We have a foine tinement, close be the bridge, Wid three pairs of stairs an' a. term. . The term is on the roof, but it's ilegsnt Just For to kepe the smell ehilder from harm. The railin’ is high. Shuts it's tired they get From pleyin’ "puss corner†an’ " peep ;" An’ 'twould do yure heart good in the twilight to see Ould McGue put the baby to, sleep. KcGue is my man, en’ a daisy he is, For either the gee-house shuts down . He comes wid his pail (faith. the coal on his face Gives the shake to the boys or the town) ; _ Then 1;: sets down wid me, sn' his poipe, on me e au- Comfortéble, cosy un’ deep, Wid the kid in his arms; it would break you to see Onld McGue put the baby to sleep. Be ings him the ehune of “The Old Phwiskey J'ug," . An' juggles him up on his knee, As light as the mist from ould Erin's green turf That floats from the bog to the sea. . Then the 1piossoon lies back like a. king on his couc , An' the shadows across his e es creep, I'll lay you abet it’s a beautifu sight When MoGue puts the baby to sleep. Then the ould man says, “Phwistl†as the ï¬rst darling snore Comes om: oi the nose of the child; An’ he shteps to the cradle as eisy as mud, An' the dump of a. pin makes him wild. " The Virgin take care of that baby!" his prayer Comes out of the heart low and (lee . It would kill the ould man if the id should refuse John McGue for to put him to sleep. The minutes that she has to wait seem like hours, and yet she dreads their passing, dreads the moment that must bring her face to face with the poor wife who is to learn from her (Marian) that she is a widow, When she hears the carriage stop, and a moment after hears Lady Killeen’s rich robes rustling as she hastily sweeps through the anteroom, and then across to the spot where Marian stands, the latter feels her heart cease to beat, and fancies that the words, “Your husband is murdered," are printed on her brow: The People Loved Her Much. " I wonder how many men and women are really happy in their marriages ?†he says, meditatively. “ Killeen wasn't, I know, poor fellow, though he was patient as an angel with her ladyship, and always tried to make the best of his poor bargain ; and I shouldn’t say that the Annealeys’ domestic life is one of unmixed bliss." “ Neither of the women you have men- tioned has it in her to be friend as well as wife,†she says; and she is a. trifle disap- pointed when he drops the hand he has been holding all this time, and, starting up, egeleimsâ€" "‘No! you’re right there! That’s just what Darragh would have been, thoughâ€" h'iend, guide, loveâ€"everything that a. wo- man should be.†When McGue Puts the Baby to Sleep. " More ‘ guide ’ than anything else, I'm thinking,†Mrs. O’Leary Bays, incisively. “ Your beautiful Darragh is born to rule ; yog are_ not _box;n to be r_u_le¢‘1." But though she says this in her most dul- cet, most convincing tones, Lord Killeen is not won back to his seat by the siren’e side, nor does he resume the interrupted clasp cigar sugagining hangâ€"tins day._ By and by, away from the influence of her subtly shaped room, and great personal charms. he reads in the columns 0! a. tran- tic little free and fetterleee journal the speech she has made this morning, and he reads it with ungnitiguted disgust. " He met his death trying to be of use to Robert,†Mrs. Annealey cries, bowing her head down as she'kngels by Lady Killeen’l lids. “ Will that thought stand between Later in the day two men are arrested on the charge ethaving shot at, with intent to murder, Mr. Annealey, and of havmg shot and killed Lord Killeen. It is worthy of remark that no outbreak of violence against, no ï¬erce denunciations of, those unknown ones who heme murdered her husband break from Lady Killeen’s lips as the story, so far as it is known to Marian Annesley, unfolds itself. To Darmgh’s indignant grief and horror, one of these is a. man on whose ï¬delity she would have staked her own lifeâ€"the Clad- dagh girl's lover I i Mrs. Annealev has an overwhelming sense of responsibility upon her as soon as her eyes fell on the terrible telegram. It is from Robert! There is great comfort to her in the midst of this misery, in the feet that Robert at least is alive and uninjured, but her heart sickens as she reads: “ Killeen has been killed; the shot was meant for me. I am sure. You must break the_awlu_l news to his p90: yvidpw." ' There is e. presentiment of some sorrow ahead in Lady Killeen’s mind, but she is far, poor thing, from guessing or suspecting the extent of the calamity which has over- taken her until Marian looks up and holds her hands out. Then, in a. flash, it all reveals itself, and with a. piteoue, helpless sob she criesâ€" “ Tell me howâ€"tell me everything." Then the two women, who have been united in the fellomahip of trivolity and fashion for some time past, are drawn closer together in the holier fellowship of sorrow and gymgathy. _ For a few moments she sits down crushed and almost paralyzed by the weight of the burden that has been laid upon her, and wonders if it be possible to evade the piti- less task. But quickly the real womanli- ness that is beneath her vanity and care- lessness asserts itself, and she rises, praying that she may begiven grace to tell the cruel trgthtenderly and wisely: If she can only catch Lady Killeen before the latter leaves home for the ball! There is still a chance of doing this, for Lady Killeen is apt to be late on these occasions. Mrs. Annesley suspends her own dressing operations. and, hurrying on a large wrap. runs down to her carriage and sets ofl again tor the house which she has but lately left, to tell the happy successful hostess that she is the widow of a murdered man! All that is best and womanly in Marian Annealey springs into stronger life as she sits waiting for Ledy Killeen in-the still lighted salon, in which they have all been somerry but an hour ago. But for the merest chanceâ€"en unsteady aim, perhaps, or the failure to discriminate between the two menâ€"her own husband would have met with Lord Killeen’s fate, and she would have been the bereft women to whom the grim tidings still have to be broken. As this reflection is borne in upon her mind, asharp twinge of conscience tor having let him go into peril without her seizes her, and with unfeigned feeling she says: ___ _ '3 I will be a. better wife if it pleases God togpare lgimr I†‘_ “ How shall I begin ?†she asks herself over and over again, as her carriage rapidly traverses the short distance between the two houses; "it’s slow torture to ‘break things’ gradually, and the shock may kill her it I blutt it out: abruptly; how shall I begin ‘Ij’ She is at the door now, hearing. as one hears things in a. dream, that “her lady- ship left ten minutes ago.†As the servant tells her this her dazed face, pallid in the full lamp light, strikes him with a. sudden conviction of evil to the house he serves, nudge adï¬s! hur_rie_dly. " The worst, the very worst," she says, with a gasp that prepares him for; the words that follow, " Lord Killeen has been killed, shot in mistake for some one else, Mr. Annealey telegraphs, and I must go and tell her.†“ No,†the servant says, wiping his eyes undisguisedly; “ her ladyship must be fetched home. and hear it from you here, ma’em; your face would tell her the truth before you could speak, and to hear it in a lb;|:a;llro<3mâ€"-â€"-â€" Her ladyship must be fetched ome. ’ ’ "You bring bad 'news for my lady, ma’gm; is it ubqutâ€"†HUSBAND’S RELATWNS ; on, us ?â€"â€"will it make you ï¬nd more pain than comfort in anything I can do for you or any to you_?†__ _ - -. w." H, " I don't know yet," poor Lsdy Killeen says, hopelessly. “ How can I answer for myself ‘2 I never knew till now how I loved Harry, and now the knowledge comes when it is useless; how can I answer for mzseli ‘1‘: _ .-..n.u By and by the morning light flickers in and pales the lamps, and still these two are together, bitterly sorrowing still, but grop- ing their way out from the deadliest bitterness by means of prayers framed by their needs and wqrded_b_y their heagte. . As Mrs. Annealey drives home in the pallid light of dawn she resolves that this trouble which is crushing Lady Killeen shall not fall upon herself. It Robert’s lines are cast in Ireland, unpleasant place as it is, so shall hers be also. Without delay she will wind up affairs here in Green Street, face the worst, ask outright and boldly for a check to defray the bills she ought never to have incurred, and go over to Darragh in a ï¬t of oontrite economy to share her husband’s fate andjortunes. But later in the day she sees in strictest seclusion a few dozens of her most intimate friends, and these convince her that it is her duty to stay where she is, to keep her husband’s name before the world in anti- cipation of that day when he shall sensibly return to his peaceful and paying practice in London. Lord Killeen’s murder is an awfully sad thing indeed, but since it has mercifully averted a similar fate from Mr. Annesley, common sense and wifely affec- tion combine to make her regard it with resignation. And as for her going to Ire- land to join him! why, common sense and witely affection ought to combine their forces to keep her in London in order that he may be lured there with as little delay as_possible. ",1 This is her iggdive as she drives home in thg pallid lighti_ _ot egrly gawn. . 57LA_L The papers teem with reports that are more or less inaccurate ‘of the manner and motive of Lord Killeen’s death; but, widely as they may differ in other respects. they are all agreed in this: that Lord Kilieen died in place of another man ; that, in fact, the bullet which has pierced his brain was “well meant†for Mr. Annealeyi And still Robert and Dolly are at Darragh, and Marian is in London. Three days after the murder the new Lord Killeen is in London soliciting an interview with the widow of the late one. It is only her due that he should do this, and no one but himself knows how he shrinks from the task. His has been a. soul-saddening journey, for he has brought with _him the corpse of the cousin who has fallen a. victim to the more malignant spirits of that cause which he (the new Lord Killeen) has so fondly fostered. And the widow is not the woman to forget now that she has always disap- proved of his politics and his manner of pursging them. “You can hardly wonder at my being a little sore about Harry’s infatuation,†she lays. deprecatingly, and he does wonder at the coarseness which can allow her to imply that her dead husbund had more than the regard ot a. kinuman to: the “ That’s just what Darragh has never done,†he says, oareilesnly. “ If anything, she has overvalued me, and as I think more of her and of her good opinion than of any- thing else in the world, I won’t talk about he: any more to you now, for you’re not in the 1_nood to gay !_1_ioe things of her.â€_ . " I believe in the spirit of the old song, ‘ If she undervalue me, what care I how fair she be?’ " Lady Killeen says, using the spur to make him leap aside from his loy- alty_t9 his cousin. _ I “ She never could take a. broad view of things, and there’s nothing in the world so harrowing as sharp and undeserved suffer- ing brought on one by the hand of man," he tells himself, as at last he is summoned to the room in which poor Lady Killeen is wrestling with he); woe. He feels constrained and awkward to his own surprise. Something seems to tell him that he is not altogether guiltless of having brought about this bitter end, and the same something whispers that he may be accessory to more mischief still if he goes on adding the fuel of his admiration to the flame which Mrs. O’Leary’s beauty and subtle fascination and fervid tongue are lighting in Ireland. “Ten thousand poï¬nda to Darmgh !†The announcement of the fact acts like a. tonic upon Lady Killeen, rousing her from the euervating depths of grief, and string- ing her up to the strong old spite against Darragh. Left it to her “in discharge of a just debt to her late father." Such is the way in which the legacy is worded, and no one knows that the debt is merely one of gra- titude to his late uncle, or that he has taken this means of discharging it out of his dear regard to Darragh, and his doubt as to the treatment Darragh might receive from his wife, in case of the girl being dependent in any way on jhat lady2 "He is tar more subdued in aspect now that he is the rich and prosperous head of the house. than Lady Killeen had ever seen him when he was the poor, nearly degeqdetflgadeï¬ o; it. _ I “ He is son-owing for his cousin, he is repentsnt for ever having mixed himself up with a. cause that is nurtured by blood, and that in its blind, mad, motiveless fury has sacriï¬ced his cousin.†MSG Elieâ€"toil}; hérselt, as, wifli bowed head and broken words, he comes and offers her his liqarï¬feyi sympathy. CHAPTER XXVIII. THE TALE OF THE DIAMONDS TOLD. When Lord Killesn’s will comes to be read it causes almost as much consterna- tion among the members of his family and the more immediate circle of his frinds as his death has done. For he has left ten thousand pounds out of Jillis personal estate to his cousin Dar- rag ._ “Her whole heart has always been with the people who have killed my husband,†Lady Killeen says, drying her eyes, and speaking very bitterly. “ She is with them, and of them; she knew, it even seems, that his life was in danger from them; they conï¬ded that to her, or why should she have gone over to strive to warn and save. as you say? Yet she let me stay here in ignorance; she let me go out and be gay and enjoy myself. I might have been dancing at the very time they were carry- ing Harry’s dead body to Darragh ; it was wicked of her to keep such knowledge from me, his wife.†Viiidderilleen’s heart_is touched, and he): conï¬jence won by the_oha_m_ge in hjm. _ “ Won’t Dafraéh coins to me ‘2†she sobs‘ “ Igrshe haréer that; you a_.r_e ?â€_ . Then she learns from him how Darragh went over striving to warn and save, and how she arrived too late, and how hers was the ï¬rst hands that touched the murdered man. / “Darragh’s anger and. resentment, her detestation of the way they are carrying On their work, is as deep as your own; she has ceased to share my hopes and prayers for the better future of the country; or, at least, she has ceasad to share my sympa- thy with the way they are struggling for freedom.†“ Darragh had no certain knowledge,†he protests. " She got a him; from Kathleenâ€" the pretty Gladdagh girl, you knowâ€"and actedron itrto-the beat o_£ her apility.:’ _ “ She might have influenced her friends to spare her oousin,â€, the Widow weeps; "but they and their fancied wrongs and their wicked, idle, bloodthirsty ways are dearer to her than family and respects.- bility. Oh, Arthur! forgive me for being angry with her; forgive me} for say- ing hard things of your love; but I have lost my husband, and she knew what was coming, and would not show me how to save him. She is in accord with them, and you are in accord with her, and I and my g_rief are nothing to you.†orphan cousin whom they (the Thynnes) regargded as tpe glorx oi ghe‘y: 112283. --n_._._-- ,, Other people besides Lady Killeen are greatly exercised when they hear of this handsome legacy of ten thousand pounds which has fallen to Darragh. The old Meckivers prick up their ears and tell each other that they “ see the ï¬nger of Provi- dence†in just this sum having fallen to the lot of the girl for whom their son Ron- ald’s heart 18 sick. “ It's adispensation." Mrs. Mackiver says, solemnly. “ That which has been taken from Dolly has been given to Darmgh, and it’s not {or up t9 gepineï¬ â€™ “Neither is it for us to scheme to make the transfer pleasant and proï¬table to Ronald, mother,†Mary says, etou’aly, and though Mrs. Maokiver gvowg that such ,4 4‘. L__ gainsâ€"hr from her thoughts, her daughter shakes an incredulous head about the matter. Ronald hears of it: with unmixed plea.- sure. That the girl he loves should be placed above all heart-sickening, mind- weakening anxiety and want is a. source of pure and perfect joy to him. Personally he knows that he has no interest in the matter. Whether Derragh be rich or poor, in is borne in upon him pretty strongly by this time that she is not for him. Nevertheless, as soon as he can get out of bed and walk about, he longs to rejoin his regiment, for he hears that he is under orders for Ireland. He is in ignorance still of the rupture of the engagement between Darragh and her cousin. It is the dread that he daily rises to face, this one, that, in the course of the current day. he may hear from some one that Lord Killeen and Darragh are to be married shortly. For, naturally Killeen will secure his prize, now that fortune has made it possible for him to do it without delay. Naturally he will wear his jewel openly, now that_he can‘set it_ so well. A 3 _-L:_ v..- , ___.. V eroï¬y heargvbï¬tï¬ii With unfeigned satis- faction, forâ€"money is money, and may it not make Ronaldâ€™ï¬ path amoother? I "th even povefty can come between tehm now; ,and I’m glad,†Dolly tells her- self brazely. But Darragh hears 0! it with more unmitigated, more intense, delight than any of the others. Her plan is plain before her now; even as Dolly has done, she settles in her own mind that by means of this money, Ronald shall be happy at last. Things are going very roughly and crook- edly on the Galway property. Powles has proved her claim to sit for a picture of ï¬delity, for she only among many has the courage to remain in the home of, and to try to serve. the Annealeys. In pursuing her path she gets roughly handled and rudely assailed with straying speech very often. Still she stays on at Dnrragh, doing her best according to her lights. and denouncing “ them Irish wild beasts†in a. way that gives many of them a handle to turn against: _her enigloyeri. 1 p n ,,,A,, nn_. Evilodays hove indeed fallen upon Der rough and the region round about it. The bold,brighc, fearless young Claddaghlad who is betrothed to Kathleen has been tried and found guilty of the murder of Lord Killeen. The revolver found by the ditch out of which they lifted the dead body is known to be his, and he can offer no other explgnation _of its. being there than this : ._ A__“-L A St. Louis man went around with Chief Justice Coleridge and talked of nothing but the bigness of everything in the town. “Finally,†says Coleridge, who tells the story, " while passing one of those tremen- dous grain elevators, which are a feature of western cities, my friend broke out: ‘ Did you ever see anything like that? How many of these elevators do you suppose we have in St. Louis?’ With perfect gravity I replied: ‘Well, don’t know exactly, but 1 should suppose about 10,000.’ †And the old gentleman chuckled over the mem- ory of the incident, and of the crushed and humiliated aspect of the western boaster, who had to admit that there were less than a dozenâ€"Detroit Free Press. Emperor William 5 again troubled with jaundice. -_‘_.V_ "Hevï¬ia. lent it to} friend for target practice, and he’ll die rather than tell who what friend is.†It is in vein that Robert Annealey, stimu- lated to the task by Dnrmgh’s eloquent representations, and poor Kathleen’s pas- sionate entreaties thath’e “ will try to save her innocent sweethearts,†avows his belief in the innocence of the young ï¬sherman, and praysthat judgh ent may be suspended. $he poor Olnddeg 'lnd is oo‘ndemned to . ,.:1, 1,1,. More than 22,000,000 steel pens are made every Week, and two-thlrds of them are produced at Birmingham, England. die, and popular feeling, which holds him guiltleeeâ€"as indeed he ia-oriaes higher than ever against the Annealeys and the landlord’s interest generally in " this most distreestul country that ever yet_w§e eeeq.†Terrible scenes are witnessed daily in the neighborhood, and though Dan-ugh, pro- tected by the magic of her name, goes among the people freely as of. old they die- regerd her exhortations to patience and paciï¬c conduct, and degrade their cause by ruthlessly brutalizipg themselyes. ‘ And one there is who leads them on down the lowering path that must end in disgrace, destruction, and death, whose beautiful physique. and ï¬ery, maddening language make sane and moderate lovers of their country regard her as a. magniï¬â€˜ cent and seductive embodiment of its evil genius. A.- . .. nr,,,:|17:n_._m_ There is division even in the Cleddegh comp just’now. The youngfellow lyingin jail under sentence of death for the murder of Lord Killeen is knewn to have been a. faith- ful friend of the house, and it is known widely and with certainty that he has had no hand in the dark deed. Still, what they persist in calling “English†law has found him guilty on the most damning circumâ€" stantiel evidence, and though conviction has brought it home to the heart of the condemned men who the reel murderer is, the brave Gladdegh boy holds his peace, and resolves to suffer wrongfully rather then bring the punishment of his crime home to the real offenderâ€"who is the father of innocent children. Mrs. O’Leery, in spite of Lord Killeen’s entree-ties that she “ will keep her name out of the papers,†comes to the fore on all occasions in this neighborhood now. If there is to be 9. sale of terms from which solvent but non-paying tenants have been evicted, the lady is there mingling freely with the insurgent throng, and never stay- ing them with so much as a. warning word or hand when the savage grows rampant within them, and they hurl stones at the heads of those who represent law, order, sng authority. In time it seems to be coming to be almost a. personal struggle for prestige and influence between Darraghâ€"the good young lady who is “ one of them†and who loves them though she loathea their current courseâ€"and the fair. dangerous foreign incendiary who has begun playing the big game out of love of excitement, and for the gratiï¬cation of her_own ambition.‘ . .1,,-, It is nothing to Mrs. O’Leary that these people, whose own woes she portrays to them so eloquently, should be inflamed till the devastating ï¬re within them burns up not only themselves but all within their reach. Let them perish! They will have served he: purpose, and the purpose of those who are like minded to her. Her manipulation of that “cause of freedom†for which they are ready to destroy them- selves and others puts money in her purse, and makes her name prominent. The poor, weak instruments on which she and her colleagues play do not count when she is calculating the cost. She is to the fore it marked and mentioned woman. It “ the gevirl takes the hindmoet " what is that to er . Taking Ihe Wind Out on his Sails. (To be continued.) The Terrible Fate 0! a Small Body 01 lVlen and the Future Hanging Over Many ()Ihera. The keeper of the Eddyatone lighthouse recently duoovered a. bottle containing the following pathetic sentences, the lass ex- pressions Ola. small band 0! shipwrecked men: "We have been living upon a. raft for ten days, and for more than hell the time without water. We have hoped against hope, and new are ready and waiting for death. Anythingie betterthan this agony. We cannot endure it more than a. few hours longer. Yesterday we saw a.- vessel and thought we were safe, but it passed on without seeing us. Today we have aban- doned hope. Such a. death, away from friends and in such agony, is terrible. To look into the cannon’s mouth requires bravery, but to face death coming slowly but surely needs only despair. There is no hope-=1 - - a. The only difference between the experi- I once of these men and thousands of others on land to-day is that the shipwrecked men realized their fate while the others do not. They are in just as certain danger . but are wholly unconscious of it. They are aware that their heads pain them frequently; that their appetite is ï¬ckle; that they are losing flash or possibly bloat- ‘ ing ; that their skin is often hot or feverish, alternately with distressing chills; that at times breathing is difï¬cult; that the ambi- tion is gone and despondency frequently occurs. ;People notice these things but think they are caused by some cold or indigestion, and hence give them no further thought. Any one of the above symptoms recurring at intervals indicates a diseased condition of the kidneys which is certain to result in Bright’s disease it permitted to go on unchecked. What the terrors of this terrible disease are can never be described, 3 but it has carried off some of the ï¬nest men and most noble women America has ever produced. “ About one-third its vic- tims,†says Dr. Robert, the highest authority on the subject, " through neglect to take the disease promptly in hand on its ï¬rst appearance, die of uremic poisoning (in convulsions or by diarrhoea). Many die from watery suffocation, from gan- grenous erysipelas in the legs, thighs and genitals, peneumonia, heart disease, apo- plexy,2intestinalï¬lcerations, paralysis, etc., all of which troubles are the result of Bright’s disease.†.. .. ...\~ - r , Another high authority says: “ Diabetes and Bright’s disease of the kidneys always terminate in death it discovered too late, but yield readily to treatment if taken in time. Thousands of people who pass thick yellow matter with brick-duet sediment and complain of a slight backache, head- ache, dizziness, imperfect vision, cold back, hands and feet, general debility, etc., etc., are victims of this deadly disease (unknown to themselves), and when, at last, overcome by its exhausting influence, they present themselves to their medical attendant, he, nine times out o! ten,will write out a prescription for malarial poison, or, discovering their terrible condition, inform them that they have come too late." To permit the kidneys to rot away, or to suffer limestone deposits to accumulate in the bladder, is criminal carelessness, espe- cially when it can be entirely avoided by care and the use of the proper means. For this purpose, however, there is but one known remedy, and that is Warner’s Safe Cure, better known as Warner’s Safe Kid- ney and Liver Cure. It is true there are many preparations that claim to cure or relieve these troubles, but no remedy has ever been found that absolutely does this except the one above-mentioned. It is, actually, the only proprietary medicine which has ever received the unqualiï¬ed endorsement of the medical profession. Among the number of physicians who have written at length regarding its wonderful properties are the well known Dr. Dio Lewis, Dr. Robert A. Gunn. President of the United States Medical College of New York, and Dr. Frank Gallagher, of New Haven. These men are men of science and will not endorse anything they do not know to be valuable in the highest degree. But the thousands of men, women and children in every nook and corner of America who have been kept from disease and saved from death by means of Warner’s Safe Cure speak more truly for its value than could all the endorsements of every physi- cian in the land. They do not speak of its chemical ingredients, but of its healing power. They know the value of the remedy, for it has restored them to health. The above facts all show that it is an absolute duty you owe yourself and your friends to not only carefully observe and reflect upon these things, but to attend to them in time. Sherman and Grant were St. Louis man before the War; Grant drove in oordwood and Sherman was president of a. horse-oar line. Sheridan, meanwhile, was engaged in curbing earth dug out o! a canal. George D. Robinson will be the third Governor of Massachusetts direcny de- scended from Dolor Davis, who came over in 1635. John Davis and John D. Long were the others. The late J. P. Hale, of New York, left $10,000,000, much of which goes to a. cousin who can neither read not write. Leo Tolstoy, the Russian novelist, re- fuses to serve on a jury because his religious convictions forbid him to eerve as a judge over his fellow-men. That a. fellow who deliberately proposes matrimony to a. girl when he can’t support himself is either a. ï¬rst-class fraud or a. foolâ€"unless he marries for money and becomes her hired man. gom'an. That to deal honorably with all men they begin with their wgsher-wqman. That they can i; reckon on their father’s fortune to bring them through life. For- tunes me slippery thingsâ€"better have sorgething b_e§ide§ to [all back on.“ _ That a girl who decks herself in the latest things out and parades in the street whila her mother does the washing, isn’t worth waqting much lpre on. A remarkable story comes from St. Helen which is well vouched for. About six months ago twin brothersâ€"Alfred and Henry Groveâ€"arrived from Kansas and settled near St. Helen. There was a very strong resemblance between them, in fact so strong that intimate friends could scarcely tell one from the other. v Henry was married, but his wife was living in Kansas. He soon made the acquaintance of the family of John Avery. living near, including their daughter, Lottie Avery, aged 19. One night about ï¬ve weeks ago in jest he asked her to become his Wife and to his surprise she accepted, informing her mother immediately. The mother in a practical way broached the marriage. etc, and before Grove could recover from his surprise the details had been arranged. He immediately went to his brother Alfred, told the story, and asked for advice. Alfred volunteered to personate the brother and stand for him. The ceremony took place Oct. flat, the couple remaining at the home of the bride’s parents. Alfred fell in love with the girl and a week after the marriage told of the deception. In her indignation she ordered him from the house. She then informed her parents and the father started after his eon-in-law with a shot gun and has followed Alfred to this city, where he is supposed to have fledâ€"Portland Ore- For Young Men to Bememhar. That clothes don’t make the man. That if they once get in debt they may never get out of it. That they need something more sub- stantial than cigars, kld gloves, and a cane to 39m housekeeping yvith. A Real Comedy oi Errors. LOST I An Old Euglneer’e Story of the Eflect of superheated steam. Coming over from Detroit last week a reporter met a very genial and intelligent old gentleman in the smoking compart- ment of one of the sleepers, says the Chicago Herald. The scribe thought at ï¬rst, from “ the out of his jib,†that the ‘ stranger had been an engineer on some big lake steamer or on one of the ocean liners. In talking about boats and engines the sub- ject of superheated steam was reached. The old man had been most of his life a locomotive and mechanical engineer. He said : “ I never cared much about super- heated steam ; it is ticklish stuï¬f to handle, for you never can tell what it is going to do next.†“ Did you ever have a boiler burst with you? †“ No. but I was mighty near it once, and I have seen three or tour explosions, Well, one was near Susquehanna, on the New York and Erie, now the New York, Lake Erie and Western. Poor Walter “Arnold was running the engine. He was as nice a chap and as steady and careful an engi- neer as you ever saw. I was standing near the ofï¬ce door talking to the mechanical - superintendent about some new hammers that we were putting into the shop. It was in the fall of 1857, but I remember it as if it occurred yesterday. Walter hauled up about 200 yards to the right of where we were standing, and his engine had hardly stopped when the explosion took place. It was a fearful sound. It stunned us for a second or two. Then we rushed down to see a sight which I don’t want to ace again. A lot of the work people and their wives and children had got on the tender. It was pay day, and they were going down the road to the village. There were fourteen of them altogether, and they were nearly all cut to pieces. The fragments of the bodies were seen lying around, mixed up with the wreck of th engine and'tender. Immediately on getting up to the spot I rushed across the track to see if I could ï¬nd anything of poor Watty, for he and I were close friends. Well, sir, sure enough, there was his head resting upright on a flat stone in a little stream of water by the side of the road, and the color of life was still seen in his cheeks. His eyes were wide open and staring. ‘ My God 1’ I said to the man next me, ‘ there is poor Watty’s head,’ and with that the eyes actually closed and opened, as much as to say, ‘ Yes, old man, here I am.’ This is as true as you and 1 are here now. No, I don’t want to be in any more explosions.’_‘ Perseverance and Patience Will Accom- plish Wonder-[Ill Things. “I am in an unhappy frame of mind,†writes a young man to this paper. “ I love a beautiful girl who seems to trifle with my affections, though I am persuaded she loves 1 me but does not want me to think she may be too easily won. Last evening when, I went to her home to call on her she set the dog on me and I jumped over the picket fence and my coat tailcaughton the pickets and held me there while the dog chewed my coat and bit a large piece out of my pants. And the girl stood on the porch and laughed a laugh full of a strange. low, sweet cadence. Do you think the girl is only try- i ng the strength of my affection for her and that she will learn to love me ?†We hardly think you have room to hope, young man. . A girl that will stand on the porch and “ laugh alaugh full of a strange, low, sweet cadence" while a dog is eating some of you is not likely to ever learn to love you well enough to let you sit on one of the front benches when she marries another fellow. But if you continue your visits you can have reason to hope that the family dog will be- come attached to you, in the end.~â€"Middle- town Transcript. " And Vyou really tflink the héad heard your remark, and answered it by winking his 9336: ?â€7 r “Yemrsir; it is true as death. Why Arnold knew me, and heard my voice and answered it. You see the head was taken off clear below the jaws, and very hkely the superheated steam nerd Vthe ends of the veins and stopped the flow of blood from the head and face. There was a. good color in the face, and the eyes were full of intelligence." The reporter ascertained that the name of the speaker is William Nugent, mechan- ical engineer and draughtsman. As to the possibility of the head being conscious after severance, it is on record that several of the heads taken oï¬ by .the guillotine in Paris during the reign of terror showed signs of life and consciousness after execu- tion took place, and that vital action con- tinued for a considerable time in some cases. It is by no means im- possible that a nervous contraction of the eyelids might have taken place. Whether there was really conscious motion is an- other question. It is certain that Mr. Nugent thought at the time that there was, and that he continues in that belief to this day. The conditions are certainly more favorable for the momentary maintenance of consciousness in Walter Arnold’s case than in the cases of victims of the guillo- tine. There was much less loss of blood, and the whole system was probably in a condition of more robust and active life. There was also the fact that the flow of blood from the head in this case had been partially checked, ï¬rst, by the super-heated steam, and, second, by the cold water of the creek. In all things have the courage to prefer oomtorh and prosperity to tushion. â€"The Central Prison contains 275 in- mates. The Pope About to Astonish the “’orld on Ilse Subject or Philosophy. At any moment, it is said, His Holiness Leo ,XIII. may astonish the world on the subject of philosophy. Some persons say this will be imparted to the faithful in the form 0! a bull. Such is not correct. From the Latin bulla, the boss or seal which is attached to it, comes the word “ bull.†It is written on parchment and sealed with lead, and is only issued by order of the Pope, by formal process, from the Papal or Roman Chancery. A prevailing report that a bull is soon to be issued is incorrect. There may, however, be a brief. One side of the leaden seal on abull is impressed with the heads of the Apostles Sts. Peter and- Paul ; and the other with the name of the Pope, and the year of his reign or pontiï¬cate. Bulls, as a rule, are issued for the‘ celebration of jubilees, the establishing of certain oonclusxons concerning doctrine, and, in such cases, are addressed to the Church Universal. The creation of new doctrine is- an unknown procedure, inasmuch as the Christian doctrine of the Church has been one and inseparable from the beginning. Bulls are also issued for the consecration of bishops and other solemn subjects. They are generally designated by the initial words or sentence. For instance. the bull famed all over Christendom as Um‘genitus, and issued by Pope Clement XL, in Sep- 'tember, 1713, commenced with the words Unigenitus Dei ï¬lius, and has ever since been known by the ï¬rst word thereof. This bull condemns 110 propositions extracted from the book of Pore Quesnel entitled " Le Nouveau Testament aveo des Reflex ions Morales." A brief differs from a bull, though at this moment both are con- founded by some publications. A brief is from brem's, and, as the word indicates, is more concise than a bull. It is a letter written on paper sealed With red wax car- rying the impression of a ï¬sherman, or St. Peter, in a boat. It terminates by the Cardinal Penitentiary adding, “ Given at Rome under the ï¬sherman’s ring," etc.â€" Italian Times of Rome. A SEVERE†HEAD ALIVE. ADVICE TO AN ARDENT YOUTH. PAPAL BULLS AND BRIEFS. [have been sick and miserable so long, and had caused my husband so much trouble and expense. no one seemed to know What ailed me, that I was completely disheartened and discour- aged. In this frame of mind I got a bottle of Hop Blttera and used them unknown to my family. I soon began to improve, and gained so fast that my husband and family thought it stran e and unnatural, but when I told them what ad helped me they said, “Hurrah for Hop Bitters! long may they prosper! for they have made mother well and us happy."â€"The Mother M. Michel Ephrussi, who recently married Mlle. de Rothschild,ha.e purchased the hotel of Mme. de Pompadour, at Fon- taiuebleau. is three times the man he was before he began using “Wells’Health Renewer.†$1. Druggists. J ease George is‘tne pioneer peanut raiser of Tennessee. He made his ï¬res map in 1850 and now has immense ï¬elds under cultivation. MOTHER SWAN’S womu SYRUP- Infallible, tasteless, harmless, cathartic;_for ggverishuess,restlessness; worms, constipamon. c. The late «Senator Randolph, of NEW Jersey. always distributed his salary as a. Congressman among benevolent societies. Stinging, irritation, inflammation, all Kidney and ,Urinary complaints, cured by "Buchu- paiba.†$1. , â€"A medical Englishman prescribes a. strong solutlon of chromic acid for warts. *J“Example is better than precept." It is well known that dyspepsia. bilious attacks, head- ache and many other ills can only be cured by removing their cause. Kidney-Wort has been proved to be the most effectual remedy for these, and tor habitual coativeneas, which so afliicts millions of the American people. ' 'â€"-The late Bishop Hunter, of the Mor- mon Church, was born and reared a. Quaker. l3? For ï¬ve cents, Wells, Richardson & 00., Burlington, Vt, will send colored samples of all colors of Diamond Dyes, with directions. ~â€"" 011 the snow, the â€"†But the subject is stale ; let us change it. D Public Prints about the value bf Phosphates as fertilizers, and as nerve and. brain food to sup- ply the waste of tissues, resulting from mental and physical exertion, that they have become universally recognized as the most important nutritive agents known to science. They are nature’s restoratives, whether it be the worn out soil, or the constitution run down with wasting chronic diseases,dependingupon indIgestion and. imperfect assimilation of tooa, their action being to perfect cell-growth and the formation or healthy tissues. Dr. Wheeler’s Compound Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya is not only elegant and reliable, but extraordinary in its eï¬ect in gngrgizin'g and. vitalizing all the organs of the o y. . t 5 -â€"Winter’a chilly blasts aï¬ruok- the town in dead earnest Sunday night. . successfully treated. Pamphlet of particu- lars one stamp. Address WORLD’S DISPEN- BABY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N.Y, â€"â€"The fever for Jersey cattle is running high in Alabama. -â€"â€"9â€"â€"â€" _ BEAUTIFUL WOMEN are made pallid and unattractive by func- tional irregularities, dlsorders and weak- nesses that are perfectly cured bytollowing the suggestions given in an Illustrated treatise (with colored plates) sent for three letter postage stamps. Address WORLD'S DISPENEABY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buflolo, â€"-Skunk skins are sometimes sold an Australian mink. $72 Young and middle-aged men suffering from nervous debility, premature old age, loss of memory, and kindred symptoms, should send three stamps for Part VII. of paw}:th by World’s Dispensary Medlcal Association, Buffelo, N.Y. â€"England is no longer jealous or sus‘ plcious of Russia. (I Dr. pimples. Steve T. gists.‘ â€" w v â€" _ _ _ _ _ When I an cure 1 no not. mean merely co'ï¬op them Y5: a time and t en have them return again, I mean a radi- cal cure. I have made the disease of FITS. EPXLEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a. life-long study. 1 warrant my remedy to cure the worst cases. Because other: have failed 3 no reason for not now receiving a. cum Send at nine to n treatise and a Free Bottle of my lnfnuiblo tamed) Give Express and Post omen. It costs .3011 f t 81 d1 [11 . WM ï¬eï¬qï¬fï¬ Timmwmw â€"Dr.C.W. Benson's Celery and Chamomile Pills are prepared expressl to cure and wxll cure Headache of all kinds, euralgia, Nervous- neas and Dyspepsia. Proved and endorsed by physicians. IEGUBE FITS! _- . m. n... mun“ man 9:. sum thnm 'm â€"-A Boston oculistz protests against dotted veils. *Women are rapidly ï¬nding places in the learned professions and more lucrative occupa- tions from which they were formerly excluded. Many are graduating in medicine, Mrs. Lydia. E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mesa, is a minister of health to thousands who may never touch the hem of her garment or behold the genial light of her modest countenance. oysters â€"Duoks are very marshes this year. We all have suflicient strength to support the mxsfortunes of others. â€"Everybody’s favoriteâ€"S. â€"Ths starï¬sh is killing the New Haven $5 to $20 51 $66 33 UATABBH OF THE BLADDER. WEE“ mm. rouge own / HO are suffering from Nymvocs Dmmar Los'r VITAm'n', LACK on NERVE Emmi m: Ween, WAs'mm \Vnnmsws. and all those disease! of 1» PERSONAL NA'ruxm resulting from Alanna and 01mm CAUSES. Hpeudy relief and complete resto ration of HEALTH,VIGOI£ and MANHOOD Gunnmnmn The grandest discovery of the Nineteenth .‘.ntnr3n Bend m‘: onceiur Illustrated Pamphlet free. 1 d.de O MUCH HAS BEEN SAID IN THAT HUSBAND 0F I'll NE One Experience irom Many. 'ï¬l’ï¬ic BELTjï¬ingï¬â€˜SHALL Maxi A WEEK' “519 at 6&7 at home many Ooaflvrnm -«.. 1km." 75,17“ A" a a week In your own town. Terms and 8 outï¬t free. E. HALIP'I'IE Ge 00., Portlan ' Benson's Skin Cure eradicated .my They used to break out continually. Harrison, Rooheaaer, N. Y. $1 atdrug- EP] I‘EI’SY (Ell!) Ier day at home Samples worth '.5 has. Brunet)»: &Son Portland M plentiful Ontario m ‘43 RHEURIATIC 1 COBIPLAINTS. RHEUMATINE KlUNEY COMPLAINTS Telimonlal from 308A NEEDIIAM. who has been for Years In the Set- vice of the Rev. Dr. Williams, of St. Paul Street. Methodist Church, St. Calhnrines. MR. BUTHERLAND : Dear Sir,TI have been afflicted. for some years with rheumatism ; became stiff and almost helpless ; and also suf- fered very great pain. I was in this state when I ï¬rst saw your advertisement of “Rheumatine " in the papers ; I thought it would do me no harm to try it, which I did with the best results. Now I can move about as well as ever. I had to take quite a. number of bottles, still that is nothing to_be_i_ng cpgeq, which_1_am he.ng to say I gm. I did not feel any relief until I had taken four or ï¬ve bottles, then I began to feel better. I truly hope that any one who is suffering from rheumatism will give your “Rheumauine " a fair trial, for I was ver bad and it cured me. Do as you pleasg with his letter, and. believe me to remain ' Most gratefully yours. ' (Signed) ROSA NEEDHAM. P. S.â€"I am living at the’Rev. Dr. Williams , St- Catharines. Any reference to him will prove that the above is true. The Rheumatine Manufacturing 39 ST OATHARINES. our J. Wlllfl' & 00., Wholesale Agcnm lllmuton. ' Education or B enceriali P61}: manshis i8 at i B SPENOW - IAN B SINEBS comma tetra“ moh' Circular: tree No! 7 “ She lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years,‘ “ The doctors doing her no good ;" " And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about] v . “ Indeed! Indeed I" i i" How thankful we should be Ior that medl- 0 he." “ Eieven years our daughter suffered on a. of misery. " From a. complication of kidney, liver, rheh; matic trouble and Nervous debility, “ Under the care of the best physicians, “Who gave her disease various names, “But no relief, “And. now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a. remedy es Hop Bitters. that we had shunned for years before using it."-â€"-THE PARENTS. " My daughters say: “ How much better father 5 since he used Hop Bitters." “ He is getting well after his long suffering from a. disease declared incurable" W I‘Kï¬diflé Eié £6 ig’l’éfd thï¬iié iiééii your Bitters. â€"A LADY of Uticn, N.Y. An Internal Remcdv and a. SURE CURE or all kinds Give RHEUMATINE a fair trial. You will never regret having done so. E'lt revives the drooping spirits, invigorate: and harmonizcs the organic functions, gives elasticity and. ï¬rmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the eye, and plants on the pale cheek of woman the fresh roses of life’s spring and early summer time. WPhysicians Use It and Prescribe It Freely.‘®i It removes faintness, flatplency, destroys all cravln‘ for stimulant, and relieves weakness of the stomach. No famil should be without LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S LIVER, PI LS. The cure constipation, bfliousnc, md 00:91th of the ver. 25 cents per box. For n11 those Painful Complaints and Woaheuel so common to our bést female population. A Medicine for Woman. Invented by a Woman. Prepared by a Woman. The Greniest Median! Discovery Since the Dawn of History. That feeling of bearing- down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its “so. For the cure of Kidney Complnlntl of either sex this Compound is unuurnusscd. will} eruï¬â€˜ic‘iée‘ every VE‘sâ€"taiEeâ€"XF'ï¬lfmï¬rs from mi; Blood, and give tone and strength to the system, of man woman or child. Insist on curing it. Both the Compound and Blood Puriï¬er are prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, $1. Six bottles for $5. Sent by mall in the form of pills, m- of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Piukham freer answers 0.11 letters of ‘nquiz-y. Enclose Set. stamp. Semi for pamphlet. LYDIA E. P'INKHAM’S VEGBLABLE COMPOUND. ~ BHEFJMATINE 1.3mm E. PINlmAiuzs 3mg» P0311113}: young or old. SED EVERYWHERE. {BOLD BY ALL DRUGGIBTB. Price 25:. and $1.00 per Bottle. If you are suï¬ering from @5011] by 11.11 Druggists.‘®n (1) Father Is Getting Well. A Daughter’s Misery. 81:. CATHARINES, July 2nd, 1883. D. C N. In 48. 53. Did She Die ? Is a. Positive Cure PLACE to secure a. Businesi Education; or Spenggrian Pen- ROSA NEEDBAM‘