I t . :' , , I I t1- P xL ifiuL CHAPTER XXXV (Continued.) That Mr. Knox had something to ay might easily be een. "What is the matter, mother?" Jaue asked, quietly. "Your father' been well-nigh unbeara ble. First be was angry about those let ter In the paper about you and Jacob Lynn, and I could well undemtand that, for It til hameful drawing your name in a though you'd murdered the pKir fellow, when I could prove, if auy proof were needed, aa none would be to folk with any sense in them, that you never left the houae all day. Now hs' taken to groaning and bemoaning, and aaya your prospects are all apoiled, that no one would marry a girl agaiuet whom such attack had been made in the news paper, tlK!" "If that ia all, mother, he need not trouble. I have no wish to uiarry," smiled Jane, sadly. "So all girl say until their wedding day i filed," was the shrewd reply. "But that's not all. He bus done noth ing but drag np that old story alxmt Jacob Lynn's letter that that I altered. He says It has been the cause of all this trouble. And I'm not at nil sure that it hasn't," concluded Mrs. Knox, with a strangled sob. Jane put her arms around her mother's neck and kissed her, too loyal to admit 1he truth of the self-accusation, though at the ssme time unable to deny It; and yet could she regret the deceit that bad gained for her those happy fourteen days? "You meant it for the best, dear moth er', and I was very, very happy while it lasted," she murmured, softly. "And there is no chance of its coming to anything again'" I "ot)e." 1 "And is there no one else? Oh, Jenny, if juq only knew what a load it would take from my heart to be sure that you were settled! Your father he is half daft. 1 think, at times has been talking of retiring and going home, and then you would have no chance of making the marriage you could now. You hate never licen in England, but I can remember how different it was. We should not ta in society at all, for we have neither money nor portion, not even that which, were we with the regiment, might be from courtesy accorded us. No, if you don't marry well in India yon can never do so in Kngland. Is there no one else?" repeated .Mrs. Knox, wistfully. "I had hoped so much from your being with Mrs. Dene, and Miss Knollys so friendly loo. Have you nothing to tell me. dear?" And then Jane, thinking it was her mother's due, confided to her that Major larron had proposed, and was to receive a final answer in a few davs. "Of course it will be 'Yes.'" was the delighted comment, as the story ended. "How pleased and proud your father will be! Why. Jane, with all your beauty. I npver expected you to make such a match as that." "Don't take too much for granted, mother, dear. I have not promised to ac cept him, only promised to hesitate about refusing him." ' "And sh who liesita'cs " laughed Mrs. Knox. "Is lost." finished Jntie. gloomily, to her self, as her mother left. CHAPTEK XXXVI. The day on which Jane was to give her answer to P.r.rry Larron had come, and as yet she had not decided what that an swer was to be. If at one moment she could do full Justice to the advantages he had offered her, the next a sudden re Tnlsion of feeling would make her deem it impossible that she could ever marry him. Tbe two strong reasons that urged her to accept him were first, the pleas ure this would give her parents: and sec ondly, that if she went away from here there was less likelihood of the knowledge she possessed proving a source of danger to her former lover. Yet often a doubt crossed her mind whether Stephen Prinsep would care for a safety purchased so, and inconsistently enough the thought filled her with a strange delight. Though be might have forfeited all claim to her consideration, all title to her respect, she would like to think of him as true to the love he had once professed. Sometimes she felt as though she, too, would like to remain tin wedded for his sake, free to worship the ideal to which the real man had been so far from attaining. But such constancy -was a luxury, and one in which she could not expect to indulge, situated as she was. with no settled home or position, with gossip busy about her name, and her father anxious, she acknowledged to see her married. And be was not worth it. Ah, there lay the sting! It was not merely the loss of love, for which she might have felt a healthy sorrow, but shaken faith, and trust in all good things and true, uprooted and laid waste. "Is anything the matter, dear?" said Mrs. Dene, the girl having been too deep tip absorbed in thought to note her pres ence. "Matter? No. I suppose there is noth ing the matter, except," with an uneasy laugh, "that a great honor has been of fered me, and I am hesitating whether to Allow myself to accept it." "I think I can goes what it is." Jane went over to Mrs. Dene's side, tad laying both anna upon her knees, looked soberly Into her face and told her all. Thra wkJ ahoald you accept Major larron for the saks of his wealth, for Ike BMitloa be eoold give yon? Many itirla woaid think these arguments suffi cieat, bwt tt to not like yoo. dear." "No, bo; I don't think it la because of that. It to boon be can he loves ate" averting her eyea, in which were aIr m dread, no responsive 7- .... IK) HKRT "Is he the only one?" asked Mrs. Dene. "Is there no one you could love in re turn r "No one I may," was the auswer, spok en almost in a whisper. A silence ensued. Jane was the first to speak. "Nora, you are older than I, and have seen more of life," she began, iu a hard, unemotional voice that told uothiug of the inward pain she felt and had been feeling for so long; "let me bsve your honest opinion. Given that I love some one I can never hope to marry not in any circumstances that could occur should I be doing wisely, or only mak ing wrong worse, to accept another one because he can give me what I want so much peace? You know how people are writing of me now in the piers, and insisting that I have a knowledge whether they thluk it a criminal knowl edge or not, 1 am sure I cannot tell of Jacob Lynn's death. And you must have guessed that something el.e is troubling me, though you are too good to question me about it. Can't you imagine that when Major I-arron came forward just now, when others are holding rather aloof from me, I should le touched by his gen erosity don't you think it mit'lit be right to secure such a haven for myself, if it makes his happiness also, as he ssjs it will r "Every one would say you were doing wisely mid well," answered Mrs. Dene, constrainedly. "Ami you, Nora and you?" "I am not sure. Is there uo chance of there being some misunderstanding between yuu and and the man you love? lie may care for you, and ask you to marry him still." "He has asked me once, twice." "And you refused him?" in surprise. Jane bowed her head. Mrs. Dene understood then partly who it was that troubled and had made her so unlike the shy, happy child she hud been a year before. "Nora"' cried June, impulsively. "Tell me, is Major Larron a good man. a man with whom I might have a chatce of be ing happy?" "He is good looking, w el! imuiiiercij -and he loves you. Jenny," she auswen-d hesitatingly. "That is not what I menu. Is be good ?" "How should I know, dear? We all wear our best side out ward" a vvkw ardly. "But you know. They say forgive me if I am paining you perhaps I have no right to mention it they euy yon were once engaged to him, and I wondered "Why I did not marry him?" finished Mrs. Dene, in a low, tremulous voice. "Well, I will tell you, and you shall judge for yourself whether in that he was to blame. No, it does not pain me, dear, to speak of him; my feeling for him was only a girlish fancy hero worship. I sup pose it might be called, although ho mis applied. It is only other things connect ed with that time that have power to move me so, for It was through his jilt ing me that that 1 won my husband." "He jilted you?" cried June. Mrs. Dene winced. What it mst her to reopen this old wound she alone knew, yet she had resolved to tell all rather than by her silence mislead Jane. "Perhaps he una not altogether in fault. I was young and thoughtless, mid flirted, though never untrue to him at heart." "lie jilted you!" repeated Jane, who, having in her excitement risen to lor feet, was now pacing up and down the room. Her breathless indignation rather startled Nora Dene, who had outlived her first auger, though the pain survived still. Then the whole story cxtneoiit. nothing extenuated, yet naught set down in ni:;I ice. And Jane listened with rising wrath against the man who, having acted so to her best friend, had dared to ask her also to le his wife. "He would have jilted me. too. proba bly!" she exclaimed. "No, dear. He loves you as he never loved me. I think he would suffer any thing at your hands rather than give you up." "He shall never have the chance." "You don't mean " "I mean that my answer to-day will be 'no!' No, no emphatically no!" "Don't decide hastily, child. Think of the position he can give you, the luxury of wealth that would be yours; mid. re member every one hns some good in him only waiting to lie brought out. To love any one, as Major I-nrron loves yon, is elevating in itself; every man is the bet ter for marrying the woman he loves." "He sha'n't marry me," said Jane, with such a mutinous iout that Mrs. Dene nits obliged to smile. Going straight to her own room she wrote two letters. The first was to her mother, with an instinctive feeling that she ought to Is? the first to know of the step that she was taking, and the second to Major Larron. "Dear Major Larron." she wrote, and smiled a little sadly bitterly, too, at the stereotyped beginning of what meant so much to both "do not come to-dny. The answer which I have to give will ranse Ws psin to both If written. I will never marry yon never! Nothing yoo can say will alter my decision, and it will be kinder to ssy nothing at all. Circum stances have come to my knowledge that make it Impossible I could ever change my mind. And I never loved you never should love yon; so it Is better that I should have come to this decision better for me, and for yon, too. I am yours sincerely. JANE KNOX." She smiled as she dispatched the letter with something of her old mirthfulness. That ahe, the former sergeant major's daughter, should thus be dismissing a coronet in prospective, and some present thousands a year, seemed Irresistibly comic. And ahe felt no regret, only re lief. It waa the letter to her mother ahe fol lowed with some apprehension. How would they take It at home? CHAPTER XXXVII. With the morning came a letter from Mrs. Knox, full of reded reproach at the disappointment she had experienced, and openly expressing discontent with tbe life she was leading now at home alone. Jenny determined to visit her home, and told Mrs. Dene of her intention. Dur ing the forenoon she started. "Come again, Jenny," Mrs. Dene sid, wi.-tfuUy, as she pressed her lip to the girl's fresh face at partiug. "Indeed, iudeed, 1 will," was the eager reply, and waiting to ssy uu more than a "good-by," lest she should betrsy how loath she wss to leave, Jane went quickly from her presence and the bouse. She met no one uu her homeward way; and even when she entered their own drawing-room she found it empty. But Just as she had coucluded tbst every one was out Mrs. Knox's voire iu an adjoin ing room undeceived her. rVrtunately Mrs. Knox wss too much taken np with her grievance to notice her daughter's appearance when they met. Jenny was leaning back in the chair she had taken a moment or two before, and wss filing with distended eyes on a boot that her mother hud throw a angrily to the floor. The sole w as uppermost, and she had ample leisure to see that it had just such a triangular mark as she alone had noticed on the foot-print near Jacob Lynn when he lay dead that day iu the deserted compound. It might be only a coincidence, it is true; but the mere suspicion was enough (o make her blood run cold and her heart almost stop its besting. The magnitude of her discovery so overwhelmed Jane that fur a moment all capability of thought deserted her. Then slowly, as one recovering from an illness, digest first the simplest food, a regret stole across her still half paralyzed mind, that she should have done Stephen Prin sep such a cruel injustice. She even felt a faint thrill of pleasure at the thought of hi innocence; but almost immediately the remembrance of who it was that she now knew to le guilty rendered all other feelings weak and vugue. Brain and Im lug alike seemed saturated with the knowledge that her father- her father who had held her so often iu bis arms, sHithed her childish sorrows, and shared her joys, and whom she bad honored as the best man she had ever known, or be lieved could be he, her father, was a murderer. She could have shrieked aloud to have relieved herself from the burden of her restrained emotion, yet so silent, and so often unguessed at, are the tragedies in real life, that she sat still, making uo sign to betray the horror that had come uin her, and her mother, all unknowing of what through her agency had been re vealed, went ou scolding in the same high-pitched key. How xiii. thought Jane, would all these trifling worries that now beset her vanish iu thin uir were she to know the truth! But she never must she never must! The secret should le Iss'tween herself and heaven. So strangel). often unwillingly, are all our ideas tinged with thoughts of nif that, after the first shock bad uhidc,. she rcllienilsrcd to be glad that she had refused Major Ijuroii. "Now, Jenny, I am ready," said Mrs. Knox, lending the way from the room, while silently June rose and followed. "Well, and so you refused Major I-arroii. I can't tell you bow disappointed 1 was when I got the letter, and your father looked quite as if some one had struck him, so dmiifdiliided. He had been more like what he used to be, since I told bilu that 1 thought, wits almost sure. 111 fact, ymi would marry Major Larron. And this morning be was iinbea ruble. First one thing slid then another was wrong, until I lost my temper too, and answered back. Then he grew furious, and said I had been to blame for all -as though I had not lecn as eager as he could be to see you happily settled -and that Jour life would be ruined, with a lot more which seemed to have no sense. I sup pose it is these letters in the papers, though nobody taki-s any notice of them. 1 am sure. livery one know s, anil we can prove, that we were iu the bonne all day, even if it were possible or probable that a little thing like you could kill u strong man like Jacob Lynn." "I wish we had never known him, lie has been the cause of all our trouble." cried Jane, with an anger she It-It uu reasonable, yet could not restrain. (To be continued.) THIS BIRD HAS HORNS. Hare Specie of the "reathcred Tribe Found in South America. The rarest species of bird now extant, mid one which Is almost extinct, has Its home iu the jungles of South Aineric;i. This ornithological inrtimiiy is known to science its Hip palametlra corumla, and to the common iH-ople as the "horn ed screamer." As a rara avis nothing could excel the coruuda unless It would Is- the accidental discovery of a living most or an cpluoris. But few of the bird books even let you know that such n horned paradox ever existed, let alone telling you that living specimens of the queer creature are still occasion ally met with. The only one now in captivity In North Auierl-a, If the w Tit er has not been misinformed. Is that belonging to the aviary of the I'hlladel-pli-U zwhglal gardens, and which arrived iu tills country alsitit three years ago. The creature Is atsjitt the sif-e of a full-grown turkey hen, and of a blackish brown color. One of Its dis tinguishing peculiarities is a nillle of black aud white which surrounds Die head. Tbe homey appendage which caused the early South American ex plorers to write so many chapters on the "wonderful rhinoccrotm bird of tbe Jungle," Is alHut four liichtu In length, And grows straight up out of flie heavi est and lrdot portion of the head. But the above Is uot the only natural offensive and defensive wcaxiu with which the homed acmuuer baa been provided. On each w'.ng, at the "el bow" joint, he has a three-lncli spur, and Just back of that another an Inch In length. He Is said to l a match for any ten game cts ka. St. Ixmla Hepub Ilc' A Mtupentloua Work. Tbe nusuvualou bridge over the Hud son river at New York city will un doubt.diy be built. The (nurture will rie one of tbe most Important sire, cost nd engineering difficulties considered, In tbe world. It will require more tlian 80,000 (on of atructural ateel, and 28, 000 ton of wire. The total coat will exceed $22,000,000. Tbe apan will be three-fifth of a mile; and tbe bridge 1 to be strong enough to aupport, with out danger of breaking down, tbe equlfi alent of a loaded freight train twe ml lea long. THE MAN FOR SANDY. I wouldna gie a copper plack For ony man that turns hi back On duty clear; I wouldna tak his word or note, I wouldna trust him for a groat. Which he might steer. When thing are just as things should he. And fortune gie a man the plea. Where'er he is It isna bard to understand How he may w alk through-house and laud Wi' cheerful fai-e aud ojien hand Coutinualiy. But wher. i' ite o' work and care, A man must loss and failure bear. He merits praise; Wha will not to misfortune bow, Who cocks hi bonnet on his brow And fights and tights, he kenana bow, Through laug, bard days. I wouldna gie an auld ImwU-e For ony man that 1 could see Wha didna hold The sweetness o' his mirher's name. The kindness o' his brother's claim. The honor o' a woman's fame, Par mair than gold. Nor is it hard for him to do, Wha kens his friends are leal and true, Iive sweet and strong. Whose hearth knows not from ytar to year The shadow of a doubt or fear. Or feels the falling of a tear For only wrong. But gie him praise whose love is pain, Wha, w rong'd, forgives and love again. And, though be grieves, I-ts not the dear one from his care. But loves him mair, and mair, and malr. And bide his time wi' hoe and prayer, Aud still believes. Ay, gie him praise who dm-sna fenr The up hill tight from year to year And who grip fast His ain dear ones through good or ill, Wha, if rhey wander, loves them still; Some day of joy he'll get his till; He'll win t last. - Pittsburg Post. DAFT BET. "Mlrichsteddc, famous for ye flow re pardons; Infamous for ye fayre." That is how an old chronicler sums up tho character of the village. The flower gardens remain unto this day; so does, the fair. But the fame of the one and the Infamy of the other have long been merged In a decent obscurity. Mlnch stead has. Indeed, shared tbe fate of a hundred other villages. It has nue climbed to an age of railways. For merly, Londoners used lo visit Mlncli steud for change of air. They then took as long reaching it by ctxich or by si! c!i:im- as they now take over a railway Journey to St. I-onards or Kastbounie. Bath chairs and donkey chaises were quite abundant on Mincli stead common then, children and iiursin 'hrotiged it. Jt was a popular saying lu the place that "seven airs met them" meaning thereby seven dis tinct characters of atmosphere. How that number was arrived at Is scarcely obvious. But, at any rate, the common was, and is, particularly bracing, and a day spent upon It cannot fall to Invig orate the spender. Now, however, IcIisIkhI! No one Is to be met there save the ubiquitous golfer, the loafer, who lives upon bis lust balls, mid the dingiest sheep and most odoriferous goats that are to be found w ithin the twelve-mile radius. The fair, ns wp have said, still re mains. It Is held at Bartleinytide on the old village green. There is an obi and there Is a new green at Mlnch stead. The latter deserves the name, fur It has a fine expanse of turf; with the former It Is otherwise. Kvcry blade of glass haslongdlsappearedfroni It. It Is a bare, worn space of grave) and sand, trodden to the consistency of a road by playing children and loaling men and women. It Is here that the denizens, wliw houses lie around the green, are full of cursing and bitterness for th rtv whole days in every August. The strident music of the merry-go-rounds, the nauseous odors of their oll t engines, the oiMhs of drunken men, the shrieks of drunken women, the gen eral rowdyism and disorders which arc rampant after dark may serve as some excuse even for curflng and bitterness. Many Miiichsteadiles have tried to get the nuisance put down, but without avail. The fair is held by royal char ter. Au act of Parliament alone can abolish It. And Parliament has Its hands too full already to Is passing acts for the abatement of mere ls -a I tiuis anifs. The fair, therefore, continues. In the daytime it Is quite respectable; It Is even arlstisratlc, bk aristocracy in Mliiehstefid goes. Indies no mere lydies have been seen In the swing lug Isiats Ix-fore dusk; gentlemen and those uot simply gents stroll up there to while away an hour of tbe afternoon In cocoa n ut skies and rifle shooting. There Is a famous shooting range, kept by one Amos Dtinkley, which has graced Mlnchstead fair regularly since tbe early fsTs. You do not simply shoot down a tills' at glass Isittles. but you have a sort of miniature Jungle where in to practice your markjiiiinshlp it Jungle full of moving rabbit and flying birds for the experts, of stationary targets and ltottlca for the inexpe rienced. To those Minclisteatlltes who used to patronize this gallery a few years ago one figure must have Im'cu very famil iar. It w as that of a middle-aged worn, an, lielonglng" evidently to the poorer classes, who used to aland Just at the ctilrHiice of Dunkloy's gallery nil through the three day of tliu fair. She went by the name of "Daft BeL" Passers-by would ink) to her In a pitying orl of way, and give ber coppera or small silver coins. She did not, how ever, pay much heed to any of (hem, or I even seem to care wnetner uiey gave her money or not Her eyes were alt tbe while fixed upon Uie entrance of the ghootlng gallery, with a set, eager expression, a though she were anxious ly watching for some one lo come out. So stie waa. So he bad been now for thirty years. When eleven struck, and I Hi nk ley came to the door to cbme bis gallery for the night, she would ak him, eagerly: "How alsint Tom? Will he lie coming borne tu-ulght?" And Duukb-y would say, with a kindly gravity that did credit to hi fellngs: "No, lass, no! Tom must stay to night to take care of the show." "But you 11 not keep him tomorrow night. Mr. Duukley, sir-you'll not keep to-morrow?" "Nay, las! I'll not keep him to-morrow." For thirty years had this same dia logue taken place on each of the three nights of Mlnchstead Baniemy fair. Daft Bet's story was a suffhdeutly sad one. In the year lWi, a bride of sit weeks' standing, she had lost her hm baud In the ' following tragic way: Duukley, one of whose assistants had lieen U!ieXMftedly laid up. had engaged Tom Pllcher, a resident of Mlnchstead, to help him with his slnaiting gallery during rbe three days of the fair. To ward evening, ou the last of the three days, something went wrong with one of the running rabbits and Tom crept Into the Jungle to put the thing In or der. The shooting was stopis'd while hp did so, but the gallery was very full Just then; there was great confusion and crowding among the would be marksmen, and somehow one of the attendants did not observe that Tom Pllcher was In the Jungle, for he was Ptisiplng very low and was hidden by the artificial grass and rushes. The at tendant handed a loaded gun to a gentle man who stretched out his hand for It. The latter, also never seeing Tom, took aim at one of the rabbits In the grass, and -before he could bo stopped -fired. There came a sharp cry from the Jutigle, followed by an ominous groan. Dtinkley sprang over the barrier and rushifl forward. He found xsir Tom Pllcher huddled upon the ground, Just breathing his last. An ugly wound in the forehead showed where the ball had penetrated. Everylxidy present was horror-stricken by this tragical accident. Tbe gen tleman w ho had fired the shot, esistial ly, was In a perfect agony of distress. But the affair was rendered sadder still by what followed. Tom's young wife, who hail come there to walk home with him, was actually waiting for him nt the entrance at the time when the acci dent (spurred. Some excited and thoughtless witness of the catastrophe went out and told her-never attempt ing to break It gently, or In any way to prepare the poor girl for the slusrl;. She ran wildly hi. She forced her way through the crowd toiler dead husUind. She threw herself iimii his body, with a terrible wall. When she at length raised her eyes from the dead they were fixed and strange. The light of reason was gone from them. It never returned. This Is how It was that ever after ward, during the M iniiistead Baniemy fair, you would find ber at the dsr of Dimkley's gallery waiting for Tom; never quitting her sst, never grow ing weary', always receiving with pa tient acquiescence Dimkley's Intima tion that Tom could not be spared from the show that night, and buoying her self up with the promise that he would surely lxi allowed to come with ber to morrow. The gentleman who had tired the fatal shot made what amends were (sisslble to this aflllcted creature. lb called tixiti the vicar of the parish and arranged to pay the widow, through him. a sufllclent weekly allowance to keep her In comfort for her life, or -sui)ifdiig such ft coursp should be held necessary to defray the cost of her maintenance In a gisid private asylum. The former course was adopted, for the dis-tors pronounced her quite harmless, and declared that there was no reason for shutting her up. And so poor Daft Bet lived on In Mlnchstead for thirty years, pitied and kindly used by all; not unhappy, never complaining, but supported from llrst to last by ber mer ciful delusion, and always confident that she should see her Tom to-morrow. It was exactly thirty years after the fatal accident In the August of IHSo -that a party of young fellows who had come over with a cricket team to play a match against the famous Mlnchstead Club strolled down to the fair in the evening on the lookout for a little amusement. Some betook themselves to one show, some to another. Three or four went Into Dtinklcy's world-re-uowneil shooting gallery. One of them, a gixid-hxiklng. merry young fellow of alsiut ;!0. seemed to attract Daft Bet's attention as he went by. for she sudden ly fixed her great, hollow eyes tisui him ami followed him Into the gallery with an eager glance. By ami by she went np to the disirkeeper. "Just let me In. I want to speak to Tom," she xald, coaxlngly. "Nay. Bet," said the man, with more kindness than might have been expect ed from his rough appearance. "Yon cannot come In now, lass. Tom's busy. He has no time to lie speaking to you." "Do let me In. there's a dear," she jxrslsted, earnestly. The doorkeeper shook his head. "I luussen. hiss." he said decidedly. "Oh, rhere Is Mr. Dtinkley!" she cried. "Id me ask Mr. Dtinkley. Mr. Dtinkley. sir!" Amos was standing near the entrance. He turned round at the sound of his name, and Bet preferred her request to him. "Mr. Dtinkley, sir; let me come In for A minute to speak to Tom," slm plead ed. "Tom's busy, lass," said Ann si, using the same excuse ns the doorkeeper had done. "He can't be spared from bis work nt present" "But let me just come In and wait Inside till be In ready to speak to uie," cried Bet, clasping her hands. "Oh, do lettne, Mr. Dunkley, air!" Amos Dunkley waa a soft hearted man. lie bid always been very kind to Bet, and it went against him to re fuse ber this small and easily granted favor, by which, moreover, tbe poor, mad creature seemed to s-t such store. "Well, lass. If you do come inside," be wild, "you must Just stand still and wait patiently. We cannot have buj.1 ne Interfered with, you know." " h. Mr. Dunkley. sir, 1 11 be a good . as gold. I ll stand Inside and never move or sjx-ak till Tom is ready. May be I shall see Tom when I'm Insider she added with half wistful Inquiry la ln-r tone. "No. uo, lass: you'll not see him. He' busy at the back," said Amos Dunkley. "But I'll see him when he's done, Mr. Dunkley, sir?" "Oh. yes. Bet You'll see him when he's done." She came Inside the gallery and stotx! quietly lu a comer. Her eye roamed alsuit the tent until they fell upon the young man already mention ed, and on him they remained fixed. She followed all his movements eager ly. Never for a second did ahe allow her gaze to wander from him. Now she seemed to tie growing agitated. She could not stand still. She was twisting both her hands In a corner of her apron, then untwisting them, and so on. rapidly. Her feet shuffled and fidgeted ou the ground. No one, how ever, observed her. The place was full. Amos and his assistants were all busy. At last Daft Bet could remain lu ber place no longer. She glided swiftly forward and mingled with the throng. Sxn she was close to the barrier where the marksmen stood and was al most nibbing shoulders with the young man, on whom her eyes had been never ceasingly fixed. They were glittering now with a pe culiar light. She lifted her hand and plucked the young man by the sleeve. "Hllloa, mother! What Is It?" n said, turning round and regarding her good-naturedly. "Where Is Tom?" she asked, almost In a w hisper. "My gisxl woman, really I cannot tell ou," was the laughing rejoinder. "You know where he Is-you do know where ho Is," she persisted, with a cer tain fierceness In her tone. "I assure you you are quite mistak en," said the young man, still laughing, for he supixised that It was some kind of Joke. "I know nothing alxmt him." "You shall tell me!" she cried, pn slonately. "You shall tell me where ho Is!" At this point one of the assistants, who was standing at the barrier load ing rifles for use, turned round and saw Daft Bet clutching the young inaii' arm. "Now then, lass," lie said, sharply, "none of that. You've no buxiinns here annoying our customers. Come, clear out of It!" The woman's eyes blazed. With In credible swiftness, and before he could prevent her, she reached forward ami caught np one of the wiupons which he had just loaded. She pointed It straight at the young man's forehead. She pulled the trigger. It was all the work of a second. Crack! fianh! smoke! a heavy thud; and then a moment'H awful silence. In that moment, while dismay still held every onhxikcr paralyzed. Bet threw down the discharged gun and snatched up another loaded, ready for Um". She hebl the ;nii.le against her own forehead and, crying. "lie does know he does; he shall take me to my Tom!" so fired, and fell. "tJood Coil!" said Amos Dunkley a few minutes later, to one of the dead man's companions, "foxsl Cod! Then that explains It." "How? What do you mean?" ex claimed the other, who was nearly be side himself with mingled grief and horror. "I menu, young man," answered Amos very solemnly, "that the hand of fate Is clearly present In this dread ful thing. Thirty years ago her bus band was accidentally shot iu my gal lery on this very green. The one as shot him was your psr friend's father."- IOiidoti Truth. PECULIAR RETAINING FEE. John Chinuniun Had It Arranged Hc fore He Perpetrated the Crime. Col. A. T. Vogelsang, thp attorney. Is regarded as one of Hie l'st raconteurs of the legal profession. In the Palace grillroom yesterday he let out a string of anecdotes. He said that a few weeks ago Dennis Spencer, the Napa lumin ary, was called tixni by a Chinaman one evening, when the following dia logue ensued: "'One Chinaman kill another China man with a hatchet; how much yon charge make him clear?" " 'I'll take the case." nald Mr. Spencer, 'for $l.l""i.' " 'Alice right,' said the Chinaman, 'I be back after while.' "lu about a week he returned to Mr. Silencer's office and laid down $l,orj In gold colli ou Ills table. Mr. Spencer swept the money Into the drawer. " 'Well, the Chinaman, he dead ' '"Who killed hlmr " 'I did. "'When did you kill hlmr " 'Last night. There was some curiosity on tbe part of the audience for further light on the dlsxsltlon of the 1,0SI, but Mr. Vogel sang immediately spun off on to an other story. Han Francisco Call. Buffaloes Help Eaoh Other. W hen an African buffalo Is wounded by a hunter It is surrounded by several others, who Immediately group them selves round him and help blm along In their midst by shoving against bis side until they have reached a place of safe(y. Father or Cats. One of (he chief men In a Mohamme dan caravan la (he cat sbelk, or "fath er of Cats," who rides a camel carryln. doxena of baskets Oiled wilb rata, r 'V. lit:.' .'