THE WEST SHORE, any higher lUtion. It awml to br that to sell ci gars over a counter to Rood looking gentlemen was the highest ambition of life. She gowned herself gaily, aud sffecU'd pretty, ariitocratio airs, speaking often of her gramlpappa and grandmamma, as she had heard the girlt at achool do. Although not in the leant tender hearted, she fan cied ahe felt a vsgue pity for Jsinic, and grew accus tomed, after a while, to hi ugliueits. She found him lei repulsive than at first, and extremely useful Not that there was ever a time, though, that she did not wonder why (1ml should have created any one so dis agreeable to the souses. There came such a happy light to Jamie's eyes that summer, and such odd, jojful sougs to his lips, that people used to wonder what that ugly little mor tal could hava to make him happy. As for him, he never thought about it himself nor realized that any thing new and swwt had come into his life. Only sometimes he would say to Miss Jennie " 1 dou't thiuk I ever saw sech skies es we hev here, nur sich sunsets, nur sech mountains; an' the wiud, somehow, of eveniu's, jest seems to say the soft rat, sweetest things es ever 1 hear. W'y, jest to hear it come sighiu' rouu' the garden, a-takin' up all the damlyliueV down au' carryiu' it away w'y, it jest makes me wisht thet 1 could write, an' toll tho world how bxautiful it is." " Much the world would care, poor, daft fellow," the girl thought, her mind bout upon dollars and euta, Hhe had uo understanding nor comprehension of the wonderful things Chuck Olalla saw on every laud, that nature spread out The down of the dan- delion, indeed! What was it? A bunch of nothing tlat the wimla carried away and scattered broadcast over the laud. When she saw him staudiog at his back door. eaz. lug. eutraucvd, at a moon of cold silver rising out of a bank of orauge clouds, she would steal softly into the houa not to disturb him, aud whisper to her mother that IW Jamie was surely daft." Hummer passed. Autumn, too, came and went, and whit wiuW dwelt in the Cracker creek mining camp, Uad he tnB lots simple-minded and less no-LU-hiufavl, he would have known that no mortal can bo perfectly happy for uiauy mouths; but he gave no thought to the morrow. Due cold day, when the suow was pilej high about their doors and almost to the r.fs, he thought perhaps Mis. Jouuie might be out of wood, aud he went iu to ask if he ahould got U)m for her. bhe was not iu the .hop, Ml Le through to her eviy sitting room, where she always sat, sowing or reading a novel, t, j, JUeameto mM him with gUg color and ahj happhew U hr f jr., aud for one bl,, wnd the poor fellow's heart almost ceased to beat, in the intoxicating belief that this sweet confusion was all for him. Then, with a sadden revulsion of feeling that made everything hazy to his eyes, he saw some one else a tall, finely made man, sitting very near the ebair which had been occupied by MiBS Jennie; and, somehow, all in a moment, the whole miserable truth rushed upon him and crushed him with its dead weight As in a looking-glass, he saw the days and months which had passed since she first came, sweet and cool and dainty as a mountain flower, into hit dingy little shop. And in those days he saw now only one thought, one aim, one feeling love of her. What was he that he had dared to so love her, who was as far above him as the snow flower that grew at the top of the mountain was above the blue violet that grew at the base and turned its lowly head upward. She had been kind to him 0, alwayl He could not remember a time when she had not greeted him with a smile and a kindly word but now he saw the d.ffereoce. The soft flush, the radiant eye, the tender shyness were all for this strong, young giant, who could almost have crushed her in one powerful hand, And he weak, stunted, as seldom was man created by Ood 0, kind heaven, he had dared to love her. " It was th th the wood," he faltered, in a brok en way. Then, unable to say more, he turned blind ly about and shambled, as fast as his uneven limbs could carry him, out of her presence. " It's only Chuck Olalla, the lame shoemaker, dear," the girl said to her lover, apologetically. " Be lives next door, and he is not quite right iu his mind sees things in the skies and hears voices in the winds, and all that sort of things." Then they forgot him and talked of pleasanter things. And Jamie 1 Through his dingy shop ha went, haltingly, thence into the back room, locking the door behind him. In his eyes was the look that comes into the eyes of a faithful dog that has been struck a cruel and unexpected blow by a beloved baud, and in his soul the deepest suffering that can bo borne by man. He stretched himself, face down ward, on his hard, unkept bed, and once in awhile an awful sob Bhook his whole weak frame. " 0, God 1 " he cried, at last, in the voice of one who writhes beneath some fearful torture, " To think thet a man shud be 's I be-ugly an' haltin' an' hid jus, so's no woman 'd keer to look at a seoon time, an'-an'-then to think thet I shud be able to keer fer her, jot the same other men I Beoms 's if I cau't War it, nohow." After a long, long time he heard her step outside, Md her sharp, imperative rap on the door. t