with sword and musket butt CHAPTER IT. Pauline found herself in the arms of her watehful guardian, the Dona, who was praying and crying at the same time. They were rudely pressed backward by the recoil of the men when the French detachment struck them at full charge. There was a 'crash of blows and a volley of horrible oaths mingled with cries of rage and pain. A man came reeling out of the crowd and fell at Pauline's feet, where he writhed for a moment, with the blood leaping from a wound in his neck, and died face downward biting the sand of the street The nearest house was a low, mud-daubed structure, the rudest form of dwelling in nse by the colonists. The dcor stood open with the threshold on the level of the ground. Into this dark room Dona Hor tense pushed Pauline just in time to escape a volley of pistol shots fired by a half dozen of the Frenchmen. The Compte de Champ meslin had run his ships in close to the mainland, and now began raking the town with broadsidesatsbortrange. Theballswent bounding along the ground and tearing through the frail buildings with that pecu liar suggestion of resistless energy so well remembered by every experienced soldier. The roof overhead was shattered. Down from a long, ragged, diagonal rent fell a shower of boards and splinters. "Holy Mary save.usl" prayed the Dona, sinking upon her knees and lifting her clenched hands. Pauline, strange to say, felt no fear. From the beginning she had been in that numb and bewildered state which often comes upon one in the midst of overwhelming danger. She went to the doorway and looked out. The combatants, French and Spanish, were all mingled together fighting hand to hand without regard for discipline or order. Blows were falling thick and fast; swords clashed with swords; clubbed blunderbusses rose and fell with such, sounds as would, under ordinary circumstances, sicken the strongest heart She looked on possessed by a subtile fascination, feeling little ot the true horror of the occasion. With the strange double power of the mind at such times she was noting every detail of the strnggle before her, whlie;at the same in stant she remembered all the long series of events by which she had been led to take upon herself this life of incomparable ex citement and danger. The vines and gar dens of Provence with the roses and the odors, the dear old days of love and joy, the sunshine, the shade, the moonlight on the dnsky orchards, the church bells and all the sweet incidents and accidents of home life, came upon the field of her, vision and shimmered before her, dream-like and yet so real, a fine idealization of her girlhood's dearest ex periences. Through the roar of cannon and the clangor of swords, above the yelling of wild savages and the oaths of Cbristians.she heard the bubbling of the Rhone and the mellow songs of the nightingales in the leafy, odorous closes beyond the Avignon. Sweet words that Louis Doucet had murmured in her ear, the pressure of his hand, the be trothal kiss, a thousand touches of sentiment and of gentle romance thrilled her again. And yet there were the pools of blood in the street, red pools that slowly sank away into the sand, and there were the fiercely strug gling men trampling their dying fellows as they iought. Strange that the fragrance of the early autumn roses growing and blowing in a neighborlngplot should have impressed her senses at such a .time, but the sweet breath came over the scene of terrible passion and brought into her consciousness its touch ot pleasure despite the awful strain of what she was witnessing. Louis Doucet and Captain Cortes met face to face, and crossed srrords near the middle of the little street The Spaniard knew his man. Pauline's cry of recognition awhile ago had told him who was the swift-footed and handsome young leader of the French detachment. As for Doucet, he knew noth ing more than that an enemy worthy of his steel was before bim. A voice that he had heard a few moments before had seemed to him to utter his name with a tweet tender ness that recalled, in some strange way, the homesickeess of his first year of absence from France. It was no time for gentle re flections now: the voice could notreallv have called him, he thought, and the mere flash of nostalgia passed as quickly as it came. His sword rang sharp and clear on that of Cortes. The two men glared at each other, the ooncentrated hatred of yean of war and hardship burning in their eyes. The meaning of inch a look can never fall short of deatn They were well matched in every way, Cortes was a trifle the taller, but Doucet ap peared rather more compactly built than his adversary. Both were sufficiently heated by previous exertion to make their blood twift and their muscles ready. No'tlme was lost; the fight was desperate from, the beginning, neither combatant at first thinking of anything but rushing upon and bearing down the other. Both. how. 'ever, discovered very toon that it was neces sary to have a care for self-defense at well as for attack. Thev fenced fnriontlv and adroitly, neither giving an inch, utterly .forjtfnl of wht wnspnlnponnronnd fhpm. . . - ' - V ,&,.. t'. . ' A u'iJ1 "&aV SSiir.V. A' Mi.PS their whole souls focused, so to speak, in the one desire to kill and, by killing, to live. Cortes was aware that Pauline was near by and probably looking on. The thought in some way nerved him powerfully. She should not see Louis Doucet vanquish him; he would show her that a Spaniard for once was superior to a-Frenchman. Doucet had no such extra stimulus; but his was an iron frame and his coolness and courage needed no aid when a Spaniard dared cross weapons with him. With the dexterity drawn from long practice and with the fierce fury of young tigers thirsting for each other's blood, they struggled back and forth and round and round, while their companions, fighting quite as madly, swept on down the street leaving them to occupy the already corpse-cumbered and blood stained ground. In those days soldiers of the better class knew the use of the sword and were over-proud of the knowledge. Under the excitement and exhilaration 01 a hand to hand combat the accomplished swordsman always feels that his strength is doubled; but the peculiar circumstances attending the struggle between Cortes and Doucet added immeasurably to this feeling. Each found the other an antagonist whose vigor and swiitness made every moment a crisis and whose steadfast gaze caught in advance every motion of wrist or "body. Cortes, in what may be safely called a sub conscious way, recalled in the midst of the fight what he had said to Pauline about sacrificing life and even his honor to serve her. Strange that at the same time he could see, by indirect vision, just beyond Doucet a dead man lying on the sand in the road. The face was upturned and dis torted, the arms outstretched. Like a dark shadow, shot across his brain the thought: "Shall I soon be lying here in that con dition?" It was not startling, it was more like an idle waft of suggestion, gone as soon as it came. Both men became aware presently that the cannonading has ceased and that the rattle of musketry was no longer heard. A great calm had lallen after the storm the battle was over and the Spaniards to the number of 1,800 had surrendered themselves prisoners of war. One Spaniard, however, was not yet con quered; one Frenchman was still battling lor victory, CHAPTER V. Louis Doucet was the better swordsman, it appeared, when it came to the test of en durance and steadfastness of attention. It must have been that the knowledge of Pauline's presence and the thoughts en gendered by the probability that she was witnessing the struggle somewhat distracted the nerve of Cortes, or it may have been the persistence of the dead man in lying there in the sand in the line of hit vision, for he' at last lost his guard and the quick, point of Doucet's sword pierced his breast He scarcely felt the wound, however, and quickly springing back he recovered him self and made' a furious rush upon his an tagonist It was at this moment that Doncet'a eves in some way caught a glimpse of Pauline's face as she stood in the low, dark doorway of the cabin. The glance cost him dear. With the celerity of light the Spaniard's blade found a bloody sheath. Out irom the doorway sprang the young girl, letting go a short wail and holding up her white arms as she flung herself between the bleeding men. The Dona followed, calling upon the Virgin and laying hold of Cortes with a desperate energy. It was too late now to renew the fight for loss of blood was making the limbs of Cortes sink nnder him. He tirned blind and fell upon the sand pale and motionless. Pauline had but time to throw her arms about her lover and call him by name whefi he, too, sank down with the blood spurting from his wound. Bienville, accompanied by a number of officers and a squad of soldiers for body guard, came along the street a little later and found the two women nursing the heads of tne fallen men. He halted and made some inquiries; then ordering a surgeon and some attendants to remain and examine further, he passed on, going to have a con ference with the Compte de Champmeslin. Dona Hortense begged . the surgeon to order the bleeding men taken to her house. She led the way, praying as she went. Poor Pauline had tainted, and was borne along in the arms of a stalwart soldier. It was a strange procession moving through the silent, storm-shattered town. It is recorded that Louis Doucet and Captain Cortes both recovered; but Doucet was never afterward able to be a soldier, iuouku ne iivcu tu ue a very uiu man. iie and Pauline were married at Mobile by a priest called Father Roman, and soon after ward they returned to France and made their home in Provence, amid the scenes of their childhood, and in the very house made holy to them by their betrothal. The legend further says that their children numbered 11, 7 of which were sons; the others, pre sumably, were girls. The subsequent career of Captajn Cortes is not certainly known, bnt in an old, though not well authenticated, chronicle preserved at Seville mention is made of an officer of that name who, "after valiant service in the Floridas and in many other countries wherein he followed the Holy Cross, was granted an estate in Mexico, near by Vera Cruz, where he lived and died unmarried, always true to his king and to the Holy Church; and it was the pro ceeds of his estate, bequeathed for the pur pose, that built the Convent of the Sacred Heart." Recently, while sojourning in Pensacola, I spent some golden April days, with the record in my hand, trying to locate as near as possible the exaot spot whereon Doucet and Cortes fought and fell. If ever you chance to visit that picturesque and charm ing little city by the gulf it may please you to walk up the main street toward the site of the old fort on the hilt When you reach a rather narrow, flower-fringed cross street about half way on your journey, turn into it to the right and go forward" until you come to a small garden on the left On the flank of this garden, or flower plot, you will see a low, home-like, old-fashioned cottage, over whose wide veranda climbs a rose-vine of wonderful lux uriance, heavy with masses of strange ly fragrant roses. Standing on the sidewalk nearly In front of this cottage, turn your face toward the bay and let your eye) seek and rest npon the tallest spire in sight This done, let your gaze fall straight down until it reaches tne ground some ten yards in front of you.- That it the spot Near by is a mulberry tree, a little beyond stands a clump of oleander, with a hedge of spirea and crape myrtle straggling away from it You will feci the breeze from the Buccaneer Islands blowing over yon, a mocking bird will ting in the moss-hung live oak yonder, the bay will glimmer and toss its foaming waves and over all will hang a sky as blue and pure as that ot Provence itself. One hundred and seventy years may not be a large part of the past, but certainly large enough to have compassed the growth of the greatest nation of the earth. It in telling this story I have preserved one in cident of that history, surely the telling has not been in vain. Such bits of romance terve to show ns how far our civilization is removed from that which molded the lives and directed the loves of those whose for tunes I have found it a pleasure to record. TUB XXS. Copyright, 18S9: all rights reserved. Could Hot Afford a Hat. Clothier and Fnrnliher. J Dashaway I hope you'll excuse me for saying it, Prettyman, but that hat yon have on Is positively disreputable. Why in thun der don't you get a new one? Prettyman The fact if, old man, I can't afford it By the way, come around to my tailor's with, me, win yonr i. want to order me a nut Earilr Prof table. Pnck.1 Misa Begreen I d 'ties how the ocean .steamers can 'afford tojtrantport people inch along djstance, andVboard them, too, at such a low. price. Mr. Pegreen (who Vhu beta' aoross) Bard doesn't cost mudh. ' " . n- -. 1889. THE DIFFICULT TASK Is the One That is Always Host Highly Begarded. the DAYID AND BETHLEHEM'S WELL Eot. Georga Hodges Explains a Yery Im portant Distinction. A COMMON ATTE1BDTE OP GOD AND MAN IWniTTEJf rOB THX DI6PATCn.: It was in a time of war. David was fight ing the Philistines. David and his men held the rocky hills, and the Philistines Were in the green valley. And one day when the harvest sun was hot, and shade was scanty, and the battle long and weari some, David grew very thirsty. And he thought, as thirsty people wtll, about. the sweet taste of cool water. He remembered a well at Bethlehem, beside the village gate. He had played around it as a boy. The trees grew near It, the winds blew over it, and the clear water, deep in the rock, was the coolest and sweetest in the world, to David's taste. He looked out over the tents of the enemy, afar into the green valley, and he fancied that he could almost see the little village, with the well beside the gate. And he spoke and said half to himself, "Oh, that I had a drink of water from the well of Bethlehem." And three men heard him three stout soldiers of his army and away they started for the well. The whole host of thePhilistineslaybetween,nd Bethlehem was the enemy's headquarters. Nevertheless, these heroes made their way through the entire army of the Philistines, and got a cup o'f water from that well and brought it back. It reads like a story of the days of chivalry. And what dia David do? He took the cup as if it were the chalice in a sacrament, and poured the water rever ently out upon the ground, like a libation in a sacrifice. He would not drink it "He would not drink thereof, but poured it out unto the Lord." . But why? It was the same water of which David had drunk often and care lessly. The look of it, the taste of it, had not altered. If it had been analyzed no chemical change would have been dis covered. It was just a common cup of com mon water. Again and again at Bethle hem, beside the well, one friend and an other had given David the same kind of cup filled with the same kind of water, and had offered it with the same gesture and the same words. And he had never refused it before. THE DIFFEBENCE. It was very good water, but it had never occurred to him berore that there was any thing sacred about it But now he could not drink it. Now it was somehow changed, consecrated, sacred. He could only stand, thirsty as he was, and pour it all out upon the ground, with tears in his eyes. Why? Not because there was any difference in the gift, but because there was a difference unspeakable in the giver and in the giving. The story turns upon one of the universal truths of human nature. A large part of tne secret ot value It dimculty. Among the hills of Switzerland the best gift which a lover can give his lady is a sprig of edel weiss. The edelweiss is not a particularly beautiful flower, but it grows in particu larly difficult plaoes. It takes long, hard and dangerous climbing to get it, and so it is a gift just as the cup of water was which means something. It means difficulty. The gift is consecrated by the difficulty of the giving. These il lustrations touch, it is true, the exceptional tide of life, but the truth for which they ttand holds good everywhere and every day. For everyone of us, nnless we are -rery selfish, the value of a gift depends upon the love of the giver, and the love of the giver is shown by the pains which he has been willing to take to get the gift Now. by studying the nature of man we make discoveries about the nature of Ood. God has, indeed, told us about Himself, but always and of necessity in terms drawn from our own experience. That is the only language which we can understand. We must by the constitution of our minds think of God as the superlative of man, the posi tive. We take the best in the nature of man, and, multiplying it by infinity, gain an idea of God. AS IHFIN1TE TBUTH. And so this truth about ourselves, is a truth also, we may believe, about God. Whatever we do easily does not greatly please God. He thinks as little of it as we do of easy and umimportant things done for dr. It would displease Him it we were to leave easy things undone. Because they are so easy there is so much the more reason for doing and not neglecting them. But we are not to think that we have really done anything for God, when we have done only easy things. It is the hard things which please God. Let me say that over again, the whole message of the sermon is in that sentence; It is the hard things which please God. The hard things please God not for their own sake not because they are hard, that was the mistake of the old ascetics. They did a great many hard things under an im pression that pain somehow pleased God; that the more uncomfortable human life could be made, the closer it approached to' the ideal or me which uod had. It would be a very hard thing to hold yonr hand in one position, pressing the finger tips against the palm, until the nails should grow through the festered flesh. Bnt that would not please God. There would be nothing about such an act except its difficulty. It would be a sign of nothing else but the per severance and endurance and foolishness of the doer. David would not have applauded the heroes of that adventure, if they had simply done that daring feat for the sake of doing it. God does not want us to do hard things just for the sake of doing them. It is true that there is a good deal said in the Bible about the difficulty of the Chris tian life. We are promised tribulation. We are told to beware when all things are going smoothly and all men are speaking well of us. We are assured that life is, as the old Persian called it. the Path of the Two Destinies: that the right side of the path may be known by its excaeding nar rowness and difficnlty. and by the small number of the travelers upon it, and that the easy and comfortable and popular side of the path leads to a destiny from which may God deliver us. We are reminded that they only are worthy of their Master who deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow Him. SHE OEEAT ZXAVPIA The central fact in the Christian religion is the crucifixion of Christ, and the most sacred symbol is the cross. The true Chris tian life is full of difficulty. You remember the beautiful and significant story of St Martin's dream. A great light filled his room, and a shining vision, as of the Christ, stood beside the saint And he saw a glori ous chariot of fire like that which carried the old prophet from the banks of the river Jordan to th,e fair borders of the River of Life, and he heard a voice bidding him en ter, for hit mother had come to take him alo to the realms of joy. And St Martin, lifting his foot to step into the chariot looked at the heavenly vision of the Lord Christ and look again, and drew back. "Where is the print ot the nails?" he said. For the hands were soft and fair. There were no scan there of any pain. "Where U the print of the niilt?" And ' the vision vanished. It was not the Christ, but the fiend. Such a vision entices us a vision of an easy Christian life, of a life unmarked by any print of the nails of the cross. But the vision is a lie. There is no place for ease and self-indulgence in the Christian life. The Christian life for every nuui and woman who it honestly living it is full of difficulty. But this eleseat of difficulty andbere it whatlaskynu to notioc-thls element of 4 ft-T 1 Bl.jiiiJtui.tSftj. i. " .f&.Afi.'Va.'"..-' '. . f.Ji . . .. 1 ... . .. a.4 .. iWiMlrlrTlii'TTtaTHriniTrM 11 aLi 1 TaaW'iiMW i Ui'iliJi Til .-4j' t- iinfflWiJtiataji difficulty is not one which God-has added in any arbitrary way. God has not deliber ately made the ideal. Christian life hard, as a retreating army cuts down trees and flings them across the path to impede the progress of the pursuers. God doesn't pile up hard things in our path, as the inquisitors laid the redhot ploughshears in the way for the Queen to walk over with bare feet o that they could see whether she was good or not NECESSAEr CONDITIONS. No, the' difficulty is there in the nature of things. The teacher doesn't insist upon all the hard text books, out of any delight in the toil of ihe scholar. The hard text books are simply the necessary conditions of knowledge. All those monotonous and wearisome exercises which small fingers get so tired ot are not appointed, as the little players sometimes think, for the sake of their difficnly, in order to make the study of music hard. They are the necessary con dition of learning music. The perplexing conjugations of the German verbs were not invented by the grammarian. They grow. They a-e in the grammar because they are in the language. They have to be mastered not as a piece of mental labor,but as a neces sary condition of understanding German speech. Work, self-denial, perseverance, are the necessary conditions of any kind of success, just as climbing is the necessary condition of getting to the top of a hill. And the difficulties of the religious life are only the necessary condition of follow ing Christ and of obeying God. It is like this: God wants us to love him. He wants as to be loyal to Him. .He wants us to live after a certain high ideal. But we cannot be loving and loyal toward God or follow this divine ideal withont doing hard things, any more than we can learn without studying or ascend a hill without climbing. By nature we please ourselves. By nature the lower part of ns masters the higher. We must say "no." We must do hard things if we will obey the will of God. Gods will is so high that we cannot obey it withont trying, and trving hard. It is not easy to be loyal to God. The world, the flesh and the devil get in between us and every act of loyalty, as the Philistine army stood between the hero and the well. Now comes the test of loyalty. Are we loyal or not? Are we loyal and loving enough to fight onr way through these 'opposing forces of the world, the flesh and the devil, and do that loyal thing? If we are, then we show God how much we love Him. The hard things which we are willing to do in order to obey Him testify to that And for that reason, not for their own, sake, but as conditions of all worthy living simply as symbols of our law lor that reason only, the hard things please our Heavenly Father. God is not a taskmaster. God js our dear loving Father. -He does not like to see us staggering under burdens and carrying crosses no, but He does like to see us loyal to Him, desirous of pleasing Him, eager to do for Him however hard the deed. He doesn't want us to seek for hard things to do, but he does want us, when the hard things come in the way.bravelyand lov inglv to do them. He likes to see our love, and He sees it when we hold fast to our loyalty and keep his word, and do His will even in the midst of difficulty. Geobge Hodges. THE TELOCITY OP LIGHT. We Sao the Stars as.Tbey.Were Three Years A so. The Touth'i Companion. Light moves with the amazing velocity of 185,000 miles a second, a speed a million timesas great as that ofariflebullet It would make the circuit of the earth's circumfer ence, at the equator, seven times in one beat of the pendulum. For a long time light was thought to be instantaneous, but it is now known to have a measurable velocity. The discovery was first made by means of the eclipse of Jupi ter's satellites. Jupiter, like the earth, casts a thadow, and when his moons pass through it they are eclipsed, just as our moon is eclipsed when passing through the earth's shadow. Jupiter's shadow far surpasses in magni tude that of the earth. His moons revolve around him mnch more rapidly than our moon revolves around the earth, and their orbits are nearly in the plane of the planet's orbit Consequently they all, with the ex ception of the fourth and most distant satellite, pass through the planet's shadow and are eclipsed at every revolution. Roemer, a Danish astronomer, made in 1675 some curious observations in regard to the times ot the occurrence of these eclipses. When Jupiter is nearest the earth, the eclipses occur about 16 minutes earlier than when he is most distant from the earth. The difference in distance between the two points is about 185,000,000 miles, the diameter or the earth's orbit, or twice her distance from the sun. It takes light, therefore, 16 minutes to traverse the diameter of the earth's orbit, and half that time to span the distance be tween the sun and the earth. Light is thus shown to travel 185,000 miles in a second, and to take eight minutes or more exactly, 500 seconds in coming from the sun to the earth. It follows that we do not see the sun until eight minutes after sunrise, and that we do see him eight minutes after sunset When we look at a star we do not see the star as it now is, but the star as it was several years ago. It takes light three years to come to us from the nearest star, and were it sud denly blotted from the sky we should see it shining there for three years to come. There are other methods of finding the velocity of light, but the satellites of Ju piter firstrevealedits progressive movement AB0OT EXPECTORATION. Aside From Beta a FII1I17 Habit, It Eidaa Cera the Health of Other People. The Tooth's Companion. Aside from its being an exceedingly filthy habit the custom of free and careless expec toration involves dangers to health which are not generally understood, but which are nevertheless in no sense fanciful. It is well established that the poison of certain diseases appears in the expectora tion. The germs of consumption are known to be minute, rod-like, vegetable bodies, visible only by the aid of the most powerful microscope. In the matter expectorated by those afflicted with this disease the germs are met witn in large numbers, ay experi ment it has been determined that they are very tenacious of life, and can be destroyed only by certain flnids or by exposure to a high temperature for a considerable length of time. It is easy to see, therefore, that if the ex pectoration from the lungs is allowed to lie exposed till it becomes dry, the germs will be taken up and scattered abroad by the air currents, and in this way a fruitful source ol contagion will be provided. Fortunately, most people in good health remain unaffected by the germs which have found entrance into the body. It is only when the powers of resistance are weakened by some defect of the constitution, or when some unusually favorable opportunity for infection has been given, that the poison gains a mastery and produces disease. When we consider that in a hall of mod erate size, which ha been occupied by an audience for an hour or more, there are mil lions of germt of various kinds, tome of which, under favorable conditions, are ca pable of producing disease, then the wisdom of such a provision of nature becomes ap parent No doubt everyone hat felt a certain dis gust at the hawking and spitting which is met with to a greater or lest extent in all publie places, and it is well fgr everyone to know that there are excellent sanitary rea sons for the observance of a rule which good breeding and a care for the feelings of others ought to be sufficient to enforce. It is in the discovery of the real causes of disease that we shall most surely find the valuable ounce of prevention. If we must expectorate, let us at least refrain frost doing so, In publio places. Bclf.DaaUI. Philadelphia Frets. lis easy to forget yourself When notalae is at stake"; S vary hard, whaathtraUptlt, And vabulm to aaka. PiSTIMESJOLEffiT. A Variety of Games in England for AH Seasons of the Year. CRICKET THE M0KARCE OF ALL. Paper Chasing a Sport That Should ba Imported to America. SOME 7fil AKCIEXt INSTITUTIONS 1 wan-UK roit thi dispatch.'. The games of the Britisher are many and various. From the lowly chuck-farthing to the lofty cricket, there are games the very enumeration of which would cover whole pages. I verily believe that our trans-Atlantic brothers have a distinct pastime for every day in the year. But of course only a select few of these games merit considera tion. Every season has its peculiar game suitable to the climate; but it is only in the great public schools that the precise order of rotation is strictly observed. In winter and early spring football reign supreme. Most Americans know how foot ball is played; many of them, no doubt, have practiced it themselves. The foot ballist dons a tight Jersey; knickerbockers generally flannel, long stockings and stout shoes. Thus equipped he joins his side usually 15 in number, and doe his best ac cording to his position on the field, to drive s spherical leather ball through the coals. The ball is about the size of a man's head, and varies in shape. Those who play "Associa tion" rules use a round ball, while the fol lowers of the "Rugby" rules, by far tha most popular in England and Ireland, pre fer an oval one. The main difference between the two great sects into which the football world it divided is, that the Rughy rules permit their votaries to take up the ball with their hands and carry it, while the association rules forbid all touching or lifting with ths hands. It would be impossible in my allotted space to enter into the minutlo: of of the great winter game. Suffice it, that the amount of running about and the con stant hard work which football engenders, make it the warmest of gomes; while it ia just sufficiently dangerous to make it dear to the average youth. RESEMBLES BASEBALL, Before spring a. variety of games obtain before cricket and tennis appear. Amon these minor sports is one called "rounders, which is almost exactly similar to baseball. It is played at Eton and Harrow and in tha great Jesuit colleges; but beyond school walls it is little known. Racquets, hand ball and fives, all played in high-walled courts, are other spring games. The scor ing of racquets is like that of tennis, and the implements used are a wooden bat and soft ball. With summer comes cricket and the bis; county clubs play matches and return matches incessantly. The famous Aus tralian team goes over every other year, and generally manages to beat the mother coun try into fits. The gentlemen of England play the professional cricketers at "Lords" the famous ground of the Midddlesez Cricket Club; and this annual match vies in interest with the Eton vs Harrow, and, the Oxford vs Cambridge matches. The three great cricketing counties in England are Notts, York and Surrey, and one of these is generally champion ot England. In Ireland the cricket playing is alwaya very fierce. The team sent over here last year by the Emerald Islanders was not by any means a representative one, inas much as it was made up altogether of gen tleman players, and contained not a singla professional. The rules of cricket are too well known over here to need any descrip tion, and the same may be said anent lawn tennis, the other creat summer eame. Tennis is played in country places mnch. more than cricket, because it requires but two to pake a good match, while a really good cricket match cannot be got up under' 11 a side. QUITE A GAME. It is all nonsense to call tennis a lady's game. Of course ladies plav it, but when two muscular specimens ot British human ity stand on opposite sides of the net then is quite as much exertion and quite as much strength required for tennis as tor any other game. Autumn brings football back ones more, and it is played throughout the win ter, except daring the weeks that ice pre vails, when curling, hoctey and the various ice games take its place. There are a few pastimes indigenous to particular portions of the British isles. Among these may be mentioned burling the national game of Ireland. Of old, high, kings and mighty chiefs took part in hur ling matches but now the sport is mostly confined to the peasantry. I know of no" finer sight than a determined hurling match. There are generally some' SO men on each side, and the game is played with long sticks curved and thick at the extremity.and a hard ball, in shape similar to a base ball. Hnrling is a very dangerous game and few players escape without severe bruises. A kind of mounted hurling is polo, a garat much played in military circles. The play ers riding ponies specially trained, and armed with long mallets, try to drive a small white ball through their adversaries goal. Polo is extremely risky, and in volves great expense, as the ponies have .to be changed over and over during the match. Golf, which is a Scotch tgame, requires good eye and some muscular power. I oaya played it more than once, but could never see any particular attraction in spending one's time hitting balls in pits or hollow v with slender and slightly curved sticks i tuch being the principal part of the game, A POPULAK PASTIME. If paper-chasing can be called a game, it is certainly one of the most popular. Two swift runners, lightly clad, set out into tha open country, laden with bags containing-torn-up paper. These they scatter after them at intervals as they run crossing hedge and ditch, stream and fence on their way. When the "hares," at they arei called, have had a fair start, the "hounds" pursue, following the trail of the scattered papers. There may be any number of "hounds" I have seen a field of 136 set out on an eight-mile chase. I think this) game would be peculiarly suitable to Amer ican youth in the fall and the early spring. Croquet once a popular game, is n reckoned "slow" in England, and is playe&r by old maids and country curates. The ancient game of bowlsstill snrvivesin quiet country inns, and on the close clipped, village greens in the west of England. Skittles and beer are, as they were in tha days of Shakespeare, the dearest pleasure of the Hodges of Southern England. They will swill their beer or as wa would call it "ale," and roll their wooden balls y among the pint from early morn to dewy eve. ' Quarters taff Is still preserved in Berk shire and Wiltshire. It is played with two.' oak cudgels, and the object of the .player. is to raise a piece ot skin on his opponent's,' crown. The moment blood appears the) match la decided. But the list of minor games would startle the reader with its numbers; and the pastimes I have already referred to are the only ones which are at all widely distributed. The only English! games proved to have been in existence ia early times are football and bowls, while in'' Ireland hnrling is mentioned by the ancient poets as early as 200 B. C. One tact Is pretty certain, namely that 7 the English, Scotch or Irish boy need never ' be at a loss for a game. Peseoscte QriUi," A Betort la Kind. Amerlea.1 Apropos ol turned-up noses, in mors senses than one, the American colony la Paris hat a story of an airy parresee who, to plain "Mrs. Jonathan Smith," added oa her cards "nee JIontmorencL" One of these she had occasUn to tend with soma message to a grnfl old Englishman,, who luatuBti: CAPTAIN JOH JOXM, wcmvwai "i-tffc