.h I- announced hy the Frmch Am!- 1 ~ of Mun-u "at It is pom-"2h to " . I: through aoâ€"mnod opaque with ordlnry lights. A Item. ' «in. vm do It. I. Lem asserts "' Mien: “Inside t bot vlth rather . Mu. he places n sensitized pllte. ’m the negative In front of the box ' plum an Iron plate, and on the ' idly of the place a lamp. Alter hin’ exposure an Image h an development an Image II “.V butlfhlhcetofleadbe‘ , mm the box and mind over ' the Iron plate on u to form .- I: no", the reproductlon of ' Tait!" for the sum length or ex- , ' h «m “ï¬llet. Th1. aperi- m be accounted for on exist- - ‘ ' ~" I. Laban lull ascer- M the lugs I- not «he to any - ‘ ‘-. t flat which night Inn in In the negative. The '1“ not succeed I! he“ A Dad bomb» one-Nova cool place h Havana lat not. rm Cabana war. “a late the open court In the cm. W unhe- had been already am! 'h mam then to death. The "nova "a trava a. In a lone. aquarc and 0a ton-n began. This main“ la ,fllhc the mu.- m In a chair with Eh iii loci. From "all. Mal: bar! a ‘ ' and acrava an arranm In be MN "m noel of the verm In or he dlea o! atrangnlauon. In an the "an! in more tonlbb mal, an the exemllmm bungled I“ (he pfloonm were '0! to dmth so '1 that lhelr "flaring. were group berated. Their cries and trim- 'Iade the amnion and even the Aim pale. Mou- no. In "rim. man 0! vii» II" but plum! In New "at VII. 00... Grammar. In. and ï¬ll- â€. On. The lady I- conun- I!- M In In! huh“ and sad lur- an “all. but on "may discovering. um I hpâ€" “ tum yarn. nut tor In: INN-4 'II um ll «in mm m a. In proennd - cum from No. 1. Incl (all. to 00min. In re- ma No. I. lando- h- a loan- H. H. "clues. no In 500. amt!“ clan-d with Wu an chudrvn II the wont run hull... hut" wen 01m nu he. About (â€nu ma § mum. devils"! to Ibo nut . hi the â€(Inn move that IN â€a m Inn "on u» unam- m to to mice. Dunner-Non! H. u "and In the til-patch“ {ram mama. the ulna bu Iclcd .a flu advice of the Ruulnn unbu- â€or In mums hlu am“ lulu-t no unload", u may be am (or m that Raul-I poncy rm not N "Quad†to (he Unlled State; It I... Ilium lncndlbh, Isa-"tr. an 00 luau. nubunadot nbouhl In the W o! m mun. The latest clause made awn-t Re- order Go! or New York by bl; cob Ila II that he overcrowdu his own court with promtnont cam becauu he “a not-lilo to tun-(er to any o! It: can courts star cue. which an "ko- h to confer (ton on the man who mo: 50-. But cert-Inn he should be the but Judge of low bud be In willing to van hunt". n. luau Enoch Am- one I: I woman. The issue on which the (air In In thus put in complete control d the munlclpnllty wu the enforcer non! of prohibition. The man who can tight in Elli- dnrlnx the ensuing â€It will have a very slim Ihow for NI white alley. DOVER" GIOVI, : ILLINOIQ. mm Intro dam ma “'3' ml 7’ years. an in. ‘11 a! neuron“ it Al I Ind um My 1... The ma. elty 0! Ellis, Kan, has (hotel: I woman no myor and elected I mncll every member of whlch la n ' Higher citizenship I: only another name tor the intelligence to know and the courts: and honesty to do the right a it is given us to Ice it. Think of this when you stand at the ballot hamâ€"â€" 119mm 6mm Wm The X ray has been used to trace the origin or that tired feeling which casts I pull over the more umld harbingers a! spring. John Bull is so amiable over the Ven- mela business that we shall have to ï¬ght to keep him tram hugging us to death. The world would be sadly disappoint- ed in a man it It accepted him at his wife's public estimate. Too many men and women Imagine that one 0! their rights Is to have every- body get out or their way. “Havel-sauna generally results In a person saying something that In re- [netted afterwards. 3’ WHITE 0 WILLIAMS. VII II, um, ‘â€" I“, I‘ll- - A Ten: Min! col-my will call tickets I: very low rate! to paint! 1!: mum-n. Kann- and Mn. For Manic: «an... n. A. (Sherrie. 81! Must“ Banding. cm- â€, Ill. or r. B. Cooke-1’. m Locust NWIMIM 'c-n. III!“ by n m In. Bryant Bee-en's death It Gresham; Ind†resulting tom: I po- cnmr adieu. A law days ago she was [tied In the had by a rooster. Bone noun-flan let in and Hood poi- Ion named. an!“ death three day- In W stain“ “The “Corn Bolt.†1' Annu- 8t, (gm. and tho paper â€Plihouncummarmtorm ‘n- "Corn Ben" II the mm at n Mutated monthly now-pa pub- lished by "a. Chicago. Bur um t Quincy R. R. n In. to cm Intona- tion In In Interesting way about tho gum m- qt the can. Send :3 m 1 On May I When? excursion ticket; will be sold from all points in the Went nnd North'est over the "BI Four Route†and Cheapest. Ohio y. to Virginie Ind North Caroâ€" line I! one fun: for the rand-Mp. 8e!- iien looking for n home in the South an do no better than in Virginia. There they have enenn lam innda, no hm- nnnie. no cyclones. mild winters. never falling crops. chap trenoorution and the bent markets. Send for free de- scriptive pamphlet, etc-mien men “(I time folder: U. L Tram. N. W. P. A. 234 can 3a.. cam“. m. I .. ._ _ "m...- m». ulln! vun "In. For fill Inter-nun apply (a ticket mu 0! com-mung "m or address W. B Knight: 0 P.31‘. A.. Chm... 0- April 11 and In I. Itâ€. (to North-Western Una (Chime . Notti- Wnun R") will all Homo looted mm “cut. at very low rum to I lam I‘D-bl? at pol-u In Northern Wisconsin. mama, lemm Inn‘ Wanton mnnou. Nam-n. km Dakot- m Bum. Dnou, In- cluding the fnmmAthll Hills dlmrlct. In... a- In“. ' A 0mm ship which bu 0000 can. mudlau to the nonlb I‘m-Inc noun} I m on tine plum nut the 1'qu Imu- ot over â€30010“, which mu I). mm by 1.000 lea. TM m boh- Irv not In the middle 0! m man. but vllbln no sun at land. The" my I. amm- "m: m- um“ 0! any non Donal-ll. sand-mu of flu loflo- at 30.000 feel mud to 00 IN III-l M clay low-d In all duped mm of m «an. I." hr. 9. "aha n“ Cnrolht 0- In! 8. Helm III! to cold from puma-l om“. town and mum of the north, to nll polnu’oa tho um» 1 ml. a "mum alive“ In Tunn- ou. Mahala. Ital-Mp“. Haml- and n parac- o! Wacky, at on dulo M [It tho mod Mp. 11cm- will In nod lo mur- qun twenty-om an. on um: of u to amt a: destination. and um allow tau-one a In; â€an. on a. null hound Mp. m nu no!“ uni about u. no u to and all you near-Ion «cm-4 rm. In 0. P. Moon. 0am! Pu- mp: A I [ml-ville. Kr. or J. K. manly. . . P. 4.. Cite-p. Ill. [or mum 13M. not. um 2.5 nm In: ohm would Iu Joana-y 10 lb. m In and. mom: of than. the Alpha 0! the Cantu-l. could not be reached In less than Mr years. while It would take centuries to not! of them. An apron In": would I." to "In! at I mm o! tony all“ an hour. not Ilono (or any- and (or week: at! for yarn, but even Waging to CI- III. 8!! Robert BIII has answered tho question II to how long It would take ‘ to and I mien-In to the Inn. ileu- wring mm by time. he taken In his unit I circuit lunounding the «lunar oi tho Mr!!! men "men. Iioax which I telegraphic mange can he sent the whole (munch In 1 second. it would take just I min. for I similar menus to reIch the sun, but to ram the Inn in not I nutter of mlnutu. Even the San Francisco Portland all many other important cities of the west and northwest. a convenience to the traveling pu lic. A com o! unilormed attend- anu has been provided to render both incoming and outgoing passengers all necessary nttention, directing them to czrriaxes, omnibnnen and street. can. carrying hand baggage. assisting per- sons in feeble henlth.‘ and making themselves uselul in every wzy in their Power. The attendant. weir blue uni- !orrnl and bright red caps. and the «nice is entirely free. The North- Weuorn Line Is the through-car tome between Chicago and St. Paul, Minne- lliolll. Duluth. Ashlnnd. Council Biuus, 933815. quux City. Denver, Salt. Lake. he. Annual-I hula-â€lb. North ' Wain-n Line- A new departure has been inausuv rated at the Chicago passenger station 01 the North-Western Line (Chicago North-Western R'y) which will be iound Vb lbw-II Mlle lallw-v at Iro- loI-hh Roan... To the South and Southwestâ€"to Arum-.5, Tau, Loulslam. South- velt Ila-our], Kansa- nnd Arizona. 01: Much 10111, April 1th and am, also In! 5th. ticket: will be sold It one (are plug “.00 lot the round trip. good for 11 days, with atop-over privileges. For particutm address 81380“ Wilson. D. P. L. 111 Adam. street, Chicano. A m 111. but. on. Q. :4 Nance". CHEAP RATES. Whnla m undoubted!) descended trom some former laud animal and the whale rennin I warm-blooded shim-l to the present an. Same Ichutlitn mm. that whales in the about" of no Mt any. £ no about with the home's head to . ummm mind. This crab an In '0! mm: hurat to New fit-II. h. h M m I. prob- hee-ryeeeleedmhhhackendml mm. feeder Hie the mm. It ‘hu been held by some eclenmn the! birds are derived from the dinosaurs. lieu: much reduced In silo during the mantle. mentions which have In, med. This theory. however. Ie not . mooring to Hurley and other modern mum who have etudied the i bone: of these monsters, and who hold ‘ the! both were derived from eome com- mon “m. m horned dinosaur was equally at home on land or com. The union} unarmed-10111111 of immense numb. and be had 1 shin has over mutant: Wand neaflyafoo! in Mad“: It the upper and. A singular thing about the bone- of this anion]. the]: have been so often ‘ found and articulated forlexhlbmbn In museums. b that they are all hollow. mu mama both llghtnon and strength. nn'tho New York World. 11:» m II supposed to Inn been a grant swimmer. and on Ind be In banned to tan proceeded mevhnt one! the mm of n kangaroo. Belon- u-u mining men for mean or m- mdmvhn era-turn Mn found ha- W 01th! afloat dinosaurs“ [banned slangormand than to not. The alumâ€, however. '13 3 In an- m: ensure. no dinosaurs were an old may with seven! branches. One of the. families of dinosaurs bad m]! m- with a big horn. Their cousin: had the bug body of the dlno- car. but I long head Ilka that of n Another extinct animal with I antral men with club: would balbolu on M- but. four pow-ma! foot mm to ally-uh the creature, Ind and u “on but very m an. the mom of la body would emu The ant-enter of “mun I: by non. mid-arable labor. mono-ad to be u mum at m- m. A dodo Wflilnl IW u country md at the arm! Um would um all tho hom- und block up the plunge. V i--." _..,. ‘capuun Vun Wax-Zane}, o1 Baum, bu left It on record how I dodo cap- tured by com. or his men could not be eaten by the theta cut. to ma! III [to am. He Ibo moll- bow tho olodo undo such I any!" of nuptdlty u to merit the oonmnpt or III» Inca. Tho dado displayed neither Icumy unintelligent-9.11:1! I" name 1: a nynov nyln (at: Itgpldl}! to 90 Dre-out day. The sportsman who shot I dinosaur would have no the pair of antler. to take home with him (or the odiiicntlon lot his friends. while the dodo val an ugly bird without any omlmental feather- that would have looked well in n woman'l Inn. This monster was In lhourd creation. being able neither to fly nor to swim, and VI. extermi- nated in the seventeenth century, much to the general relief. Even the pterodactyl. which was In many respectl the moat dellcate of l these products of a remote age. would not ha ve made a decent soup. The size at these beans was such that they could afford only a poor kind of sport. They were so big that the worst marks- man could not help but hit them. and after they were killed they could not he moved. '1‘ Is a good thlng, on the whole. that the extinct animals are extinct, because a dinosaur, a (lode, or a megatherium returning to earth at the present time would create more trouble than he would be worth. Nobody would know what to do with such a monster. and science tells us that he might be dan- BEFORE. Dix-mun and Dodo- Would can" Com. Item-“on Among I’m-mt W Anl‘ Ian-II. [In-mm II Well .- Bruce-J Ila-luck: Picture. .Hmâ€"OSâ€" M020 IFECW Oh. GMZnâ€"ahmc MEIâ€".025“!â€" NIF k. EXTINCT ANIMALS DOWNERS GRQVE, REPORTER. Wwvwm*:lJ//%i ' 7w 2 ";;‘,,?,’ I, m mammc IAIXUI'H ANIIAH CAKE TO LIFE. "The massive frame of the masthe- rium in cmvnised with the nigh.†eiâ€" iori," an an amino“ palmiolélltt. describing such 3. seen "every tibnti in; ï¬bre reacting upon it! My unch- uant with the (area of I Hundred ma; M13817 m 00 the m m imam-(id q! g in. It. This gigantic monlter in supponed to have been at home in forum oi enor- ‘ mono trees like the huge ndwood: of California. But the strongest inc could not. ii. in believed, have resisted his ferocious mango: when fully exerted. Desiring to break down such a Ree for its i‘olinu. this giant would nettle hinge" upon his hunches. and ‘ told his enormous Ame about It: trunk. 1 Yet the mentherlum, as hit (can re- mains show, could move about with freedom and use. and could even give chue to other mflnala mm ï¬ght for his "(a It Attacked. HI: head was compar- atively small. but his bones were stu- pondoua. A. the creetnree were known to lay eggs. tho turner supposition ha been most popular. When the rennin: or these creatures were found In the alch- teenth century. they were so lune that people could not hrtng themselves to believe that they reelly were bones of e monster which once bed lived upon the earth. The spleton at one of theee‘ creatures not long ago unearthed In the ‘ Keroo etretn of South Africa measured nlne feet ln length. 'lthout the all. When ell the flesh us on. end the crca~ tare ullve. he mnet have been nearly twice es hll. The mentherlum was. perhaps, the most powerful of all these hmtee. Hts strength was superior to (hot of any enlml now sllve today, and his elee greater than that of any whnle or ele- phsnL [ The ant-enter of Austral: I: by non. unopened to be I Madam of "all m- moto manor. but u good. live anemo- dont could have whipved A date: ant- eater: of the [urgent day. Nltunlhtl m to named u may and: the to.“ remain. of the nomodont that they are at I has to law deï¬nitely whether he was a repule or a nunmnl. Pork-pa the most horrible In appur- anco o! a" (hoot pnhhwrla non-ten Iran the Inomodout. 11m nature in a bun- npmo. with large noun Illa I These nuimlln were practically land whales. but they hid the aduntngo over the whale of being can": I! home on land or in water. The enormous ulll with which their ton-ll remains show them to have been provided made them powerful "flame". and ii in be- lieved they oohld dive and dub thiough ":9 not with amt tummy. ‘ Tho lore limbs were so wall that they could be of little or no apparent use In the water or on land. but It In believed they were used to dig nests {or the eggs ot the monstet. One 0! those great nntmnls could come up to a tteo and eat leaves and small limbo thirty feet above the ground. In such work the fore feet would be metal In grasp- lnl tho limb!- A remarkable feature or this skeleton of the extinct monster was that It In- cluded mined tendons, by means of which the vertebrae were held together. The hind limbs were enormous and were covered with {ah-1y broad boom The brain of this creature was very small in proportion to its skull, but it had enormous eyes. and scientists who have examined the skeleton have con- cluded that lls sense of smell was very keen. The whole backbone was found complete. wlth the exception of a few little vertebrae from the end 01 the tall. There were about ninety vertebrae [no the backbone of this powerful creature. Professor'March, of Yale college. dis- covered the remains of one herbivorous dinosaur in the Laramie beds at Wyom- ing. The skeleton was thirty feel in length and stood nearly ï¬rteen feet hlgh. Mr. Watcrhouae Hawkins, formerly of this city. restored the skeleton of a badrosaurus found in this vicinity. and when the work was ï¬nished it mean- umd twenty-six test in length. Stand- ing on its hinder extremities and tail. the animal stood thirteen feet three inches high. Remains of the herblvoroua dlnosaur have been found ln various parts of North America. The Bad Lands 01 Dakota have been especially pmllnc In rewardlng the elforu of searchers for such tosalls. My walked In Central Park and swam acrosa the Hudson river. According to a prominent London physician the dangerous habit oi nook- lng green tea cigarettes in rapidly grow- ing and becoming more in ma with the women or Enginnd. many of whom it is now chimed amoke their ï¬ve o'clock m inns-d of drinking it. The doc! of the abuse at the cigarette. upon their new syn-m in aid to be or- moi: M It can more to send A ton of goods from London to the west of luhnd than to Japan. A ton of woolen goods can be forwarded from London to New York for O4; to Chicago, one thousand mil.- inlmd. for :1. and to Japan for 810. The some good- sent from Derry to London cost $14, and from Oweedore. seventy miles Inland. $24. Florida is noted for its rivers and lakes. The Si. John’s river I: nearly tour hundred miles long. The lndian river in a salt water Eagoon, 165 mile- lon; and from one to six miles wide. and in iamom (or in amaze: and pine- ‘ swim. ‘ National flowers have been adopted in various common as follows: Greece. violet: Osman. sugar maple; Egypt. io- ms; Engimd, rose: France. neur de in; Germany, corn flower; inland, sham- rock; Italy, my; Prussin. linden; Su- ony. misnonetie: Scotland. think; again, pomegranate; Wales, leek. The Coliseum of Rome was built to :ccommodato one hundred thouund spectators. It covers the and one-ball acres 0! land, and was 120 Ice! high. The Ennlmaux give the doctor M! he u soon as he comes. I! the patent recover. he keep: It: otherwise he re< (urns it to the lamlly. Coca-d miner: lt wu customary to place A brie! inuripllon reclllnx acme virtue of the departed. On one grave. alone were the words: "i never drank whisky} Another Inscription read: 'I always paid my debin.‘ These and our" commendable charming were outlined on the varlous atoms In the cemetery. on one of which. however. was the (allowing philosophic and unique reading: 'James O'Brien, I dun ‘ my damndect' " Dopoï¬'o Luau any. Chauncey Depew has picked up a new story which run- something like ‘hls: "In one of the mining town! of the west It Ill custom-r1 [or the ulnar: to have “about. (anemia. The more lowly the minor. the more unnmuouu mu tho (uncut. On the tombstones or an A curlous thing about all these unl- mala ls that In nplto or thelr vast the and great strength 1hey should have be- come extinct. The muller and weaker nulmula nurvlved. Perhapn the slant monsters kllled each other of! in some great battle of prehlstorlc tlmca. and thln theory in. mm lhnn once been ad- vanced to account. {or men- dlsappeuv f Remalns or some at the largest mus- !odons have been lound In this state. A slant taplr-llke nnlmnl llved In the eocene period and a great blrd of prey called the Herperornls mulls ll made known to us by many (cull remains found In cretaceous strata ln North Amen-lea. The mastodon exceeded any elephant In size. He had {our enormous task: in his head. two In the upper and two In the lower Jaw, and he roamed all over the North American continent. Ptofesaor Marsh has shown that there likewise existed an eightâ€"iced horse, which inhabited Cuba. and there Is reason to believe that a species of tiger was alive that had tuskn bending down- wgiid from its upper jaws. The macruuchenia roamed the woods of prehistoric days and is now extinct. He resembled a gigantic horse. Another prehistoric brute was the dinotherium. This creature resembled an elephant except that his tusks, In- stead of turning upward, bent down- ward. The purpose 0! this was to en- able him to tear up the ground and ï¬ght his enemies by a dew-award moveâ€" ment of his head. "It yields. the roots fly up. the earth in scattered wide upon the surrounding foliage, and the tree comes down with a thundering crash, cracking and anap~ ping the brittle bought: like glass. Then the coveted load is within reach and the megatherium reaps the reward of his more than heruclean labors." when rocked to and fro. right um km. in such an embrace. it can Ions mu:- ntnnd the efforts of Its assailant. CURIOUS FACTS. The toundltlon of 1 church at 81?: Como, Guatemala, bu been named men Inches by the mull at m lune. white gun trees; I 09 ran. I'm can. Bishop Butler. the author of the “Analogy." walking in his union one night with his cunninin, asked him whether "public bodies might not go mad as well 13 individuals," aiding that "nothing else could account for most at the transactions in history." Why no Frayed for (in-dun. Up in the northern section oi Wash- ington there in a main household, the most important member oi which in n bright, little, fair-helm 3-year-old, chap. whose nriieee but pointed utter- ances are the nutrients lor many lunch; and much neighborhood gossip. A than time since the grandmother of the fun- ily had a severe attack oi the 3â€,.me ‘reeuited in a complete pmntion ot the vocal organs, and in the hearing of the lime ieliow it run end that one had lost her voice. Tint night, no he was being prepared for bed, he took his place at his mother’e knee, and, alter dutifully repeating the regulation "Now i in: me down to sleep," con- cluded his devotions with: “And, 0 Lord. please help grandam to ï¬nd her voice again, 'canee it you don’t ehe’ll blame me for it.†his brother lo dinner, and laid, "One must draw the line mmewlem." But we all felt the joke the more because In our secret soul: we had the potentiality o! the same meannesl.â€"â€"("Who Are Our Brethren," by W. D. Howells, In the Century. Paton-my lo npemtnnl. on till (I- vlllty in. Tho man III on animal and natural: now ho is o dtim lad super- nnlnnl. no for n ho to civilised. What .0 may do I. to clviliu him no thor. ouxhly that thin lntm-l feeling will lmpart itnll to all humolty. M am out the most 0! men do not rich to share in the hlemlnp of Inperhatnral fraternity, became they «head It: then! some latent quality ot the Innoyanm they Ind in natunl frmrnlty. From the hrotherood of blood. whith they did not choooa or seek. they often break away u soon a they can, and treat their hrothem on o hnslnm looting. They huy 1nd sell with them; they lend :nd borrow. and tan and give usury. at it. for nltame'n sake. they do not. they secretly feel defrauded. They live apart from one another. and keep their tan-ll. in separate. If one brother prospers beyond the others. tho, are susplctonn at him. nml justly. for It the bottom at ht. heart he hm that they are no langér hla equals, and learn that they will some time put him to shame before his equals. We all thought it very droll when the new rlch mun wooed to as): Bu! In cIvllIuIIon the IndIvIdual. not (be funny. lm bran found to be the not!“ an“; he I. procloua, and It II he who I. tog-Med. He II awarded In and {or Mum-II. Ind not bet-nun he I- nd: to um. that. or the other one. It he does wrong. he ll punllhod. Ind noun or M- “II II'Q undo Io lfl‘fl' through the “I". :- they are In bubormu counmn. Ihno (ho Ignorant llndrrd of a while many tun their u" put out when he I. put (0 death. In ml- Iho "unborn Incl! more human thin I norlo'y, which mm regard- the (usually ‘u the an". no In at Io do!!!» I man I! M- Mather cm. and to def-mo all In: hrflhnn If tho mun Mm" no†wrong. aorIMy lml remind Ira- Irrnfly only In the natural an". and In“ yet to learn um any love bottom brothers I- nllmther numnuunl. and not In Inulnci. III. Ibo Ion of ol- Ipflnx. Without this we cannot have fra- ternity, and when we have thin we shall have a brotherhood liberated from those irh-ome burden: and pulling lien which society now inflicts upon natural brotherhood. Society docs thin inur- uutiy. 0! course. in a conception of the family which is a survival of the time. when one family was Idvme to un- othrr, when each was the (term or In unfriendly nun. tribe. clan. had each or in embattled members might not no unjustly be mndo to IDIVCI' (or III the others. O the average civ- ilized man the no- tion 0 t h u m a n brotherhood is not only dismaylng: it is repulsive. as the physical contact at s stranger would be. We are all. by our ditterence of traditions and non- dltions. more or less allens to one another~"inilnltely repel. lent particles." like the sentences of Emerson. When we meet an unknown fellow-man our instinct, it not to “heave halt a brick" at him. is to have nothing to do with him because we do not know him. But it we meet an unknown fellowâ€"man in good society. we behave decently to him. because the Ideal o! society is equality among guests and between hosts and guests. We have to suppose he is something like ourselves or he Would not be in good society; and so we consent to endure him. and when We have been civil to ; him we ï¬nd that we like him a little: we like him greatly it it appears that he is of like aspirations and endeavors with ourselves. ln any case we make a show at liking him, {or any show oi‘ dlsliklng him would he vulgar. But the only terms of great liking are parity of as‘ pirstion and eneadvor. h Olrllluflo- flm lulllvlnlul. Not "I! ï¬nally. [- une Unit-Fraternity o! Inn 10 Supra-turd. 3.,- W- I). Rowena. " .21: UO<IN>‘ â€Sh. Oh. M>â€"w.â€"DLH¢ (â€0â€" fl!!! MAN'S BRMHERHOODJ