THIS case takes us across the Channel to Normandy; and introduces us to a young French girl, named Marie Fran?oise Victoire Salmon.
Her father was a poor Norman laborer. Her mother died while she was a child. From an
http:/ /www.michaelkorsoutlet--mk.com early age Marie had learned to get her own living by going out to service. Three different mistresses tried her while she was a very young girl, and found every reason to be satisfied with her conduct. She entered her fourth place, in the family of one Monsieur Dumesnil, when she was twenty years
coach purses of age. This was the turning-point in her career; and here the strange story of her life properly begins.
Among the persons who often visited Monsieur Dumesnil and his wife was a certain Monsieur Revel, a relation of Madame Dumesnil��s. He was a man of some note in his part of the country, holding a