New" I She'was delighted at the prosnrct. "They are better than poetry. Audâ€" rhefst'tor ï¬ne her a «hack Whinfhhha ;-. .4)“. t thy Oanme wou mver the expenleqo er gt“ y are ru' d 1: th ht! ‘ Journey and all noodful purchases. Mu. 130 Ch 6 $3186 0" 0‘18 u Brooke had been very anxious to send 0}“. Outside the window stood for the Holmesdale millimr. lady of groups of white aa-anslon lilion. great n'puto. hut Mrs. (‘alv rm had , ,. shuddrod al the thought. Through â€30 “PPHN‘ ("â€3“ °f the “It would he better for Audrov t0 gun-n trees aha saw the lofty gray spire have her dresses made in London." she of the l-hun-h: ahovo that was the clvar said; â€I fan superintond them there." blue .k, , She lunled when Audrey. full of glee . ° came to her und showed her tho ("heck-â€" “But poetry and â€nth alwa (ether. manna. do they not I†CHAPTER I. 000 of the earliest scenes that Aud- rey Brooke remembered in her life was the following. The morning sun wa." Ihinin. brightly into the quaint old-1 fashioned room that her father, Dr: Fabian Brooke. called his libraryâ€"a, room that would have charmed an an; ht by its dark rich coloring and art- istic furniture. Round the walls were great oaken hook-shelves laden with books. The panels were painted in rich deep colors, the hangings were of deep crimson. the carpet was of Indian manufacture; the few pictures were ehefe d'oeuvre the half-dozen busts were of great. merit and value. the ortletlo. The prevaiilng odor of Span- ieh leatherâ€"fragrant and aromaticâ€"â€" wee enother charm: but to Audrey Brooke the greatest charm was the large hay-window, filled with soft Turkish cushions. and overlooking one of the most beautiful gardens in Eng- land. - “The" nhould ,m dear. I can-not amoum would you pun-mum um «um-mm . ‘ do .y .. 'd of the desrrsptmn that she ‘ntended her la} that they :11 every (use. sat ,heauhful young kinswoman to wear. Mrs. Brooke. % $0 the morning came when AudrPy The gir! did not seem to but the. bad," Niel! 10 her meaaant home _and Iovmg parents. She was silent. fumed answerâ€"her on: were riveted on the with ‘ thousand wondem as to what blue sky. She murmure'l the solemn the new world she was going to would unrdu nnpo :nnainn "n hRI‘RQH'oâ€"“ThOSO be hke Audrey bended her the form: and got up and leened over the hock of the rhair as she auewered: "The marriage service, momma. I have never reed it before. {How beauti- ful the words ere! Listen to this one swtltenceâ€"“T‘hoee whom God hath join- rd together let no man put asunder." The worde have the rhythm of an old poem.†The girl did not seem to but the answerâ€"her eyes were riveted on the blue sky. She murmure‘l the solemn. words once again Ito herself-“Thosa whom God hath joined together let no mu: put asunder." Her father had just returneu now the church. where he had been marry- 398 “V0 Young peOpIe. and: the form he had used still lay on the table. She took it in her hands. and read it as she went to her favorite nook. the great. bay window. She laid it upon a cushi- ion. and bending her fair head over it etudied the words intently. They were beautiful words. and the sentence that riveted the child’s attention was this. â€Those whom God hath joined to- gether let no man put asunder.†She said it over and over again to herself with a critical air. as of one who “eigh- ed the words. A hand touched her how- ed head and roused her. “What are you reading, Audrey 3" asked her mother. as sin grated her- oolf in nu easyâ€"chair. “I shall never forgot fthe words, mama)..." she said, "they tree so beauti- ful." woâ€"Iumâ€" w"‘- â€"â€"-v-, ‘â€"- ful.†J | “You Willi-think rny house a vortex _ ' . . 'of dissipation. Andre , I am afraid." And heni'eforuard in her mind. the said Mrs. Pslverne. N? am never alonef' grey «hurch spire. the green foliage. solitude and lore sworn enemies. . and the white weiision lilies were all like hri ht faves shout me: I like sesooisteil with a senteni-e whii'h seem-' plenty 0 “dump-m""â€â€œ3i"' parties. , ' bells. fetes. l think life. was given us ed to her more so.emn than an) 3h°\t_0 enjoy. and I endeavor to obtain my bed ever hesrd. flhare. W'e shall have one quiet. night; Holmesilale was a picturesque spot.ithen will come a host. of visitors. You The town of Bolmesdale stood st thegwill like them all; but there is one foot of a wooded hill. The River Dale'iwhom I should like you "to make I. -â€"a lime! stream. with deep green: friend of-Bertha Hamlyn. She is a henlxs~ran through the townphrunette. Some people call her a. the houses i-lusterwl on either beauty; I think she is picturesque. But side; the great dark masses of the she is a terrible flirt.†Holme woods rose on the left. and on? “A flirt l" questioned Audrey. “That the right lay miles of green pasture' is something very bad. is it. not l" lend. The church stood halfway up theI “Some people find the character very hill. and was surrounded by tall trees. pleasant-" said Mrs. Calverne. "The H. was s nhureh with srehm] windowsconduet. of such persons means nothe overhung with ivy. and with stall tspâ€"fin; really wrongâ€"only playing at erinc spire. The rectory was ’built.i§!ove.†hill. and “'88 a pretty. qusint old house‘- The beautiful dark eyes opened half hidden liv flowers. [brightly There lived Dr. Fabien Brook» (moi of th egreatest a‘holnrs and mu- of tha‘: limpleat men in Englandrâ€"a man wise. yet simple. learned yPt humble. full all} deep roll. ion. faith and showing it inn. 3 00d li 0. ‘He was rector of Holmes»; do e. No one ever relerrerl to him as; D miracle of eloquent~o~~lw preavlie'l no new doctrine. he tool: no part in the Oomewhat acrid discussions of thP (lam he startled no one hry innovations of any. kind: that. it was a far-t. that the people. of Hollie-dale under his charge lived; 001 lives and died happy deaths. than hey were honest. sober. moral and charitable. He was as firm as a rovk in ull matters of right and wrong. yet he won so kind. so merciful. so gentlo In his judgments. that charitv lived in his parish and among ell the people with Whom he haul to detl. His wife limbo? was a gentle. kindly woman. whose life had but one andâ€"- obedience to her husband. Audrny. his dtughter and only child. completed the little househoM. and had far more depth of vhaructor than any one else in it. They ave to every sin 'its prover Inn. 1'. Brooke never 3'00! by cadm- ly while the poor man who had stol- en bread for his starving vhildren and the ri I swindler whn had ro‘ hed thous- It wan 3 wonderful household and e leneilile one. Religion was not made hideous with either cant or severity: It was mule beautiful. g.raoeful attrac- the The Bracken did8 not ronfound the sin and the sinner: they never loss- ed over wickednm. nor made lig t. of if not pretended that enythingg could excuse it. undo won chased t1. Pt er. He never listened quietly whl :4 by 10.21%! and 1:0":ng ; frieqdlou. ponnilpss girl â€to “W Wif'nout mercy and the. “Mt" follies of . "finn may" smiled 11““ called Wricitiu: be «nod ‘- h! I" right in... But. while ho and truth always go too ‘ PRECIOUS PEARL just returned from was hard upon sin. he was moot. merelo ful to the sinner. \thté or the. md‘ 3roublel. sorrows. or sins of. his parish- was oneâ€. they had but to go to him. and Wu. "10 had comfort. for 3!]. 3He could be old- â€â€œ0990!†and persuaded; but. no crea- tgre llvmg .could make him call wrong IPCU' auu H. WUULU. uuvu U'xo- â€"â€" in find a more sweet. gifted. 8110““l :irl. Refinement, shone in her face; truth. purity, candor, shone there, too. {Hers was a type of beauty. She had large dark eyesâ€"dark soft and full of poetry, with long dark lashes. and clear straight brows: a bro-ad" beautiful forehead, full of idealitv, W“)! rounded temples. The crown of this falr young lovelincu was a wealth of dark-brown hair that was full of nut- wrong. In the midst of this household Aud- rey Brooke grew up beautiful as a rpse, uure as a. white lily, bright, sensnble and intelligent. She was just: eighd teen and it. would havejgee‘n difficult) â€"-â€"-A AA‘I“ um? ripplea and waving. Ulul 11.1.]! CD “I“ 'vuv V“ [11! as tho hodv. Audrey had inheritâ€" ed her father’s keen sense of right and w rong, his passionate sense of 11011-5 or his calm, clear unerring iudgment, Eli: shrewd common sense his recti- u\e. JIIIJVIJ Alum uvaauven au-vv â€"-â€"-â€" A matter of business had taken Mrs. Calverne into that part of the world- where the Brookes resided. She had called on them as a matter of duty, and had found herself taken by surprise and made captive by the sweetness of Audâ€" rey. She thought in her heart that It was a great waste of life and‘ W911,†for'the girl tolive always in the quiet rectory. doing nothing but. read and study. and visit 03d womenâ€"a great waste of beauty. she imagined. If Aud- ley Brooke went. into soicieiy there would be no limit to her triumphï¬ no bounds to her success. xvyong The. {rat great change that mm? {o Audrey Brooke. was a visit that she find to a distant re!ative of her mother’s-â€" Mrs. Calverne. a wealthy and fashion- able widow, who had a beautiful vil‘u at. Richmond and considered life fifty miles from London quite unepdurgplo. She smile-71 when Audra-1y. full of glee came to her and shower! her thP checkâ€"â€" smiled with the supol'inritv of greater knowledge. She knew that the whole amount would not pu rehase two dresses pf the ‘ciemriptinn that. she intended her “She. will have no fortune of course. 0" "Pry little." said Mrs. Calverne to herself: “but with such a lovely {ace slug does not nee}! mgnpyff ‘ “_- U‘ enjoy it, as sheuwaa seldom without, three or four young peoplo im the house. The rector would not give a. dPPlded answer. but he promised to think the matter over and to consult his wife. The result of the consultation was that Audrey might. go and remain for a month. One evening Mrs. (‘alvm‘nr asked the rector if Audrey would he permitted ‘0. pay her a visit at Richmond. She Said t_hat_the fair girl, would veryulike: ‘Vit’h a a ugh of relief Mrs. (‘alverne threw horse" back in the traveling (ar- “380 She had enjoyed hm visit after a fashion but life. in a muntn rectory was not at a" suited to her taste. f “Some people find the character very pleasant." said Mrs. Calverno. "The gonduct of such persons means nothâ€" I‘ng really wrongâ€"only playing at. .ove.†. ‘7Hovi' strangeâ€"playing at. love!Agd your friend Miss Hamlyn does HMS wall 1†“She does. indeed" replied the wid- ow. __with a quiet hugh. “You win iike herf'she is full of life and animation. She. has a large for- tune, too. and will be sure to murry well." Audrey's eyes openml more brightly stiH when she saw the beautiful men- eion on the hanks of the Thames which Mrs. (‘alverne called home. In her simple life she had men nothing like it: it. seemed to her a very palace of grandeur._ The oddest predicament in which en ostrich ever found itself lately befall one of the huge birds belonging to e South African farmer. This ostrich stale and bolted while steaming hot. a big dumpling. The bird's regret wee immediate and visible. In his strug- gle to get rid ef the fiery thing with- in him, Mr. Ostrich twisted his supple neck around one of his legs and suc- ceeded in tying it in e knot. It re- quired three men end half en hour’s time to extricate the bird from it: eeltâ€"mede trep. Well. you must love to m up nt night. aid the indignnnt mother 1.: her daughter cums tip-toein‘g to bad nt 0. Into hour. "of éodrso, I Ion, or I'd and him homo only. Oï¬â€™l‘RlCH'S ODD TRAP. A CLEAR CASE. To Be Continued. The marquis snipped his arm Into the stricken {allow's and soothingly mur- mumd; “Come, come. Mr. O'Neill, cour- age! Let's go up andsee her. We must have the best of advice; little glrls Like her can't be swuflod out like candles." At the door the marquis was the first tocross the threshold umbidden. Young O’Neill slipped into his own room to work off a {it of increasing emotion. Norry was gathered against her mother's breast, white and querulous. She moaned ever since she had been forced to swailow the nasty medicme. "Do you know this friend who has come to see you, Norry 3" asked the mother, with a tragic- upward glance of greeting for the marquis. Norry openmi her eyes, and stayed her pcevish whimper. She did not re- cognize him after eight months. and Iiitlle visage with the uurle brushed back from the proiwberant arch of brow and the lime eyes dulled and large and dark, the marquis himself had some ado to magnize the vivid face with its swnny gi‘um'e and rosy lips that some months ago had drawn the heart of him as never child had drawn it before. “Norry, don’t you re- member your friend Grandby, whom ymi took to nee Jacky Moiloy’s puppy?†he asked, dropping into her father’s chair, and taking the white baby hand in his. Norry stared at him in an effort of memory. To the hea‘bthy eye there in armor-1d of difference between daylight and candlelight, and small wonder so little about the stranger struck a rem- iniscent chord. She frowned crossly and turned to her mother for explana- lloflloy calied the marskiaa, Norryfl' whispered her mother. Andï¬uddemly Norry remembered. Her arm-k small face wrinkle»! and quiverod In onv of the odd bright. smiles as faint as the echo ofamefody. â€Oh, yes, Ih-dey, [ remember; and stupid Mrs. Malay guys ever since that he's the 111843ka.". The mother's hear! overflpwed. thh gratitude for that sweet smile. 10 her 1t seemed a promise of reg-every. a presage a! health and merrunent, and the dear vagaivnd days restored. the kissed her mud. and held her close to her g-uobbi'ng hreaqt. _ f [[[[ 'I‘- __‘_A “v. V- V“â€"" "She'liu get well, Mrs. U’Boill; she must. By heavens, we can ’t let her go! I'll send a message off this very mâ€" stant for Sir Martin Bunbuxfy.“ l‘he rhhuiiiu 'g-Eiï¬Ã©'a 371â€"171 kiésed the Chlid. and at rode away to post one of the Hail servants cup to town by the laet. Lram for the great don-tor. He broke hm appointment with his son. and Ituyed on, culling every day at, the O'Neills. His was quite a humanized figure for bill tenants by this. He was bound to them by a vmuumu tie, for he. too, ao- knowledged their queen and hung upon her whims. Bu'e'wse she spoke of the lake and whispered she had a boat. he telegraphed for the love-nest. boat that. money vould buy. She soon grew to know him as we'd as Father Sullivan. or the vurate, or the doctor. But; she was faithful to old friends, and preâ€" ferred Murphy the (tramp and Pat Malone the big eengeant. The great man from over seas, num- moued at, the marqwis's expense, was at first dubious, thou convinced that, nothing could wave the child. His words ran across the town, and knots of rustic»: and BhOp-boys gathered to shake their heads and lmnoau their fate. The 0de had. burst. and lent rivers of muddy l'lquid along the street. and drove a. grey paid over the earth. Sheer to the sombre horizon. It was a pit/tum of dense immeasurable gloom; Norry's own town in tears, largo hi8- sing tears. tearing at. the roots of her friendly trees and splashing into her magnificent lake, till it, swelled beneath the sense of universal sorrow. 1-..!v The marquis was seen commg down the street from the dark :Lvonug, and it, was decided w quwtiun him after his visit like an ordinary [allmv-morlal. Hie; hat was tilted over hi~ was. and there was an air of sadness uwut him that stirred the ï¬re/(mayor‘s. Lo 21' 1191';in that, stirred tha BpPA‘LfltOI‘S m a belief i'n some latent, virtue: in him. He was a hard landlord. truss, but then Norry Liked him. and ha had grown fond of. this vhiid; Surely he might. he pardon- ed not having reduced their rents: V‘- ..VI. 5-0-v â€"-- â€" His knock now Owus not, so self-as- sertive as am tha ï¬rst. visit. The young fathar was down-stairs. with his head on a» table shaken by terrible sobs. Sir Martin Bumbury hml defivered his appallin opinion. The marquiq si- lently ceased the duor and stole up- Itairs. Outside the sivk-room there was no sound. Hie peepotl in, and saw it empty. Much amazed. he wandered down a aim and met, Mantegna. (-russing the hat with a cup m her hand; the back of the other she held against her eyes. “\‘v'here’s the child!†asked the astounded marguia. I‘- H W"V‘â€".“‘.~v-â€" “She’s down here, sir. She wanted a change. and the mistress carried her to the drawing-room." As she Spoke she opened the door. and the marquis marched in. Mrs. O'Neill sac near the fire with o. lmndyaJoï¬ flannel; in her 553v -‘-- w arms." and omit of this two tired blue eyes; and at_ Ema. _____IL__ on ,..:.I ‘7---â€" VJ \l‘ a-uv‘â€" v- - ll Dood-morrow. Dandh ," said Norry, with a touch of the 0!; spirit. The mother praised her lips against the brown floss curls and smiled wanly at. her landlord. “A-morrow," Norr went. on, lifting her head wilfully an strik- ing out a thin arm In her eagerness. ‘ Ll he better. apd I’ll take you to the lake, Dandby, mth my boat; won't 1, mother I" _- n. 0- 1-! Uâ€"v- ques.'dar1ing." “id th‘o ooungoous young mother. ' “And popa'u bum. tomâ€"wont he. b '00 Dari? {L in fine. Norry. but: [on Ignow pa and I couldn’t coput n! It rained. e'd catch col ." sand the marqms. ' her hand. “ailigrhklod her little marble (team out of her much pink mu». It had :h‘ishold light but not tha color. and aha M- nl‘-’ nnhiht 19M! "You rememlmr the gemdeman Mrs 'JvTui' axisâ€"Rh}? qï¬biht â€do: RAGE SOVERHGN. and broken lisp; "Little children don't mind the mm. do they. mother! Me and Tommy O’Brien used to mm on! in the min to grow big. But 'tisn't the sage wit. biz. male. 1 80069-1 She had not spoken so muph for a long while, and her mother hardly knew whether to hope of be afraid. “Norry mustn't tire hereon! if she wants toget well." she ventured to an: act. “0h. mother. Norry isn’t had a bit, “Oh, mother. Norry isn'blired a bit, I fink she is better. Mother, do play the piano for Norry. "What shall mother play 8" "Play 'Polly Perkins;’ you know. mother, the fing sergeant. sings. Do you know ‘Polly Perkins,’ Dandhy ?" "If you like to gratify her, Mrs. O’Neil-1. I’ll take her," said the marqms I WUUHI \Vith a. desperate glance Mrs. O’Neill depom ted the whimsical baby in his arms. and after she had complied with her despot’ 5 command for a tish.ha1£ staggered over to the piano. bl'mded by her tears, to play the pwretched vulgar tune just imported from the I ondon music-11.311111 mddpging Never was “'J‘a-ra-raâ€"lmom-de-ey“ played in an atmosphere more tune. The degraded jingle rose in the aston- ished silence nomhmg less discordant and inappropriate than if it had been played in a church. For Norry alone it “113 not out of place. She remem- bered her friend the sergeant, and made a gallant effort toeing his parody. In a thin. hurried voice she quivered, with painful earnestness:â€" Polly Perkins had no sense. She bought a fiddle for eighteenpence; And all the tune that she could play \Vaa ’l'a-ra-ra-lumx-de-ay. ' She closed her eyes with the violence of her effort tofinish the “remand neat- led her little brown head against the marquis} arm. Marcella came in with something for her to take, lmt’ the mother and Lord Grztndhy held up an arresting hand. There was a drowsy look upon the child's face that romised slumber. She muttered sonnet ing vaguely. and the marquis bent down to catch the words. feeling that. be vuufld never for- give the sergeant, if it, proved to be “Ta-ra-raâ€"boom-de-ay." “HE isn't! 8 marskiss at all.†she said. In Spite of the heavy feelings of the moment, Lord Grjndby invoï¬untarily smiled. He's-at: there in tha darkened Hitle dpawmg-room, holding Norry 88100" in his arms, while her intents and Mar- (fella hung over him, sometimes kneel- mg on either side of him to inapect her and measure their chances of hop?»- Not for worlds dared he. stir no bur- dened. The scene recalled a nursery episode at the beginning of his own married life. Somehow ho had taken ih‘ less to heart, in. those days. A (‘hild then, even his owm had not. seemed to him so precious a charge; it, was the heir of his estate he thought of. not. of the matvhleas aumminess of i-hildhnod. Now itsoemed to him that the ()anlng' and nlnsina‘ of baby lids hPM all the mystery. the gravity, the import of {he 'u'niveme. And when M. lust. the. Mu. eyes opened. and unfevered Bicep had givon afuint tinge moths wan cheeks. he insiinvtjveiy held out hi9 hand {othe father, and cried cheerii'y: “There. Mr. O'Neifl. she's better already! You'll find she has passed the vrisis in that light sleep." â€" v‘, [r The marquis prnved a prnphet. Sir Martin Bimhury slapped on his way to the Nation aml this time, announced the grand news that hnture had M'- c‘omp-Hshed one of her mysteries. By some uravcountahle freak the child had turned i he (-rit u-zii pomt, and there Wu nothing now to do! but to feed her up an}! kegp her amused. - I I l. ___ imagine how she. was fad. and how rmnorselmsi} amused! Sim might. have muptied the single cmifevtinner's 8110p dai’iy. and daily hava comu-med the en- tire contents of the: giass ja rs at Mrs. Reilly's gratis. Toys poured in upon her in the oddest ('Onfimion. and tha town 1hrrwo and 8p“ rkied and glowed upon the news that the “drawinmt.†Obi-id on earth was_qei}iq;g wail. means of restoring their soverrign to to than]. and wan he not one of her devoted servants? Who round dare c-‘b.a'.!enge M‘- perfectious now? Bother the rents! HP might raise them any day if he liked, and he mute he wouldn't he shot. Diesel you. There he goal flung fbe street, the- lmqt-hearted gen- tleman in Ireland. Three cheers, boys. {or the Murqula of Grandhy! THE END. " u.‘ ‘ ’ “A1! for the Marquis of Grandhy. he was regarded in the thl ofa public Mnefm-Mr. â€Ml hP 330‘. beer} â€)0 'l‘cutene Are llsupcred by G's-ammo Mur- velllnncc. In England and America police is just police. but in Gernumy the preservers of the peace and guardians of property are divided and subdivided into many classes. There is a building police. 13. business police and a press police. in addition to the regular street, police. A sub-sectional police deals with lodgings, perticulers of residence of the inhab- itants. passports. servants, lost prop- erty, clubs, public meetings, cruelty to animals. keeping large dogs and skat- ing. A change of residence is no simple thin . so hedged in is it; by restrictions and ,ormules. In addition to the worry of house-hunting the expense of mov- ing and the harrowing up of feelings by the crash of crockery and hricâ€"s- brac. the householder a removing from one district to another must eihiliit his tax receipt announce further place of abode. and receive permission to move. which documents are exhibited to the guardians of the new district The fire police is subdivided into five sections. charged respectively with preventing. announcing end ex- tinguishing fires. with the regulation {of explosives and with sweeping chim- lneys. The causes for end occasions on iwhich a. servant may be dismissed end 'for what breekeges she may be held irresponsible, are rigidly prescribed, end on all sides there is such a he'mming in. such a restriction of what else- where are deemed inalienable rights and privileges. as to he aim ly intoler- able to those retro-d amid t e environ- ments of personal liberty. But the syutem seems to work well. and the German lmrgher in content and con- sumes his beer and armor kreut es pl idly u in tbil country. . There is 1 high profit in substitu- tion, aidnd by public indifference. Thorc will be no profit. tt all it people, 31. wnya and cvorywhero. retuao countcr- teit u‘ticlfl. G ERMANY’S POLICE SYSTEI. Mr. Auguetue Arthur Peroevel. who has come into the Eerldom of Emu“ hy the death of his uncle, the late Earl, at his residence, Cowdrey Park. Mid- burst, has bed a career very different to that of eny other British peer, says the London Daily Mail. The new Earl was some years ago in the Metrupoiitan fire bri- gade, and from his former colleagues of the brigade a Daily Mail reporter obtained particulars of his I‘OVinU career. “Gussy Perceval, we used to coll him,†said one officer. “He joined our drill class on March 25, 1881, when he was twenty-five years old and had just married a very young woman. who will now, it living, be the new Countess. Perceval was a lively char- actor, and had led‘ a roving life from the first, as we could toll by his yarns. He “:13 born in Papanui, near ('anter- bury in New Zealand. on Juno 4th. 1856, and was educated as a naval cadet on board the ‘Worveuter‘ train- ing ship at (ireenithe, in the Thames. The discipline there was too strict, perhaps, to suit, his roving nature, .d be L SHIPPED BEFORE THE MAST i ï¬nd when he value to us he had a sec- ; 0nd mate's vapors. and was accepted by Capt. Sir Eyre Massey Shaw as a drill- , class candidate. “He duly passed into the urigadc OI May 13, 1881, and took duty under tho late Superintendent Hutchings. at Soutlmnrk headquarters." “The new earl," said another officer, "was 1 rattling good fellow, but he never had any chance of doing good work in saving lives. That, of vourse. is always a matter, of luck in our work, to a great extent. lie was stationed at Southwark [or about e year. and then wee. shifted. in the or- dinary routine, to Kennington He went heck to Southwerk early in 1883. shifted to Lower Norwood in the lat- ter end of that 7eer; went. to maximum in January. 1884. where he wee ete- iioned for two years and a half end then went to \\ eterloo reed Fire Ste- tion on July 13, 1886. That ieellout the average of the general moves in the servine." “When did he leave the llrigedei" said one of the men. “He realigned and left the [011% early in Fehruary. 1887, having applied for and obtained the position of hull keeper at the new town hall. Chelsea. and his rel-0rd of service. signed by Sir Eyre Massey Shnwseye; ‘l‘mring the period of l’erreval’s ser- vice his conduct has been on the whole satisfavtory.’ “'3 lost. the run of him after that... but we heard that there was at a political meeting at the haHlnd that Gussy’s fire brigade oxperienr‘o cumlng 10 his hand he got a hydrant tn uurk and swuuipcd the. riuiers, Loï¬h aides alike. Then he invented in some cement works. and that. was the lust we heard of him.†"\Vhile llle new Karl “main the lri~ gude," said another fireman who had been “(‘rulliws" with him. “his unolo. the late Earl. took a great. deal ofiuleres-‘t. in him. and at, Christmas timeu‘ed to enquire of 'tho old chief how he was going on. The answer was generally satisfactory. and then the Earl wt! to come down handsomely. and Hussy was in funds for a while. But as 3 rule it. was a prellv bard pull upthe hill for Mr. and Mrs. Perreval. for they only gol married in the year Gun joined us. and that. was a love match. the. lady who will now become the Countess, having been a young lady employed hv Splera Pond. They had no children. and it. is: generally understood that they mutually agreed to separate when Perceval left. the brigade." Tears, idle tears. I know not what they mean. Tsars {mm the depth of some divino do- apair Rise in the heart, and gather to the That bring our friend- up from tho underâ€"worm a Sad us the last which reddwa over one That sinks with all we Iowa below tho verse; So sad, 30' fresh. the days that: are no more. In Ionian: on the happy auwmn field: And thinking of the days that are no mo 1‘0 â€" dun/n3 The earliest pipe of half-awakened bird- 'l‘o dyiug ears. when unto dying eyes The cqsemem, niowly grows a glimmer- Fresh :3 Q30 {Int bum glittering on' lug square; So sad. so strange, the days that are ra m r Daar as renwmher'd kisses after death. And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feign' d. On lip s that. are for others; drep us love. Doepp as first lo‘ve. and. wild wflOh all no- grot; 0 Death in Life. the days that are no more. -Alfrod ‘lV-nn yaonr. Mrs. Gin-ate. as life get. i.n.â€"No; that poor horse of yours ha got en- ough to pull. I'll carry it on my lip. The Calmingâ€"Gimmie your bug. lbdy. n_d_ l'llApuLJt on bqp of the rub. U ‘1 . about! Each chimed that his grandma)“ used to nuke the but pumpkin pic- on oath. ROMANCE OF THE PEERAGE DAYS THAT ARE NO MORE no more VEXED QUESTIONS. , were those two man A HUMANE \K'OMAN. A BIT OF A HIOT two mun fighting Do not allow Ihqfxrllil‘ b exposed (0 'any h; liver the milk at “)6 “i1 w arrangements “it 1 our neighbors to ‘ the milk and “ï¬lmâ€"milk. 'l‘hiswil ran the lkixnâ€"d milk i , M O. young pg _ htnl of the nnd size. The» :1†points, and “'0 do no mend any one of Lb! to anullwr. The 333 ' “I? 30m! [oinls of em‘l application. - ext to (he somral n1 ml of llH-I . ' r . and angina. F _ V9 avapn'cilv of {rm i horse-power ; and . to eight. A " half- .Ide of whiteu'oo'l u1 P“but. 1 narrow l-reau k. d agar» at the Rules ~ .h needed to (:00! u; where a cooler is not 'W'berc the (Team v: to raid cooling. one dealers on the markq 9: u no“ of galvanize , in; cold water runnim . placed in the cream by the engine. This cream rapidly. A Bulwark tamer f1 mods among gamma a has of bulkr {at in 'hnttermilk. is an ease: machinery in every c A complete list of all 0‘. together with lhei. obtains‘d from any 1!! ply firms.’ ‘Aim to ban- uimut l (nah {or winter z-reum: liberally. Give the cov tad uatvr. (‘nre for treat them kindly. kc “(I you will have ym ï¬nd that corn silage, 11 My. bran, 1mm. oats an if it can he got {or I u. give us good resu a". Swede turnips 1 u be fed to ooxss giviz M; or ghegno-making. My ~Sumfly 00.. M Alexandra: «sold by '6†Londln. Ont. -_ Russian. sold “5- I). This omzh lost thruuuL and ignoran of econo'nir- municum H .Ih'ip of Lbs l hkville. Ont. Ihnish “'QS'OU. \u ‘Wehsier. St. Mary These saxmrawrs m .5“ each. «10;:0013119 31m '08 2.000 Th» 'de! 15 .:00( Lo 25 mm In will cost. about $1.0 .. .m leading makes! {I Chnadian creamer: .Alphu do Laval. soic Oped-Isl Ink-ml Cl Muir! - Jory TI on Winter In!" and and (band “WNTER l _ The winter vrwan innugm‘ l0 dairy msny vows milkim ’ TM (MP! of these : quality of butter, bring a highvr pr, yield of butler [I which is got by u tutor. Either 0! t. my the ram uf 1 butter. uhivh my three “d one-ha“ what-e the milk i cmmery. Again. much "’98 for the f the milk is sent 14 ' cry. In addition. Wit» feel muvh he‘ town to buy nous: they have five I0 (1 at as a result of t hitter. than if m Itiflv pounds of W “’BERE '10 IAN“! THE MACHIVFH The bUlldinu Sim h hated “HI: "1 â€nth-mat. " steam room 20x30 lo 30 mg â€)0 butter G! “d erminv 1 is icebouse --> i151"!!! space I T!!!" (9051 of II $11!!" where ere are u Ova-rugs of 15,000 M an he relied upotu â€on. it will pa'y cmmerv apparatus mkcr. Therv is n( “um gathering (re (â€Caries BbOlHd hl Mt Oviohv r 1 DH! 01 d Businoas until M I}. must nmka If m it. u the (‘Url m PfGfllDP‘flV l1 Oummer creamâ€"3a! Q mmmer 89-yard Summer chem-1e {m where. there are m ULLETIH ISSUE AGRICULTUI Open up my 1" Dairy f0 8021"†too. TO TH E WIN TE unit )r U] H 0U n