etzvo , :'- - :tJtv.v•woseMimOr:vs• . tl s ; 6 ONTRO PA 3 1 1 87 SE APRIL 4,9 t*tigt Y A atl tikki§titi 4 , )k - 3 M , • • ;MY Wirt ANT) , It r i AO BY STO I NEr i LLf JAC4.spNi , - • 1 Written while an artillery officer in Ate*ico. .• v., The tattoo beats, the likbtal'ilre; k6ne;,s., Th 4 Quip rirOundin slumber heal The Right with solemn paCe 'Moves • The,shadostrs thieltbn'thi.the But €lCep my weary eyeiltittlt And sad , uneasy thoughts arise. J think of thee,'o dearest o .Whose love my early Me bath blest, Of thee—of hint-Ottr baby one, , Who slninbera gentle breast, God of tlintender,drail and lone, • Oh, guard the tender sletper's refit: And hover gently; 'lnver near, To her whose watchful eye is-wet, To mother, wife—the doubly Ind hnse young' heart hav,e freshly met Two streams of love, soslegp_a,pd clear , , And aiheq . „4.r diloopi* . tkijit .g o t irci Nov; while she kneels before thy throne; Oh!. teach her, Ruler oflthe ski* , That Allike s kTAYWest A phne •Enittli 4jgtillealtlttwerrii filll or rise, 140 tear is wept to thee unknown, No hair is lost, no sparrtivii dies— That thou canst stay.o.9 r n thless..ttands Of :dark diaea.lß.!-Alttoo lirpyte*ln. I That.only by thy stern co mands The battle's lost—the solder That from the distant aea or land Thon brings the wlfntlprtr: Ilbffe" 41511 • And *lien gpo her 4 ti . Her tear-wet cheek is sadly prest, May happier visions beam upon The,hriglijt Opt, trgpgot t igr breaqt. No troWning look or ingry tone I),,istgrh the. Tjbait pt. 'hgeir,esi t • , Whiiievir tad oseff4rnis fn Oiv, Loved with 0 arar passion almost wild ! JEOfittY,:AY htyrY 0 14741 ' P&P 4 If non k , *erv. nire etttry b. h, 0 God, protect my wife and childi OtttirS'fillSTstr IPR 'I BY ELIZABETH kaiL.6 11OLLY was dustin,g,the raving : 4mm, 11 with bei aii3; l l,l under a jaunty little sweeping ; cap l ,and i her small iefiblifeif litY j ry bik)ista - gloves to . pptect,.thern flow the dust.— She had opened the window to lei the fresh morning air t9id• Was leaning out to enjoy it,"when her cousin Rob ran down the irelielin 2 hia- y Wiclultit Jane was washing the steps, and ; a 3 he came down' she looked in at the basement . window where the nook was standing, and they both tittered. ROL) Idoked' at Dolly with a very red and angry fac,e,, and 'shook his 6E. at. her: threateningly. t • "Dolly Sanford,.you'll get your pay for that yet ; youLhak better believe it," he said, hotly. Dolly onlylsaighed ; she was"not at all frightened by Rob's . threat's, and • then just, at that moment Murk yanderhuYten passed by, and drove it all out of 'her. mind. Forshe was a little dismayedfor an4:istant,' that i he should see . her lFt: sweeping-cap --Mark Vanderhuyten who was such an exquisite I He would be so mortified to know' that she swept and Bast 1. She (elt an itnpulsu to shrink hack out of sight, but! the sturdy little pride that was in her ea l ine tip her aid ;the next moment, and leaned forth and bude him good 'mnrning with. a, gay nonchalance. As for him, he looked at the clp. and the gloves land, the big dust er her hands, with a simple smile, half surprised and half amazed. "Justilike him,' said' Dolly, angrily. "Another man might not have noticed at all. The cap' isree , very becoming." This with a glance in the mirror. "Ned J4rvis, now, would ha-ve thought it a- new fasiihrwd breakfast-cap, and complimen ted hie upon it; but Mark; 'I verily be, 111 , ., knows the fashions for adies bet br than I do. How' li' do d4test .dan !" And to give, emphasis. to thil3 13'4 re-; mirk. Dolly Made 'her dastiirfly 'minds= But for some unexplainable reason, two Or three times before her dustingseAB Gniahed she went, and loked , in the mirror, to see just- flow bid ± that cap ; and shewas 1.19 t a v,4,in girl eith er. \ • S) it happened. , illiat , Aßob 'and. -his ‘q , ings and threatnings vanished entire ly from her mink But 1r DAV; if you could only haVe known 1 . - It sh's dignity had -been sore wounded. In all her jokes—and j ibe was continually tray i tig them wif,lical her - cousins-444 liul never flinched hi at so' refider`a , Pvil. "It was the silliest Ching and the nif.auest thing he ever heard of, and .ev -rybody in .the hot*, down to his three Fear old brother Dick, , knew it ;".. and in '',` i , most heart he recorded a vow to be rer.'nZed. This was Dolly's offence ; 'Rob liad nearly completed his sixteenth year with!.nt the slightest' particle, of , down I ) ‘vio,7, manifested itsef upon lip or chin 11; 4nd his friend Jack libtirton, who was I,Obteon, was, in the male situation. '' It 1148 not known that either of them *as "esuonden t from this cause, until the - day h-fore Dolly had discovered, securely bid a "3 7 in Rob's room, a 4mysterious' look -I'l2 hot. whose contents were announced neon the cover, "to 'procure luxuriant whiskers upon thn smoothest face, in a Au meriously short 'space, of finite The. b -. , I was evidently new and' I untaaeheai and by a' strange spine denee J,sok Huh bit non was invited to - '. end that night 1 ' ' ' o r i 'l .i . ' t , „,* 4i -* A.- i' - --'-, ' . ?' t, U..' • a A ' • . .. A' , s , -----. "..=------ : ~ ' - !!' I: •••:,i, ' 7T c « , ' ~ *rem 7 • , • / ,_,-- ‘.,..1 i ii. : : , - , , ~• 1 _ , ... ipit: l / 4 : : ,,,.. , , ~- .-- -: a.. .„ . , 1 ,.,,,t ei .:,..., i , t _,. ~.x . ..\ _.. . . . i . ... • . ~0 . , ~ ...,_ . I , ~i., : , _,, Ilig . ~ . 1111111 N _ , . A. • I .:,; - , ( 4 -, .4" -', r,, i 4 r •I''' , T . l i%. I - 7 'or ~ . 4- - `3` '' • \ .4 o (' — `44.. ~ . _ .. iii• 1 , . . 1 "`--:A*.-,--- . 'lith ROW, elly' hi diyu - l gei the se : eiei I tOitii'a Mother, and: One' of the children VaikiVerheitid it: ''''itoree i r than that, she had tient Jane up to the :young: gentle -nien.seroo_nr. with 'shaving Water iii. the naorning, . _ . There' Was 'a continual playing, of, tricks in the house s ; algid„ AO. Jives soloften the aggresier„.that all his brothers ; ;were de. 7 lighted with au:opporttinitY; to. tease, hiin, and his:sufferings; taking. the' Children's persecutions and, the . tittering of 'th'e'ser,... vents together; had not been slight. $6, though the sight of Mark ITandef-; huyten - drove her little joke entirely out of _herxiiiiid, tie memory 'by 'DO naeatia departed - fpm ;, Rob's:. He too, _ had aeon Mr, iVanderhuyten; . and the' sight .had •suddenlyinspired him with a project for oplegilid revenge upon Dolly. But weeks and months Went; bY, . and` Mlly, it sheover gave.a thought f;, Rob's threats Aeoideck tha,Pshe ninst pave forgotten all 41 1,,; (10 i t; t. x_ t . i. _.. , ‘,-, .: :- . ~ i , The first of 'April—the boys gala clay 'L—citme and went, and the usual number _13.( stnalljO r kes were,prpetrated, but Reb 'o4Assiii6re quiet and' dignified than ever before. "He was growing out of his mis cyevous ways," his Inother, remarked, Withrplolrgratification ;_"and 'Dolly,teo, milks 'lot wing.quiet, and , Seneiblklind'wns not putting the boys up to so many tricks as.she used to." The next shy, Doily received ) a letter L addressedin4laiklrindelhnyfela's hand writing. She knelt it at •once, because he had several _times sent her a note in viting her to ,go Opaewhere , witlkhina'; indeed tiV .• tadt often' dOti t e , so., beWejae etirabi4iaa, tri lie y . was distantly con nected with the family', and they had been 'lff;.eryitrocidi.friends as -, girliend $0•5i:';:; - .t.' But since he 'ladle tn nuf ,frxt, m Europe, and came fitOpossessien o r his fortune, and grown o be such . a lion, altogether, he lad ; rather neglected her. , H.ewae alWays deviating- himself to .one 'Or' the other of the populdr belles, and rumor was continually engeging a t4 to this one or that. • la El4 , was , altogether removed frinif her _humble sphere, Deilly - Said to herself.-- Nevertheless, he did call on her quite of ten, and had _once invited her to a con-, eert, but she refused the invitation, pith outlniking any excu se. The reason was 'as - she told her aunt," that - "he had grown Iso conceited than she couldn't endure -him." And when her aunt said : ' But you used lo like him, Dolly !" she ,flushed a little, and' said with rather tilinecessary . .viin :' - ''Well, I pit about detest 'him now, aunty I" 1 ' 1 ; Mark had-. never repeated the in vita tion so it was rather a surprise to Dolly his writing. But how much more sur prised when she began to read. .! ; ' It , was a bona' fide loVe-leiter, and just such a onls as she would • have expected Mark Vanderhiyten to write, though perhaps rather, more ; earnest . . and impassioned than it had seemed posinble for him to be. He had loved her all his life, he said, thOugh until h ..• went away he had not realized that his affection was other than a brotherly ore. ' Now that .he had as sociated with so many brilliant women of the world, he realized how incompar ably superior she was, and also how firm• ty his heart had fixed itself upon her.— He knew that he was not worthy of her; out could shelnot give him a little hope ? He could bear waiting waiting if he might be , 'sure ot . one day calling her his wife., .Dolly. read On the 'solitude of 'her bwn .room. wi'll the door securely locked against all intrudere-i-read it over and over again, as if its meaning would never 'grow plain to her. ,; , • ' . Whee she had read'it ' long enough to commit it to memory : she tossed it aside -witka little seornful laiigh, and then, tor some unaccountable reasuji i she dropped her head en her hands and indulgectin a good al. ' 1 ' I Mr. Mark Vanderhuyten was' in his rooms at the B—House., . Very luxeri oda rooms they were, and \ the gentleman , himsOf had . a very, lazy, a me nd luxuriant air, as he reclined with his feet at a con siderable greater elevation than his head„ i and .a 'fragrant cigar between .his lips.-- He'had been out very late at a succession 1 of _receptions the night 'befpre, and. had Only ! just breakfasted, , though it was nearly twelve o'clock. ' A pile of: letters which the postman had _ brought,' hours before, lay untOnched ' upon the table.-- Suddenly,glaticinga,t them, Mark caught sight of a smaller envelope than the' rest, direc i Ted hi a lady's and, and one which he did not recognize. He tore it open, and Iglancediat .the signature—" Dolly SanfOrd." : - . 'lhat in the natne of .Idt that is won derf I is Dolly Sanford writing to me r for?' he ejaculated. His, m nohchalent air - vanished, ,and aniaieent became 'depicted on his coun ; te \ nance ad he read "Your letter has' surprised me More than can eay. I 'used b 3 'think, in the old Mmes, when we sere boy and, girl to gather that you liked tile . ; of late I have thou lit you were utterly iodifferen rto t . .the: 1 was `so rry ta-believethat, 'but' not so, so yai I 'Pm, to linow-. that. you ; love me: • 1 Fur .I cann i ot tie--!never coals be ;- . 1 t , • *jfe.z, I.::kndtv this, 01'bela OinftneOt' tO- you, at fiist.,bUt I 'cahoot . helo - thinithicr . ii,hat your feelitig for int is pagato g !an cy ; how cap ]yOu care so much _ fk..001) a plain. matter -of: fact little*.,4.oy, so Ornlike.yoUr : , : friends ? I am sure that 'the time will .come a.ill think ine'for't,i4iUg''uo.', Y stall be yonr . Siocere friend=if:.you Brill lOt,. me. DOLLY SANFORD." • Mr. Mark :Vanderll ny ten felt like pi n ch ng himself ,to See .if, he were really Mark Vanderhtiven. , 3 , - 4 911 lettt:r..l- r -some fool's confoundeely silly, jOke l*!.he exclaimed.: 4,,hd then•he remembered that it must havp been .writ ten on "Aprilstool's day," and .he won dered that Polly had uotnoticed it—poor iittlePolly, whose wits had been so scat tered by, burprise that it had not once oc• curro to tier. • . . But lbove and beyond his 4 - nger to the, perpetrator, of the jeke, Mark was con scious of a, yiery strong .sense:, of surprise and 'Chagrin.: , . Dolly Sanfor4 !, Li v wouldn't hae him t who; had , neither; beauty ,Tior rOrtune„Whatu' he had often. pitied be canse 'she was.a dependent in her uncle's Camily,-whe're -her busy feeti And willing hands werelijWays,at the service of that doien of ,great rough. bOys. ..11e•had, neier..ekeiLin the days when he had had liki,ng for her , entertained the Ipas a t.idea of ;marrying ; but, that she lam*: Object".o such an arrangement; 01L i nking wish it, truly an as. aisliAng f thing , For Dolly . Sanford to r,ejeCt hin - i,,when was \ sue that not one,of. th,erieigning belles of the season ivould'Sayliitnnay I, •• • ,pretVwas,riot wrong' in regard to Mr. Vatiderh'uyte:n'a conceit, you see. • Was; very "potictlited—a fault 'not altogeth pr;foreigu to,,his 'sex, in general—but I am:obliged to confess that hiS lady friends here iu , a ,gi.etit ,measure responsible for if, Ile was richand handsome, had very. .ele,gantlxtaiiiiers, and could: make him -8.11 *eryligre*le—When ch .se to (. 7 0 and yonng ladies fluttered about. him .BtiaKecl ,that they felt very much 'flattered,' ky . .i k is„ attention, and . tuammas were nieneeessarily polite to him: San ford ! Mark could not grt her out of his mind ; he let his ; cigar go out,7ltrid lais horse wait, all saddled at the door, while he: read: his letter over and over —almost- as many times ''as she had -read' his. ',"Poor little 'thing! I should think she would be; glad to marry anybody that ociuld take good care of her; and get her away from that place, where they make such a drudge of her. She's a nice wo manlylittle thing, though not much like the average society yoting lady. I' suppose She wouldn't marry a fellow un less she really l / 4 liked Wm:, And Mr. Vanderhpyten heaving a little sigh—for what reason I . cannot imagine, unless he felt suddenly that it would.be rather. nice to be "really liked" by such : a girl. "Uncommonly nice little thing!" ne went on reflectively. "But :she has rath-• .er taking ways ; don't believe the're put on either. She's fresh and ibrigliti like a daisy, too, co powder nor rogue, nor any thing of, that, sort, She lOoked almost pretty that morning last . winter in that. .hurrid cap that would have, mac p a guy of any other woman." • Altogether, -larger grew the sum of her' periections us 'Mark reflected upon them, and the sting of wounded pride seemed to grOw keener in proportion. She had rejected him, flintily and de cisively rejected him. To. be sure he didn't want to marry her, he had never proposed to her or thought, of doing such 'a thing; , but still it wasn't? pleasant to know, for certain, that ehe wouldn't have hint. He mounted 'his horse •and rode briskly off, trusting to; the air and exercise to get"all that nonsense out *of his head!' But,. strange' to:say, he came back `stiltthiniting of 'Dolly:Sanford, arc.i in a frame of mind, which ;showed OM there was something of ,ecimmon sense and manliness beneath hie conceit, for this-ls ',what , he , said to himself as he' eprang front his .horse : , b'l don't know why in ;the world should Suppose that she would marry me. I'tn a -Confounded coxcomb . arid that's the truth !" TWo or three weeks- later he met her. . At a patty. It was the Arai time:he had met her since, he teceived ;the letter rig' which sh'e declined 'the honOr of his hand tied she discovered 'that she hud been the victim of ;a jokel? he wiidered. One glance at her face as she greeted him told him that she - had not, She was frank and friendly, as altvar, though with the faintest shade of cinistraint,and he fancied, a trace of pity fOr him in her face. . I~ie hal opportunity only fora word of greeting, for Dolly, if sh'e was mita belle, was not without her attractions, and to night had quite a little court of her own about her, 'foreitioat in which was Ned Jarvis, a young _gentleman for whom Mirk hid no great liking.' On this'oc, clown he assumed an .air 'proprietor- Alp over Dolly which was exceedingly saggravatink to Mark for ,sottie realm, which be did not himself' quite ander- siand: lie was gloomy and absent minied, - to the ; intense dissatisfaction of Miss Laura Panshawe, a, brilliant belle to . whom,lie had 'devoted himself of lafe. That lady . noticed thiit his eyes waodered very rm..: qUent in the direction of Dolly; and:re- MarkPd, at last—witb a, gleam in her own. that Mark did not see : 'Mr. Jarvis seemed determined to entirelymononolw Kiss Saiiford;, already. And she never h'ad so many' admirers. ways makes, an object attrittive to you gentlepan tef know that it is out of your reach." 1. - • "I don't understand you,7 said Mark, bluntly. "Do you mean to imply "that Mr. Jarvis has a. right to monopolize Miss Shuford ?”. ' t: • , "0, don't speak so loud, Please; lam not sure that'it is' Public yet, but I haxe, been told_on very, good' ,authority, that they are engaged." 1 , Mark tugged fiercely at his moustache. and stalked away, With scarcely, a word of apology . , Engaged to; Ned Jarvis!. Well, why not'?. Ned ilia respectible,well-cOnnect ed; had plenty of money. - ;Of course it would be an excellent thinglor her. He would haVe been 'glad to ;hear.,. of it a month ego, Mark _said. to = liimself„tkad wondered% wbat had cliiinged him' in: would- shake off this 'ridiculous feeling,' and congratulate her.frankly, as he ought to do. ' .r. , But it was not so easy .to ,fipd an op- . portunity to do that. ,She evidently pre ferred to avoid - bin); - But. at lad late in the evening,.he succeed in _securing her hand fur a dance, and aftertvards in lead ing her into, a deserted nook of the brar,v, to rest, Dolly w,as a Jittle shy..and re aired; when she found herself aloue with - "I suppose I may be alloied . . to con atu:ate you ?" he said, abruptly. . "C ingrai ulate me ?" said Dolly, inter rogatively, with innocent Ode. "Perhapait is a secret—but • l have just been (old that you were engaged to Ned • Who could. have, told ycitv that ? En gaged to 'Mr. Jarvis 1. No, 'indeed !" said I:1611y, with her cheeks in *flame. And then—be never quite knew how, he surely had not - nieant tiD do it—Mark found hitnself pouring forth the story of his love, in the most iinpa.ssioned man' , .ner and even forgettineLittneelf, that he was not the author of the letter. And Dolly listened with' a feeling—of Which she had more than half conscious' of before-- - struggling fiercely with what she called her "reason" and her "pride." "I can't take that ‘no"-. for mranswer, Dolly ! 'You must—gnu will give me a better one, dear he pleaded. "J. can't—l don't quite know-'—you must give me time tai think, perhapS an- 1 other time," stammered poor Dolly,want-: iiag to yield and determined, not to. And just then to her great relief, ,Ned appeared -to claim lac r for, a promised dance. And Mkk saw her no more that night. , • Dolly was dusting again the next mor ning. She was hot exactly a"drudge," but she had a certain round of duties that must .be gone through with, even though the night 'had brought more "counsel" than- sleep, and ."reason"' had been utterly vanished"bv lope. The mor ning's post had brought her another fer ventappeal from" Mark, .and Dolly had resolved that her lips shotild, no . longer say nay while her heart Said yes. She was dusting Rob's room, Wand trying to bring order nut of the - inevitable school• boy chaos. Some loose slips . of paper 'bad slipped down ' behind'.:Rob's writing desk. She glanced carelessly at them as she picked them up.- carelessly, and then . attentively, :with a :list beating heart. It was evidently an.. attempt toPtopy l;omebody's hand writing ; certain' letters were made over' and, over .agein ; in the first of them she: rectvized. -Rob'ahand, at once, but, by and-byi they, began': o look astonishingly iike..Mark'sl Then she came to a. note ofinvistation that hsd been written by Mark . ; t4i .her lont ago, and which had evidently', seryed lor copy ; and, finally r -pcior Dolly, it tieein 7 , ed if a cold, cold,hand ,vitere . Clutching her heart,,as she ,loked—* letter which was the exact fac.iimile of the_ one she had received, except. _for certain emigres and repetitions` where the letter bal not seemed tolmtisfactorily imitate the, copy. When Rob came home from school she, met: him in the door,, with a face so set and white that he asked it once , if she' had seen a ghost. .Dolly held' the paper out to him. "R..b, did,you do that?--did you.write • that letter to me, and sign Mark•Vand• erlinyten's name ?" she said, ,as if lin., ploring*him to deny it.- "Why,. yes, ot course. , You weren't green. enough to believe it ? Wasn't; it as good a joke as ever you ;played on mei old lady ?•and didn't I tell you rd , pfy Y(- A. look at Dolly_s O ppediktru., , • • "lint,l say, DA : I'm,,,sorry if it got you into trouble, you knowl I. ; .photig4 you'd' find Out. that -'twila joker—you might. hate known by fhe date!-: - But 'Dolly was out of hearing. She ; . 1 .:-.--,','-,,i,.,i'1,:i i''_,"i .- ~.~~, . A.'p;g •-•+ t 5 ~~1 C~~~Y~ t. . i ,vas..' '.'l3--.Np.'.,-`_fe- had rushed uti - to her room; and thrown .herself on thebed, in a passion of iveep-, ing. It seemed io her that the humilia-' tion was too bitter to be borne. And how noble, how - chivalrous' he had been't Row great a sacrifice he had, been to save her from the sting of wounded pride I An hour later, - moved by .a , sudden termination, Dolly Went down stairs; and annoLnced to her aunt.her intention of going, at onee, up into, the country ptit her uncle john's, to Spend ,the summer. khad been arrangeethat she shou4 in . June, width's. was' only a Mouth earl her, and alter along 'argument she suc ceeded in convincing her aunt that them . was a reason—though a secret. One—foy, her sudden freak; awl she was,allowed, t4l, go. Perhaps Doily's entreaty 'Mark Vanderhiiteh should, On - no account, he allowed to discover her whereabouts enj lightened her aunt a little as th the cause of Dully's sudden flight. Before she went , --on that Very, niaht-A Dolly wrote - Hark a' little note, him of her 'discovery, giving ,ti cold mot final ‘130," as to his% proposal, and for 4 b.dding his seeking her again Ah, that was a long summer to I. The country bad lost its ,charrif. There was no•delight in the - clear fresltair ' nor' the. woods; 'nor the -shady coiintry roade: Life was a hard sod dreary 'thing,. She: felt: , It was October and heruncle's family, ' 'were settled in- toWn again, before she vent back. -Arnorig the bitti of news id t her last letter troni , lfer aunt had been) 'this item : ;will be surprised' to, hear that. dark YanderhuYten has all his I don't' know exactly, how but I think unfortunate speculations', think. He'bears Win a very manly and)- brave way—you know I always ;told yoni that there was a great deal more of hit i . than you seemed to think—und be hat ;taken a poaition as clerk in his uncles. store. He looked a little doinhearted; but not so much 'so as' he when Your went away. 'I think-he`-really keit you,i't Dolly, and you were a,.yery foolish girl..] r however, as it has tinned oat, it was, elk for the b est.' . ,' mm "All for the heat" because he was poor I', Dolly said a hat over to herself with' at thrill of indignation, while the cars were. 'whirling her rapidly homeward. But what if her aunt was right, in orie thing s : and he - had really liked" her after all - ,?„ "Aud I should he a better wife f o r him thin Laura Farishawe o any *of theint' she said , :to; herself, n tautly. But tie did not' come e her.' She. had been at home a wee efore she saw), Then, she met him in V the Street; and he turned . and walked home with ' her. . They talked of 'cOmmon-place mat s ters, like ordinary acquaintances, until, just before they reached Ihe door, he said' in his old abrupt Way : - "Di lly, if you ran away from me he cause you thought I didn't love4you, you, made a ter great mistake. l should' have found but very soon that you were , the only woman in the world to me, if , that letter hadn't helped me 10 it. You., will burely believe me, .now that I am too. poor to have an, right to ask any woman , to marry me." Dolly heSitated, with a deep flush, and down-dropped eyes. ' 93ut—but—don't .you 'know ? Uncle, Julius died last spring in California, and lett me - twenty thousand dollars—" And . then dolly thought she had said.enoughiQ And I think.that I have.. Advice :vs. .The other morning when a rawboned, stranger was pacing, up Broadway he was accosted bva chronic old beggar who, whined al i t : .if hav`r been sick for'. twenty-two years!" , '• "Woosh but ..that's tough !" replied: the strange r, ns hd cattle to a halt. Whit I see* to be ule !eliding binutilaint ?" • ' . . "Fever' at,re, sir." ''• "Fever sore! Why, you've juit•erndkfl my: fituily.. My.late, wife had fever ade for.eleve►r B:traigl3 years." , "And I want a. mone y bay medic!ni:,4laid The beggar. • =' ' • No use in iloctorite," replied. Stranger: ..'•We doctored Sarah-Ann andi doctored and doctored, and we jest throe:. money away. I spitt pv,er t 3,000 trying to'cure that fever. sore,, and she died ow me just at harvest time ; when • I was in the worst muss in the worlds "Only five cents, sir,". urged the beg-_: gar. • . , • . !,Five,cents is , nothing. It isn't the nuiney I care for ; it's holding out Also hopei to you. • I tell :you that you can't be cured, and you'd better stop feeding, the ductorr. What you want is rest. G 0. ,. out and buy you a nice country residence I stock it with nice things, buy you a span, of spanking nice hordes,and take comfort . while you can ; for you are just as sure to turn up your toes on account of that leg, as -you are sure that you see me Don't fool, away. any more money. 't, had one in the' family, and I,know whiA:rfa balking about , Trowsenrobtained on °Mit us es of trust. "v4.,:e!: .`e 'V- v;'