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Show I itS; ..A Story of Cromwell's: Tim I B i, BARR. ty .BY AMELIA E. - I. Thou and the Othor ? Author .of "Th Bow of Orango Ribbon r' 7 f' : Th- Maid of Mldn - t J ' ' ' .. v Etc. Unt," ii (Copyright. 1901, by Dodd, Mead & Company. . j i men-servant- s, ,sary to work; the land; four of them , ' - went bhck with George to the army. 1 Lave had to-- send Delia away" only o Aniee hnd Audrey are left to care, for 7 i11 an, father says 'they are more ban afford. ;.than he , u ; i Dr. Verity has been here, said Jane, trying to- change the subject He thinks the war nearly over, Ma- 5 ; altation, through the last as people . I : .tilda. not. Even if King Charles J '.VTwere.kniied, there would then be King James to fight The war may. last for a century. And if, this is the world, I would I were out' of it Dear, shall I if,,' .ever, bei happy, .agaiq? ii.'... Thus, in sjiite of. all, Janes effprts,, , they jhverj found themselves on dangeiy ous or debatable 'ground!''1 'All tfepibfe ' boads Vere feidlng thither, and'dliPy i ''fidally abandonee!, $ver kind ofl,tabtir! and spoke' as their hearts prompted $f iheniV though oine hard things ''fere said, niapy .very kipd things were . Also said, and Matilda rose to" go home comforted and helped for, after all, " ' 'the tongue Is servant to the heart As she was tying her hat, a maid called Mrs. Swaffham from the room, and ...Matilda lingered, waiting, for her re- ; : - . - - 1 plicity. - A r J iv;: - she said, why should we worry? Everything comes roiind ' in, time .to jts proper, place, and then ;it will., fie, t oldvAnjoe expects tjhe hooks 'wll find the'eyesthat fit them. As she spoke Mrs. Swaffham hastily entered the room, and with her.yras', ' Lord Cluny Neville. Both girls turned you know. mob hear the advice, fof.tfie1 froin fh'6 TndOw arid caught hid eyes t ti ' .1. Heigh-ho!- , ,,V - ,, ( He-did - . v se-rio- wine-glas- ' t. . -- s, , ' the eyeriing'me&l!: jit Charles' te, , . Where did Stuart go afteri' asked Jane. ; He'vyent'i,iOrtfiv'ard to Perth. For a: little while fie'field with Argyle and the Kirk, but the Covenanters drove him too hard. They told him he must purify hiS court from all ungodly followers, and so made iifrn dismiss twenty-two English Cavaliers not godly that Is, not Calvinistic enough. Then Charles, not willing to erfdure their pious, tyranny, ran away to the Highlands behind Perth, and though he was caught hnd persuaded to return, he did so. only on condition that hi friends should be with him and fight for him. Why should the Scots object to that? asked Mrs. Swaffham. Because, answered Neville, these men rer'e mostly Englishmen and Episcopalians; and the Whigs and Covenanters hated them as being too often reckless and wicked men, full of cavalier sauciness. In return, Charles Stuart hated the Whigs and Covenanters, made a mockery of them, and, it is said, did not disguise his amusement and satisfaction at the defeat of tfie godly army at punbar. ' , Dunbar?-- ) Mr. Winslow Soothing Hyrnp. tne Kcnis, reduces las For chi.tlren Qamniauou, allays paia, curen w lud colic. 25c a botU Those Kids. Heavenly thing about having children is that it keeps a mans wits sharpened to prevent them from discovering how much he doesnt know New York Press. A nice saved I am sure Pisos Cure for my life three years ago. Mrs. Thos. Bobbuis. Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.. Feb. 17, 1900. n have-strikingl- y , The sun was high when Neville aw'oke. .next .morning, and he was ashamed ;of his apparent indolence and would scarce delay long enough to eat a hasty breakfast.' Then his horse was waiting, and he stood at the ' ' ' r' threshold. Mrs.' Swaffham he mounted,' ,A afeked him if he went, by York, and he. answered, Yes, I knov perfectly that road, and .I must not miss my Vay, fori l am a laggard already.,. The way That is right, she said. that is best to go is the way. that best! In business if he doesn't know from per :onal observation what time the sun rises ?t 'ferent seasons of the year. So" ' Journal. i Exaggeration is one of the most evils of the day. It is common In all the walks of life, people not being willing to see what is actually before their eyes, but permitting their Imaginations to enlarge and extend their view frequently to the limit of the mental horizon. Few will deny its deleterious effect. Rumors on each Bide of the ocean for which there is no reasonable basis throw the country Into a state of unhealthy anxiety and do positive harm at times of a serious character. Very recent events illustrated this. It is the vogue, or it Is a temporary evil which has seized upon the public, and there does not appear to be any remedy except to let it run its course like any other epidemic and pass away. Baltimore American. ' , ' ' A Tendency to Exaggeration Becoming All Too Common. ' some-'fhin- g " "turn.: mo-rnen- Get Up st S A. M. A man is seldom successful SERIOUS EVIL OF THE DAY. , , t : - . , , t , Love grows) even, in a moments gaze. Jane forgot her intention of captivating, and yet 'nohe 'the less she accomplished her purpose,, For when they parted for- the nightihe held her hand, with a,- gentle pressure, and quick, glancing, sweetly smiling, ,hp flashed, into fier eyes admiration anJ iqteijet not td be misunderstood. , And, Janes heart Vak a crystal rock! only waitipg the touch of a wand; Had Her shej fejt th,e; mystfp' coutaCt? fine' eyes1 webe dropped, but there" whs a fainty'be'aitsching sipile around her lbveiyl' iiioul:h, and jther'e was bewildering afid something bewildered in her ver'pilence and sim- ) r.'Tt.is half-audibl- It is in moments such as these, that - v and feeling his voice vibrate all .her senses, though at he had spoken do in extremes of life or feel- ing. ) ; ! i . ? ! , All rights reserved.) CHAPTER III. (Continued.) told it in a picturesque way that would I know who he is." have been impossible' to Dr. Verity. 1 never saw my father so dis-- v It !was a magnificent drama, though traded. And it is always give, give, there was only one actor to present give. George took away our last it silver, and I ,am surp yearly all our Jane did nof speak"; she glanced at Father has sent away all the the young man, wondering at his rapt mpney but such as are nece3-- . face, its solemn pallor and mystic ex- r I I Ono." cheerfulness in its comfortable rooms, such plenty of all th5 necessaries of life; such i bilsy service of men and maids, such active, kindly hospitality to herself, and such pleasant companionship between Jane and her mother, that Matilda could not help a little envious contrasting. One day, pear, Christmas, the, roads above them, and in spite of the cold were hard and clean and the sky blue Matilda resohed to walk over to Swaffham. As she left her father' she kissed him affectionately, and then courtseyed to the Chaplain, who did not notice her attention, being happily and profitably lost in a volume by good Dr. Thomas Fuller. Matilda walked rapidly, and the clear cold air bleyr hope and cheerfulness into her heart. As she went through the garden she saw a monthly rose in bloom, and she plucked it; and with the fair sweet flower in her hand entered the Swaffham parlor. Jane was sitting at the table serving Lord Cluny Neville,' ho was eating and drinking and leaning towards her with a face full of light and pleasure. Mrs. Swaffham sat on the hearth. Matilda saw the whole picture in a glance, and she set her.mood to match it Dropping,, her gown, she let the open doqr frame her.beauty for a She .was conscious that she 'w lovejy! aqfi she sa4 the .swift lift-- , ihg' pf Nevilles eyelids, and the look of surprised delight 'which came into his ' eyes. She' w;fts resolved to be charming, and she succeeded. She let Jane help'hr to? remove her hat and .tippet. '.She; let1 Mrs; Swaffham make much of her. .. Then she sat down, by Neville,' and he fcut her a klice of the pasty, and Jane filled her and Neville touched his own against it and. wished her 'health and happiness. Then they sang sOpie madrigals, and as the shades of evening gathered, Neville began to tell them wild, weird stories of the Border-Land- , and they sat in tjiq .twilight 'pleasantly afraid' of the phantoms .they' had themselves drawing close together and 'Speakirig with a little awe,, and finding even the. shoft silenc.es, that fell upon them very eloquent and satisfying. ' rtiqre jh'en no questicin' of tfikt night' to de Wick, aht ery!y6p!n;Mrs.! Swaffham joined them,-anto build the. seryanfs-begatable for 'up, tfiqfi're apd Spread, Red Hair Preferred. This is a bona fide advertisement in a paper: Stenographer; typewriter; no beginners; with red hair preferred; (And red hair has just permanent. been barred from the stage!) Curious Lake. In the center of Kildine, an Island in the North Sea, is perhaps the most curious lake in the world. The surface' of its waters Is quite fresh and To Cure a Cold in One day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists ref und money if it fails to cure. 25c. Strange Mourning. supports fresh water creatures; but In Sitka, when an Indian wife haa deep down it is as salt as the greatlost her husband by death, she goes est depths of the sea and salt water into mourning by painting the upper fish live in it. part of her face a deep black. . Reads Like a Miracle- - , DYES color PUTNAM FADELESS . Friarspoint, Miss., Nov. 30. The more goods, brighter colors, with less Butler case still continues to be the work than others. talk of the town. Mr. G. L. Butler, the Explained. father of the little boy, says: Now that Ive, met Browns wife 'The doctor said my boy had disease I quite understand why he is so dictaOf the, spinal cord, and treated him for two months, during which 'he got torial at thO office. He has to have worse all the time. Finally the doctor some place where he can show hia told me he did not know what was the authority." - i , , The boy would wake up dur- trouble. ing the night and say tfiat he was dying. He would he nervous and trembling and would want to run from the house, saying he saw ugly things which frightened him. After we had tried everything else, I read an advertisement of Dodds Kidney Pills as a I purcure for Nervous Troubles. chased some and used them until he had taken altogether eight boxes when he was sound and well with not a single symptom of the old trouble. This was some months ago, and I feel, sure that he is permanently cured. We owe to Dodds Kidney Pills all the credit for his restoration to good health." RAtHER LONG TO WAIT. Substitutes for India Rubber. is a material which is utilized as a substitute for and in conjunction with india rubber. It is a . e- product of the East Indies, chiefly of , She let the open door frame her- beauty. island of Borneo, and in the form the . And how did thfese godly men re-at the same .moment. He was, as Dr. moment his horse felt the fopt, in the gard Craipwell? asked Matilda with in which' it is imported is described as 'whitish in color, looking some-- , riapth stirrup he was offAPdard' to hold undisguised sqorh. Verity said, a man' destined to' : marshmallow candy, smell. hlri noble bearing with bit and bridle. A vate, They troubled us a little in the thing like of petroleum and oxidizwas When he of strongly ing quite but sight, West," sap! Neville, and Cromwell and handsome, face, but also by ,such an fndescfibable charm of manner as 'they turned ipto the bjpuse 'With a 'marched the army to Glasgow, and on ing on exposure to the air, becoming same description says: Mrs! SwaffhanY said,-Nowppened, ,the door.of every. heart to, him. sigh; ancj ,the next Sabbath 'day the preachers hard. notThe ' a substitute for gutta-perch- a It is .. Bowing to both girl's, fie' presented' I must have! the house .jlmt in,, order, - railed 'at .him from every pulpit in .that chiefly as Jane with k letter from her friend If I were yoU. 'Janq!' i Wpuld go to de city. One of them met th.e Lord Gene- or india rubber, but is used india rubof in manufactures filler a the street and attacked him "Mary Cromwell, and also with a small Wick this afternoon' katilda is full ral-on imgutta-perchIts and caniiot fdel ber I of gum 4vil I trouble. indifferent n.otne contained beautiful,, with threats, and prophesies. parcel which from ff increased 6,500,000 t has , to her. ,';j; ribbons. .The pretty, gift inadn.a.pleas--an.would have shut, his lips with a blow, portation pounds in 199 to 14,000,000 pounds introduction to a, conversation full So, Jane, veUt to fieri room antj began huh Cromwell said! to me, Let him items to fold away the pretty things she had alone; '.he ,i one fool, and you are in 1903. of gay inquiries and interesting worn the previous pfghO And. as she .another, and the .very next day he of pocjal, information. Matilda watched ' JUST RUN ACROSS the young soldier with . eyes full of did so, her heart sat so .Slightly on .its made friehds with this preacher, and I interest, and did not refuse hiS escort temporal pfercli that'.she j was singing met them coming., down the High Some People Are .Lucky. to her carriagfe' hut, aS she departed, and did not know it, And she did not street together in very sober and pleasu Some people make an intelligent After beating these she gave Jahe orie look which left her know, that, at the very same' moment, ant discourse. of food and get on the right her "lonelin was went we heart, study into the Well an at with Cluny Neville, Hamilton, sqlacing unhappy question Whigs not only for that night,, but to- - be re- iness of his ride by the Hymn for winter quarters at Edinburgh ; and track (pure food) others are lucky called long after as premonitory given to Its Hebraic, fervor Cromwell is now staying at Lord M- enough to stumble upon the right Victory, way out of the difficulty just as a a melodious vigor qf interpretation ad; orays house in the Canongate. Phila. young woman did. rest his in to eventhe taken have He emphasied" by Gregorian mirably ought During the preparations' for the I had suffered terribly She says: of the tune. , Holyrood Palace,! .said Jane. ing meal, and while Neville was in his simplicity nervous indigestion, everything from Nedid i reI he am not, replied and armor glad chamber removing his Tis enough to fight the living Beemed to disagree with me and I was CHAPTER IV. ville. freshing his clothing. Jane also found point of starvation when one Stuart; why should he run into mortal on the time to put on a pretty evening gown. I to run across a demonday happened of home a that Dream. So Sweet danger by invading the Something had happened to Jane; she of Postum Food Coffee at one stration in ' his man now A was Peace preconfidently-sleeps and family? delicious a unlucky was in anticipation, the big stores here. she could not keep- the handsome dicted, but hope outruns events,- and dwelling place and when he sleeps he pf I took a sample home and a sample of the dead. over down settled is at the winter mercy the of slowly out consideration.. her stranger Df Grape-Nut- s as well and there tried The Jane. withsaid of land Not level dreariness the good so, When she heard Nevilles steady, swift the found they agreed and them again he naman is at the mercy of God, and if step coming towards her she trembled. out ariy apparent change in the me perfectly. For t months I with and watches. his wakes situation. and angel not tional ask herself, sleeps, Why? She did I will lay me down in peace aEd take made them my main diet and as the In de Wick the situation was pitiher soul did not tell her. It indeed I or of rest; for it is thou, Lord, only, result am restored to my former per-I of my sorrow, ably forlorn and desolate. Matilda warned her, either joy health and can eat everything fect me in dwell safety. that makest for surely its tremor intimated that would gladly have escaped Its depresswant to. as she her looked at Neville visimere no was to be steadily for while a little every the newcome ing atmosphere When I spoke to my physician tor of passage, no neutral guest; that day, but she could not, for the roads spoke with such a glad confidence, and about Grape-Nut- s he said It is a most under his gaze, enleading from it were almost quagmires Janes face grew rosy widened perhaps, indeed, he might have Name given by Posexcellent food. smile while Nevilles or at slowly, least unless steadied by frost, and it was tered her home as a fate, tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. as a messenger of destiny. For who only rarely on such occasions that the until his whole countenance shone Theres a reason. with into walks pleasure. can tell, when a stranger horses could he spared to take her as Look for the famous little book, (To be continued.) far as Swaffham. Even the atmosany life, what his message may he? in every The Road to Wellville, It was a wonderful evening to both phere of Swaffham, though grateful Postum and both of package which in a Behavior is mirror every Jane and Mrs. Swqffham. Neville told and cheering, was exasperating to the one displays his image. Goethe. over again the story of Dunbar, and poor royalist lady. There waj; such g Invasion of Grasshoppers. A curious day's happening at Hutchinson, Kas., was an invasion of thousands of grasshoppers. The following morning they had disappeared, where, npne kpew or cared. 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