MIDDLEBURG POST. HIS STEPMA. I knowed a little codger once As onery as could be; Hod chuwr and swear, run off from fchool. And pester beat and tree; Kept ull tho neltfhbor"s dona afeared And half their winders broke; There couldn't for that Tommy Tuff i One prulsln' word be spoke. Xtut by and by his ma was dead Ills pa met Wldder Green And courted her; she imrleyed some, 'Cause Tummy was so mean. But last she said she'd pive consent If neighbors, friends, ami kin Would promise to lit tiKddlln' out While she broke Tommy In. These mentioned, knowln' things was bad. Saw fomethint? must be clone. So nil agreed to keep hands ott And let his stepma run Tho youngster; well, she used the twig A little, but not much; But, Kraclous! How site used the ax And 'later hoe and such! She kept that boy a rhoppln' wood And doln' turns and chores. And hoein' com and Harden sass And scrubbln' steps an' floors Till ho was Klad to bo to school To fret a llttlo rest; Tot she was monstrous kind and good Soon as he'd done his best. Ills busy hands stirred up his wits. And soon that boy at school ."W'ns lendin' all his classes; hlra They used to call a fool! He studied doctorln'. Rot to be A most uncommon man, (All 'causo his stepma worked tho vim That one to meanness ran. The nerve that phiyln" hookey takes Might turn a whole school down. And that which breaks a winder light Might sometimes build a town. There's lots of onery little tykes A loalln' 'round the streets ?,eed only work to make 'em men Instead of trlllln' bents. Emm Ghent Curtis, In Denver News. r The Reveries of a Sand Crab. BY S. RHETT ROMAS. IJ'TIIE day is soft nml misty, bright, 1 nml a breeze blow the foam of !ie tvaves over the wind. "Tide in hip-It, nml the water wdSilies up shells mul star-Ash, and npurs of tlrift wood, along the elge of the beach, anil children troop out Irom the big hotel to pick up the pretty play things, while grown peo ple tit on tho half-buried, water uoaked masts and logs, and watch the routless ploy of the ocean, and the flitting shadows of tho clouds as they shift by in the su miner sky. ; "They sit idly on the beach and cay foolish things to each other, and laugh, and half the time do not rea lize the poetic grandeur of the scene before them, the wondrous combin ing linq of tints and colors or the sublinilTy of. the play of inooa beams n the roJlingt restless water. "The -children run about and shout ...... b..i-.'iol, gather -tiiclls, and dig holes in the sand my sand with their toy shovels, and then . quarrel over who was first to see a piece of scawnoil, or corral broken from tho Florida reefs; or they hit down and build houses, shouting with glee as the wind sweeps them over, and they melt away. Their elders, absorbed in themselves, talk of their puny am bitions, their plans anil prospects, iheir shallow loves, anil short lives, nil of which 1 hear ns I peep out from the sand dunes and listen. "There is a bench, close down by the water's edge, near my favorite haunt. Kvery evening at dark I come out slyly, knowing the pale liffht will confound me with the gray mind, so that no one, not even the clogs will snap and snarl, and dig in to the shifting hillocks in pursuit of iim can distinguish my slight, agile form when night falls. "1 come out slowly and stealthily, anil laugh at the big New Found lands, and querulous, over-fed pet dogs, rambling along the edge of the water, while their mistresses stroll by, nml tho wind blowing against them, shows pretty feet, tipping from under ruflles and laces, und soft strands of hair, little curls and tendrils which.no comb or ribbon can Jceep in place, on our long stretch of wind-blown seashore. "I watch the young men nod the cirls as they saunter along, and al wavs guess rightly which onps are going to pause, and sit down on the bench. Oh, I never make a mistake "There is a certain couple I've CTown to know quite well. She's been here all summer. She's pretty, very pretty, and holds her head high He comes over from the city fre- ouentlv. very frequently of late, fot the summer is waning fast, and will soon be over, and then they will all go away from the seashore and back lo their every-day lives, and, as far ns I can judge, will forget each other coinplrl.-ly. "I I'.ke to watch men and women, nr. 1 i vmember faces. Often the same ones come buck and renew their walks on the bench, sit on the rocln f the breakwater and occupy this decaying old bench near the beach, but it is seldom that those of the year before are again together. "I know, because it is quite amus ing lo watch them, and it makes me laugh until I grow tired and positive ly weak, to hear the same old foolish talk repeated over and over again. The only difference is that when the seasons change they change compan ions. v "And, strange to say, they all love to prate disdainfully of the 'changing sea' and of what they are pleased to call 'constancy.' That seems to be a favorite topic with them. Especially with the very young men and the girls just from college. The older and wiser a man grows, I notice, the leas he has to say about constancy, And the women ,, "Well, H is hard to tell efctly " JVVTa what a woman really thinks. She'll ' assert a thing which she doesn't be- Compton told ine he saw you the here one bit; and ahe win talk nip- 0aer niirht? . . 1 . 1 . I - . 1 I. .. i t. o pauny ui " V" i"""K" -yes indeed. We chatted for and absorption of her heart and soul, v,.,.,.- he ... llrh . just to make her listeners believe it feiiow! lie has promised to spend is a matter of very small conse- the winter ia f bectuIge rm to i quence to her. there; and to take the same steamer Oh, yes, I ve found that out long we wi tnke to abroad in the go. Its hard to tell what a woman ,pi.jug. ne' awfuHy good-lookjng, means, and still harder to guess BO :ve w what she intends doing. Some of 'cm: ..VK -mntnn'. ricrr,r Honnt fM. piny fast and loose, and I've no- Jow , knew vo.d uke him oi ticed they often spite themselves out course as your 'Iun8 are all aiJ ollt of a strange sort of perversity and for the winter nml s,,rin yo give an entirely wrong impression of wollWn-t care to alter them?" themselves, their character and their, ..why K,lolll(1 L aIter thera? Aren-t sentiments. !... t.,.M,. .Men arc more straightforward, ..yrv. onlv Bome fe,low miaht and consequently more comprehen- pro,))sen little alteration in them siblo.. There must be a reason why for his ,,enefit. you are ure you women act so strangely, but I don't don.t tare to lnnke nny chnnfye? know it. , I .-, mnfa ti.ru T ran't Immnna "I've often laughed to split my nv K11,rKf:nn ...i,;p1l wi,i lnnl.-i. sides to see how the girls who come me aUer m.m, Jmt now CouU out here on these sands manage to you? puzzle the men and get the situation ..None at n T rnnt maffine how mixed up, when, iu reality, both tho thoy cm)(1 be lnipr.ove(1 on. shall men and the girls are pining for an w BtroU (low on the beai.h? Identical termination to their lime ( The snm, crab ca,ne close.f nnd summer game. waltzed over the dunes down to tho Hut they ore nil at cross pur- water's edge in ad ecstacy of de- lioses, and come back to this island ljn-ht for sea bathing mismntched and un- ..j knew now lt ,vouij be! Now the happy, eynical and morose. breach between them is irrevocable. "I've heard so many silly things They've duir their nit with their own said by people sitting on this bench, 0ij IleMi 0 back to tbe cltv. ond nd I've crept out on the sand and beqi work hnr(j nnti -rovr morose observed and listened for so many nnd crabbed and rich, and Maude, she years, that I could be very enter- ff0 to l'aris and become more tnining if I choose to give the result worldy, nnd frivolous nnd capricious of my discoveries to the public. !eacb yenr nd the handsome fellow "Why, only last week, when those . the white flannels will be there. two I am interested in were out here too. while the trirl who dresses so chatting, it struck me how grateful wen win stay ln yew ynrki Dick lhornton would be if I could j "They've mixed it up ns usual. It's have made him see that Maude Cam- 00 filnnv! ' eron's light badinage was all put on j "Hello! They ore going back to like her clever, careless society man- tbe bench. That's queer, and there's ner, just to hide Her real ieenngs that confounded dog Eoyal. Why ond because she was so deeply hurt, can't he keep away? that lie Had let a week pass witnoui ..vyy ghould you and I, Maude, mis running over to see her, nnd had understand each other?" Dick said, not even written. slowly. "You know, sweetheart the "So Dick grew formal, nnd also whole world is as nothing " 'society in his manner, and men- There was a scramble on the bench, tloned a pleasant call he had made on and Boynl dashed by in pursuit of a Dorothea Spencer. Dorothea is the sand orab. tall, handsome girl who was over) Tm glad it's safe in its hole under hero a month ago, and looked so the sand, poor little thing," Maude stunning in her striped black nnd said, softly, a little later, "for nn yellow bathing suit. I danced over exquisite night like this every human the sand in the moonlight, nml shout- creature should be sublimely happy." cd with delight at the absurdity of "How remarkable! They've come their misunderstanding each other, to nn understanding!" the sand crab nnd their mutual indignation over ' Baid, peeping out. N. O. Times-Dem- The walking1 sick, what a crowd cf them there are: Persons who are thin and i1: :;ot sick enough weak bi:1: to rro i ) b Chronic cases" that's rai t'.;e (lectors call them, :k i:: common English what never existed, "Of course Dick Thornton never expluined to her what I hoard him discussing later on with a friend, ocrat. Intended for a Compltmeat. There was a family reunion at the while walking up nnd down on the home of little Alice's mother. Grand hotel piazza and smoking; that their father, grandmother, uncles, aunts, firm has been unusually busy with nnd cousins had gathered from far some cotton shipments, and that the and near. The child was much bc- senior partner is away. wildercd, says Harper s Magazine, nnu "I travel around a good deal these had great difficulty in remembering bright moonlight nights, specially e new names ana tusunguisiung when the tide is law, and in that way . the strange faces. , T get to sen nnd know everything lney were an anxious xo iMnceeoy- that is going on. nizea ny xne nine one, me oni,y.uwi "I run across the sand hills to the 'present, and her mother was pres old bench on the beach, then to the ca?er to impress all their names sickness. T'i f '. ) the continued Ions c: f-.-sh they need Scott's i;n;uision. For the feeling of weakness they need Scott's Emulsion. It makes new flesh and gives new life to the weak system. Scott's Emulsion gets thin and weak persons out of the rut. It makes new, rich blood, strengthens the nerves and gives appetite for ordinary food. Scott's Emulsion can be taken as long as sickness lasts and do good all the time. There's new strength md flesh in every dose. We will be glad to send you a few doses free. Be tura that this picture in the form of a label is on the wrapper of every bollle el tuuuion you buy. SCOTT C: BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c tnd $1 1 all drugglit. ill m Hinssflai breakwater rocks and on such a night ns this there are a good many couples sitting on the rocks then I go around by the hotel, where the band is playing, nnd big white and pink oleander hushes grow along the front of the piazza, in spite of the drifting sand. I am spare nnd agile of limb, and have no fear of my ene mies, the dogs, when night comes, and I love to roam around and learn the ways of the world. "Last evening when I came out she was sitting there gazing out nt the sea and absurdly unhappy. She is much too handsome to sit alone, and far too spirited to mope, so as soon as a fellow in white flannels came on her mind. So the poor little girl was subjected to the tiresome ques tions: "Who is this, Alice?" "What is my nnme?" i At first she gave very vague re plies, but soon fell into a tearful si lence. j In a little while Mary, her pret ty next-door v neighbor, came in. : Alice loved Mary, and her face brightened when she saw the dear I familiar face among so mnny strange ! ones. Mamma told Mary of Alice's trouble in remembering her rela tives' names. I "But Alice knows who I am," said Mary, confidently. "Tell me, dear, i who am I?" "You ain't nobody," said the child, -ffi 1 i lr 1 1 1 .1 1 . A , , . . .. 11 , fondly, with a sigh of relief. into her usual brilliant spirits, nl-i " " ... -j v ., . . ... ,. 1 , Mary was somewhat confused, but though she was thinking of some1 , . . ,. . ... h, . .. .. ' under the circumstances it was the one else hnlf the time. i , . , . .. . ..i,i - .. I. ii highest compliment she could have "They all net that way. . . 1 .u i n i . received. "Now, the man in white flannel is, I know, engaged to a girl a shrewd, why necl Avoid.d UlshUnder. clever girl-who lives mostly abroad, i . . tlnuHMH(.(1 nf v,lmor. Kn. a South African correspondent, writ- One of the For that .Millionaire Feeling L-lniw1 liwitilantnltv nn n ntmi n 4 t9 . cu. j inff to a contemporary, rcrwircr' (.mm ; in kTi-uiBinaii, ttsv9 tr than all tho other womra, .11 4K. .Mn, akAsx s Cka 4A Oil Olid I II V t Ull HI I I kTUC tyVtP. , . - , , . . f .... ... , . , . durinr the dinner, took occasion ln 6h. eritioiaes the island and laugh. 1 offe e 8e1 r"k to ..y h at the sand and U rery apish. She i h"Te s f ,r mo,,Bt of w"8 i.uo.Ka ..,,,inn. t H- lit,- T among the eaptured convoys. De- h wet wa very much amused at this. . ul j .i. i hi aad on referriag to it subsequently "Neither does the man in white 8 i. , , . fliu k n v.. i - rore attacking a convoy tlUIIUVI.ll v T V, Ml w Ull m Vll' gaged to her. They are to be mar ried in Now York this fall. Mean while I heard him flirting outrage ously with handsome Maude out here in the moonlight while the tide, was rolling slowly up, nnd Maudo ahe was encouraging him, and all the time wishing he was somebody cite. It's too funny. "Dick is to be over this evening, and as 1 lie night promises to b; glorious, he and Maude will be out hire until after 11. "I'll sit out, too, on the sand and listen. It will be diverting. Tho older I grow, the more I enjoy watching these queer human be ings, who are always making them selves and other people so foolishly, miserably unhappy over nothing. "I wonder if that huge Newfound land, Koyal, will be around? I hope not. I'm afraid of him. "There conies Dick Thornton und Maude towards the bench. Now we will see how they are going to patch up their quarrel, if one can call drifting apart by that nnme. "The night Is gorgeous and the moonlight on the sea looks so peace ful it ought to teach them the beauty of serenity nod happiness. Tho he made . inquiries if they were miarded by .Scotsmen. If this were so, he further inquired if it contained any whisky. If the second condition accompanied the first he always gave the convoy a wide berth, because he knew the beggars would fight to the last man! The Scotsman replied that he would write home nnd inform his countrymen of this important ele ment in scouting nnd in defensive warfare a remark which set him in to ronrs of laughter. St. Jntnes Ca zette. v Why II I Henri Wis Shaved, Tho late Queen Victoria was never credited with being herself given to witty sayings, but that she appre ciated wit in others is abundantly attested. On her last visit to Italy she went to a church at Assist to which she hnd been commended by the dean of Windsor and some other prelates. Describing her experiences there, she told the dean of a very devout monk, who escorted her through a chilly corridor. 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