â- % t â- InafwiStuviaiG&tSFtinitnnjuSJh^ A Girl's Caprice 0«. THE RESULT OF A FANCY DRESS BALL r|T.lii.i.lr.i,i,T,i, 1.1,1 M.j.i7m?F;Trtmnrr,i,..r,ii.i,i,t.M.l,t.i.«M,i,i.i|i|r,M,ni,.,i Jx ' iiiiikj '-' - ' 'g" IS2 f » Wrs. ClifTord." crii-u the old matil. tcrs TESLA'S WmELlSS PLAB HIS GEEAT KLAN TO DISTBli BTJTE POWEH. Tower* WiU Send Out Currents for Lighting ajid Heating. You, who arr> so eloquent, 'because I felt I must speak to ye!" jdear Uise Kinsella. requite no advo- I Hilarys heart stands still for a cate." moment. In it anything about her? I fhe old maid brightens up percep- .\bout that luncheon â€" or Ker"* _ 'tibly, and gives her head an airy , "About what. Mi.*s Kin.sella?" little shake. Eloquent! Yes. she : a.skg Diana anxiously. has felt that all her life. But it is j Electric I "Why. about Pethor!" pleasant to see the fact acknowledged Hilary's heart given a great re- j,t last. j boimd. Shi> comes quickly forward. ; •â- Well, me dear, there's some truth 1 She takes old Miss Kin.sell.i's hand, i„ what you say." returns she mod- j ^n encrmous mushro.,m-ah«»ed and positively beams upon her, to estl.v. "and I'll take the note. Whilst j„,.^.^_ ^^ j^^ .^^^ completed^ tDi.anas intense astonishment. lyou're writing it. I'm thinking 111 Wardc-nclyfle. Long Isiund X Y by I "Tell us! cries Hilary. ;,ell you a little thing I said to that j^^ Nikola Teski. the distiueuished "jNell. Peth.^r-ye know me nephew ibrazen creature. Mrs. Dyson-Moore, electric inventor. Krom thi.s tower Pether Kiiis.-lU-ye saw him last .My gracious. Mr. Clifford, did ye see ^ ^esla is now pievarin« to put nitrht? eh! ye did now, didn t ye? | her petticoat.-? ' into oiK'it r ^ r- •niana. I hope you will be able i "i tried hard." says Clifford. "I ! nuld to say yes to that, ' says Clifford tklnk, after a liit. 1 did." •And isoleninly. "This, I must inform , "Scandalous! Scandalous! K CHAPTKU Xll. ] -I riont know >vi,:.t |.].^e y<: '"I'hank Heaven!" says Ker. say, I'm sure." dis<;<>iisolatel.v "For what?" questions Hilaiy, I can't help thinking that I !you. is a most important ca«>. ' Klnselln uplifts her arms who is not feeling as svmi>athetic as shouldn't have dor-' it. Diana was | "Y'es. yes, of course we saw him," -What did you f^ay to her. usual. " very angry will. me. " isays Hilary enthusiastically. She is IKInselia?" asks Hilary. "For â€" " He checks himself abrupt- j "I am very glad you did it." says ly. "Because we are once more [Ker, with sudden earnestness. "It alone." ihas made us friends much more "You must be tired," says she | quickly. It has taken the chill out BWeetly. "I>o you really want to |of our introduction. Don't you see?" talk? Am I boring you? You have ' "Y'es. perhaps so." ha<l a long journey, I know- "What nonsense!" savs he. .- „.. „„ â€" , . ^ - I should mind a few m'iles by train." more earnestly. jchief he was, an' lovely he looked ! Isupfwr afterward. ' He, has not altogether understood i She had so arranged her house- |I couldn't take me eyes oB him all j -You?" begins Clifford, "butâ€" her. "Will you sit down here until maid's gown as to have the sleeves ! night. A matther, me dear, that | At this moment a loud knock the next dance begins?" i tucked up to the shoulder, as though made him a thrifle mad. Y'ou know [the hal! door i.s fceard "It must be almost due now, and about to go in at once for a severe he wHI^ hciye his flirtatious ways ; --Who's thaf> ' demands Mis« Kin- I sella, eagerly. ys Clif- I --Some friend. (K'ratioa the most daring and amazing scheme ever conceived in th« . tdevelopinent of wireless telegraphy, "'** For ovt-r four ;.ears Mr. Tesia has been hard at work almcfit day and ^** night experimenting and endeavoring ... - 1.1 J . .I.- ij V, , â€" - "o make his niarvellous theory feeling .so obliged to this old bore. --Just i word m.' dear No more . <. i r . . j • -«„_•»„ , ,7 r a . â„¢ . •. i.„o'> â- -'"'"^ a viuru, an. atur. .-o mon.. , practiable. . from lime to lime dur- "1 Hi..hl-,nr.hief,»in -"T. . ru, '^ *^' "^ "' her When she was danc- , ;„ .^^t period he has iulima-ted va- A Hignland chieftain, says C if- ,„g with ^ne C Ihem stravaglers from , ^i,_. the immens.tv of his plaji, and forn, correcting her severely. Of .h« hnrraik<.- nn' T asked her ' ?u ' n . "j y-"^' 7â„¢ -L. ,, ,-,„, „.„,„,•. i'^"* DarracH.<.. an i asuea ntr , the equally tremendous .results that the very Iirsl water! wouldn t she like the loan of a kilt? â- ^ J" ^ . "Ye're r:gnt! Yere right!" cries it struck rae." says Miss Kinsella ed herself in one of the chairs, and jold Miss Kinsella, her curls vibrat- .thoughtiuliy, -that'she was a little "As if now leans forward to speak to him |ing with excitement. "A Highland Ishort with ise, when I met her at She has seat- at his flirtatious we know!' he will have you have piomi.sed it to Mrs. lijsi.n- scrubbing match. This lets her love- 'sometimes! Uoore." ly naked arras be .>:een in all their ' "We know "So I have." He would have add- beauty. She rests them on her ford sadly. ed "worse luck," but civilization knees now and look.s up at Ker. | "Flirtations, but not indecent." pre'.eats him. "Still there is a j "Po you know I never know what [says Miss KinsijUa, blushing a bright minute or two left." to sav "to a partner when first Intro- orange. "Well, an' what will you She makes no answer to this, and ; ducod" to him? ' [think, nie dear Mrs. Clifford, when I the silence growing a little oppres- ' "I remember what vou first said i tell ye that they put him down in Bivc, he breaks fresh ground. ;to me." " [the list of eharacters for Mrs. Mc- "How fond you all seem to ie of | "So do I. It was "forgive me.' " jintyre's fancy-dre.ss ball, as " fancy balls down here!" â- •No, it wasn't. It was 'A glass |Here she breaks down, and dissolves "Not always! Hut once a thing of water, sir?' [into tears. is started, you know what a lun I Hilarv blushes hotly. "That was | "Oh! Miss Kin.sella, what is it?" there always is on it. It liecouies not an introduction at all." rasks Diana tenderly. "There now, an epidemic. It is worse than the , -'And was the other?" jdon't distress yourself." measles. It catches nil the coun- i "No. After all." with n little j "I must begin at the beginning, me ty!" lembarrassed laugh, "I don't think dear, if I'm to make you understand "We are certainly of the monkey [you have ever been introduced to ^it. When me nephew. Pether Kinscl- tribe. Such imitative animals! P.iit line." ['*â- arrived at the hall door, that fancy-dress balls â€" they must be such '-We must get your sister to do it j jackanapes of a footman they have a wori-j !' to-morrow. I may call to-morrow?" I "Not greater than others. Look , --i hope you will come to luncheon. at red hair. Let one woman preach Diana will be very glad to see you." a crusade on the becolniuglle^s of it, \ --And you? ' and all other women will dje their ; "i shall be very glad, too." hair liite mad. That must be a far i "Tlmnk you. I suppose Diana ! greater worry than giving a fancy wouldn't allow me to be butle no doubt," Bays Diana carelessly. "Now, here is the note. Y'au ought to take it at once. You know if the account is sent to the papers wo'rld follow its introduction, and now. at last, he has arjiounced hia preparedness to put his theories to their first practical test. For a large part of the work al- ready darie Mr. Tusla is indebted to the generosity of Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan,, who is extremely int«reBted in the schti-ie. Brieily explained. Mr. Tcsla's as- surance ot what we may expect in the next few years aic as follows : NIAGAKA TO NEW YORK. A ceaseless day and night servica "I know." Miss Kinsella is peer- [ of millions upon miUione of volts of ing out of the window that com- lukctricity irum the electric power mands the hall door. "'Whvâ€" if it [plants at Niagara Fails to the War- ijn't that young man that is .staying with Mrs. Dyson-Moore." "Is it? Very likely. Y'cu really ought to see about that at once, if your nephew " "Is he cominc to see you now, or Miss Burroughs? " denclyffie tower , the electric power being forwarded from there by TSB- la's wireless syssTern to New York City for the purpose of illaminating the entire metropolis, running elevst- ted and uridergrounrfl trains and tramways ca.'s. c^ieraMng lifts, mo- Bothâ€" iie." de.s-perately. "is a sort ! tor-cars, trucks, and ferry-boats, fur- was standing just inside it. %vith a pencil and paper in his hand, an' had the impudence to ask Pether about his chararther!" *" "His character?" of cousin of ours. But if yo-i don't [ "A cousin"' Vou dnn't say so. On 'the mother's fide, or the father's?" ! "The father's Nc. the mother's â€" I [assure you the first " I "Then, let mc see. his name should ibe •' "I'll see vou to tb«> catf. Miss ball. Because, at all events, the morrow? •'Y'es. me dear. His characther ! r to- [An- you all know what me nephew iKinseila," "savs"' CHfTord""' peniaiiv; . . . , , i^^^V"-'"" 'I 'â- '•â- '^ '''â- '*"°^^<1^'""P' iconve.ving the cld ladv safelv out of latter permits usâ€" at least some of , '-Certainlv not." laughing and j Here she pauses to wipe her eyes, jthe room just a<; Ker enters Mi«s the fortunate ones of usâ€" to show looking a little confused. which gives Hilary a chance of re- [Kinsella macage^ to givp him a good ourselves. at our best fcr once in our i â- i-u ^sk her. however. It would [tiring behind the Irish Times. 'stare however as thev pass each do me good to wait on you this " "Dear Miss Kinsella," says Diana, l„ther ^ time. gently, "I think the man must have wished to know what costume your lives." "'Ah: you can speak!" says he. ••being one of the fortunate ones." ; shc is looking lovely with this new It is very ready and very delight- earnestness within heV shining eyes, [nephew was wearing, with a view lul, of course. But to Hilary, iu with this soft touch of shyness ' on i to putting it in our daily paper and, her present mood. it savors too j,^p beautiful lips. " perhaps, in the Gentlewoman, or much of the man of the world, of j Hilarv lifts her eves to his. isame other society paper." the word in sea.son â€" of, in elTect. hy- , "i wish." begir.s she. "Mr. Ker, I ! -"Y'es. me dear. So it seems now, pocrisy. I wish you would forget all about that |but at first me nephew Pether could (To be Contimied.) JAPANESE BABIES, of ""I wasn't thinking of myself," ; stupid prank of mine Bays she>. ([Uile calmly. "I am, of , Ker drops into the chair course, quite out of it. I should jjpr. not understand what he was at, an' ' Common Sights in the Streets all Jap Cities. The streets of Y'okohama and for beside 'vou know what % spirit he has 'that matter, of all Japanese cities .quite bloodthirstv when his honor is "J'^'' towns, fairly swarm wnth chil- have liked to array myself in gor- : .-i-n ^i^ anything vou with." savs 1 called in question!" l^J^^; ^^"^^^ * '"'''*â- " '° the Brooklyn geous nppaiel,"-heie she smilesâ€" he in a low tone, "ff vou will call ! "-nut th,> man exnlnined"'" jtagle. and the question of race smi- "but I nadn't a penny to do it with. I was thinking of Mrs. Dyson- Moore." I he in a low tone, '"if you will call me â€" Fred . ' ' "But the man explained?" 1*.^ , . , . . "He did. me dear. But Pether was l"^"^* certainly cannot be rai.=ed here. "I--rcd! is that your name-' Oh! I [so flabbergasted by that time, that | ^t seems in many streets that couldn't call you â€" Fred. It would be he couldn't remember what he w Ker "It was very gocnl of you," says impossible. " " She rises quickly to [so he told see more children than adults, which the ;her feet. "Why. it is only a week , -no character." and that the His manner conveys to her the be- ;j,go since I saw vou.'i [thrcss knew him well!" lief that he thinks it very good of j â- •'^Vhat has that got to do with her to waste a thought upon her at it7" He too has risen, all, hut this does not satisfy Hilary, can't you, of all people, call me Why didn't he say it? my name? You might remember Ilea man that he had i^'^J', ''<^ partiallv accounted for by Here Hilary gives way. and burets the fact that many of the adults [are indoors, while the children ueual- |ly are ijot. They are of all ages. nishing heat, and even winding up clocks and making them keep perfect time, by a system of ball-hourly re- gulation. The erection of TesIa towers, simi- lar to the one now at Wardenclyfife, at conveinient places everywhere, for the purpose of distributing wireless telegraphy to be used for Ulumina- lion, power and heat. Only such towers as are erected within a given distance from Niagara Falls will be supplied from the power plants there with electricity, says the New York iVmerican. .^11 the other tovcers will derive their own power from generating plant erected alongside or between the main uprights, and each will dis- tribute about ten thousand horse- power of wireless electricity 'ander a tension of one hundred miliioti volts. Mr. Tesla declares t'nat he is able to produce and handle that much with perfect safety from one tower Each tower will be capable of transmitting heat, power, and light to ciliet'. factories, and private houses within a radius ot thirty miles or miore. LIMITLESS SYSTFM. Eventually Mr. Tesla proposes the extension of this to.wer system until practically the whole North Amtri- ca." continent is dotted over with "Good of me?" says she; a sudden that I am vour- "Why ,j„to a peal of laughter, followed bv 1*^^'' ''*"^^ »'*' e"^^"g^^ fonip around them spaced about sixty miles impart. le by (Diana, who has been growing hvster'- I t*'e streets and engage in their 'so that practically every inch ol ember Ileal ' |games with the greatest vun. A'jjround is covered bv tlio nev.- wne- ""Miss Kinsella. I hope you will I book could be written on this fea- [less seivice desire to make him speak has driven ; jje pausesâ€" purposelv perhaps. Hil- [pardon thjs reprehensible merriment jt"'*^ °^ stn-et life in Japane.se cities. ; The Wardenclyffe tower is lHo feet ho,. f„ ti,,.. H,r„^f „„^^r,r.„ ;__ ._: «â- , ... 1 . . - ... , and the subject would not then be. high from the ground to the top ol her to this direct ((uestion. "Yes. Why should you? Others j^^ '(^ gayf "' "" I'teV "sav"s ' Clifford soTemnU-. "" --"ko l«-''^'»"sted. Almost every woman is i the cupola. The smallest rtimeiision will no doubt take that task out of ; "-My? My?" stammers she. Ifer [doubt hysteria has a good deal to do cari-j ing a child on her Uick. as the !acro«s the bare of uprights is 97 your hands. Many others." glance has grown cold. She is in- with it.' No one could hear vour |universal way of carrying thein is in feet. The height to lodge of cupola ary grows crimson, ing to say? W'hat is he go- joii the parf of my wife and my sis- iter," says Clifford solemnly. "No "Are you a friend of hers?" asks ly. If he had •he .something else, her sudden touch of Isav's he. "A friend? An acquaintance ra- hauteur has prevented him. | characther'' ther, and," meaiaiigly. a guest." ', --n,e „ext dance is beginning, ' ] ..Qh. but. )m [fully. is 153 feet, while the cupola itself is 65 feet iu diameter. The tower, which is to act as a giant receiver, has eight sides, with a staiicus*' and lift for reaching the cupola plat- He laughs, and a vision of Mrs. .tensely angry with him. partly be- harrowing tale without being deepiv i^ ^'-'''t "f '<â- *>ag- i"ade by tying the Dy-son-Mooie's very short skirts caujo of her unluckv blush, partlv : moved. As for me " Here his | «"°s of a piece of cotton cloth comes once again before Hilary's because he has been the author o"f voice beginning to shake treacherous- | -iround the shoulders and depositing eyes. Vs he laughing at her? She it. , ,^. he subsides behind his handker- I the baby in the receptacle thus form- turns her eyes suddenly on his. ; ••Y'our- cousin," answers Ker soft- [chief. ""When 1 think of Mrs. Mc- [ ^d Some of these babies seem eti- heeii going to say jintyre's face when she heard that." ,tircly too large to be thus carried, jfcriu. It is there that the wireless •Such an aspersion on her !a'>d they are not, as a rule, agree- [vibrations are recvived iUid shot out ;able objects to look upon, fcr when j again in the voltage desind to given .... - -.^ ^. , .^„ „„, „,c de.,r there's .^vorse '''"' "''*'"*â- ''''* ^''^''' ''**'^^ '^''^ 'â- >'''"*^ i''"'"ts scut'e.ed over a very "wida "Ah. I sc-e! Your lips are sealed. .,.,ys miary. still with her manner [to come" savs Miss Kinsella tear- j '^'^ °"^ ^''^^' â- "'*** '' ™°*' ^^"^^^ ex- radiu*;. ••They would be certainly if there distinctly changed. -Mrs. Dvson-[,ullv rather li'eased' with \he'sensa- '"â- "'-''""' In most ca.^es they are I LIGHTING OCR HOUSES, was any cause for .sealing. Hs Moore will be waiting for vou." She 'ti„; 'she is so evidentlv creating '"-It ""'«'-'?' and it would seem, from the [ One of the chief U5«s will be the Biniles and gives himself a slight moves toward the door of" the ball- ^^-ems'that that scamp of a footman l'"'^^' "^'-'''' '^'â- "^â- "' ^"'"^ "â- "*'' the bag. illumination of residences. It takes â- hake. ""Have we not had enough room. Ker follows her. 'eavo' me nephew Pet'-er's message '^^'^^ ^^"^'^ '^'^'"* '^'""â- 'J l"" dislocated, (very little power to light a dwelling •1^ -You will give me another later if truight to Mrs Mcliitvi'e this morn- | '"""â- ' certainly possess the i>ower ofjwith vacum tubes operated bv high- on?" 'ing, then she was looking over her I ^'"^^i-'^S ""J" the most duscouraging frequc>ocy currents, and in each m- . "lam afraid not. My card is,j^. An' now I hear thevre goin' ['â- •"'â- â- ""'Stances as the mothers go ... quite full." to take revenge on me pooV nephew, i^bout lust a; it the child were not I "Then, till to-morrcw." says ho. [^n^, „rc going to put him in all the : there, antl stoop over when neces- indificrently as it .seems to her. ! papers as "Thadv. vc gandher.' As i «V7 '" their work , , ^. com- 1 if here Miss Kinsella begins to sob i *^''">' mothers do not bathe their ,ple. will require absolutely nc 'children until the.v are two vears ot "Foli.v" for one evening?" asks he. with a rather comic smile "I don't see how I have been fool- ish," returns she, wilfully misunder- standing him. She gives him a lit- tle return smile, however, as she Bays it. which betrays her knowledge ot his moaning, and at once he feels that ""peace with honor" has. for i the moment at all events, been re- stored. •"You foolish" Xev..r! " says he. j CHAPTEU XIII. Not even â€" when â€" I "Not even then. One can forgive ! "'!ood heavens. Hilary you for keeping up the masquerade Miss Kinsella!" .says Diana, in the under ourâ€" peculiar circumstances." hurried, subdued voice we all know. He regards her steadily, as it wish- when destruction is descending upon Ing her to understand that there is us. She pounces upon her workâ€" a meaning in his words â€" a desire to frock for the youngest darlingâ€" and approach the delicate subject of the makes u rapid flight from the win- will. Hilarv colors faintly, and dow where she has been sitting, into '"I shall tell Diana you are ing." "Our dance. Miss Burroughs," says a gay Hussar at this moment. [wildly, "Pether woald go anywhere .without his breeches!" old at lea.st. not because thev desire It's frightful." suvs ClifTord, who i '" ^''°'^ , the labor involved but ought to be ashamed of himself '"You know the old lines, don't ye. Here's iMrs. ClifTord. me dear? tiecause they have been taught' for a generation that this «-aB the proper course to pursue. The result, as a pleasing to Clifford. Both Hilary and Diana are tiifies Willi the corner of her apron. , the middle of the room. It is more ehaking voice. "I suppose you wanted to study la movement of impulse than any- nie?" says he. 'a little daringly. thing else. "<\h! That was what was so un- ' '"ITiat moans two hours!" says fair. I know it Jiow. Why should Hilary tragically, stopping short in I study you when you had no op- ;her arrangement of the flowers in portuuitv ot studying mo?" the vases. â- Yet I had. 1 had." says Ker "And he is coming at one You t Iword. me dear you re galyly. "He laughs as if remember- told him the hour." friend of Mrs. Mclntyrc s Jnir" " ! "He knows it. I say. Di," matter of fact, is not European eyes As soon as a female child grows to a certain nge .«ihe is also utilized to carry the baby, which is sure to ibe in the family, and little girls 'often go around with huvi- babies ion their backs, almost half as large Thev sound sadlv familiar." savs ]»" themselves, and romp and play with the utmost' indifference as re- " "Oh, Thad.v. ye gandher, Ye're like a Highlandhor. For want o" \er breeches. For want o" yer breochesl' " The old lady chants them in a I. stance a terminal, a little above the roof will Ix- sulficient. Another valu- able application will be the driving of clocks and other such apparatus. at- ple. will require absolutely r.o at-: tention. and will indicate rigorously correct time. There are iiuiumerubie devices of all kinds which are either now em- plo.ved or can be supplie<1. and by joi'erating them in this way Mr Tes- 1.' ma,v be able to offer a great con-- venieuce to the whole world. The in- troduction of this system will. ac-^ cording to the inventor, give oppor- tunities fcr invention and manufac- ture such as have never pre.<=ented thenisi-lves before. VEST rOCKET WIKELKSS. .Vmong his other schemes Mr. Tesla beyand speech. •'Oh! to think o" me Pether being so treated." Miss Kin.si'lla. distractedly - great I came ith a to nsk would y ou go up to her. an Igards their burden the stupid eye's ^proposes a perfect system of world- spotless '"' the babj blinking, if awake, as if [wide wireless telegraphy through goes on ''t did not mind in the least having [which \rtdely separated friends will "Mrs. iits head Ineck. almost jounced from HIS .•<ERU>i;s STCDIF,*;. •But not as if vou saw me os my sudden gleam of hope, "let us say be* me nephew Pether ofT? You could propCT- self."* â- ['TO are out." explain to her. me dear, that he •Your â€" other self was not to be "Too late. I saw her. and shc saw never meant it." i despised. And how do vou look when me. as she came up the avenue " Inspiration seizes on Diana, you arc vour proixr self? " I Hilarv falls back in her chair. "l " tell you what 1 11 do." \a 1 look now. of course."" At this moment a loud rat-a-tat- sne- "I" K»>e you a little note. What' Do vou alwuvs go about 'tat is heard at the hall hooi . nntJ yo" n-.ust ta'Kc it direct to Mrs. in a can and'apion?" " [ 1 suppo.se there is no safe and Mclntyre yourself y*"" '"'°'\ ^1" 'travel fields I m studying the â- •Oh ..ii.«.nce'' Here thev both sure wav of murdering -.nv one">" nro a gri-at favorite others, and she straye<i ntias im siuaymg me Inu^h -. mth YouM-t- I have^he «"vs infa.^ gloomih â„¢n refuse you nothing. I'll just ex- , J««t then someone passed h.m the 1 nnd from friends ,„„ny miU-* away, inugh . l.ttli. ^ou s« have *Y, .,f ^'door^ hrowi-. open. g~l PU«n the case, and you can do th, dish of hash 1*".!'^"^''' T? '""*"', ""' ir^f with nil the rest." [ ' "â- ^''•- he continue*!. fathoming | will be k«»i etl in u certain pitch to ••You couldn't come with me. me ithe mysterious unknown." i prevent their communications from ilemr^" j And the landlady never knew why [ going aJrthiy ir falling into the •i could." says Diana thoughtful- -all the people round the table smiled [watches of diaintervstwd thiri per- il* ibe able to converse instantaneously [and without the slightest danger that their wireless conversation will be overheard by a third person. I.ittle instruments about the size i-ind shat'e of a watch will he carried Uhat studies are you pursuing?' ; ,-„ the vest pocket. and will record asked the landlady of the new board- l,narket quotations, races and iin- says i*'"- "'"' ''"'' *"''' ^^ ^^ ^^"^ " **"" jportanl news features dent. j Another little wnfch-likp i,;stru- •l am studying psychology," he ment is one with a dial face by answered. "I am delving into un- [means of which the wearer caa trans- mit and receive wireless messagoe to advantage. I have se«'n you twice In ordfiiary clothes. whereas you, Miss Kinsella enters, have never "seen nio e.xrevt in this." 'signs of storm al>out her, followed. She pulls out a told of her gown. by Cliflord. who had met her .ir.si " "niis" is verj becoming," «ays ^outside. i "I cau-.e in thus early, me liear j ly. "hut I kti<v»( J «»>«»iM snrti) "^nt- '^i.tflhlv