SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VTII. A Presage. 1 have a friend, a dear one. Her name—but why I confesst You very rarely hear one More fascinating—gnessl Her merry voice is sweeter Than any rillet's flow; Her laugh has more of metro Than any song I know. Her lovely eyes that lighten When robins softly sing Are like the skies that brighten At dawn in early spring; Her cheeks —his brain is duller Than dunce's who'll not own They've all the pinky color Of apple buds half blown. You will agree it's pleasant That such a one should send Each year a charming present To me, "her dearest friend." And this year I've a presage- It makes my pulses start- That with a tender message She'll give to me her heart. — £i ssell Clinton in Harper's Magazine. "A NICE OLr WOMAN." BY FLORENCE ALLEN* "Oh dear!" It was a pretty little face which was all puckered up into such a lot of wor ried little wrinkle; pretty in spite of the shadow of care in the fair blue eyes, and the tired drop at the corner of the girlish mouth. The owner of the face and the wrinkles and the blue 3yes and the mouth in question, was a flight, rather delicate-looking girl of about 18 who stood, attired in a faded calico dress, in the doorway of a small wood-colored cottage (or "cabin" as lliey more truthfully call such edifices in the mountains) looking out at the sunny slope of the road before her. Two fresh-faced smiling girls of her own age had just gone by, stopping to lay a pleasant word or two as they passed; and the sight of their pretty, though simple, lawn dresses and float ing ribbons had brought, as they de parted, those worried wrinkles to the face that should have been as bright as theirs, and the impatient exclamation with which our story begins to her generally uncomplaining lips. As a general thing Phrosy Miller (she was Euphrosyno by rights, through the instrumentality of her father, who had found the name in his somewhat limited reading, and had delighted in its long drawn sweetness,) was a very cheerful and contented girl in spite of the troubles and hard work that had come into her young life so early; but, just it present, thero was something especial upon her mind, and that was the pic uic. It was to be in just four weeks from today, and all the girls were going; and she, who had stayed at home so much and so patiently for the last year, felt as though she rea'ly must go, too. But bow? Tiiat was the question that brought the worried little wrinkles to the front so conspicuously. All the girls were going to have new lawn dresses and fresh ribbons for the occasion, and "do U])' her blue muslin as best she could (and she was something wonderful in the laundress line all her neighbors tail,) it would not look any way but aid and faded; and her ribbons—well, tier small stock thereof had been cleaned and dyed and "done over" so often that they were merely a travesty upon their kind. Of course a new dress and the requisite adornments would cost very little; but, as Phrosy said, tersely but truly, "If diamonds could be bought fo» a nickel apiece and one didn't have '.ho nickel, where would be the comfort of it?'' Money had been very tight in the Miller family ever since Mr. Miller's long ilness, ending in his death, had put :he little household under a load of 3ebt which seemed at first, simply over whelming. Ben Miller—a wild and reckless young fellow he had been while his father was well and strong and able to ore for the mother and sister—had steadied down wonderfully and taken tho burden of ex istence on his shoulders patiently and manfully. Mrs. Miller and Phrosy had sconomized in every way, even to tho extent of taking some of the many wootl- Dhoppers about as boarders, and they hud worked early and late and sewed and ienied themselves until the debt was paid, and the future began to look a lit tle brighter. Then fate frowned on them #nce again. Mis. Miller, a large, heavy and somewhat unwieldy woman, ingoing ilown the back-steps one day mule a misstep and fell, receiving an injury to her side which ma le her utterly help less. Since then Phrosy had found life harder than ever. Additional doctor's bills piled lu uyou them; Mrs. Miller instead of helping as before was now as helpless as a baby and so nervously irri table that keeping boarders longer was an impossibility even had Phrosy been able to do the work. So it was that every cent that came into the family had to be earned by Ben; and so it was that the new lawn dress, so ardently desired, seemed to be among the impossibilities of existence, for Ben's wages were small at best and there were at least a dozen ways for every dollar. And Phrosy thought altogether too much of her patient and kind-hearted brother, who denied himself so much to keep her and his invalid mother from want, to add to his burdens by telling him her own troubles. "If there was only something that I could do myself to earn a little money," she said to herself, "but there doesn't seem to be. Mother wouldn't hear to my running the machine steadily, even if 1 could get sewing to do, and there is nothing else. It's a hopeless case, 1 guess." And, sighing heavily, Phrosy turned to enter the house in answer to a fretful call from within, but as sho did so her eyes fell upon the clothes-lino in the side-yard. "In one minute, mother," she said cheerily. "I'll just bring Ben's shirts in as I come by,—they're all ready to raw-starch and I can iron them by the supper fire." How whito and clean and sweet they were! As Phrosy gathered them into a stiffly awkward bundle in her arms she could not help bending her head to in hale the "smell of outdoors" (as she called it) that came from them. "They smell different from Chinese washing," she thought. "There's one thing certain, —poor as we are Beu's shirts are always the nicost done up in town," and then as that thought passed through her mind it left an inspiration behind it. That night after supper, when Ben was resting himself from his day's labor by "puttering" around the chicken houso and back-yard generally, and Mrn. 'Miller was chatting with a neigh bor who had opportunely dropped in, Phrosy, pleading an errand at the store, slipped away from them all and pro ceeded to put her inspiration to the test of practicality. "It might be a good idea," said kindly Mrs. Jenkins, to whom she had gone in her emergency, "but there's so many o' them plaguey Chineso around that it brings prices down dreadful, and most folks don't carc how a thing is done so it is done cheap." "But my things don't smell of opium and nastiness as tho Chinamen's do," averred Phrosy stoutly, "there must be some one who would rather pay a little higher and have things nice." " Such folks is scarcer than dia monds in dust heaps,'' was the senten tious reply. "I would myself, of course, but old Ma'am Gilman has kind of got a mortgage on me, and though she's failing dreadful and don't send things home fit to be seen some weeks, I kinder can't go back on her all at once." "Of course not," assented Phrosy unhesitatingly, ' 'that isn't what I want at all. But—see here—you ask Joe to inquire around up to Loren's mill and Ido believe he'll fiud something for me. I don't care to say a word to Ben or he'd fly all to pieces—nor you needn't tell Joe who it is that wants the things—just let him say 'some one who'll do them the best they can be done and needs the money.' " * 'All right," said Mrs. Jenkins, "I'll keep it as still as mice, whether it turns out well or not. You come by tomor row night and I'll tell you the verdict." And so, full of hopes and fears and fond imaginings, Phrosy wont home. The next night Mrs. Jenkins met her with her broad face beaming. "I've got six for you," she said, delightedly, "and six times two bits is a dollar and a half! you are in luck, Phrosy! 'Tain't one of the mill hands either, but a young fellow that has bought out the old Bradbury ranch. He's been up to tho city for tho last week and more and come homo with about a carload of dirty things—its been that hot up there, Joe says, that you can't keep nothing decent two minutes, and old Mrs. Bul gal that cooks up there don't know beans about doing up, so the grist naturally comes to your mil!, and I'm glad of it for one." "And I for two," answered Phrosy gleefully, and then, with a light and thankful lieart she took possession of her somewhat bulky bundle and w