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Pittston Gazette from Pittston, Pennsylvania • Page 1

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Pittston Gazettei
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Pittston, Pennsylvania
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1
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Jv 111 I Sill II III I 'W KTJ' I K8T VIH.IIIKIU.H.'.O. I VOL. XLVI. SO. 41 Oldest Newspaper in the Wyoming Valley.

PITTSTON, LUZERNE FRIDAY. JUNE 11. A Weekly local and Family Journal. 9USSW2SS teens have our smcerest CLUB HOUSK A GO. a lit her sy.upathy.

DElD HEROES HONORED. Pux Hie Armstrong Propnrty Uim Born chased by the Exeler Club aud L'lheir Graves Decorattd With Flags Fate. Fate drives iu on. Yield wo to fate, KocnrkinK cans will mend our sc.te Or chaiiKe the vl th fortune Iuor inert, who sins ami grieve. His course fun nxed from hi aveu veives.

There is the thread relentless sjiuu tf i verjr beneath tin sun. Their ordereit path all tilings pursue. And from tin ulil was burn tlx nev. No gud tout knits the i liaui That knits events mijdit break in mix. No prayer avails his eai on Fururuled must run.

Seneca. and Flowers. REPUBLICAN CONVENTIONS. The County Fx'cattve Committee Sleets and Fixes the Dates. The Republican County Exscu ive Commit ee met in Wl ke trre last week and decided to hold the SenatoilaTT Congressional and County Conventions ou June 30th.

The primaries will be held on the previous Saturday. The Legislative Conventions will beheld on Jane 29th. A MOST FITTING CELEBRATION was mgn, ana snmiouniea ny a luscious wealth of glossy black hair which Phil never remembered to have seen equaled before for its silkinessof texture uud its strange bluo sheen, liko stool or the grass of the prairies. A queenly grace distinguished her mien. Her motion was equable.

As once the sous of God Baw tho daughters of men that they wero fair and straightway coveted them, eveu so Philip Oilman looked at that dignified stranger and saw at the first glance sho was a woman to be loved, a soul high throned, very calm and beautiful There was much excuse for him. He had been living for three years in an UP country station, where ho had never on seen a real live white woman, and, under such circumstances' the mere sight of one's fellow country yvomen (believe one who has tried Is a delight and a wardrobe, 1 venture to usk, it it persists in being seasick and sticking to its berth the whole way out from London to Aden? The consequence was that Aggie and Captain Stuart were throw a great deal together during the course of their voyage. When Aggio sang to tho Peninsular and Oriental piano in the big saloon, it was Angus Stuart who turned ever the leaves of her music lxiok. Whou Aggie sat ou dock and dot lined lunch with thanks, for pressing reasons, it was Angus Stuart who brought her up the unsngared lemonade and one dry biscuit which alone apjiealed to her maritime appetite. Old ladies on board remarked with malioious glee what a pity it was poor dear Mrs.

Mackinnon wasn't well enough to come up and look after her charge. Old gentlemen observed with a knowing smile that Miss Oswald was going out to be married at Bombay, but they rather imagined she'd mistaken the bridegroom. Aggie ami Angus Stuart, however, went on happily unconscious of tho unkind remarks whispered about them in confidence in the saloo at night when broko it opeu nil of a tlntter to see whether Phil wanted her to conio out to him at last, she felt hardly so much delighted with the news it contained us she knew sho ought to be. On the contrary, sho took it down to her mother, half crying. "What is it, darling?" her mother asked.

And Aggie, trembling violently, handed it to her to read. When her mother had read it Aggio laid that Huffy head ou her shoulder and sobbed aloud. "Now it comes to the pinch, mother," she said, quivering, "it seems so hard to go, so hard to leave you and sail alone so far across tho sea. Fivo years ago it didn't. You see, it's so long siuco I saw dear Phil he seem i almost like a stranger.

I can't bear to think I've got to leave you all and go away CUUO miles to a stranger even though I love him. Ho may be so awfully changed, you His photograph's quitu altered. And he may think me so different now from his own ideal of me." Iler mother gassed at her in speechless surprise. Five years aro not nearly so long at GO as at tluee and twenty. Hall Will be llullt.

The club house aud hall on the West Si3e uau bs put down as a pretty sure lug The Exutfcr Club, the proj ctors ol ti scheme, held a meeting last uigtt, at which it wa decided to r.urchaee the Arms' r.irq property, corner of Luzerne avenue and Ltuden etreet. The mem era of the c'ub htv hud the pnrcOage of this prop eity under cotiBideratlon for long true bat difli arose to prevent them from stcuriug the plot. Everything now is favorable. The club bai been Sored the pi tee and It only remains uow to blod tba bargniu. No better location for a bnidicg of thin kind could be found In the borough.

It la in the heart of the town and convenleat. The plara of the c'ub are to mike extensive repairs on tbs building now ou the alte and tr ansform it into a modern club house Can yon put the kernel Wk in the nut Or the broken ens; in tho shell? Can yoa put the honey Uiek in the comb 1 And cover with wax earh cell? fan yon pat tho trfune tack in the vivw When oucv it lua aw iH fan you put the com silk back on the corn tr do un the al Vi ns say Wu think my questions are tr.tiinir, dear. Lei nie ask another one. Can a rd ever 1 ansaid Or a deed unkind undone? Wide Awake. one, won't talk like that.

I never could stand it. I shall require him to be desperately, wildly iu love with me I If lie tries to be philosophic, whj, ho'H have to go Phil was just on (lie point of lowering, "Ah, but if a. man was in lovo with you that would bo altogether hut politeness, to say the trnth, rather than loyalty to Aggie, prevented him from voicing the thought that was in bim. "Besides," Freda went on, "if you were very much in love at least aa I count it yoa wouldn't have said you'd bring her photograph dowu when you next wont up. Yw'd have rushed up for it at one, that very moment, and exhibited it with pride aud joy and confidence.

And you wouldn't have said it was kind of me to want to see her. You'd have taken it for granted every, human being was dying to behold her beautiful face, and. you'd have considered it a great favor to me to show ma b.vr portrait Phil laughed in spite of himself "You're quite right, "he said frankly. "That's just how; felt some four oj five years aga But omjiNiu't keep it up to that white hart, yoatbow at least "At least not, when?" Freda put i i lit, Sunday School Children ANlnt In Beautiful Services at the Market Street and Vlttston Cemeteries, and Scatter Frag raut lilotMoms oa the Moanda of the Heroic Head. It would be bard to coacelve of a more fitting observance of Memorial Day than that carrier? cut today by W.

Nugent Poet, Oiand Army of the Republic, of this city. In a qn'et and unoatentatioua manner, In keeping with the true spirit of the day, the veterana of the Grand Army acd their friencla coanaemoratdd the services of the fal'en heroes and placed fliwera and A PltUton Boy's Success. It ought always to be a credit and honor to a town or city to have Its dinger men and women mklng brilliant records in scholarship In the academies acd preparatory achoola of our country. Such urely ought to be so In the case of J. Truman Evans, son of William Evans, of South Main street.

Mr Evans has been in attendance Ch ltenham Military Academy, one of the best preparatory and military chools In the East, for the past three yeara, and during that time has acq ilt'ed himself in a brilliant manner. His ft at year was charactered by carrying away the very highest honors in the school In CHAPTER II. Five years tolled jn, and Phil Oilman prospcied. He wasn't quite a viceroy, to he sure, but he was a deputy collector. Ni.t a man in the Deccau got on better thttii he did.

His excellency was leased more than once iu that short time to jiromote Mr. Philip lilman to successive posts in successively droary np country districts. Phil saved and scraped, and all f'r Aggie. At the end of live years, with his own little income ami his rising pay, he began to fitd himself in a position to think about uiairying. He would send home tor now and ask her to come out to him.

He could redeem that long standing pledge and make himself and her Fivo years hail rolled on, but they had rolled on (as observant souls may often note to be the case) by one day at a time, through 12 months of each year, with long, slnv regularity. Xow, all those months PH' (iiiinan had written by eterv mail to Aggie, and by every piail he had heard in return from Aggie again. At first he had sat down to rite each time with ardent uftectiun. Ho li; A rrn oncu Aggie's when they came, with engerx But as njijliths tw i ty aiut he never saw Al this first Hush of rivuitg lovw begau to die away Imperceptibly, until at List! almost without knowing it himself, sat dowu so n.any times a iycclc to write his (judge! ns a' pure matter of duty. Soiiietinios it rather worried jo Lave to find freh to say to Aggie; lie wrote, not so much Uyuusu he wauted to write, us lcause he kuew Aggie would I' not to get a letter.

And so she would have been. ISSPB LOVE. joy to one. And then she was so beautiful, with such high typo of intellectual beauty; no mere fluffy haired schoolgirl, with red cheeks and lips, but a Keuniiie woman, with sou! ii her face and a pervading sense, of grace and dignity in all hejcuio'veiiieuts. When she stepped, forward and smiled, and held ri 1.

flies upon their a raves iu the various oeme Urlta. i the vacant lot in the Tear Ot this building, (touting on Linden street, will be located the large hall, which will be up to While the day was quite generally recog out surely, Aggio, sho said, yp.u Ihey two engaged; ia admiring on deck the phosphorescence on the waves or the very singular brilliancy of the tropical moonlight. uauil IU 11IUJ. rmi iluliri KUUJf n'z as a public holiday, the collieries and Kin be so nugrarerin to our dear instantly To tb.iuk that in a world Phil i as to tunny lum over now and. re which, juoloses such infinite possibilities.

On oue such eveuing, in the Red sea, fuse togo gut to him ho who Las be muy buslnea houses being closed, there was so far as we wete able to notice no unseemly cmduct on the pirt of the thousands of people who appeared on the streets, and no nesituiea. Ihey stood together by the taffrail with us these ho should have tied, himself dowmbliudfoltV rrfur it was really Vlind foldto, of pretty Aggie Os "Well, at least koi when you don't the form of a handsome gold medal, and he also win a high honor medal. He was vtn more en cesaful In bis second year, winning two fiae go medals In' com pstitlve examinations In Lttln and Higher English, and another high honor uiedaL Tula year his standing in sob ar shlp entitled him to the valedktiry of hia one accord aud looked over in unison into the deep white water. There was silence for awhile. Then Stuart spoke see the girl, you love for five years oj thereabout," Phil answered, with, rare waid at least on the east side of the river much interest was taken in the services conducted by the Post.

The vision of beauty stepped forward I candor, abiuptly. By GBAKT ALLEN. Copynirht. ltt. by Grant Allen.

UiAPThK 1. They were simply Ifetrtbrokm. Its, repeat it, heartbroken. No diamond cement that ever was made sufficed ts? repair the injured organs. For when Philip Gjl'pau left London to go out to India hV cried bis ryes red over his cad farewells to Aggie' Oswald.

They two Weie in love with one another madl; jnoasWs and girls wjH bt, with that unalterable affection which enduies for eternity or, to be more precisely piatheiuatical, for sis months 'at least, pn an average computation. Philip hud been placed third in the India "civil pouipetitioit, and the boundless prospective wealth, vhicb, that position promises (In depreciated rupees') he rjro ceeded forthwith to lay at the. tVet oi aud held out one frank hand. "Oh, Mr. Oilman," JVda cried, "You haven't seen him for fiveysars," Toe members of the Po't, to the numb.r "Mr.

Oilman?" ho said inquiringly. "I'm afraid you're very fickle 1" he said meditatively, without anything class, the largest ever graduated from the date Id every particular. It is expected tba' there wlil be two fl lora, IncTullog the bust meat, and the bulldlBg wl 1 be of about the b'zj of Armory Hll. In ff reut parts of the hall will be located drjBeli.g aad reception rooms, pantry, and all other convenleoefs essential to a first claea ball room, about one half of the be semen walla will be above ground. The basement will be need for amusements, aa bowllug alley and billiards.

A g) muaslum outfit will also be placed in this room. When ccmplebd, from as uohitectural standpoint, the ou'ldlng will be a beauty and a credit to toe towa. The Improvement to the beuie and the work oa the building will ba etartfd jnt aa soon ig eveiythtog la settle ot fifty, gathered at the Post headqaarters 'AJi, yes, I thought so. 3Iy unclo's sq 'No; not fickle," Phil answered, Institution, and we fbd he is the probable growing hot aud red. He couldn't bear at nine o'clock, and soon afterward, in sorry, but ho had to go out, and he asked me to receive you.

You've heard my uame, I dare say I'm his niece Miss carriages and wagons, started for Market the nnd8n" scholareMp to be called perfidious by such beautiful special to indicate tho personality of the him in question. "That's a very long time, you know, Miss Oswald. At your age and his in five years people often altor wonderfully." (Beiua himself true to you bo long and, uehavvd so generously I Jt would break his heart, poor It would just break his jjeart for him Think of Ijitu, toiling and moving aud savnui and scraping, out in India so lvug, and dreaming of yoi all the while and writing every mail to yen Why, Aggie, what can, you mcau? Y'ou con id nevev refuse him." him 1 Oh, detir no, mother faltered out, shocked hcr sell at the. bare suggestion "I didn't mean that. I meant I only meant I didn't feel qnites iglad, now it's actual ly conic, us 1 always used to think I should.

1 begin to wonder now what Phil will be like after use years' ab lips, lie couldn't bear such lovely eyei Street Cemetery. A verv ea" 0 I 0 I J. I. Tievelyau. to look so reproachfully aoross, a.t him.

o' iwnl hJ neho, ttn. th I nr nuancter or uivu war Pkil accepted the proffered hand with exercise, aod thev were of. most inter I Evans has not only shown ex indeed she would have cried bitterly that Phi should have 'neglected; Mis. Then ho leaned, forward gravely. some slight misgivings ho was so very just ao, aim square that, Angus jtuart affected always to speak to Aggv the character of a grandfather.

eating and appropriate character. Btaldea ob tta past dnstv and I blush to write it. but Wemm.v ne sain, witn some earnest her Phil itiis puneitial; v'ht the Post there were mnt rew aiapiayea wonderful skill Oh, I hope not Aggie cried ferv something much liko a lift 1q thrill of "T'm mustn't think of me like doliuht, ran throuih him nt touch of her Umt, I really couldn't bear, that you Flnnen, Qjlnnan and Lavelle, several in unln ih Wd ftne penman. He veutly, with a little shudder of alarm, .1 .,1, .,,,1.1 a Jnn 3 xtof. from se n.t I editor in chief of the Cheltenham tlh.

m. tmir Ai hit Pint iiwv vuo or, to say the truth, her new friend had ust voiced the very terror that was per the choir composed of etudenta rom I to MPtala of hte company Said, could havo seen her lover iust cons wranon tor Aggie. ui, remem f.CAUDSMAN SHOT DEAD. at school. Mr.

Evans Intends to pursue that moment, she would havo turned Vr. wo wero young we were both very jetually consuming her. "It's onlv fivo St. John's Academy. The ritual of young when 1 wont away trom JSng Dlstresfting Accident at Parsons 1 ast years, you know, and wo wore, awfully of the Grand Army of the public for land.

Aggie was IH, and I was one and his eduatlon still higher, and It is hoped ha will conduot himself in the sane admirable manner aa he has done in toua oi cacn outer i Memorial Day was retd by Poet Command Saturday. A very dletreeticg accident occurred In Aukos Stuart answered back that very day and returned by the b.rauewurd bound mail to London, though, to bo sure, poor Aggio herself was that moment engaged iu a very desperate and heartfelt flirtution with twenty. Naturally I hardly know what sort of girl sho may have grown into by er Daniel Howell, and the prayer was read could in; the puuiiong or tins iieiayr Was it possible that Phil, her dear Phil, was forgetting hev: Thete's a vast deal of difference, however, tween 21 and Far those, ttvi loii jcars Phil had saved every penny (he said penny quito natuially now, an having growu only too common and unclean to him), and at the end of that time, when lie Is gau to ihmk to him self ho might now send home for his lie loved Aggie why, a strange sort discoveiy broke suddenly pcr ltiut. Great heavens I What was Ihis'r Wan ho over joyed at the prospect: I I'd he hail with effusion theutUdit of that by William G. Simpson, acting as ParHODe on Saturday, resulting In the dth of one of the town's most prominent this time.

Naturally she can hardly know what sort of man slio'i going, to. with quiet smile. "Y'ou say 'were' yourself. That doesn't qnke look as if you were desperately in love with hint just atpreseut, does it?" And ho, flailed chaplain. The following prog tonne was hut will not anticipate.

Phil looked down at his coat and Mining Notes af Interest, The discovery of the Diamond seam at re idents, Sergeant 0 edlah Rbotdes, son then ctrried onl: Song, "Cover Them l.imij. sence. I've pictured hint tomyself just as he was when we saw him last. I'm trying to picture now as fivo years will have made him. Mrs.

Oswald gavo a sigh of distinct relief. It wonld really havo terrible if Aggie bad lost live years of Jier life and the In tears, too on tliis clevet young fellow in tho Indian civil and then thrown hi overboard. At 2:1, after such a long engagement, her chances of placing herself would lie seriously impaired. And thougl she, had other opportunities, and was muda' much tif everywhere, yet Philip was really a. very eligible young man and lie paused second.

Thon he spoke of William lodes, and nephew of Cap Oner With Beautiful a poem, stammered out feebly somo inarticulate at her wisely. ttill ruoro seriously. "At the time we Williams colliery, now leads to the plausible supposition tht at a greater depth am Knoaars. rne unfortunate man was apology. A prudent maiden would have divert "Oar Country," by Whlttier; song, "Ret, So dler, R', Thy Ltbor is Done;" reading both loved one another dearly.

It was Qn irteruinetar of Co Ninth Regiment, "I'm really not fit for ladies' soci ed conversatiou. But As'e hesitated aud temporized heartrending to part. If we'd married ot Parsons of the 50 Psalm, miserere; de profondte, ety," ho murmured, with a glancoat (ho landed estate. "From Punna here then and there, we should no doubt have, ell, five years is a very long timo, they will find tbe Mammoth vein in one great unbroken basin, bereft of the pitches and curves that mark Its cm tee. and the course of other measures throughout the lho gmrdflmen have arid) range loca 59; prayer; song, "Sleep, Soldiers, on loving one another just as dear is so trrrihly dusty he admitted, with a slight sigh, "and Sleep." Dating the service committees Froda Trev.

lv.ni smliert. "Oh. wo'vn 'J to this very day. Hut thou we should ted near the Mineral Spring colliery, en the outskirts of Parsons, and this morning if conrso ojie naturally wonders whether .1 I .1 I 1 decorated the graves, aud afterward the region. If this supposition proves correct ai ttono it ourselves." she answered.

I meaiiwime ot i umber of them from Wilkeebarre and children placed fl iweis u'pm them. "I camo from Pnnmi last week, so I I each other. As it is, conceal it aa we it will revolution's the theories that have a person will really strike ono now exactly as be struck one five whole long years aga a deputy collector I Mrs. Oswald set herself forthwith to check, by every PaicoiiB gathered at the range for practice, The Post then proceeded to the Pitteton been held hitherto concerning the coal de pretty ittle Aud no Wt'Hihr he fid litjfu was as airy, faify a little butterfly as ever flitted through a ballroom among admiring lads of rue and tSventv. Every idy who saw ber fell a ieini at once to (hut fluffy brown hair and that arch little smile of hers.

No pxford undergraduate was ever known fq resist that tripping tongue no sith.il eru at Aldeiliot was ever known to withstand the winning prace of those pinky white cWks and those cherry jed ipo Akk'V (Oswald's. jiuf Philip iiluian was tho hero who bore pfj the prize. What wonder, when he could make love her in Tamil and Telugn almost as fluently ns in English itself? Jfot that understood fiuo word 'f either of those learned tongnea a little bad French bounded he taltt of her liiiguintie ptfiomplish ineutiH 'but the glamour of them i hnuo through to her from his thoughtful brown eyes, sixko a language tinivrsally understood, lie was it clever telov, Philip, and an earuent one Into the bargain, and if lio thought biui pelf desperately in love With the pretty fluffy hair and the laughing mouth why, a gxid man" lias made, the tame sort of mistake at one and twenty. We were one find twenty ourselves once, you mid though it's a lon time Biiiee, uud were the girls we tiien thought we could never be happy without the same a.s those with whom we finally decided non passing a luunilano existence tether if trow if I recollect it ariKht our hearts got broken hud very decently mended again some half dozen times before we were 30. Rhoad was keeping score acd was sitting cemetery.

Here, too, there was a very knowhowtosyuq.athizo with you. One may from ourselves, we. must meet as foels as if tho Indian ocean didn't hold strangers. My find; anxiety will be tQ enough water ever to wash ono quito Syttwhat kind of girl has out to. "Precisely Angus answered and posits of this vlolDlty acd the problem of long wished for, that much desired, day? he half mad with delight, half wild with expectancy? If the truth must bo told oh, dear nie, not bit of it 1 It occurred to hiin al at once that for the last two years or thcrealxrat ho bad been uml writing not for pure, pure love, tut by mero force of habit.

The original flame had died down, the original impulse had worn itself out, and now, in tholr place, Strange, critical doubts and fears obtruded all unawares their unwplcomq faces. la a protected place near the means sho kuew, these vague misyi yiugs. Aggio must not be encouraged ill her doubts about pliik' rihe iuu be made large cmptny of people, hnndredaof neat dropped the subject. Ho weut on to remark on the beauty of tho phosphores clean again. I won't ask von, iuto tho wary me.

Aggio's. fin, ftustety will be tt get. There happened to be a little ly drtestd chttdrea bsing among the num mining that has h' tier to been bothering operators and prospective operators will have been toWed Pottsville Jotcnal. drawing room uow and keep you sitting see VM k.id of wau she has come to feel she was in honor bound to go cence that sparkled and danced upon the bar. The children from the to Suoday in the shooting, ani Bhoadt stc his bead out from the protected thcro iu discomfort.

You'd better ao uo rt man7 WW 1 to "suit out and marry him. urface of the water. They leaned over schools oa rVelsh Hill, the Baptist and the Isaac Molster, for the Lehigh Valley Coal to your own room. ouce, and as soon ty sell dotense, you know, place, let ae Hirry Whipple, a member of Congregational, who were to slog patriotic Company, and L. O.

Emmerich, for Mr. to repel your charge of fickleness? Well, its you've got rid of tho first few layers Co. of Wilkeebarre, fired at the tatget hymns, marched to the cemetery in a body, to look at it once more together. Lovely object, phosphorescence on the. surface of the water, espeoially when you look over at it, twopcrsuns together In point till the moment arrived when I could a cup of tea 11 po ready down here for Roderick, met yeaterdaj and selected David Roberta aa the third member of the arbl presenting a pretty sight The oemetery it 6end homo, Aggie i my one feeling, you," Toe bullet st uck Rhoades in the left side at the neck and cams out on the other self appeared to batter aivantage than was a longing to be uble to marry her.

tratlon committee, wbo are tj decide She Eiid it with a friendly smile that 'dr, Boverli the jugular vein and injur ever before. It la being kept looked at her photograph day and In excellent condition, and the lot ing ti larjcx xne wounded man ran with a distinct rapture, Ijooked at it was the warmest of welcomes, full fumbled Up idairs as best ho could, and ojiened his portmanteau. lie was a good whether or not the plliars in the Stockton mine will be sufficiently strong enough to permit tbe mine be fljoded Hazleton Standird il fact, they stopped up looking at it, in that balmy southern air, tillalmost midnight, and only retired to their respective berths just in time for saving the last end of the lights before they wore ruthlessly put out for the evening. The old ladies on board shook their heads (ittcu. it gave ute a thrtU to look at it.

tbout 4C0 y.rds, and hen fell to the owners seemed have taken ma prld It only on the very day that I wrote omd, dying In a few moments. In decoradag the graves with fljwers. Tne Did ho really love AgRie quite as well as ho used to do? Did Aggie really Jove him quite as well as she once said the did? Had they two changed much in those five years of absence? Would Aggio's fluffy hair Le quite as entrancing and as errant as ever? Would, Ag" gie's siittplvity be as engaging as of tld? Or, again, let him see she was 18 then; would there be any simplicity left at all at 23, ho wondered. Looking at tho matter philosophically (and In looking fellow, with a' most manly mus uome to asic ner to come out to me ti CHAPTER ni. While be waited for his answer at bis up country station Phil Oilman hiipidf had half hoptd Aggie might by this time see thiugs in the same light as he did she might perhaps be willing to release him from an engagement which had ceased to bo a reality to either of them.

No doubt she, too, had changed a great deal meanwhile, and there Phil was quite right; Aggie had deepened and broadened from a giTl into a woman. She was uo longer tho mere light hearted, fluffy headed coquette, leading a buttor fiy existence in Buyswater ballrooms. Pretty and rosy' clicked, uud cherry lipped as of yore, she had developed The shooting, while purely accidental, Gomer Jones, fcmerly of Stockton, has another side to the question firsf occur Post, with the Stars and Stripea flying, formed a circle on the main road, In about the center of tha cemetery, where the ser tache, and I'm bound, to admit ho took more juiins over his dressing that evening than was strictly necessary or in red to mo. Then, fought tomyself, all the greatest excitement In the town, RhohdtfB having been exo tdlngly popular been mentioned as successor to the late Griffi Ribeits as assistant superinten at ouoft, it's uot the Aggie of today I 3e woe twenty eight years of age, and was vices were held. The Memorial Day ser deed desirable Aggie luterest.

He. looking forward to see at all, but the dent cf tbe Leblgb Vllkeebarre collieries on the South Side. No successor has yet endued himself with (saro in his. best vice, the same as tbat naed in the Market Aggie of five years ago bat reason aext day and observed to one another with scandalized faces that the sooner Miss Oswald got safo to the better for her lover. 'chapter v.

At Bombay meanwhile Phil Gilman 3orn and had lived all hla life In Parson, le enll in the tonal Guard tn 1888, afteruoou coat and his newest imported have I to thiik. the will be to rue now Street Cemetery, was read, and thtte were dian civil servants urecx oflicio philoso nri wae eeivlng bia third term Ue la snr Enropeau tie, ami ho surveyed himself been named, but it Is thought Mr. Jones will be the iu uleton Plain Speaker. brief but aoproprlate addteseea, bear at flU the same person? I loved the girl of 1 8 when I left England, and if that 'lved by his wife and two jhddren, a son approvingly in the glass before no, de. ing on the elgnifiiince aid value of Mem ted a tuguter.

phers it's part of tho examination), he saw for himself they were both five years older, and five years might have mado a deal of difference to both af fceudcd with slow stepa to tho drawing girl could come out rue nowwonlii odal Day, by Rav. W. D. Thomas and Rev. meanwhile throe additional features a mind and a will aud a decided con room, 1, sure I dou know what au was eating out his heart with suspense Oh.

dear, uo! Ho was haying an exceedingly pleasant time, with Freda Trevel Funeral ot Mrs. Smith. Death of 'Mrs. James Gallagher. After an illness of sixteen weeks, Mrs.

Wm. G. Simpson. The Saodiy a hool chil lovo iier ins; equally. Hut now do I Vuow lmll love the girl of 23 who now bears tlio same name? And if I find science engaged young man could mean by tak ing so much pains over his personal afV The funeral of Mrs.

J. K. Smith took dren eang "My untiy 'Tib of Thee" and "Star Spangled Baoner," acd many others These very acquisitions, however, strengthened as they were by her peariuieo; ho oould ertniuly havo taken placa from the family hems on Njitb Main tret this afternoon, and was attended Well, Mow Thilio Mt Iindou he sp nt at the Oswalds', as iu duty bound, and eveu that sternest of chaperons, little Aggie's mamma, under thW special 'circumstances, left them alone in the drawing room for a pcraplpof hours of iioiiized leave taking. Philip was particularly certain as to their plans for the future: i "I shall save up every anna, Aggie," he said he fpoko of annus familiarly, instead of speaking of farthit.qs, in or fler tQ give it tonr of 'lial color and to prove his minute acquaintance with that India be had never yet seeu "I yan. The oue drawback to pis pleasure oh, faithlessness of man was the thought that his Aggie would so soon come, out and spoil it all for him.

Rosanna McKinley, wife of tmes Gallagher, of Railroad street, died at three o'clock Sunday morning. Tbe cause of death was enlargement of the l.ver. Mrs. them. Each might have developed, and each might now take a fresh view of the situation and of tho other.

Objectively Aggie might be somebody else subjectively, ho himself might think quite diversely of her. Ji jw, when a joined tnetn In rendering two old Welsh no more if it was Aggio herself, not a. strange young lady, Who awaited him mother's exhortations, led Aggie to sat oy a large concourse of people, many of bymup, "Hndilerefidd' and "The eur her altered out of all recognition what a terrible thing for her 1 Vhat ft, terrible thing for me 1 What a blow for both of us I IJow appalling to feel, you're ntar rying'a woman you dpn'i really love! in tho drawing room. notion The service was closed with the Freda and he got on admirably to Gallagher was a daughter of John and bom were life long friends and who were hcroughly srq Tainted a 1th the i oble life When he went down he found. Freda gether.

To say the truth, she was far ben diction by Rv. r. Thomas, when rilice herself, a modern Iphigeuia, on tho altar of dury, and to write Phil Gil man a letter in return, all replete with ardent expressions of delight and con fc'tauey. It was a letter to thrill lover'8 Katharine McKinley, and waa born at man begins ti talk of object and subject iu these matters tit all, you may bo Trevelyau already seated bofore a most better fitted for him by nature than Ag tid ot anctar of the departed one whom the children strewed flwere noon the hospitablo You must havo lived had met to Uy away. 1 ev Dr.

Mac Glasgow, Stotland When a mere child she Imnlgrot to thle couitry and settled perfectly sure the fine flush of love graves of the soldiers. 4ie Oswald. He saw it clearly himself now. There was no good denying it. How appalling fur her to be marrying a man who can't really love her! We're taking oue another now in the dark, put tho best face you ca.u upou it.

in a hot climate at least once in your 1U ments had charge of ti service young dream is pretty wen ov.r witn It la somewhat of a rtnwtlon upon with her parents st Pottaville, in which life iu order thoroughly to appreciate Aggie and he had Veen thrown together him. We certain iv dou philosophize Rev. Dr. Parke dell vet ed the addreee, the residents of the West Side tbat heart with joy. Phil Gimidn'read it with veiy modified rapture.

Not that ho was quite sure he wasn't in lovo with Aggio even now. Tijl ho saw "her the art of tea drinking. One would say place she received her early training. otl to too frightened, Mr. Gilman," before they kuew their own minds, aud, iu the first full rupture.

Phil Oilman very few of them took snffi lent Interest In beforehand that nobody would care for After her marriage ehe, with her husband, taking for hie xt Revelations 2:10, Be tun faithful unto dea and I will give realized all at once that love's young Fredu answered, with that charming smile of hers. "The moment you see hot drinks with the thermometer at 90. the exercises at tbe WestPictetouCametery dream was well over with himself ho thee a crown of life The eve i end how could be Ho might be, and ho mightn't. Ho had been in love with Experience proves the exact contrary, to a tend. The service, however, while removed to this olty, where tbey have since resided Being a djvout Christian, Mrs.

Gallagrer endured her eaff irlnga with what was more important still, before their characters had fully developed. They were not fitted by real, tastes and instincts for one another. Aggie was a dear little giri, of course, very pretty ind dainty and with lovely fluffy hair, was award that the idea of Aggie's arrival in India awakened withiu bim, Doctor said, In ptrt "Mrs. Smith's home her, the moment sliij sees you, all your old love will return, again with a rush. I'm sure it will, because I can see you're not elaborate, waa most appropriate.

I the Aggie he had left behind; he would The hotter tho weather gets tho. more hot tea does humanity absorb and tbe iad been In Pittston for over fifty jeara, waa held, as costomtry, at the grave of perhaps bo in Jove with tho Aggie who better does it love it. Phil threw him in earnest. You think of her as well as tnd she has been reoognlz by all ho not transport, nor eveu calm joy, but a certain languid curiosity as to what she would look like and how ho would feel was coming out to him. But aftor fivs but was she quite the sort of woman patience and waa prepared and ready to go when ahe waa called.

Ddoea ed waa of a retiring disposition, lived her home and where the was ever found. Sbe new ner as an active, earnes gentle self into an oasy chair and looked, if not engaged, at least engaging. He" was Dr. W. G.

Nugent, after whom the Pott was named. The ritual for the day was again read, the aesimbltd company sang iong yoars and ac too you musf of yourself, aud with you whenever a man thinks of 'on woman as well with whom a man of bis type would siihsb, faithful Christian woman. She to her. confess it's a lottery. he waited in considered tho handsomest man ou the care to pass a wuol long lifetime? Kevertheb ss, miud you, Phil Ciilman lid small tremor of doubt aud misgiv same here shortly after her marriage as oi "imselt, you may be penoctiy sure he's a really good fellow." "My Country 'lis of Thee" and the "Djx Boolanuggur hills, and ho certainty Wasn't she better adapted, after all, by had been a resident of tbl place many years and waa veiy well known.

She Wits a tnau ot honor, no stncK to hw 'he bloom and freshness of her youig life looked it that afternoou. There's uotli ology," and the service was concluded with tastes and habits, for a cavalry officer? ing. Whut terriblo thing if be had to tio himself for life, out of pure chivalry and to prevent disappointing her, to guns. Ho hadn the slightest idea oi El re she has done her life work as wife ng to make a man look and talk bis the benediction by Rw. Mr Simpson CHAPTER IV.

At Port Said moauwhile, Affgio wm going back upon his word or even of wnereaa jfreda rreveiyan now had a mind and a soul She was clever, well leaves, betides her hmband, the following children P. of Chicago 8 ster Mary best like a pretty woman. It was what is Comrade Bet, Evans led th tinging in ltd sla'er and mother in her hems I a friend and neighbor, in this community, tanghd mass of fluffy brown hair, euphemistically described as "tho cool sitting on, dock with, that delightful I readi ynipathetic, quickly perceptive. both the Pittston and West Pt'Uton Come Antonio, of Holyoke, Mass Mrs. Seward letting poor Aggie herself doubt tho depth of his affection for her.

Perhaps his was wrong who knows? Perhaps with nothing elso in particular ou earth young man who camo on board at Brin season ut lionibay, ana tun wiuo)ws terlea, and this feature added much to the Kenney. of Wlnnetka, Id of to recommend it! Her mind went out to his at once by instinct. She seemed to jump half way to where she was rtspeit and beloved by VI who knew her and as a Christian work disi Ho was tall and slight aud bad a of the veranda weio Uuug wido own. interest of the eeivloes. the wisest thing, after all, for a man to Alaska; James, of Mt Cirmd; Daniel, a When a man thinks liko that, you may straw colorod mustache Aggie had al meet every idea ho advanced to her.

He er in the First Presbyterian inrcb, whete Tho view over the sea was beautiful uud refreshing. Phil could even hear bo tolerably snro his afTix tiona havo The business men and many of the own ways had a sneaking fancy fur straw rould almost have fallen iu love with me quietly and faithfully did her part. omehow declined a trillo from their do in such a case is just to make a clean breast of it, rather thau involve him solf and the girl he ouce loved in a mar student at St. Miebael'e College, Toionto, and Misses Grace ani Genevieve, who reside at home. The following Bisters a'eo color.

And besides he was a soldier aud era of private residences tyok more than the gentle plash of tho waves on Mala that beautiful woman if it were not for rhroujh all these years of her active life youthful ardor. ajd do eauip to the lieutenant governor ordinary interest In the decorating of their Aggie. But Phil Gilman was an honest bar point, and though that deceptive surf is by uo means so coo as it looks However, Phil put tho liest faco upon Sere, It has been my privilege to be in of somewhere up country. (Aggie a or nix year hc cried. hall cave up every anna, Agsjie, till 'w atle to send hofnu for yon: to come out and marry me, and when I've got fnougli to (h) it Juu'jI fly across the sea places of buslne and hcm with the survive: Mri.

Janet Mntray, of Sbenan inau aud bud plighted his troth to Aggie riage that may prove unhappy for both of tin ui. Huf any rata Phil oilman didn't think so, and somehow, do you it, liko a gentleman, and waited with imately associated with her, in her horn1 and souuds, jet it was delightful to his national colors Iq this resptct Main I doah Mrs. Agnes Ssott, of this city, and outer calm at his up country station. Ho for a time was sav Pittston ear after threo long years spent away Mra John Feeley, of Now Philadelphia. street was moat profuse.

waited a week; then, reflecting that ho Indian geography was as delicioVy. He wouldn't turn aside now vagno as au Indian, sveretary's, and, u0, not for a hundred Fredas "somowhero up eouutry" was about as And yet. definite to her as any particular name Ana ye(J ho asked Wm. of any particular district. She regarded, w8 caimer moments, to change to me like a swallow flying home nnn, aud in tke church of far inland.

He enjoyed that after must meet his bride at Bombay, he ap OM) SOLDIER'S SUICIDE, noon moro than ho had enjoyed auy bicn I was. pastor; and that know, 1 feel as if any man of honor in Phil Oilman's place would have acted just as he did. There's something so horribly cold blooded in telling a girl who has waited live years for you that plied for a month's leave, in tho time The Baehman Bowkley Nuptials. The annou ncement of the marriage of to her, which Impressed me most was her honored way, "on urgent private bnni The Curious Ptory Ab ut Voice That thing for months; and months. Poor Afigio'ii chances of a whole love, 's heart seemed to fade und pale at each succes sithfu'netsa lu all the relations of life, and ont you, my darling?" Agle laid the fluffy hetd very trustingly on the future vii eroy's shoulder fhe knew he would never stop till be Wt9 biast a vioeroy, "Of Course I'll wine to you, draret," 11 tun ted Uim.

Mies Beatrice Bowk'ey, of Parsonage street, ness. His excellency was pleaw to all India, indeed, as naturally diyidod, y0ur mind before marriage than after into two main parts the, piyt where it? Isn't it better to cry off, eveu at some Phil was statiou.oA, and tho part where present cost of pain and humiliation to bo Further thau that she never tbe iri thaiJ t0 tie her fo, jife (o a un really dou't know whether you love von tDillis Post. tWm Bachmtn, formerly of this place, sive half hour. in all the varied experiences of Ufa through which she was called to pass. Her life grant the request, und Phil Oilman went down to Bombay accordingly, her ativ longer or not that only a very I now of Dunmore, will be a pleasing sur For Miss Trevelyau, it seemed, was An old solder named Joseph Kne.t, llv much trembling iu soul, to meet his tried to go.

When jieople on board talk vas not all sunshine. Sbe has pissed 6imply charming. She talked admira brutal man, I fancy, could ever consent to do it. It mav be wise to act like that, man who can give only rutrt of his heart prise to their many friends here. Not car Ing at Noxen, 73 years old, caused hia own the answered.

I shall count every minute of the time till yon send for Aggie. under the red When her children were ed to her glibly of the Punjab, or the to her? Isn't it better to be miserable bly, xn )lS'dus sho was so frank. Sho death bv taking poison last week. The ing to have a wedding the young couple Of course ho couldn't go to tho house Central Provincos, Saharanpur, or Mb yonnit, she was cilbd to nurse them through had heard beforehand of courso that nice for Bill in oue's life than to bo mis no doubt, but there are qualities, after all, more to be prized than wisdom. 1 story is that be purchased 10 cents worth taa But will it be very, very long, do rm think? How soon do von snnoot (if tho friend with whom Aggie was to were quietly driven to the homi of Bet.

Dr. Prke on May 29, where they took zallargarh, sho nodded and smiled. Phil hadcomo down to Bombay to unset scarlet fever, and to lay away at one time of arsenic and remarked that he was going stop in tho short interval liotweeu her benign acquiescence, glossing over nor iott'irbe iu a position to marry, Phil? his future bride, and when a woman wouldn't give 'twopence myself, dear friends, for a young man so wise us all ia oi grave two lamba of tbelr fold. the nurrtase vows After tne ceremony. to kill himself, bnt nobody believed It A knows a man's already monopolized she ignoranco with thy cU.arui of her uiau phil stroked his struggl iig mustache erable always? These questions sometimes obtruded themselves painfully upon Phil's mind, but being an houest man, why, he waved them aside as transparent sophisms.

Having once arrival and her marriage, so bo put, up with another acquaintance of official Xgain she wai called to part with a beau Ihat coines to. few dtys afterward lie was found in a dy treats him as if ho wero married that (you c)uld see it distinctly with a pow Mr. and Mrs. hman left Immediately forth lrnew home already prepared in al marrl daughter who was the very Ho, after a brief mental struggle, Phil Ins condition tn a barn. Dr Ttbblns was Aggie and the handsome young man erful pocket lens) and assumed an air is to say, sho talks to him like arnthiual tpple of her eye.

I i these a irro vt that al wrote to Aggie as impassioned a letter eot on together admirably. He was a of adult and manly wisdom. isked Aggie to come out and marry him, creature and not Jiku an an'ima special called and did what he could to relieve tbe man, but he was too far gone far medical as he could easily pump out best cpis most broke her heart, no words of com certain Captain Angus fttuart conjec Dunmore. Both young people are very well known here, Mra Bachman being the accomplished daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

ly created for the solo puiimso of nirta it would be cruel and wicked and selfish Oh, not so very long. Aggie." he replied quite airily, "live or six years tolary fashion to say that now at last tured from his. name to bo of Scotch ex plaint were heard from her Hps. 8be tiou. Tho coH.soqueiico was that before uid unworthy to, send her home again aid, and soou died.

the desire of their hearts for many recognized the hand of ber Heavenly at the outside, I expect. I mean to half an hour was over Freda Trevelyau nuwed. vAuhe what might, as things Ia connection with the circumstances of I traction and bo had fallen a victim to Aggio's fluffy hail the very first momoutj Edward Biwkley, while the young man whom ehe has chosen as her partner In life years was to be fully gratified, and they tow stood, he must do his best to avoid and Phil Oilman were laughing and Father, under whose direction 'all things Knee "it's death, it is said tht when he was Vu and fa every anna." "Ngt for worlds would behave con ho ever set eyes on her, Indeed; ha, I tallil)g iu with Fr(jd(k chatting together as if they'd known ono work together for good to them that love two were to meet once more and bo happy forever. To bo sure, when the a soldier In the wtr for the Ualon. a rebel I a person of many excellent lalities.

He If au hour on deck talked to her for hal Dented to state the fact on such a night another for half their lives instead of But the human heart is a wayward God Wbh the spirit of Mary and Martha, ehot one of Koecht'a comrades. This oo I la employed ae a civil engineer for the ud beeu desolated to in Brindisi harbor an letter was finished. Phil read it over for just about 30 minutes, organ. It refuses to be disciplined by who mingled their tears with the tears of tM that iu mere commonplace pennies. Aggie's cherry red mouth pursed it enrred near the rebel's hom, and Koecht I Pennavlvanla Coal Co.

That their future once or twice, leaning back in bis bun laarn by that time that sho was not the brain or tho conscience. "And your bride's coming out on the our blepeed Lord at the grave of Liztrns, vowed revenge Going to the house with I Uvea may be happy and prosperous Is the Only engaged, but actually going out tQ galow lounge, with a critically ilissatis Indus?" Froda said after ono, short ielf up into something very like a pret There was some excuse, you know, sbe continued t) do what her hands fonnd India to get married. ray, ne even re tied air. Its ardor seemed rather want his loaded gua he slew tbe rebel in 'he I weh of their many friends. ty little pout only much more alluring pause.

"How boou do you epcct her?" after all, for the apparent fickleness of floctod with a certaiu blaud pleasure at lug in spontaneity, he fancied. It had I "Fiveorsixyears! she cried, alarm presence of hie wife acd family Toe "Sho was telegraphed from Port Said these two young people. Their minds to do for the comfort of those sne loved, looking unto Him who had promised, no longer the genuine impassioned ring this morniug," Phil answered, with a that early stafie of their brief aoquaint (were.i,tt. both cases filled full beforehand woman screamed when she saw her hue I Death of Thomas Kills. ed.

"That's an awfully long time, Phil I wish it wasn't so long. I can't bear mice that there's many a slip 'twixt the of fonr or five years ago. what. 'L, I am with yon Her consciousness of profound hypocrisy, for band killed, and ber voice had such an I Thomas E.lls, one of the eldest and cup and tho lip aud that people who to do without you." with the idea of marriage. They had nourished their souls for five long years with what the Scotch philosopher called education, social, ln'ellectual ani re unearthly sound tbat lecbt said It al most respected residents of Mooslo, who Would you have; If one, can ijullo rise to tho height of such un occasion of ho felt tho subject was really far more interesting to Miss Trevelyau than he go out to India to get miUTied dun al yoo calt wait for me, liglons, ht.il not been neglected in ways haun'ed bim, and be was going to I was also widely known thn hout Luzerne ways persevere in their prime intention Phil cried, with a loving look into one 8 own mere motion, one must try to himself could pretend to find it.

"love in the abstract, and now, when kill himself in order to get away from the I and Lackawanna couatles, died last Frl lie trs met on the threshold. when they see thoir beloved in his In irnsh gently, for the lady's Hake alone, "How anxious you must bo for the those liquid hazel eyas. "Yon can wait love in the concrete seemed so near, so tie home of ber youth, where she had the beet of teachers. It was tn German, but a 1 who knew bet lutimately knew that she roanlt of his cruelty. I dav mointnff.

aced 69 years He distinction a man who had been his dian avatitr. Hud it not beeu for that With literary aptitude. A man would steamer to come iu Freda exclaimed, very near, neither had at hand the prop for me, can't you? Only live or six years! And I would wait au eternity had baen in ill health for a locg time. superior oflieer at bis first country sta slight liopo Captain Stuart would have be hardly a whole man, Phil supposed. with lervor.

1 tit so glad you came was not wanting ir that intellect ud cul tion. His host was Sir Edward Moul Death of Mrs. H. D. Judd.

I iB wag an elder In tbe avoided talking to Aggie altogether, for if he consented to let a woman see he here. It's so nice to fct 1 you must both for yon. er person upon whom to exjiend bis or her affection. Besides, it may be unro mantic and unconventional to confess the truth, but I believe it is a fact of ture ard Tefioemeut and tins Christian being a Scotchman ho was of course bad begun to forget her. I the death of Mrs D.

Judd, whloh Langcllffe Presbyterian church for many bo so happy, I may olwrve in passing ho was very i A .1 1 an However, what the letter lacked in both prudent and tunierstltions, and he spirit thst beautifies and glorifies the high much in love with her. "Oh, very nice indued," Phil answer we are cauea upou io nuuuuuco iuujj, years, ana at iuo uiu Ucaiu wr. Plttstvin loses a wman esteemed by I elder in the Moeelo Presbyterian church. "Oh, yes, I can wait for yon," Ag est type of womanly chata iter. The line ed, hesitating felt the yo ry instant ho began to talk to her that here at last was his undoubted humau nature that when the feelings re very much roused, and the proper of work to which she felt calb.d to devote gie answered, drying her eyes the twen all who knew her.

The end came at the I He la snrvlv by his wife and the follow "Havo you her photograph?" Freda put in. "I should so much like to see afllnity. tterson isn't ny to make love to, there herself In her circumstances in the in loverlike ardor it fully mado up in businesslike definiteiiess. The Oswalds were poor; they could hardly have afforded to scud Aggie out t' hiin, ivi Phil had arranged for all that arrang' for it generously. Ho inclosed a check for a family home on Montgomery ttreet at 4:50 1 ng sone and dughtere: Tb mas, Alot zo, tieth time, a hundred years nece iary.

I never can love anybody else in If you have ever lain at anchor in her." fat cy of Pitteton was the one that seemed a considerable temptation to transfer the love to the first eligible recipient ono Brindisi burbor, or, ever mado a trip the world but yon. Jt isn that so Horat'o and Mrs Aroh McDonald, all of Mooslo, and Mrs W. Lower, of Avooa. last Friday, Abcnfc her bedside weie oathered her sorrowing family and a few "Yes, I vo got it up stairs in my to open to ber with moet of promise, and from thenco by P. aud O.

to Port Said, Jnuch. It's the time while I'm waiting. portmanteau somewhere," Phil answer happens to fall in with. I've found it so myself, and I throw myself upon the to it she gave herself with the same faith you will bo well aware that there's Von don't know how dreadful it is for ed unconcernedly. "I ll bring it down fulneea that cbaracterizI all her efforts, nothing for a sensible man to do with when I go up.

It's so tisvfully kind of me to have to do one day without yon And so, with many genuine tears. meicy of a jury of matrons. And in both these cases, as it happened, the first She did what she could. She has finished you to want to seo her." his timo as ho skirts the shadowy coast of Crete but to make love to some fit ber work, and tie power of her beautl nl eligible person Phil or Aggie met was nd many loving protestations al true. "Up stairs in, your portmanteau!" ton now, a K.

C. S. I. and a member of council. Yon mnst havo been in India yourself in order fully to appreciate tho exalted dignity of a member of council.

He lived in a very lino house on Malabar hill, with a very fino view of the sea and tho city, and was supposed to keep the very best horses, to drink the very best wine and to give tho very best dinner in the whole When Phil Oilman arrived at Sir Edward's door, half un inch deep in generous dust from the lavish hospitality of the Great Indian Peninsular railway (a lino which endows every traveler free of charge with a small landed estate to carry away homo with him), he was met on tho threshold by a dream of beauty in a loose white dress which fairly took his breath away. The dream of beauty was tall and dark, a lovely woman of that riper and truer loveliness that only declares itself as charac and proper person. Now Angus Stuart also one more fitted by nature for the life and character abide with us and will steel at tho time that evening wore. tried, smiling astonishment. Death of Mrs.

Bichard McHagh. Mary, wife of Bichard MoHngh, of Broad street, died on Saturday evening at about five o'clock after a lingering illoesj of nearly a year. She waa aged about forty five years aid was very well and favorably known Deceased is survived by a husband, two sons and one daughter. was a most sensible man, though he and Phil tisik his departure. "Not in vour breast icket And to bo abide." vacant post thau the old love could eve.

possibly have lieen. Phil felt uncomfort et morning he left by the overland married in a fort night I Oh, Mr. Oil had too great a resist for vested interests exactly to. make lovo to another fel of her nearest relatives. Mrs.

Judd'e demise was not unexpected She had been a Bcfidter for a long time. Several mouths ago ber ailment took more serious turn and she suffered a stroke of paraljsla. Fiom she never entirely recovered. Mis Jndd was a daughter of Mrs Mary Oliver, who died la this place In 1839, and was in her forty fifth year. Possessed of a klid, loving and gentli nature, sbe endeared herself to all who had the pleasure of her acquaintance.

Sie was very well known and her death will be calved with mnnh sorrow by her many friends. Her Many beautiful floral designs bes Kike tie love and respect in whloh the deceased ably aware that, though nothing on via Brindisi. Aggie saw him off, man, that would never do lor niel 1 afraid you're a terribly lukewarm most substantial amount. No hoped it would sr.flieo to pay Aggie's Massage and begged to be permitted to Set bar np in a proper fndian outfit. Kho was to meet hiin in Bombay, wliero she could stop at the house of a common friend (I daren't fay "mutual," a much more sensible word, between you and me, becauso some silly, HiipcrfiW! peo plo raiso microseepio etymological objections), and there she was to be married a day or two after landing.

Phil flattered himself that his check was a tolerably expansive one. If ho didn't lovo Aggie quite us devotedly as he used to do, at least sho should never discover tho chango by pecuniary earth would induce him to make lovo to "olverl In tears, at Charing Crops sta low's affianced bride on Her way out to Bombay to join her future husbaud, yet lover!" was held among her friends, A qutrtette imposed of Perrln and wife, M'ss Freda Tre'velyaii still, if ho did yield to that dreadful temptation, he could and was left behind sobbing. For nights after she cried herself to it must be candidly admitted Dy an im "Oh, not lukewarm, I hope," Phil Jeeele Perrln aud James Monle sang eev have loved her a thousand times better interposed, with au answering smile. partial historian that ho sailed very close to tho wind indeed iu that respect and teep. You may laugh at her if you like too who bold the young palpitating eral beau'ifol atnd appropriate hymns in by far than ever he could have loved "Only you seo it's like this we've been mado himself remarkably agreeable to touchlna manner.

The remains wers taken human heart a fit object for your gentle engaged five years and a little bit more, Aggie. Sho hud a chaperon, of course. middle aired sarcasm as for me, 1 can Mothers will find Chamberlain's ugh Remedy especially valuable for cronp acd who ping cough. It will give prompt relief and is safe and pleasant. We have sold It for several years and It has never failed to give the 8t perfect stl faction.

W. Richuds, Daquee Pa 8old by H. Houck, Pitteton, and Wilson's drug store, Wyoming. and by tho end of that timo ono begins to get well, calmer and more philo No well conducted young woman could hsbnd and one bop, Bymond, two Sie tere Mrs. W.

HacDougall and alias hot. At 18, which was then exactly Ag poor fluffy haired Aggie. And Aggie iu turn felt that, though it would bo treason to think of Angus Stuart when she was actually on her way out to India to marry Phil Oilman, still, if things had gone otherwise, she could have loved Concluded on Page 4th. gie Oswald's age, the loss of a lover. to their final resting place In Hollenbaok Tie pall bearers were: J.

L. Case, Hon. Theo. Strong, Joseph Lng ford, C. H.

Foster, Taos. Ford, A A. Prjd jn aad W. Watson. ter Her features were clear cut and delicate and regular, her eyes sophic.

Freda shook her beautiful head. trust herself to the Mediterranean and tho Indian rtcean without the services of a chaiierou. but what's the use of that in gone to India foi six is a serious Cora who mtde ber home with tbe deceased and a brother, who resides In South, survive. lurtio and lustrous, her liiis not too Now, strange to say, when Aggie Os matter. There are those of us in tho That won't do," sho answered disiieusablo arUole in every young lady'B fyrtiea who feel these things btilL Let wald received that letter, though she thin, but rich and tempting agaiu.

bono my lover, if I ever got.

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About Pittston Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
127,309
Years Available:
1850-1965