m Cynncsrisc inns. late ttlt'v rlnr;'30u to get Bid off sparrows-"p. . IIIan 1 Cl! - buff-m a:.. ï¬t. , '7 \ :ittt built-yrs tittf ss'rcf Gr4-k‘ -.-'~fl Li!" lit 1..‘ BLU verity, ..-.i r:-;ti' ‘ _ u}: beau-e: 232*; :_â€" a cum .3. 'i'n': 4" L (2 :1A' at: . .i :ii.xtn. 1., n. from “.0 '0 fr Lr‘: .wi r IL; . :x.‘ .ir‘mni Toledo than: liar i.‘ I": i3. 5) tutti in on the Adszc. 'u. .Ltrn .l:':::.a_, ..: by ml at tis-l ‘ . l! vrcs I.3!, after trn years [I _ ,3, [IPCCEUI a. porcdain' . t; the [aim-u: old Sevres. It, will Lil; tall kilns oi glazes, srd is Elucrptvl Mr Jsmcs Fix was the junior partner iblo 5.1 .im hulls/:59; kinds £I div: .ri ion. i in the film of Piumley A; lit-x, the prin- , v ,h u, m P. ,, ; , H ,cipsl soiizicors in {fleflJmel'i'lat dead-alive . ._ Z ,' '" .’ L‘ ’n“ m“? .‘ V.a“,y‘e‘l“‘, ‘lclu Cathedral town of Slumbomugh. Be in J ":‘I‘ "1'11 "3‘ 3 "3:1 "2‘3'?“'631‘j~,"‘ W‘Ia Was a smart, weil-zet-up young mm of Ilehi in .1 -.u ‘LU no with between 8.00,“: .“m U: mch and 14mm]. "uh cuemuy “H 6’" (JUL Tim†3;?" 2‘1†f: "fled trimmed bl:.ck wiskets. ssilken manner, ct..er In Lite some Olly WAII‘: ionunes run 3 “m an uhumhei 11‘â€, of more or rr' 3 “'1 v H ‘ "if ,. -; .-. , l . . .. up ""0 "Jimm‘rj‘ 'hl’u'jan‘a" . Hess enter-mining small talk. Hence '81 ' .3 i2 mic-aces durLY-I; ll‘l‘ i; came to pass this: he was an ex- bx.ia::.l in". by (it urge ILUWIA, h 131%! ' Ceedlugly pr,pu}at man among the vi llm laâ€™ï¬ J. U . VII-U WM like“ In") "-0 ‘ ladies oi S utnbitough,botholdnndycu a, 1'â€) ‘l 5‘ '7‘“ "iv" ill-3 dram 0‘ hi5 “559‘ an), haul his Vler min in the Cir-c inni-f tire. lie at routs Luqu SLR-nth n, as he ls, anti-into" v, ho Wuuld have had, mull dim- lit'v'efliï¬'ili' CI“ in “1‘1 111‘;de E'ï¬b- lculty in iddccing any bashful dsinael or near'fï¬sk’y Widow to share his lot. But the handsome solicitor was ambitious ; his snare in the bUslnz‘BB did not at present bring him more than a moderate income, and he had ling ago determined that when he married he must consider not only beauty, but more sol-l advantages. , . . . , Ilelrosses however, were not lcntlfnl fn'mmflfi': m iii-13:33]“? hf“ rialâ€:- . in Slumborodg'n, autismalthoughIAIr For'sl a "éiryllgl‘mtafflmigrxjiiljI hitcnllutis frequently flattered a. virgin , ' ; . V ‘ . ' ' botom, he was cariui not to commit him- As Ell-J“ as the birding Dim his education 31 H Um my. and not we“ them“, gossips bi 51â€" cud by hummg mm “in†wayâ€?! u: CUUIfI fairly say of hint that he had com- b‘m far: or lolurdtif" i.‘ 1i‘¥.IErL Sigh“ pl'meiï¬td a rcpiimtion or knowingly raisod ‘ ‘ ' yauiiglndy who hen made a deep impres- U~ll‘-" Wm†sion upon the sc-ilcitor's heart, but she was A: the Academy of Medicine in Ireland 3h†daughter of a county magnate with “ “30‘0"†ll “1†nullâ€! ism“ “l allun' whnn put r Mr. I“. x was not even on vis- ‘W‘ 1“ ’«530 z "Il'r'lslccl “MW-"‘5 “h†“‘5 ILlllL; urnâ€, II :h‘bd ntinet he: the Anna. lounil him Lintvl’hlllg to have eaten off exit l “1 uwtlhu1 3}“, ma danced twice wkh mm“ ‘1’ ll†“‘11- I" W" “WW "1331" him, for Iilr. Fox was an excellent waltz bl“? ‘ “1 ‘5‘»4lll‘ikldy “lkl’i-Wd “f “‘3'- 1’l" it ; bu‘. her mother liizd dontblees warned 1*“ 1hisâ€: “N in“; Wmm‘mâ€"‘id 0“ he? “‘W' her against him, for will! they next met, PAW-’- '1 l†Mimi†“'33 GONE!“ "llâ€"‘1†comet-x mess afterwards, Miss Lillvmr- itnrshn would eat herself up." The mum tun Embed the unfunmmte man wimout o" the trouble was thought to be hystui. 3., mm“ a, u bi-“r. Miss quugrfon, how. of i\ kind sixnilnr to flint which causes Wo- “a. MS 121,21), and rich, and Mr. Fox ‘1‘“ l 1" l“~" “4"†“*0â€- was no: it man to be easily discouraged. A gunuimm in Humane-ï¬n, 1),, , “~11†lie knew :li Us if lie-could afford to cut the was gantly unioy ml by u colony of rpiir- l fill-’0 ‘lll-“EB'Q'U’ 1“ t" mfd‘Jd Prolll'li‘liml rows lit fir-.Li tnkui up their \‘Cu-I'uld in 11“ V/“ulu ‘i'vl-Vt‘ I?“ 85 gm“ 3 thmm ,W‘th ’ r as anybody else ; so he waited patient- u mass of ivy covering one ride of hislllt'_ ' " h um, g i; liil (.f iIILlu by a new] wipe. l ly in the hopes of one day oiscowrlng the to fortune and success. an n',. Line day he purchase; halfa pound YUM WIN-Ill Mills of rid p: pptr, and, going up the third The firm of I’luinley & Fox was alrighly story, Lp- nod tho Windows and sifted the to [xlc‘ilJrl and old-niehioucd cmcurn, pnppir own through till: I‘.". 'Ihn alarm which avoided litigation, and lo p5 almch oi the rpmnN-d was evinced by the haste cniirtly 0 family business. Plumley was, “Lil which they luit their hicing places. a IIIII'J‘ ghifll lawyer, but Fox’s legal Eniy ‘oird tuck its oc-parture,rnd his linimlulgc was of the most limited char- p.i,-in:to. are now" clear of them. heucr, and he was much too lazy to takel ‘ the trouble to iucr. am it. SJ it came to Allii'lli’ th umcrous :rcsents rccuvcd . . " e n l he understood bcztvccn turn) that Whllu by {mi hulpvrur “intent on the occasion ’ Rummy did the I mm wmk’ FUX hp: or l.ls IAUL oi: tl tl -y Was a nllelU farthiiig: . . _ _ . . -' .. I - v. I o b “in†i cf the yin: li‘Ji, that Lciig ilie your Lh“ ‘ 1'“le 3")“‘1 hum l 5'“ o “1 - . l . them il in )..B of nothln and sinus- iylncn ho w..c born. 'lhin curious pI‘LBUIlL lâ€! mull ‘li'h his j‘meg’and “mm linl’lfttlcllflclllhyitgftnllhlllll'lllglldIliOIthO 1h†budnc‘a was dchuicuuy tumui inliih'b'nfl round llrunsmck. who also wrote “ 1,1 1 V K, )’ Nun". 1i,“ r ,eflmr .. and .\ loner ci-iigratiiliting the Enpcror, in the i, 8""l'd‘ if“: F f‘ :v‘cn‘ fnd‘eed’ 1’ ' nus; Lingimbc he Could cuiiiniaiiu, on buy. Jiusuwtim; I“; “nix;3 thhgkwpiug the . 00nd mi" r. “Mira a“ Liam 81- ugo' ah? “the: nocticn to vetl‘cr that Mr Fox made the i...'y,ZULISIHLLDPULIBLIlllbllifltflfflJllBlDCkY . ,i t 5: “fa rminr'l‘h old Widow . . ., ..1 . .1, (Hum, m†,m ucqiii ii ancs ( cc . c ,uu.h tittiiu ennui†. gin rt N J I d t u .1 p . r the “M m m .uawwm ,h lady, named -lrs. .iuison, an so we .10 4IIIIKIU>IH ~-} d ab 1 1 lb. V ] hrb‘f ‘ln Pl‘n- ‘- 'c" tli-'-' in I l mi f‘ 2' his )resent and m “l' a) 13 C“! u a" " Um’ o g L l “Aâ€, i . f)“ ., .J, ,v‘ 1,1 d , mun. ' Icy d: Fox becauicMrsJohnson'sfumily so- â€. “l: WWW,“ {D ,u‘; L 3‘ it, :83? ‘y' licitois, hind agents, and cmï¬dential ad- min put“ “mum†L w (“w ( 0' visors. The film made it pretty good thing out of His. Johnson. In accordance with the ll‘flill arrangement. l‘lumley transect- ed the businrse, and Fox bcczuuo a con- stant visizor u: her house, and worked his The M ,r.: Ventoux Observatory, Avignon. in France, is in. course i f cun- s‘rui'unt , and in a fcvr weeks will be in working order. Iis height is nearly 03%.!) lust ti) H: the sea level, and the ad- d tinnel ooscrv'atliry, likewise in progress†is 5 150 foot in height. (in the eut‘jtc; of color-blindness, a. corrupt llllL'liL writes to the I'm! .llit'l (Lin-ii»; "A Vi i‘y largo prt-pzvrtion oi the cum if sUAwllul odor-blindness IJ, I All) on .viiwed, duo to ignorance, and, in usn- l “a, into h. 1- good green: by his wonderful IltllI-hhll‘ll ill lliis Opililou, llltl‘n i3 ‘tlla un- power, of gmuzmg cahveggatiign, There dunlii' ll {43: Hit-L ll id tardy IOUIW “1 tx' ' was yet i\ niiotner accomplishment which ilziiiinLiun or loinan thdifflltiï¬. Iicolor- “and our aolic‘izor in very good stead, bllmlllt‘l‘l l†“l1 0‘53"“: (30105 0f m8 Vl-‘l' l and this was an accurate knowledge of “H “PP-Hill“. lurClJ‘ l5 want to CXIBl’lH‘ohciniszt-y and medicine, winch he had usiiiu..ricrn ubaut [no same ratio in the g picked ul; as any in the shop of his uncle, rush: and fcfulllu. I don't for inomcnt' um chemist, '1‘mimrriblu smells young duty the (X'Siullc‘i (.fgciiuino CUIUX'bliIlklv l 1-3.), hr†creator; in In: experiments and Hum ; but l do contqu that tho genuinol m.) uny- 3531.351†hyi made on his hunch;I 0»le 13 “NW Unil- Mi‘ Buggcailvu 15. deioriiunnd him to lursziko medicine furl, the: instruction in colors and their names the law, but. he never entirely forgot his' Will“ ‘0 I'm“ 3 Quillâ€: item in '11†cm" early experionu s. lleciuldlnlk fluently l I k\ll. lint.“ lure but. .11; is: W“... a..- ...â€"..... .\ it {count lc Professor. ;\ currv :p mien: i’fll‘c! : I‘Icci-iitrfc 3:1“ (lg-poi. u. 1,i‘.l\:..\.'.\l A'Ll.€!l'ï¬ nm in- d ti~ul in 13:, L'iiiurzi‘y of Edinburgh; n-i- 1: vi: 3' be w till “i iie to saw In in, n!,l.\'; u llll tl'JIIl‘lJIU uruuin whithl hut-j 'r n: my i.\:lu-r as having been no“ ILL‘IMI by :ho pitiftsmr of IJ'J; i~i his day, wide I! in was thei fun in I‘mf. I llhiii‘isuu, I'\ lorg an ornament of the E ‘inbLirrh stho lif medicine. II.‘.\'il g dL‘lvcï¬ldJ. student Ill king in the claim. he urtirrnl flux to stand up, and spilt-.- as follows: “5t until tg. I‘m aniiiii g. and, 1 .‘LHQ loll. no liflil ,5: of tho nick; Ii l'l sucli than no hurtul to YUUJCIH‘HH luntfo‘. til the ri‘pub.i:, and ‘III bring clown :‘m gray hail of )‘c or pucuu uithg wrmw to tLugravs. Hun! ty the way, that's a wry ll'cl'y sentence; turn it in- tuLuiii. Izr.‘ Ju-ï¬'girg irvm my famu,’ who is! j :5! left ‘ \le l’illsus" and the high “hail, Prof. Christi-on turned our u wilt-Li: :tho‘a'u. l 6‘ uh: If many stu- dcn‘s if the “man: day cmld give u; impromptu rendering of Inch I sentence, or if may mole-non e. uld Hf ml to wit thrir classics out: such oswrdy vtrusc- ulsr. m.â€"â€"o.oâ€"-~< “will!†Ul ull CIL‘ILCHIM‘V =ClIUI'Il5-H about cvi-ry known drug and disease, and The I’fcItC we of Mirscillea his issued about a great many much had not been visllullull, profusely illustrated wuii tiiups‘ sympto s at least as accurately as Mac- sud pun) l‘noieiislng phy siciniis,tnkiug- Il out, i. o Scotch doctor, and Would even («IULL‘I'ALU tno llitl‘L‘LlUCLIUII and prigrtcs of wart elect angrily threatened to kick him Ilut he retained a very pro- with: ruin-Elli; ii, and the n suns obtained, f minent p‘nce iii tlieold lntly'a “Lotions, iiifi.c‘..i>:i is clear ly trswd t. n'I‘i'ulon. Thu and it brgsn {ll-bu whispered about that he qurtcnis owner in! death: was 1,2oo l . .l 4:), 350 in August, 114 in Stptonnur, 1 her Very c iiiiiidernble properly. Hm . The iiiiposll of Mrs Johnson's money, In lrlll: zreru “1‘3th 101 ; Ill ltlin, Lenin; in 15-15). l “U '- lli 15-â€. 3M3"? 1-‘i 15W. ' speculation of unfailing interest to the 2' 1'53: 1“ “57.1.5313: “1 155“: ~ townof ï¬laiiiioui'ough, and filled many a 1‘. rhould bu 0011.111, _ mind lel the puluiatiiu has liicrodscd. 3m, 31,-, "him, n 1,3,1 pun,†mimic Dickens hm bun ouch criticised for; in the unrid, hlzss Lizzm Roberts, tn.) fl‘iiill'hllk‘uU‘ u in. um -t , lru; bi: W. Hulli loll). l‘ow: Vir, it We iigrri‘d, had not the. |,,,.i)- [minted ton bllrllllrhi g ism buxom" bliflll?tf‘LChfll.Cc of I) dug mentioned in her li ion 1., lullu‘. A Lug », liii'hlul man, i Huu Wis l f: “Clix-1‘ [lll'l‘llis' death to make itâ€. mm. nil in; in. l“ E. lllit‘lllv of bri'atli- 1 her on; “guy in (In! Word, inheriting no- Iiyiunn mud n? Uii‘» 's l mpiful At lilo like, f‘Nlrs Juliusnll, who iin not setnl p r u rt cut of HM ivil\\“|1 3 day the-r“ ‘ the mild nines it quittcu i:s baby clothes b 2y bl..>b;nl\g‘iiilivlll x-lv"lll.l!.‘.I Kl lxgiu _-!«~ni‘ p:- p-v fluid. in times lo:-g cone by, '\ w‘iiin 1dr. Ii-vadlfl, L when falht'l', then mini 5 l \\ ii ziiiii. oral - ilglnt‘xilll‘n'CIIC-[r‘ ‘ _ pin 3. the gun which C-C1})CU. buiiiui mill , 1"1 M- ‘Hl us Hall 1‘ N the Ilkllau of Mrs. tin iiif‘izriry flame -f casiicrciti d hydro- J -".n a; » piiviz's. hl-o Iltll'g the elder the mum, , Ill rsclt. end lull f;li it keenly as n [ur- . . . . . ,s-'«ii.l ‘ll u.t “hall Ilt'.‘ sistcr cared ' to lift [Living mode a thumb more bril‘lsintI iiiazcli 'izi’rsc. f, n‘n- llL’VLYCl-UILI forgive this the Erotica, which not unnszurally pned iruizi tin-flier Cilll l. ttuour not, one thing was ccrLain; poor. Llizt‘o Roberts find no? the ghost of a let aunt’s money bx ; her claims were clearlv quits on: of the ncstlnn. Tncro Mm.) hutcn'slaiy companion, and Mr.‘ J wins I". x. n voiuiiiiiious riport on last year's choleral uncovered ; 110 L118“ “Cd Mls- Jilllninn 3 up diluent (lupsrzmnnzs of the subject, l have prescribed for her Iilld not the still- tho i-p duinic, the uirnsurcs aiopxd for; if he ciu L0. “' 'nl had an excellent chance of succeeding to mm ~33 Uctultcr, the total being 1"†was it matter which had. long furnishtd " 5713, . not in 1534. CUJ- ynuiiiiv: ~ .21.. iii c. rivers-silon at afternoon 1-}; u}. M,“ hgkcrlfli‘c; d 11,,» 1., 9 (if (T..ii.{':itcr of her into sister. This young . . , . the conniiztic of ilm Ilium t f Lords on aunt's :.i l, A handy 1113, Well-bred girl, i i; 'il‘il or s‘ «iv-wit. i. of the vviiniisâ€liiig but the brittle of ifo null the dis- w..s i..i sign in: dici.ii.po3i;.im. and {bul’fhlt str..ii,;- niitip.tliy we traceable, us "\\ i4 l lil‘."".ll\ es “fr. Ill-41~'lll llls“ skin, I ‘ _ V . i r, ii out: i ‘r his Illlilily Dulllly, had been .\~. nun, ad 4 in z. ‘1; of these small iiiughicr, 011d hiking all his nt'.ctiti0tis for irnstch him away†; l‘nlllI even later on, af- iztrly iiifx‘at. Death even had no: buried How for this toying may have been chance of cvi‘r sector a single penny fmui remained, than, only Miss Nelly Brown, .‘II. .I imes For know from his pittiizr. tbs: Mr: Johnson was no: going to civ'da‘ tor fortune. but would leave the while of cloud lit-r to da-szroy the put ofllr. For, and a constant supply Srii)‘, again reinstated this lady In fore, had good casino for anxiety is w Qlukupeue runâ€: I broker at all. but that nould be the exact state of adults were thelettcr,s‘.l inalittle pickets, noon i pill-bearers tor harry do you know of my man Ihuhll femini- when the old lady was family all“ “9°†.1 so many such qmuuou l t to join the majority. “intuit:Willi Juthna's gmd grows. Mr. Fox, . FENELON FALLS, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY :23, himself, “who is ready upon a whim ; a remedy must be found. The safest thing would of course be to make love to Miss Nelly; she ls rather ‘thirtyish,’ and altogether not. very at- tractive ; still, if she were to get all the money, she Would be anything but unde- sirable. SJ Mr. James Fox set to work at once to make hims.~lf agreeable to Miss Brown, I yet without going toofar; fir he had by no means forgotten Mus qunerton, but he felt it was better to haVo two strings to his bow, and therefore he determined to do his best to keep Miss Kelly in good humor. This lady, however, was not so easilysatisfied as the solicitor expected, for now he had once begun to pay her attentions, she wanted a de- cided cfl':r of marriage, and not be- ing able to get it, she took re- fuge in a stratsgem. This consisted of suldenly making the disc way that Mrs. Johnson's health was In a'tleuLe want of some German watersâ€"in fact, she decided that it was quite dangerous for her to spend the spring in England, with all the changes of heat and cold. The old lady was therefore soon persuaded to yield to such tender solicitude, and away the couple went, leaving Mr. James Fox in a rather awkward dilemma. What was he to do? If no wrote cool letters to Miss Nelly, she would be ofl'etded, and all his chances would be lost in the event of her inherit- ing Mrs. Johnson’s property; on the other hand, if he played the part of a lover, he committed hinisel f, and gave her the materials for e breach-ofâ€"pvomise case should the good lady die .when his name only figured in the will, and should he then turn his attention to Miss Laquerton. What, then, could he do? The Worthy Fox was baillsd for the moment, but after deep deliberation he hit upon a great idea which his chemical studies suggested to him. Ciiucklirig to himself, he went to a chomlst’s shop, pur~ chased several drugs, and mixed and re- mixed until a magnificent black ink wss produced, which bad the grind advantage that in about ten days after being commit- cd to paper it would fade away, without leaving the slightest trace. Emboldened by the happy resultof his experiments he became at once the most tender and Zealous correspondent any woman could wish for. His letters, in fact, overflowed with promises of everlasting devotion. Miss Nelly beamed with joy ; for she was now convinced how true and unselï¬sh was the attachment of her admirer. Under such circumstances it was not surprising that the German waters speed- ldly did Mrs. Johnson so much good that; her careful nurse considered that tho the couple returned to England much earlier than had been expected. \Vhethcr, however, the waters had real- thing else had upser lmr, was never quite clear, but soon after their return to Eng- Big?! PUPUla-llon- lland her health and strength began scri- | ously that Miss Nelly bud induced her to take , to fail. She complained bitterly on now cesenry and useless journey, and that ever since she had neglected her al- together. The end of it was that one day in the height of her anger, she burnt the then existing will, and made Mr. James Fox sole heir to every thing she possrzsst'ti. This decision socmcd to have exhauzted her remaining energy, for she died not many deys after. Mr. Fox, who had been apprised of the atom of affairs by his pit-trier and friend, almott lost his senses with joy ; still his excitcient did not prevent him investing some money in hctbnnds imd crepe, and looking as mournful b3 if the sorrows of the nhole world rested upon his shoul- ders. Miss Nelly, too, almost melted away in tc-nrs, and could only be comfort- ed by "her Junie,†as slio now milled Mr. Fox But the latter seemed to have turned quite dull with grief. He did not appcur to understand her at all, and day by day as she became more demonstiative he grew less ail'rctu n rte. The afternoon before the funeral Miss Kelly was LX-I :remely broken hearted, and amid her sobs remarked how comfortable and happy she had always been with her late dear friend. To her astonishment Mr. Fox attempth to comfort her by saying with cool civility, " I hope you may svu-n meet nguiu with s: ch 9. hit} py home as you have had here till now.†On hearing this Miss Kelly's tcars sud~ denly dried up, and wiih ryos diluted with astuuahinent and anger, she cried : “ It 15 you whom I cxpec: to mike me this happy home, 2" Mr. Fox, hmvcvsr, simply shrugng his shoulders, sung: " I do n-“t deny that I may haw mm: bad but of late I Love grown wiser. Every- thing alters in this World ; why thou slioiill mzr opiiimxs nut do the some? T521: is who: \v-s c.i,l pr. gross.†Up in this he bowed until it Miss Nelly c'ying m.df1in‘ing in nu arm-chair. Ht‘ did nu: hear anything; of her till a few days littir. when :i un’ienmii called upn hini Brï¬ll g f‘r.‘ 1.0 Lad Lees in- triisfud wit": M's: Nelly Brown's slfiirs, and surge.- 'in: that paint†Mr. Fl x, tc’urc inazturuwciit fgtti‘i-Jr. Would prcfu m‘ki' '2, some p:l'.'ate arrangement about his breach of promise of nnrriago with his oicn‘. “ And what» Bliss. llmwn ix 2. p; be: crying 5‘) 3‘ (A Mr. Fox. " ()3,‘ :izisivqrcd :iie young: man. “I luv; 592'!) a b it full of lent. rs .r. m yfu " “ llsvo yin res". them?" c 'Liilnlhld Mr. F. 1 szrrsstic.‘.‘3y. “ 5.): ye’," replied the other ; “ but I have 303:1] ilm hex " -' \“uil, you lint. bctfcr co and read them his: bill it you take any fu'tlic- steps in? If you can ï¬nd ss'ngle line from me r v )I so proof of that promise has ask- ing awarded by a court of law." future hangs such ideas ;. Trout. laiu qui'c wiliing lo lat who hail cautioned liimin a friendly m". z ‘ pr have ample damage: with: u: theirchy “With such an old woman,†he raid to 1 address ; and, oh, heavens i when she un. to make a new'didthe will any day a:d to burn it the next, there i . is no dependence. one's packet they contained nothing: ihu‘ptperâ€"all white paper, without a sin- gle word on It. The wily lawyer had evi- dently deceived her by some demoniacal trick. The shock was so great to the poor love- sick lady that shezhad scarcely the courage to show herself when the will was to be read ; but she rallied at last, hoping [against hcps that it might still be in her fivor, when she could treat with scorn and contempt her fnithleu lover and his paltry damages. Mr. Fox, although he considered him-l self already master of the house and every- thing in it, felt considerably excited on the morning of the day appointed for the reading of the will, and when Mr. Plum- ley, as chief executor, sat down and slow- ly got his spectaclesout, his junior pirtner came over so faint and his heart fluttered | t.) such an extent that he fancied all his hopes and beautiful castles in the air were crumbling away as In a dream. INhy did not his old friend at once read the docu- ment? Whv did he make the suspense so unbearably long? Why did he continue to stare first at the paper In his hand then at those around him, and then once more at the paper, without uttering a single word? and then at last, when he l did opeak, why did he stammer, “ Iâ€"l do I not know ; I see nothingâ€"in fact, it is the it :me paper, butâ€"â€"â€â€™l " Could it be? Yes, sure enough, there was th a paper on which the will had been made out, but there was nothing upon it now ; it was merely ablank, a white sheet 1 “Good heavens! \Vith what ink did you write out that will? burst out at last Mr. Fox. “ With what ink 7" repeated the old gen telman lndgnsntly, “ with your ink. As I found the lnkstsnd up stairs dry, and the old lady was In such a. deadly hur- ry, I rushed down_niyself to get some. and seeing your bag in the hall, I took from l it the little inkstand which you always l carrv about. Mr. Fox turned deadly pale, and with- out saying another word vanished, like his ink, before anybody had found time to ask for an explanation. When the rest of the company had composed them- lselves agein, Mr. Plumley said: “I knew that the testatrlx has destroy- all former wills, so that their is none at lall in existence, and, bylaw, therefore,the lproperty will go to the next of kin. I i know, also, that Mrs. Johnson hadno lrclstives whatever except Miss Lizzie l Roberts. , She is conscquently sole heir- less." Statistics Concerning Women. Almost all the Southern States have a [nearly equal Lumber of each sex. In cure could be shortened, and accordingly : Massachmetts the females between twm l iy and fifty years cf age exceed the males of the same age by about 44,000. In seventy-eight cities the excess of fema‘es 'ly disagreed With the old Lady, 01- name. is 148,000. Tliatilliteracy prevails more ï¬nllJIlg wr men is due probably to the for- Women contribute less to pauperism, the prr plrtion being 31,0t0 to 30.000. I‘he ratio of prison Inmates stands 5,008 women to 54 190 males Women are in cx:ess among the insane, men in excess among the idlotic, blind and deaf motes. The proportion of wo- men who engage 'in occupations outside i of the household is smaller in the United. States than in foreign countries, but in no country is the prOpOi-tionnt-x number en- lgaged in superior industrial occupations equal to that in this country. ()f the 2,647,000 women in occupations 595,000 are engaged in agricultureâ€"must of them lcnlorcd women in the Southern States ; 5 632,000 are in nlanufuowries, of whom about one-half are in New Yozk, Manse ochusctts and Pennsylvania ; 282,000 are milliiicrs &:., 52,0(0are tailors. forty-four occupations recorded as “per- sonal servic:,†forty find women in them. lThe 526 female surgeons of 1870 hiâ€"ve liucro.ised to 2,473 ; the 7 lawyers to 75; the 05 clergymtn to 165. The numbxr iof laundrics has increased from 6l,000 in fare kept by women. This large increase ' shOws a great lightening of the housewtfe's * labor. .â€",_.___ 0 Getting up his Appetite. “ Out in Portland, Oregon, where dis- it8XlCt‘fl are so deceitful, a very i'fllllllï¬lng incident occurred last summer among a party of friends with whom I was travel- ,iing. It happened that one of our num- 1 Der was troubled somewhat by Insomnia, : so much so that he arose one bright morn- ling Justus the day waslbegluning to dawn, 'dresscd, went to the ofï¬ce and inquired of the clerk at what limo the matutinal repeat brgan. Being told that 7 o’clock was the earliest hour, he walked to the l piizzu, looked around for a few moments, ire-urned and inquired who: mountain i that was in the distance. Upon bolng told that it was Mt. Hood, he said u) the clerk : If any of our party inquiresfm- me, ray that 1 am going to fake a run over thorn to get up an cppetizor; will be back in time for breakfast 1’ Now Mt. flood is some twvnty or thirty miles from r Portland, but has the appearance of being not over two or three. As the hour for breakfast approached, our party began counting up Its numbers, but Mr. Aâ€" was nowhere to be found. l “ Inquiry was at once institutedas to 1 what might have becmne of him, when i‘. was ascertained from the clerk that he ,htd gone to Mt. Hood fora morning walk, zone, with a merry twinkle in his eye, fhe added, ‘ha might not be back in time ifâ€: the first breakfast ;' consequently we {lock our breakfast minus the absent Mr. '1 Aâ€", and immediately after took carriages ill: a drive to M2. Hood, if possible to lovortske the prodigal. Fluslly, after ‘ridlng an hour or two, we came to a little brook, and there, sure enough, was Mr I A â€" divesting izimselfof all his clothing. When asked what he was about to do he i replica that he was ‘ goingto swim ncrou’ There was winsthirgso diabolical about l ‘ But why don't you step over 3' said some it in her "truer friend,†though Ibo hid Mr. Ft-x that theynnng defender of lnno- one. (videnlly not yet mule her mind up u :0 cence hand it but ti rttire fir the pro. ‘ country of magnificent dunno“. 110' ‘10 chm danced that title. More than once gent, leaving his opp-.ncut to rub'n“. hands , I know but it is two miles across I' " h-KI 31:.I‘lumley been suddenly minnow triumphantly and ruild astlcs in the air} ed to draw up a new still ; I0 Ill h!» In about the country out Ind the horses sndl annoyance u a cold cup of tea ulng curing he was g ‘1! g to buy in order ml the one in Mus dizz'o Min Liquertun, whom he felt jus-l Sally's favor. Thi-n two days' neglect 011 mm! in lc'tiualiy ihirklrig “#11! now. _ Mus Sclly had meanwhile been inform- of hot tea a: the hands of Miss ’ ad of the conversation at Mr. FL 1 ( :hee,l Mr!- and, with an indignmt \ xziarmdon about i said the gardener to the cook. “Yin; and -" such incredible unzmz‘ns, ' the tent to in illigsn: stcylc, toe. She's goin' for in There. acre enough, i have a chess thny ysrruds long an! four . fetch her letter-box. ‘\\'ell,‘rcplied in. Aâ€", ‘ln mi. .- “ What's the matter with the hoby‘f' ukcds lady of s little girl. who“ boby brother she had understood to be ailing. i“Oh. nothln' much," was the answer. i†He's only hatching teeth." “Soths minis is lobe married. ch 1* it." l ly tied up with blue and pnk ribbons} Hanging on the rugged edge is now run lbs: strange to my, also could not we on dared tottering on the slippery brink. Of thel g 1870 to 122,000, and of the hitter 108,000 I RBTOLTING MURDERS. Educated 1 flme I". l Strange impulses to murder, or curious deliberation, have marked three of the most extraordinsry ciimes ever known in the United States. apparently demon- strating that none of us, occupying the l most intimate relationship, friendships, E or ties of betrothsl, are safe from the ~rnurderous hands of those we deem our best beloved. In one of the cases we find a youth so well endowed mentally that he was the valedictorisn of his class at Yale i College ; so well organized physically that Ihe was remarkable as an athlete, and so ,pcpulsr with his fellows that they style him “a hail fello well met!†Added to these traits are tsszimonisls of his indus- try, his ambition as a lawyer, and ex- emplary conduct in general, and partic- ularly in the family ‘circlc. And yet this young man, a member of a cultured fami- ly, deliberately invites his own mother and his lovely in d interesting sister into a grove adj ï¬ning the village where they reside, and brutally kills them, ending by his own suicide with the same pistol 1 Nothing but an inexplicable note, declar- ing his plll'p’ 3°, and indicating his un- certainty in n hereafter, explains any pos- sible motive to the crime. Quito as startling is the case of Proller, upposed t'i have been chloroformed to death in a hotel-room in St. Louis, then This redoubtablo chieftsln has probably .._ u -m...‘ Pleat-Pot. been a greater source of trouble to the Indian department than any other Indian in the North-West, and although he has not yet got into any trouble the fear that he will soon be " up" has (rented a pmlc more then once. His reservation, to which in 1882 he withdrew his people be- csuse if he had not they would have starved to death, Is in the vicinity of In- dian Head, and is of his own choosing. llisbsnd numbered, in 1882, 562 souls, but they have suffered much since they came under the treaty, forty-ï¬ve dying in ten months in 1883, no births occurring during that time. and the rations list for 1834 was for 370 persons. They have made but llttle progress in agricultural pursuits, as there are only about twenty- two acres of land broken, and their entire crop for the last harvest was 250 bushels of potatoes. The trouble with Pin-a Pot runs over a considerable number of years. He and his tribe followed the buffalo south, and for some yon-ii he and his people losfcd around Fort Walsh, utterly and entirely refusing to return and live upon the reservation «listed to him. In 1882 he was Induced to come back and settle on a reservation of his own choosing, but he with a large portion of his band almost at 01200 returned to Fort Walsh. He could obtain nothing to eat there, however, and during the month of August, defpoile‘io‘his money and jewels! and with 436 followers, he wont to Fort afterwards packed away in a zinc trunk ; » Qu’Appelle and demanded food. Tho and .3“ this! 1“ “mummies†strongly 3" lchiefs of the district, with (iCO followsrs, to “now, done by h" mums“ “wudilassemhled to meet him, and for a time beneficiary and fellow-traveler, and an I educated physicieuol the same nationality. l The third tragedy, showing in the princi- I pals the same good-breeding, education and family connections conspicuous in the others alluded ti, exhibits a handsome things lookrd serious, but the Indian agent was firm and would neither food not pay a cent of subsidy to the Indians of Pie-a-Pot's band further than a supply of six days to enable them to rest. I’ie-a Pot, at last, in the face of threats and young Virgin!“ girl! a distal†“kilo†Ofiprivations started for Indian Head dal- ï¬Prezidet llIadlscn, alleged to hava‘biiu‘licd lhl‘OB'dllyB irresolutcly on the, road "t hmmytd under Promme 0‘ ma‘m‘g“ 5 ï¬nally reached his reservation, submitted by-her own cousin, 8. ielaiivo of President Tyler ani is member of the Il.chmond Bar, and then to have been decayed by the some men to the old reservoir of the city in the night-time and thrown into ihe basin, where she was discovered dead by the authorititfl. It will be remarked that in 1' one of l these cases of murderous violence werethe I immoderate expressions of disgust. known or alleged perpetrators vulgar to the Governmz-nt, and was given the food he riquircd to feed the women and children. It was the some chief with whom Mr Dswdney. the Lieutenant-Gov- ernor of the North-Wort, got into serious difï¬culty regnrdlng a spring cart, which he promised Pie n Pot, and then did not give to him, provoking the Indian to most .4». ._ . ._-... ._- .-....... ..___..-__.__ criminals, or of the ignorant walks of so- Nay,†Service in Shallowsncams. ciety: that there was every reascn, as there was every indication, that the vic- fims felt the profoundzstsensu of security in their presence, and that the evontsl themselves were as startling as horrible. And yot,suggestive ins xvi-y as the crl'res , Steam-IEUHCIICE- Tho naval service of the delta, with Its 3 many hundred miles of sh'sllovv channel, is done by seven or tight small gun-boats of peculiar pattern and hqu a dozen ouch carrying a Hutch- aio, it does not tend to lessen our conï¬~l kl“ (Ffendh Gem-Te“) W111, and manned deuce in our daily or chance surround- ings. This is well, for we do not believe in what is styled the “epidemic of crime" nor has any specialist ever betn able to show (save, perhaps, In forms of robbery, bunco, and the like) that the brutal crimes were ever more than coincidences, i cm one. borrowed entirely or the results of organized bands of des- l tle shallow steamers that have for the last pal-“doe, {onuwing up doviceu which have ; half-century nearly been running on the Act; was passed sending the tfl'onders to l lof them of the same pattern, broad, flat- ;bcttoiued, and not drawing more than ithree feet of wwer, even when licnvlly lproved succesrful in bLflling the police. 1 Upper Water 0f $110 Ohio, Mlfl’ll'ï¬ll‘l’la An isstance of this was the great prevs- i lane of garroting in London at. one time ; ; but this was summarily stopped when an duklng the rebellion. by six or eight sailors. The gun-boats tire cullel cannonlercs. They are nearly all loaded. The idea. is a peculiarly Ameri- from the lit- ant‘. Missouri, and more GIIOCU)‘ from the tin cl»th that did such excellent service The boilers nreiti front, protected by a thin steel plating NeWgate, mere to be flogged in the most; sufï¬cient to turn any ï¬re to be expected exemplary fashion ; then garrotlng ceased. ‘ from hostile forces in ï¬lm dulla. But the more phases of the takiuit of hu- Tn engines are aft. and similarly protected. man life are not epidemic, and it is be- Th'iiqmrters' (f the r‘lliccrfl. Hm Muld- cnuso (f this that the cases cited may be . £11113â€. 01‘: 1f the llfl’gI-L‘TII 131 WWW]. W110“!- rcgarded as phenomenal, although theylever Convenlencndtctutcs. 'l‘nnarmainentl are. all remarkable. may, there is no way to prevent, see,“ imigino, any such events. pwpomtom, “11 the†certainly“ merit, Iris»; guns at the sides or on a must gunm- It; is an ordinary, g cd in similaJ‘ f. shion. The wheels in. the everyday case to hear of men and Walnut ' atom are mauhmca marked by broad L dgclaring mdrde_oua intentjrng, which are plates (if 9.0le, a OOIXIIRUMIUII (if the plï¬ .- l l mg on the sides. The small-arm is the some prompt sciir it. lightly dismissed, only to ï¬nd afterwards that the threats have bun carried out.l And, ï¬nally, comes from violent deaths can be directly ; traced to the recklesssalo of ï¬rearms, drugs were and poisons, and to the wandering at and pm large of partially or wholly insane people ; 5 and we imagine that no better service could be done to society than a thorough investigation, by competent authorities, of what measures should be taken to pro- tect its members from murderous self- violence or otherwise. ._._.â€"â€"-w<-.<>OOâ€"-â€"â€"-'â€" Betting. It is generally assumed that the firs tn liments of that spirit of gaming which ‘It blots out 0 whole err-p bi mates itself conspicuous from time to time: among all clotses of Englishmen at tho . present day, may be traced back to the associations of the Saxons with our curli- cst ancestry. And it is perfectly reason- able to belicvo that the helpless Britons, I when they invlted the piraticsl Saxons to l loud on their shores, and protect them from their domestic foes, may have read- ily innernized with a tribe scarcely lots] _ _ i ll - as up n reh m ns (t I'In'flnnd.l " m ’ W L ’ ’ ’ 'loariied thntshehsd died sudden! barbarous than themselves, iidoptui their 1 l upon the public debt of a nation, stops lhostler and street car driver. portion of the world will never go to tho' :pzior-hcuso if wsr can Intervene in their l behalf. And, reflect as we l I: usually two medium steel guni‘. forward l or fore. l on a. revolving pliitform, with a. range of, The“, 1 two miles, the gunners being protected are, however, is class of suicides and njur- by semi-circular stool pinion at the edges, ders which are often proclaimed by their 1 of the platform, and two or three IIotch-f l ‘ i i I Mauser title, a heavy weapon, but con-l much of the misery thug ' sldored by the French the most illicient. l These vessels are all painted grey. They i built in France brought out in pith together cither at Saigon or , Haiphong. Two are now on tho a'ocksi at Haiphong, which will In a few days bo‘ added to the delta tquadron, making itl the most useful for the special dudes; exacted that could be devised. .._._.._. ... ..._--. . Destroying War. War Is a. thermometer of ï¬rcand death. I of grain in u; week, destroys the ciliciency of a mighly' railroad in three days, puts inlllims a day v credit in every direction, hastens bank- ruptcy, and lifw into glory yesterday's. The idle . Russia has attempted in come forward among the business nations vsln- lv; her strong card has always been Wtr. She would prefer not to trouble Europe, but unfortunately her path into Asia habits and customs, and followed someI England, Ill-"5â€" 8 3 Ill-‘80 "Ming “"1 of thiir favorite amusements. “'0 read , crlonisl caieer,hca awakened the jealousy how {he plunge" of the period would i of nearly eVery nation in Ii iropetvlilcli boldly make an they pouuud. own (,0 in inuiil‘srcnt to a sziutiglo in the for their personal freedom, till the lasers were tften made slaves to the wiuncrc, and sold in traihc like other merchandise. . g the satiety But, after all, we can hardly lay the bar. den of our vicious practices on tho shr ul- ders of the ancient Saxons, :or the habit of gsmlng was never confined to any par- ticular tribe, but it In common to countries,en.l almost every age; and it Is not till lung Anglo Saxon with the Normsn races that excess as to call forth the intervention of the legislature. In the middle of the sixteenth century to ï¬nd the first ac: prohibiting gamlng to all gentlemen, and interdicting tenuli', cards, dice, and bowls :0 nll inferior persons exmp: at Christ.- mas time ; and a hundred years later on it was enacted that my person losing more than £l00 at say one time should not be mmpelled by the low to sy the “me. From that date r uni-do t e legis- lature has passed vsrlous nets to restrict the evils otgamlng, end has latterly di- rected its sttontlon princlpally to gaming- housel and places of hitting, while still refusing to acknowledge the legality of any sums of money w n or lost in wag How the snrtchod lateral? of book- makers cm drive caches on any mm. bar of horses through these fragile matric- tions. and how Ohs smllcr dopenéznts on the betting ring an ends such ambiguous penalties, the broken ranks of infatuated WWMW idstsd lockers on. after the fusion of thei l l I l l w l l l i l on him say lint or on tho aces bet“. on the winter giant and the island rcvcr. England is full of gloom, of unemployrd people, of of avarice and of commerce. Both England and Russia have the temptation to arm the great hordes of Asia rind use them in war. England has an colonies all 0V6! the globe, and the atti- tude of each of these will be considered With interest. War I) like fire; you can kindle it anywhere, but where you can gamma in England was carried vi suchflzop it is axnattcr of wind and tutor. __â€".__‘OO“.‘> 00*. Gabriel Dumont. A prcmint-n: gentleman living at Ilr-nitecc i: {JrIlJCd us that he knows (hbriul DumoL: well. He was born in S'. Bonifscc, although his uncut/its lived in the Saskatchewan country for three «.1- four generation. Gabriel was I trader pper and followed the chose from early childhood. He med 9/; visit Winnl- ' peg every ycsr, partly on religious busi- ness and srtly on other business. as he was a in er in the Sukatchclsn cxiuntry. Ila is described as a magnificent-looking fellow, and those who had dealings with he was a brave and honest mm If he be the military loader of the rebels, l the informant says, a desperate raistaucc gw the troops may be expected. l “4-,†A girl, raw, lending in boy's clothing, beckon of hone-eon mflfy to their own I this gave her away. A mu would have; “my, “up grief sad to thsamswmsntof the nnln- been just u must hurt, but he 'Ouu‘â€Bc‘:luIfl,". uld Jchcny, i have inst adiflaren'. remark. ‘iwas decently covered and 1 was lyingvln ithe bedroom of my boardlng-housc. be do l I was obliged to plead ignorance. mifsirs, and her body fl Luz-=1: A GHASTLY tenement. s Horrible indent t- in use cr- hi; loans Slldut. I †_You remember." remarked a young ' medical friend of mice to me the other night, “ what a time all medical colleges had about eight years ago our the cli-~ covety of the body of Scott Burl-on. con ‘ of the Info President “'illiun Henry flu- rison, and father of Simtor Benij Harrison of Indiana, in sCinolnnati mod- icsl college dissecting room? Well. at that time l "is a student in Ann Arbor medical college. Ann Arbor, Mich. You will recollect l: was here that the author- ities claimcd to have undo some startling tin-c )VL‘I‘II s. The bodies or mdaveu, u no call them, Were kept In a lot-go pickle vs: in the cellar where they floated around , in the brine like pork in a barrel. The were harpoonsd by the attendant on hoisted to the dissectng room by u rope elevator as they were needed. Well,“ I will not barrow up your feelings b - ing into an extensive description OI gs scenes dolly enacted in this department of the school. Not being a phyuiclan you, might ï¬nd them desppetlllng for adsy or so." I thanked him for his consideration, sud he proceeded thus : “ In the spring of 1878 I entered the college as grccn in medical knowledge as one of Gen. Grant's physicians. l was taken up to the dissecting room soon after I matriculated. Of course 1 had heard about the ghastly scenes of this veritable chamber of horrors, but I had steeled my self not to give expression to any of my feelings of surprise or disgust. The boys, who have seen courage simulate ed before, ttslcd me by stuffing my cost pockets full of dead men's oars, ï¬ngers, and toes, and other cheerful fragments while 1 was not looking, and one hnplous wretch who was calmly eating his lunch- eon pretended to use a slice of human check for the meat in his sandwich. The deception was its real as it was horrible. I passed through the ordeal usillnchlngly, but_l can assure you it was not unaccom- panied by sundry qualms of the stomach. it the course of timoI become somewhat familiar with the scenes and before the summer vacation I was thoroughly hard- sued. " That summer I accepted an invitation from Harry Brown, who lived at Adrian, Mich , to spend my vacation with him. I cheerfully left the college, my books, i and tho dissecting-table, and prepared to enjo myself as fully as posslbie. Harry is l e nicest follow In the world, and both he and his sister did all In their powur to make my visit I| jolly one. Every day we went rowing or ridng or walking over the shady country roads, and every even- ing them was some sort of party to make that part of the day not tholcast onjoy- - able. I met a number of pretty girls in the town, butnono prettier than lovely Mary Brown, and before the fall torus bo- gsn we were more than friends. although thcro was no engagement, as I was too youn to ivo such matters a serious than t In October I went back to col- Icgc regretfully. I must own, and recom- menced my studies. After the lung and pleasant summer the dark walls of the building scorned more somber than ever, and the work ( f the lecture room appeared more tiresome than when 1 flrt bcgan my studies. Shortly after the term began I was called to my homo by the death of myjetther. I was gone over a month, and when I had settled up his ailrlrs,thoy were not my extenslvo by the WA , I wont Luck to college. The ï¬rst day re- turned I vitited tho dissecting-room and purchased an anntuinlcul tickot entitling me to a portion of a cadaver to operate on. The boys till scented glad to see inc back again, and many of them offered sympathy for my affliction. This was conifortirg, for they were a nice lot of fellows, take them altogether. I began work on my subject more to distinct my mind than unythiug else, and got fairly c I into it when I heard a roar of laughter from the farther end of the room. It came from a crowd of students who were smoking their pipes and, cigaretth and playfully knocking each other over the head with fragments of bones in one cor- ncr of the apartment. The nolsolncreas- cd instead of «flying out, and the crowd ruomtutly grow larger. Impellcd by curiotlty, i left my wrrk and Jilned the throng. The boys lintl taken it female sul'jcct and draped the shoot over her fair proportions as tho robes of Mary Anders)“ are arriving in the role of (isla- “'3. She wus stroll up against the table as i-rect us if she had been carved out of marble. lIer dark brown hair was coll- od in a. Grecimirollon the back of her chaper head. In‘hor month there was in pipe, however, and her attitude was one of extreme gnllusnoss. It wssintonded as a burleique upon the statuesque, and it was n horrible and ghastly success. “ ‘ What do you think of that us work of or: 1’ inquired tho ring-loader of the boys, as I approached. “ ‘Illther hideous, don't you thlnk 'l" I mutated. “ ‘ If you think so,’ he replied. ‘from that view, wait until you see her face. G me around here and catch on to her pipe.’ “I walked around to the front and looked at the face as directed. I had no more than raised my eyes to the pipe than the room began to whirl around and around. I grow deathly sick and fell In a faint. When I was revived the body you think she was?‘ I afterwards while I was at home looking after my sthof'l had been exhumed by the grave-robbers. The shock threw me into: favor. from which I auflersd ' for over a mouth; and since that day I l have never gazed upon the face of I corpse lin a dissecting-room without I fouling of l apprehension that 1 cannot rid myself of. ; I feel asif I might meet my own likeness iln the dad face of every subject I han- die." __..-.--.â€"1,.._-..._ l I. poking for a Lost Fleet. The arol unloglcsl societies of Vienna ,hsvc put tlitir brains to work on ii curious {whim tliu’. of raising the Portion fleet lost 3 in the mirror thrill. of Manila 480 years .bufnr-i the Christian era, 2,361 years 530. “It was Mary Brown. -'l'ne thncse i.vi Jrntly have confidence Sin tho i-reterviru qviuiitiia of the briny ‘dncp. 0n the sublime faith of an idea Uoiumbus discovered America ; why Ethan-id not the some faith lead to the re« turr mom of a broad trlrcmo of Eglna, , or a bronze] banked galley of Greece. or lane of the hugbely highestcrncd, lofty- ! decked Persian ships, whims-ice and num- ber threw thtm int!) confusion before the dropouts valor cf the donation Greeks. ; â€"..â€"~~.â€"â€"-â€"0â€.â€"- ’ Ia entity, husbocds cut is their l wivo's nous for punishment. The women iln this country are too smart fur their ‘ husbands. They can ulk through their locus. I "Mn," aid little Johnny, hold] his mother‘s aiigprr, "canyon to! “P In. IllI-pxl “d ‘00- 511° “ld- “001ml†‘34; why your. slipphr in like the after nil if ‘4" "No, my son ; why is ltl†H u . = spunkex."