HIM 
accompany yoa home next Sunday, if yon will al¬ 
low me.” 
As Lina came up he greeted her, then stopped a 
horse-car for us, and bade ns “ good afternoon.” 
As 1 eat on the shaded front porch, that afternoon, 
with a book in my hand, I thought and dreamed 
much more than I read; but then the very air seem¬ 
ed asleep, and the breezes dreaming. 
‘‘But I took my future out of liis hands,” said 
Mart ; ‘‘I set up another god—Gold—and fell down 
before it.” 
ii gat yon owned, yourself, Mart, that you did it 
partly for Harrt ; you hoped it might yet he for 
him.” 
“I don’t know what I thought,” she said; “1 
■W8S in a delirium, I think. O, Lina! the words of 
his letter eat into my heart! — so hopeful and happy 
with such trust in me, as though it were impossible 
j could be false! Think of it, Lrja : he says he and 
Tom nave each made a nice little fortune; that they 
will be home by the next steamer; that we will have 
a double wedding, and such happiness 1 ’ ’ Lina said 
she seemed to take just such a terrible pleasure in 
telling this, as a convict might in bugging his chain, 
or continually lifting it up and weighing it in his 
hand to see how heavy it was. 
“Poor, wretched Mart!” said Lisa; “I see no 
way Tor her out of her misery, but, as 1 told her, per¬ 
haps God does.” 
Lika seldom said as much as this of sacred things: 
I made no reply. She washed the marks of tears 
from her face; said father must have come up the 
hill, as the steam-cars passed some time before, and 
we must hurry down to tea. 
"One thing, Lisa,” I said, ‘‘I don’t understand. 
Why hasn’t Harrt or Tom written to their friends, 
all these years? ” 
They did, Hakkt’s letter Eays, overandoveragain; 
but it is doubtful whether their letters ever left Cal¬ 
ifornia. They might not, you know; for they were 
away out at the gold diggings, and their letters were 
entrusted to any chance carrier, aBd might never 
have reached San Francisco. They were in Oregon, 
too, part of the time; and a whole year in Idaho. 
Oddly enough, one of the two or three letters that 
did come, was sent from Idaho, and came the over¬ 
land route, a letter to their mother: that was in 
1861; do yon remember, Ruth?” 
“lee, very well: Mrs. Andrbws sent it to yon and 
Mart to read: there were messages in it for both of 
yon.” 
“Yes,” said Lina, with a deep sigh; “and 1 re¬ 
member, so well, 1 wished Harrt could have seen 
Mary, as she read his to her. I thought she never 
looked so beautiful before: she wore a Merino dress 
of the loveliest color, — a shade between lilac and 
purple,— and she is so fair, you know, and her little 
! TWAS BUT A MORNING GLORY 
•> Q QQQ of these Watches are now speak¬ 
ing for themselves in the pockets of the people — a proof i 
and a guarantee of their superiority, and furnishing the 
best reason for their great popularity and justifying the 
preference uniformly shown them by the public. 
^ X EXPERIENCE of nearly fifteen years has 
furnished the AMERICAN WATCH COMPANY the op¬ 
portunity of thoroughly testing all really valuable in¬ 
ventions in Watchmaking; and it being the sole aim of 
the Company to produce watches which as time-keepers 
would bear comparison with the very best made any¬ 
where, they now confidently assert that the WALTHAM 
WATCHES have every improvement which time and ex¬ 
perience have proved valuable. 
rjYHE AMERICAN WATCH CO. desire specially 
to remark that having had the refs sal of all the contriv¬ 
ances designed to prevent damage to the train by the 
breakage of mainsprings, 
FOGG'S PATENT VENTER- PINION 
was adopted for that, purpose as the best and faultless. 
“^TALTHAM WATCHES are now supplied with 
Patent DUST-PROOF CAPS, protecting the movement 
from dust, and greatly lessening the necessity of frequent 
clearing, &c., an improvement, of very great value to 
watch-wearers whose watches are exposed to rough usage 
and constant wear. 
mHE DIFFERENT GRADES of WALTHAM 
WATCHES have frequently been submitted to the se¬ 
verest tests to determine their time-keeping qualities, and 
have invariably been found thoroughly reliable and accu¬ 
rate, receiving the strongest indorsements from railway 
engineers, conductors, and expressmen, the most exact¬ 
ing class of watch-wearers — and that a usage op fif- 
TBEX TEARS HAS FURNISHED CONCLUSIVE PROOF OF 
THEIR DURABILITY. 
^ ND, FINALLY, that by reason of their large 
resources, and having by far THE LARGEST AND 
MOST COMPLETE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE KIND 
IN THE WORLD. AND EMPLOYING A BODY OF 
ARTISANS WHICH, FOR SKILL, INTELLIGENCE, 
TRAINING, AND EXPERTNESS, ARE UNEQUALED 
IN THIS OR ANY OTHER COUNTRY, with every fa¬ 
cility in the art at their command, the Company confi¬ 
dently claim that their Watches are better than the 
imported article of even much higher cost, and are AT 
LEAST TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. CHEAPER IN 
THEIR SEVERAL GRADES THAN ANY WATCHES 
WHATEVER OF AMERICAN MANUFACTURE. 
rjIHEKE ARE DIFFERENT GRADES of finish 
in the Watches made by the Waltham Co., and embrace 
every variety for Ladies and Gentlemen, and are for sale 
by all respectable dealers. 
No Watches retailed by the Company. 
ItOBBINS & APPLETON, Agents, 
No. 182 Broadway, New A T ork. 
’Twas but a Morning Glory, 
On dusty window-sill; 
And yet its simpie story 
Some loving heart may thrill. 
From damp and mouldy pavement 
Uplifting tendrils sweet. 
It clung, in soft enslavement, 
Above the squalid street; 
And crept, with sweet embracement. 
When rosy morning smiled. 
To bless the widow’s casement- 
To glad the widow’s child. 
’Twas but a Morning Glory, 
To kiss their hearts by stealth. 
And smile its silent story 
Of far-off garden wealth: 
And bring them gentle fancies 
Of woods and fragrant spots— 
Of daisies and of pansies. 
And blue forget-me-nots; 
Above the wide, wide city, 
So dark with sin and strife. 
To Wees, with tender pity, 
The widow's toiling life. 
’Twas but a Morning Glory, 
Grown tip from soil obscure, 
To smile its radiant story 
Or mem’ries fresh and pure; 
And tell how natures holy 
May rise o'er dust and grime. 
And np, from by-ways lowly, 
To light and sweetness climb. 
’Tis but a simple story 
Its patient bloom imparts— 
But, Oh 1 this Morning Glory 
May whisper to onr hearts. 
CHAPTER VII. 
Tbe week that this Sunday UEhered in was an 
eventful one, at least to some of ns. On Monday ar¬ 
rived onr expected guest,—onr New York cousin. 
Everything was prepared for her. her room had its 
new articles of furniture; all was in spotless neat¬ 
ness ; the open windows let in the cool hill breezes; 
two vases on the mantle, and a glass on the bureau, 
were fnll of June flowers. Also, the Madonna bad 
been removed to her new lodgings, and, from the 
opposite wall, could see herself in the mirror, in an 
excellent light. 
As father brought his niece np from the cars we 
went down the hill to meet her. If it had been a 
w stern friend, come so far to see us, there would 
have been a rush into one another’s arms, an affec¬ 
tionate embracing, an interchanging of most loving 
kisses, and, in a little rainbow cloud of question¬ 
ing chit-chat, we would have ascended the hill, the 
rainbow deepening in its tints all the while, and 
promising the sunniest weather for some weeks 
ahead. But now, as this eastern cousin came toward 
us, leaning on father’s arm, why did Lina go for 
ward first, give her a kiss and a hand-shake, with a 
quiet “I am glad to see you, Cousin Dora?” and 
why did I, as coolly, follow suit, instead of both 
rushing down upon her together, tumultuously 
seizing her from father, and in a small whirlwind of 
embraces and kisses, bearing her away to our eyrie 
on the hill-top ? Ah, this bird's prim little feathers 
must not he so rudely ruffled. She was bred in a 
cage of formality; her wings would fall lifeless in 
an attempt to breast a freer atmosphere. If you de¬ 
sire any intercourse with her, yon must stand just 
outside the bars of-her cage. So we did.—[Contin¬ 
ued on page 805, this number. 
Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
[Coe tinned from page 300, last No.] 
CHAPTER V. 
As I went np Mr. Quincy’s stepB at about 5 o’clock 
that afternoon, to my surprise Lina came out ready 
to go home. 
*< Mart’s lying down,” she said; “ she’s not at all 
well this afternoon, and as it’s quite late, I thought 
1 would be all ready when yon came." 
“ Lina,” I Eaid, in a low voice,” what’s the mat¬ 
ter? You’ve been crying.” 
“Never mind, dear,” she replied, drawing a veil 
down to conceal her face; “it was not for myself. 
I will tell you all about it when we get home. Is 
there a horse-car coming!” 
“Ye9,” 1 said; and waiting till it came np, we 
both got in and settled ourselves for our hour’s ride 
home. As we left the town the green fields gradu¬ 
ally opened on each side of the roe^l, and the air 
became cooler and sweeter, 
“ Lina,” 16aid, “I had a very pleasant afternoon.” 
“ I am glad of it, dear. 1 am glad, too, that yon 
left ns. Poor Mart will be happier,—more con¬ 
tented, at least, —after onr talk.” 
" Then she is not happy?” 
“ No, dear.” 
“ She looked at least gay and beautiful at the din¬ 
ner table to-day.” 
“Yes, I know it; but that gayety is all on the 
outside.” 
I stud nothing more, nor did Lina, till we had 
left the horse-ear, climbed the hill, and were in onr 
room, dressing for tea. Then she told the pitiful 
story she had heard that afternoon: 
1 had scarcely left the room when DIary, rising 
from the easy chair she was in, sat down on an otto¬ 
man at Lina’s feet. 
“Lina,” she 6aid, suddenly, “my poor heart is 
breaking.” 
She made no moan nor outcry. She said these 
words in a low, clear voice; but Lina said the white 
face of agony she turned up to her was most awful 
to look upon: every feature was quivering with tor¬ 
ture. “If she had only cried,” said the pitying 
Lina, crying herself, its she told me, “but, poor 
dear, she could cot; yet her breath came and went 
in such spasms that I feared she was telling the 
simple truth,—that her heart was literally breaking.” 
Much alarmed, Lina wished to get her some water. 
“ No, no,” she said, “ don’t leave me: I shall be 
better in a moment. I know these attacks; they 
come on me very frequently of late. I only hope,” 
she said, with a cold despair in her voice — “I pray 
only — that every one may be the last.” 
Lina, horrified, asked her if it was a disease ? if she 
had no counsel ? 
“Counsel?” she retorted, “what counsel for a 
breaking heart, but to finish its work and go?” 
She softened a little, and the white, awful look left 
her face. “ 0, Lina,” she said, “ pity me.” 
“1 do, Mart, God knows.” 
“Do yon know,” 6he went on, quickly, “that I 
got a letter, last week, from Harrt ?” 
“I heard so, Maet.” 
“And do you know,”—the white, terrible look 
coming and going in her face, — “that he had never 
heard of my marriage, but -wrote me a hopeful lover’s 
letter, telling me he had succeeded at last; he and 
Tom, too ? Did yon know Tom was coming, Lina ? ” 
“ Yes,” said Lina. “ Never mind, my poor, dar¬ 
ling Mar y, I know all you can tell me. Yon have 
sinned and yon have suffered, and God forgive me if 
I judged you harshly.” 
“ But we thought they were dead, you know,” 
said Mary, with a laugh, that sounded frightful, 
when one looked at her face and her bloodless lips. 
“ During three years, you know, we had not heard 
from them; and I thought, if I couldn’t be a happy 
wife I would at least be the richest woman in Alle¬ 
gheny. Don’t detest me utterly, Lina : I thought 
it all coldly out,— that this old man couldn’t live 
many years longer, and if Harrt ever did return 1 
should be a rich widow—for him. I actually thought 
so! ” There was a wild light in her eyes which fright¬ 
ened Lina, She endeavored to calm her with sooth; 
ing words: with the old girlish endearments, she 
persuaded her to lie down on one of the velvet 
conches; then went into her dressing-room, pro¬ 
cured iced--water, a sponge and hair-brush; bathed 
her face and hands, and let down her long, glossy 
hair,— pained to the heart to see the white threads 
here and there through it,—and sat down to 6oftly 
brush it, hoping it would make her sleepy. 
“ Lina,” Mary said, with the dark, hopeless look 
in her beautiful eyes, “Tom is coming home; you 
have been faithful to him, and you will be happy. 
I will try not to envy you, hut it will be a dreary 
task.” 
, “Marx,” Lina replied, “the future of both of us 
is known only to God. Try to trust in Him. Yon 
„ cannot tell what good things He has in store for yon.” 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorke: 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS. 
Rochester, N. Y 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed of 60 letters. 
Mv 0.13. S3. 40.10.80 is a boy’s name. 
My 55. 4-2. IT. 25. 31. 46,14. 51 was a General in the army 
of the Potomac. 
Mv 86, o. 7. 11. 27.53. 84,Sis a came. 
My 16, 2?. 45, 32,20, 49 is a bird. 
My 19. 37. lU. 22, 83, 5C, S3, 50.12, 54, 44, 21, 33, 5 is what I 
delight. in. 
My 11, 43. 57.4(1. 29. 2,13,50. 30, 9, 54, 40 is an institution 
for the yenmr. 
My i, 35, IS, 52. '.7,11 is a plant. 
My I, E:«. 21, 8, 19 i-- Ru-Rau measure. 
My 24, 41. 50, 25. 14.15 is a fish hawk. 
M v 20. 16, 58 is a girls name. 
My whole is an old Proverb. 
bhantyville, N. Y. J. G. Crouch. 
Answer in two weeks. 
In consequence of the great success attending our system 
of selling genuine Waltimra "Watches to persons m remote 
pH! -- of the country a* less than New 7 ork City prices, we 
invite the haver's careful attention to onr list ot prices: 
Uni - itch In 2 oz. S iI ver Case.*18 00 
The rah." Watch In 30Z Silver Case. 20 00 
The Watch in 4o«. Silver Case. « 50 
The Milne, -TcWt-led, M uddlOOttal. 
The same, Extra. Jeweled, with Chronometer Balance, $4 
additional, „ , „ 
The Silver Cases arc warranted equal to coin. 
The "Watches to be sent bylixpresB. ACCOM PANIED 
WITH AMERICAN W A TCH COMPANY’S 
CERTIFICATE OF' GEN tINENESH. 
THE BEYER TO HAVE PRIVILEGE OF EX¬ 
AMINATION IN POSSESSION OF EXPRESS 
COMPANY. 
Purchasers are requested to compare our prices 
with Mint nuked lot spurious, metal untutuon 
Watcher, of no value, and which find a market 
solely because tlte buyers are entirely ignorant 
of ilielr quality. 
Address mnsthe plainly written, and purchaser must pay 
express charges. M. E. CHAPMAN 4s CO., 
a- Lii.na No. d-t Liberty Street. New York. 
For Moore's Rural New-Yorker. 
PROBLEM. 
CHAPTER VI. 
Ou the next Sunday as I came out of the Penn 
street Methodist Church, Mr. Hills joined me. I 
was alone; Lina had gone that morning to St. An¬ 
drew’s Church, of which she is a member, though 
not always a strict attendant. We walked slowly 
along Penn street talking. 
“It’s a nice warm day,” I said; “I could scarcely 
keep awake in church.” 
“ Did you keep awake ?” he asked, smiling. “ It’s 
more than I did.” 
“ I don’t know,” I said, cautiously. “1 thought 
I did,” 
“ Your face betrays yon,” he rejoined; “there is 
a peculiar tinge in the cheeks, and a brightness in 
the eyes, which only sleep gives; its different from 
all other colors and sparkles. 
“ And it’B in my face?” 
“Yes,” said he, laughing. “Pardon me, but the 
tokens are theie; I should say you hadn’t been 
awake more than ten minutes.” 
“Well, yon know what Beecher says; that it’s 
the preacher’s fault if bi3 hearers go to sleep.” 
“ Oh, yes, and I entirely agree with him. By the 
way, did yon know I was a member of Beecher’s 
church when at home!” 
“Indeed! Then 1 presume some of the sermons 
1 have read yon have heard him preach.” 
“ No doubt. Is he a favorite of yours?” 
“Yes,” I said, with more emphasis than I gen¬ 
erally used; “I think he is the most thoroughly 
alive man on the continent.” 
“I am very glad,” bis dark eyes lighting np with 
something better than the “sparkle” of sleep. 
“If I could begin to tell you,” heweBton, “any¬ 
thing of Beecher's daily life.—the good he does in 
his genial, happy way, and the blessing he is to all 
who come in contact with him. 1 might talk all day 
and not have done.” 
“I believe you,” said I. “ I think if there were 
a few thousand such men in the world we should 
soon see the sunrise of the millenium. How I hon¬ 
ored him for refusing to be made a D. D. That alone 
should make him immortal in this age of conven¬ 
tionalities.” 
“You are right; I agree with you heartily,” said 
Mr. Hells. Someway, this peaceful Sabbath, when 
even the smoke of Pittsburg seemed “ resting from 
its labors,” we got on harmoniously together. He 
continued: 
“Such preaching as Mr. Beecher’s hastens the 
1 good day’ along by rapid strides. There is the very 
essence and spirit of the Gospel in it, in a body of 
practical, nervous life. I defy any of his hearers to 
go to', sleep. He could safely launch that stone at 
sleepy preachers,—his house was not glass.” 
“ 1 do think,” said I, “ that Mr. White was sleepy 
to-day ; .he sat np too late last night, or the weather 
was too'inueh for him; anyway, he had a soporific 
influence upon me.” 
“And upon me; but the drug took effect upon 
ns at different times. I was overcome about the 
middle of the discourse; you, near tne close.” 
“ I guess, theD, said 1, “ I can make good your 
loss to yon. Yon were a wise economist of doctrine 
and time, though, to go to sleep just then. There 
was nothing that you could have digested. It was 
babe’B milk; or, rather, mush and milk, which al¬ 
ways makes me sick.” 
If the base of a right-angle triangle be 8 feet, the per¬ 
pendicular 6—required the length of a line drawn from 
tl.e right-angle of the triangle, meeting tne bypothenuse 
4 icet'from the npper point of the perpendicular 1 
Orleans Co., N, Y. Nomad. 
Answer in two weeks. 
AXr VLTIIAIU U ACTHES. FOB A FEW 
\\ months r ust we have adverrised the above W etches at 
tu irtmehJ lore price*, and the result has been most eatiMue- 
jory. Oar elan has been to salt the genuine WALTHAM 
WATCH,iu Solid Gold or Sliver Cases only, and at a very 
small profit; riving The partdiaser every opportunity of ex¬ 
amination and comparison, and with the understanding that 
if the Watch does not prove satisfactory, It can be exchang¬ 
ed or the money refunded. ... . , . 
These Watches arc. without exception, the most perfect 
specimens of Cue mechanism ever produced in any country. 
Each and every part is made by machinery of the most deli- 
c at" nnd elaborate construction. 
Compared with foreign watches, they possess many advan¬ 
tages, excelling riot only In principle aad firdsb, hut stm 
more In ihcJr reliability as time-keepers. At an indication 
of tne prices we submit the lollowing: 
Silver Hunting Watcliea ...."*£•}$ 
Gold Hulling Watches, IS carat cate,. hU.CO 
Gold Hnntintr Watches, ladies’ size,.. 
We often receive urdeis direct from, our advertisement, 
hut prefer that every one should send first for our descrip¬ 
tive price list, which explains all tl.e different kinds, tells the 
weight and Quality of the cases, and FiTes prices oi each. 
This we will forward to anv one on application, and it will 
be found i err useful in making a selection. 
Erery Watch is warrant id by special certificate from the 
America * math Company . _ a 
We send them by express to any address. Allow tlionnr. 
chaser to open the package, and examine the ^Vatch belore 
paving, ana If afterwards it docs not prov-^ MilUfactorv, it 
nor. he exchan£ ,, (i or the money will be cf»*zvfully refunded. 
Ca pic;ise*tate that you saw this ini the .Rural New-Yorker. 
Address, In full, HOWARD A. CO«, 
" , > No. 619 BE04DWXY. New Yozk. 
Formed iong ago, yet made to-day, 
I'm most in use when others sleep ; 
What few would like to give away. 
And none would always like to keep. 
fW Answer in two weeks. 
Answer to Miscellaneous EnigmaWhere no counsel 
is the people fall. 
Answer to RiddleThe cock that crowed after Peter's 
denial of his lord. 
Answer to Anagram: 
An Austrian army awfully arrayed, 
Boldly by battery besieged Belgrade, 
Cossack commanders cannonading come, 
Dealing destruction, devastation, doom. 
Answer to Geometrical Problem —The diameters are 
25.63, 31.96 and 34.33 rod-. 
Answer to Illustrated Rebus : 
And reason raise o'er instinct as yon can, 
In this tis God directs, in that 'tie man .—Pope. 
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS 
Receive their Teas by the Cargo from the best 
Tea districts of China and Japan, and sell 
them in quantities to suit customers 
AT CARGO PRICES. 
CLUB ORDERS PROMPTLY SUPPLIED 
PRICE LIST OF TEAS. 
OOLONG (Black,) 70c., 80c.. 90c„ beat *1 9 b. 
MIXED I Greer, aud Black,) 70c., 80c.. SM)c., best 21 ? B 
ENGLISH^ BREAKFAST (Black.) HOC., i»C., $1, $1,11 
80e., 90c., *1. *1.40. best *1,25 V ft 
"Uc.ToOc., t-i, * 1 , 10 . beat *1,2 
* 1 . *1,10, best *1,23 31 tt. 
IMPERIAL (Green.) 
r NCOLORED JAl’ANi 90c., *1, *1,10, best *1,25 V B>. 
GUNPOWDER (Green ,j b est *1,50 # lb. 
OOPFEES ROASTED AND GROUND DAILY. 
GROUND COFF EE, 20 c .,25 c., 30c.,35c., beBt 40c.per pound. 
Hotels, Sak>OB6. Boarding-house keepers, and Families who 
l&rsrt* nuiintldes of GotTe^i can economic 1 b that article 
by -S our FreSch Breakfast an rt Dinner Coffee, which we 
sell at the low price of 3bc. per pound, and warrant to give 
SOSHTOSmiU «*.. ate.. W* per Ifc 
GREEN (Unroasted,) 2&C-. 3 JC., 33c., beet 35c. per -b. 
We warrant all the gooffs we sell to give enure satisfac¬ 
tion If they are not satisfactory they can be returned at 
our expense within 30 days, and have the money refunded. 
BREAT AMERICAN TEA COMPANY, 
Nos. 81 & 33 Vesey Street, 
Post-Office Bo x 5,643, New York City. 
P ORTABLE STEAH ENGIN ES-FOR 
Farm.Mixiug or Mxcuanioai. yurao***- These:ms. 
ohiTirtu no brickwork:—mounted on legs they are 
especially adapted for use In Muxs, Wanted 
pBTO WoH CO., Eat’on, Madison Co., N. f. 
SPLENDID 1*110TOG KAPH», MAILED 
for 25 cent;. AddressB. 4 ok. V t&rlck St.. N. Y. 
OHA A YEAR TO AGENT* TU IP* 
I S*»r Shuttle sewiag Machines. Puli 
particulars free Extra ir-dncementstc; experienced BgeuG. 
Call on or tidur- - - L > G. VS ILfcON & CO., Cleveland, Oulo 
Boston. Mass., or St. Louie, Mo. U.l-lS'.os 
T OTIO.- PROF. CHRISTY’S HAIR LO- 
I l TIO IS NEAT. CLEAN. PURE, UNIFORM AND RE- 
Ijable. and richly perfumed for the toilet it contains no 
Srout nr Lk.id or other poisonous miner:.!? or oils, it 
makes the hair glossy and beautiful, removes danorno, re¬ 
stores cray hair to Its original color—will grow hair on bald 
heads and can be rsEi> as a uaih dbessino FOKitvir. 
WITHOUT THE BUOHTtsT IN J CUT CO TER BRAJN OB 01*110 
xsbve. Do not take ritiythiug else, hut get the pure article. 
If vow drusrglst will not get It for you send direct to the 
manufactory? Sold by druggists, si rer bottle -, half dozen 
* 5 , or sent to any address ou receipt of llie money. Liberal 
ffeduction to the trade. Send for testimonials, roc. 17-ule 
supplied by DEMAS BARNES A CO.. Wholesale Agents, 
New York City. .Hand this advertkment to niur Drug- 
'/iteteo 475 West Fifth St-. Cincinnati, Ohio. 
seem to know it s hanflay. mere is lina com***a 
np the street now.” 
“ Yes, it is her. I would like, Miss Ruth, to go 
into the country with yon, one of these sultry Sab¬ 
baths.” 
“ Do,” I said. “ The* idea of staying in this dirty 
town, when there are clean places in the world. 
You must come soon, too, before the roses are ail 
gone. We have a perfect wilderness of them now. 
“ I will,” he said,” with a pleased look; “ I w ill 
f 
\ 
