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rut held re. •eupytog the mbera were I electing a ; year. Th* rtin Daniel, r. Monahan roguu, John ohn Farrell, • Jf. gaatft

ehbishap ot <v. Michael to the Cu-

t vacant by James Bo-ore, Bailin-vea, Abbe) tted bis re

di«d Oct 3' ra.

Mrs* Alt' ib occurred rfcglness. f'Malley oi Sov. 27.. ting of th* .John Fits-Mr. Webb

uinimously congested

1 works on cb«as roads B tmprove-tenanta de­ad districts Qtain gen-led by the

x w. ca c m , was tates com-ide agree* the agent tt twenty-erm rents, tement of and. The rasa farms hty acres, 180 acres, gibbons to their sale, tg grazing ' habit of mmer six system of he eleven •let. Mr. be farms i commla-

commis->n, visited 5 tenants

the two umedlate-

slonsd in : became vbo resld-1 dead in :«Ina was lay in the alf of the f thepar-i bribe In 31nce the, tea lie-since be teed that

Sunday dock and eturalng, tnd some ody waa

th* nsxt 6 on the bas been i not go­sh stand-b a a an tive fea-Lg ahead, : steady rincinles ach year his pre-

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wrrseLjtf' b show* i and de» rlestand •eopteof ich th* | ''•*«*•,•-.* esenting I Of W*b now the illse the priest in WthXuJ

rJadness •t last

wbejao-ibaulm-•i ige. oeekna.

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th* illlocan jenoitt-wjy ana wtlc **? ided b i tanked onty of tank hi* was ai­re was' . They sir trial jplraey. > doubt f were * as to y could r voice i of the things

e to be \ make r work nd bis do so.

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My dear*, sit down. I am going to tell you the itory of a beautiful girl I once knew., And I wiB «a|B h#r Myrtle Rawson. We were together a very great deal, for a long, pleas­ant summer, in the hotel of a little mountain villa**. She4 was fond of walking: and we would wander over the country; roads, and through .the silent woods, for hours at a time.

I always enjoyed seeing the pretty color come and go, a* Myrtle would poll off her big straw bat and use i t for a fan. And I noticed that she used it with more than ordinary fi-gor, on this occasion. She bad been so absent-minded, all the afternoon, that I could hardly coax a yes, or no, from her about the ferns we had been gathering. She would not talk, and I knew something was on my little lady's mind; so I kept silent, and awaited developments.

She drew a letter from her bosom and sat playing with It, while she said: ^

"I am tired of keeping i t all to myself, I**e got t© tel l somebody, and I'd rather teil yon ttotfwiyboaV else."

Then, little by little, the romance took shape, and X listened, while she told me the new-old tale of the dam­sel fair, and the lovers twain. The one was young and devoted and hopeful; with not mujch of iMa world's goods, bat with a good poa% tlon, and willing hands to work "tor all that she might wish—if she but willed it so.

"There, read his letter yourself," she said, a s she tossed it over into my lap. , Tv,i-. .> r •jr^v.

She leaned the pretty yellow head on her hand, and stamped the green turf beside her with an impatient lit­tle foot-*- But I felt that she was watching me closely, to see what my face might tell Jher, aa i drew the letter front its envelope and read it through.

She looked in my face when I had finished, and said:

"Well, what shall I do? But I have not finished yet"

Then she told me of the other suitor, whqm I had already met And he waa a grave, quiet man, a widower, much older than herself, with riches: and to spare. But as I looked into the liquid depths of

those blue «ye«, I said gentry, be-sause she was, the younger, woman:..

ysar :-b*art Itllst you',' and **o§ 4«1 server live to regret i t "

Her glance full from miner and she shook her cnrls and frowned.

"(Mvs tn* that letter," she said •wJekly. And -when'" I handed It •ask, she took it from my hand, and tor* it into bit*. She suddenly clenched her small fist, snd cried out passionately, almost tn pain,, as it

t t f asjryaiOTey; I'ir marry aaoney. I'll marry money, yes, if it breaks my heart f"

.;.. Th«a -taew* was s^saanv - • "L*'§(tjttj ba«k, aow.*f tu< So' *t'went % k . iad the subject

was never mentioned between «s again; but from that day and hour I could feel the chinge that begati to creep over her. Not long after, she taarrisjs- the man of money; '

We d%i svot meet for §IT*MI1 years, but I was told that she wore many diamonds, and that her costumes were the envy of the less favored. 8b* was said to be the most beauti­ful young womsM that entered the dining-room of the celebrated inn where she and her hnsband lived for a 'time; and she was visibly prond and exultant over her success as an acknowledged belle. Later on, she had ber^towa aerate; and her conn-try place, her servants, her horses, and so forth, and she entertained lavishly, ,A%became as ambitious so­

la tenderly nursing a brand-new genealogical tree, and sports a crest on her private belongings, and i l l that

la she happy? Well, I met her a year ago, and 2 thought of that long-ago brook scene, and wondered about that part of it myaeif. If she is a contented woman, it does not show in her face. She has grown •tout, and Isthink she mourns hear lest beauty, and the golden-tlntad

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^ee)egajtssoa^ * - «• ^^<^^^^^^»^^t^u«.-^ ^ • ^M v i JipN *-§he has. even- lost the charm of *'" • ' • ' • • '

manner that come* with a deelr* to .^y»ssf ;oih«r%-' i S |^:iaf*i ' : is l ;^«el-stxess on' the pomps -snd. vstnitj*4 that her conversatton was all ahoni

eiey-w<M>4-tie ne^| i | f IC#a:#' latest fad... •. " ,-i?•K J !*.'f.¥T^. *« V)

That poor girl (for she is stHJ yoang) worships only the golden calf, and society, and herself. Con-•e%uentlr «he looks jaded and old, and there is a pl«*ul unrest and dis­quietude that mere money wjpa never salve. Perhaps it is Nemesis—who knows?

And the other man? t doh*t know. I never heard, But I hop*, ere this, he has found a worthy love to match h*is own. •

After all, girlies, while ittoaey It a power, as we all know, does not the song tell .us, "Sat hearts are, tramps for aye"?—Waverley Maga:

SHE ALSO mm A PET.

But it Was Somewhat Different fross Other Women's.

When the thin woman itt ths loiag grajj' alst.er, »at downtin the Subway car opposite the fat woman holding a bright little Scotch terrier It could be seen at once that they had pints of ^mmo^- inte i^^an*^* those points sef. common iaterest consisted of do^s. *

"What a dear little fellow he is,*' ehirped the thin woman.

"Isn't, he dearf*' cooedr**be f*t woman, snugging her pet so closely that he had to sniff for breath,

"Mine is a French poodle," veh-tip^di'lhe thjQi woman. 'Shear those gray terriers^ are %ominginto style* though."

'•yes, they're all the rage." said the fat woman. "I had to give np fifty for Sandy."

A^Jhiadsamf yoasg weman who occupied1 th. seat by the thin wo­man was an interested listener to the colloquy. She was good looking enoi whei%t. every^IngM^f ^~1&m#fia* ta

a i ^ ^ a i r a f ? 8 a l ^ h S ; an a«ecOon«tf M9&*i$fat tried, to lick her glovedihand. ,>7-,..-..

" Y o u M o v e . & w o f ^ ^ d th* fat woman.

"Oh, yes," was the reply. **Who could help it?*»

"What kind is yours?" came'the eager query.

"Mine? Oh. I haven't any. I have a baby;*' ' ' And the fat woman and the thin

woman raised their brows, turned np tfielr noses and grew coldly si­lent, Just as. if. some one had said something to shock their sens* of Jnodesty.-'' • '•''"' •'.*<<-'*''.•> •:-.

jughy^iattract^ attewtion • «hy-ere;and she l o o W a s T f i h * loved

Origin of the Thermometer. . According to Sir Bamuel Wilkes.

Fahrenheit constructed- his th*r-. inomWer'troiir hni'-laMMimsMJt^i^S. before by Slr<lsaaciN«wton. 'Itt the transactions of the : Soyal Society of 1701 will be found the paper writ-, ten by Sir Isaac Newton^ who ^ M at: that time secretary to the^soclety,";! says Sir Sattinel. "He invented th*l instrument for measuring the degree of heat in fluids by taking4 a( tube and filling it with linseed oil. On this; h* marked the freezing* Doint as| sero b>- putting the tuS^in ic#, ahdf In the same way he marked the point when placed in boiling water.: The very awkward' scale ,wiijb|Vw* now use is evidently that of New*, ton; for, the decimal'system not $4*j lag then in use.he took the hUMber IX to denote the h e ^ of th* body, Thft he f otrad «h*TB*^»^thw'«ta^ ing point of his scale both np**rd and downward. It was some time sftar- this ^b*t fbricAnvenUnce's 'Sasi*»;tke. 'aegri*i''%e"f*' ~4imri 1*1* two, and thua,th*v,bodyrh««t sr»ba^- :s*B'/*ndIth|^lp«^

{WBsWP*** used mercury which was far mot* convenient, he again d M d ^ (b*b*»degrees' la ta row, so if the number b* multiplied accordingly w* have S H for t h * boiling point; and t # for the body

%«&rissfys»lBaar«s freeslngr made this noU| .««% #1811 brought the number t ot Newton's to SS of faajeatheft U^this way the thermometer was, ins tructed , A«rst« # % ^ •««. tbr: s%sn*^s; ywt 'it toricany inttr#jrmig M having bee m*tl¥*T *>i iiw^^great'pinosoprier and formed on the basis of the heat of ft* huhli&-swdj^t!ii: ••. -r+nW asah m isasota* . 1 '-siHt

b* forgottw «»*risao*vr M7« otis who know

shaved, a rag is twtotod round hit waist *nd his f«*t »f« eyed a beau­tiful red. Ton « • s^a*i by this individual, rusted; pushed face downward on » marble slab, find his feet in your spin* and his hands up-

his feet up and down your back; they are round your neck, or your

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MEM AI© WOMpi l»io»«dy mm*%&ft*F#

Our Special Bfi*i% "St J Ml o | ^^LdeisTt»o«!

The Catholic Journal .and hem n&8&§gc¥'i$$i% ti-^mmmj0h^s

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Men and Women

N«ta devotiotial ifla Mane i r am^ t* ss

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A VlghA Aaeoag t b * Karew, 0)1. j$i # . . j(^;|ftMBSJr;tolUt M- _...

battle which; h* .:witnsssel- i n ' th*. bi* axplcrraUoM k AjdjLtto,

T^A*yi.yTh»V^iw"''of: f i fv ig l i t #*#• a n attemptooi theft Qf aheep, K* says: "Som* flocks w*r* being dr|v« • n off aerosjs the itpkanil - Klurds* border when ths usual a l a m signal*, shots fired and amok* fires kindled a t - ay ths . v i i i iges -aronndi • brought: clouds of ho»«naan^gsaibping wild­l y acroaa in that dlrectiott. Thle did not lcok very reassuring in th* mid­dle of s o wild a oountry^ wliere a pi-man l ife is %»«wr- :*oriti' tttttst'flX**. .'good' shesp, hut, w* soon perceived, b y th* ysiling Kurds with .grinning faces who dashed past u i / tha t ' to u i .awhwrn^' f i s i^^^d^' f •,< H.S-'iu!':Vsy

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frwa w^to the hmttle^waaTa^dag'tn And the flat roof* beeapiad by all the

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trtempsUaar »to«ght ***k, t«*jwta*e-with th* bodies of a fww d« anl ^; soaT^*TS- v woel | l

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I I . I I I { I I I I U I H I imn'i Ai'Mii<'!<9<.

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Witt, n»i;wl>b:-S»4"ltvwA' ; * a n # ^ ^ O T ,tnp«r-r-ftliii- «pe# ./tafv^alilirt^iii manners '• #t ^m~cijm#&$*~:& •land', htti^gM^1!^**•J••'3|lM*•,•

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h*ad~—everywhere! . , - ~ _ , , ^ -jr.— ^--^---^-^;.|fehtJy-o«»»n«fti:*-BaolB^ s|B^:;^1^-:7^*i9ttano&thalfea*r 'mw*:^*Wri!WJ**&6F5W^mr" squeesed cloud* b« perfumed bub­

bles, and .yon aaN».JiBM*n.Jte;t|MsM from head to foot at completely as If you had fallen into t snowdrift Tof are not absolutely bruised, bttt yon are clean,"

Harvesting by electric light has been introduced in Australia. .,„

Charity begins at home v a n it wants .*» ooyat, * muttttnd* o*

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