,_ . ,1. cm»... _ . , . :,. . - . mm .'-- '~ "r . ‘ . ..,-uo....-..s..“‘4mn-......-.--..~...... .. we a . r, . otherwiseâ€"had settled themselves more or less in pose of ease or eagerness, when the man in the meadow lay gazing with hunted eyes and a bloodless countenance on the scene in the valley below, there was led farth before them all a glorious chestnut mare with a white starred forehead, and for while there was a silence. Then the mere tossed her head and lifted high her hoofs as she stood before them all on approbation. The groom who held her halter laid his arm caressineg across her neck, and she turned her quick eyes on him and snuuled his shoulder with her nose. And then she threw her head high and free and-whinniedloug and loud. That whinn tore at the heart of a man in Crumple orn meadow ; he drew his breath in quickly, his eyelids .prickcd wrth tears which should not fall, he struck the daisied turf one blow with his clenched ï¬at. “ Curse l" he said. Then he rose and turned his back upon it all, and walked away forever. _â€"â€"._â€".__..___â€"_ EVERY TOWN HASâ€" FALL FUN- I An Autumn Scene. The skywas gray with the sullen, sod~ "‘th {10 33:“ Wk,†Y°$h 9:3ch 331:: den graynesa of fall. The river moved unat rective apes . ' e co r sei . . . mu“ on only Phi“ food-n sluggish and lifeless between its high banks. Mrs. Squibâ€""Do you still think this TM In": “to tnmmg' but no‘ into new hat too big,dear2"Mr. Squibâ€""No’m glorious. glossy rod- md yellows- The! not 30w. I’ve been competing it with the were sere end brown mid sickly in their bill} wish our mother were “30 m moth decline. The wind whirled them furiously “‘nmd hi; looking “ h" tenderly? "A" about the place that afternoon. The lawn, right." she “id. "1 will b. . an“ to already scorched into a dull, herd color by you." the beating of the summer sun, was half f‘She isa greet favorite with, the male covered with the dry leaves. The big sex.†“Yes.†"Why doesn’t she marry 2" house on the hill looked deserted. “Her numerous engagements prevent her.†Up anddown the walk, littered with Possible purchaserâ€"“Now,.is this mule dud 10â€â€œ: “he Wflhd- .30!“ 6.!" were perfectly gentle 2" Uncle" nuuuwui, sombre“ the 390116. but m their depth- sah, I nebbali knowed him to bite anybody Y“ ‘ 3°“ 0‘ "m Wflt‘ H“ debut“ yiu", lips were pressed tightlv together as one go“ I see you & n for ‘ moment ,n w 0 found memoriestoo bitter for her. She “You mm gone, on,“ you 2.. “Yes . was wrapped about in a grey cloak, end . ~ there was a sort of ï¬erce resignation in her #334“ a n‘ en‘uy' I “at to borrow attitude. She seemed like a woman living - - , , _ over again a beautiful past in a miserable Banks-«"Here isaqueer fashion item. It pruenH g of “n 1.". “d to“. “Y. W‘kneed "0’1"" “'9 coming ‘50 and blue s ies, w ite, gleaming sails, 9 , “‘4..- l. , scams SALE. British and Foreign. , - Congressman Wilson, of teriï¬â€˜feme, is to be banqueted next Thursday by the Inndou Chamber of Commerce. Edgehlll. the scene of the ï¬rst battle » between King Charles I. and his Parlia- i' ment, is soon to be sold at auction. ‘ Omsk, in Siberia, has just been connected ~ with St. Petersburg by the completion of the ï¬rst 500 miles of the Trans-Siberian Railroad. In one month 95,000 copies of Hall Caine's "The Meuxman" have been sold in England. a sale unequalled by any novel since "Lothair." Odessa lately celebrated the centenary of its foundation. In a hundred years it has grown to be a city of 330,000 inhabi~ gents and the great port of the Black 9.. ii A bust of Herod the Great, believed to g be authentic, was recently discovered at Jerusalem. ltwas bought by the Ruse- " ian Government for the Hermitage Museum at St. Petersburg. The flavor of a daisy stem is somewhat sweet, but a bitter thought chewed with it censtrangelyalterthe taste. A man was chewing a daisy stem as he lay on the young grass in Crumple Horn meadow ; at the same time he chewed an exceeding bitter thought, and the flavor of the thought was the stronger of the two. and the flavor of the daisy stein became entirely nauseous. The daisy stemwas the-man’s own pro- perty, the meadow itself was his own pro. party. and from the spot on which he lay he could look down upon the valley in which lay his house and sundry other lands. All this was his own ; it had been his father’s before himâ€"the father whom he had come so near to cursing during the last few desperate weeks ; it had been his own for two months and a half ; it would behisown for a few hours longer. The «We .W- , _ the front." Riversâ€"“Where else could Ice in waters and glad companionship in 1 1 d a; g ' “c we»: hi- cew mm hm! We on A w- they come watt. on W... A. x... be. up. may;.mc:.r:.§:;lizrszi:a “H.131†:durmg h0hd‘7‘ “'0'†“11°01 h‘ A Spenser. Daughter (weeping)-â€"“ Oh, papa. to-day rted ed article on postage stamps by Harold had desired no better change: he knew where the blackbirds built their nests each Spring ;he knew the shaded river pools where the trout grew fat and dainty for his harvest ; even now above his head spread that glorious sycamore, so excellent for the making of whistles ; that bright green ï¬eld on the opposite hill was the spot on which he had brought death to his ï¬rst partridge, and came near bringing the same to his second cousin ; down on the pleasure grounds which lay before his home had he whiled away numerous Summer evenings, striving to instil a knowledge of cricket into the hearts and brains of village youths of sportive nature ; verily, the roots of his aï¬'ection spread thickly andstruck deeply in these few acres of the soil. As the man lay there the morning sun be came more ï¬erce, scorching the dew oil' the greennese;and down by the house on the valley below he could see little knots of men and women assembling ; he could: see them occasionally gesticulating ponder- ously, and he set his teeth as be imagined the words which they were saying. Then by degrees these knots of men an women turned and sauntered and entered this home; and he could picture them, in his ima- A smart Aleck. A blatherskite. Its richest man. Some pretty girls. A girl who giggles. A weather prophet. A neighborhood feud. Half a dozen lunatics. A woman who tattles. A justice of the peace. A man-who-knows-it-all. More loafers than it needs. Men who see every dogï¬ght. A boy who cuts up in church. A few meddlesome old women. A “ thing†that stares at women. A stock law that is not enforced. A widower who is too gay for his age. Some men who make remarks about wo- men. A preacher who thinks he ought to run the town. A few who know,how to run the aï¬'airs of the country. A grown young man who laughs every time he says anything. A girl who goes to the post-ofï¬ce every time the mail comes in. “Oh: good heavens 1†she murmured, “Why doesn’t papa send me money enough to pay my board and let me get away from here 2" Ienter already on my thirteenth year. Fatherâ€"“ Calm yourself, childâ€"it won’t last long.†“ Call him a veteran joke writer? Why he is not more than 20years old." “ That is so; but his jokes are veterans all the same." Sheâ€"I don't see you with Miss Gotrox any more. Have you and she had a mis- understanding 2†Heâ€"“ No; an under- standing. She rejected me.†“ What! haven’t you’ named- the baby yet 2" Mamu aâ€"“ No." Can't ï¬nd any‘ thing good enough 2"Mammaâ€"“Nâ€"uo ; can’tï¬ud out which uncle is the richest.†Fat manâ€"“ Phcw lHo'w do you account for this unexpected hot wave?" . \Veather prophetâ€"“ I think it must be on account of my buying a fall overcoat and a heavy derby." »~ Ethelâ€"“ He was very attentive to me. I wonder if he know that I have money 2†Clarissaâ€"“ You say he was very attentive to you 2†Ethelâ€"“ Yes.†Clarissaâ€"“ Then he knows it." Physician â€"“ You must avoid all excite- ment, avo..l beer or wine entirely, and drink only water.†“ But, doctor the idea of drinking water excites me more than anything else.†' Good-bye, mosquito, soon we'll ï¬nd Frederick, in which the old penny stamp was reproduced by engraving. Every passenger landed in a French port, from a steam vessel oomingfrom a European port by a decree just issued, is to pay a tax of ï¬fty centimes (ten cents); from any other part of the world he pays a franc. i i Twenty-seven million francs has already 3‘ been s nt on the great Church of the I Sacredï¬eart at Monbmartre, and the .1 building is far from complete. The money i has been raised entirely by voluntary contributions. Colonial forces throughout the empire, 7’ including India and Canada, are, by a recent order of the War Ofï¬ce, to receive medals for long service, meritorious service, . , and distinguished conduct, on the same ’ : terms as the regular troops. “ Twenty-ï¬ve miles of'the Congo railroad, forming the ï¬rst section between Matangc and Kenge,are now completed. The work has cost $100,000 a mile. The line will be ninety-three miles long in all, and will connect the immense waterways above the falls with the sea. - - 'At the meeting of the Grand Lad e of Oddfellows at Chattanooga,Tenn.,on T urs- 1‘, day, it was decided to admit to the Order through the Rebekah lodge all Oddfellow’s wives and daughters and all white women } ii more than eighteen years of age who believe ’ *â€" Three Terrible Disasters. A monument has recently been unveiled at Springhill, N. S.,erected in commemora- tion of the disaster of February, 1891. In that catastrophe 125 miners lost their lives, and the monument has been erected to their memory by the Provincial Workman' Association. In the mining history of the country three terrible disasters are recorded. In 1873, at Drummond, 65min- ers lost their lives. The bodies were un- recognizable, and were buried in one com- mon grave. At the Albion disaster in 1883 50 were killed,and none of the bodies were ever recovered from the ruins of the explos- ion. The Spring‘hill catastrophe was the worst in the history of the Dominion. The bodies were- all recovered, indentiï¬ed and buried in separate graves. The statue which commemorates the disaster is of a miner in working costume, with lamp and pick, ready to descend into the mine. The names of the 125 victims are engraved on the ped- estaI. . , .m :.â€"r ginaticu striding with dusty desecrating Your days are o’er. â€"â€"â€"â€".___.. in the Ruler of the U . . boots 80:0" his 113119. Info 1313 1'00me and A legion of smart Alecks who can tell the You wereâ€"claim not to be malignedâ€" A Ghastly Story. Inverse over every inch of his fair birthplace. He The recent reprieve of a condemned murderer at Rudolstadt in Germany has brought out the fact that Duke George of Saxe-Meiningen, the organanizer of the celebrated "Meininger†troupe, in the thirty-eighth year of his reign has never allowed a death sentence to be carried out. Safa-el-Bahr, " Joy of the Sea," is the t name of the Khedive of Egy t’s new steam " yacht, built for him on the 31 do. It is a 1'5 handsome boat of 700 tons an 1,100 horse- 1 power, ï¬tted up with all comforts and modern improvements. 0n the trial trip it made a little over fourteen knots an hour. In Hungary the Prince Primato has warned-his clerg to conï¬ne themselves to their calling an leave politics alone. He considers it essential to reestablish a good understanding between Church and State, and declares that in ecclesiastical matters he has not taken a single step without the prevxous sanction of the Pope. _ France proposes to have a general exhibi- . tion of sports in connection with the '1’ , . Exposition of 1900. The Bois de Vincennes :' ‘1 ‘ will be set aside for them. The Minister 1': {5 of Commerce has appointed a commission to draw up a general programme, which is .' to include fencing, shooting, gymnastics, ' l i editor how to run his paper. Scores of men with the caboose of their trousers worn smooth as glass. Aman who rins when you talk and laughs out lou after he has said some- thing. A frightful bore. “ What’s the matter with J ennings,Har- low 2††Oh, some mental trouble. He suffers from a complete loss of memory.†“ Suffers? Jove ! he’s in great luck, con- sidering his past.†lVe swelter, mop and fan. And growl because ’tis hot; Then when ’tis cool we grumble, too, And wish that it was not. “ Look here.†said the proprietor of the lunch establishment, “ this c'oin has a hole in it. †“ Well,†replied Meandering Mike, "so had the doughnut ye sold me.†And he strode haughtin on. Patientâ€"“Can you tell me, doctor, the cause of baldness ‘3" Physicianâ€"“ Nothing easier, air. It is due to the falling out of the hair. Will you pay now,or shall I put it down to your account?†Voice from doorwayâ€"“ Mary, what are you doing out there ‘2†Maryâ€"“I’m look- ing at the moon." Voice from the door- wa â€"“ Well, tell the moon to go home, an you come into the house. t’s half- past 11.†Dayâ€"“ If 1 were in your place, I wouldn’t paint that house white; I’d paint it brown.†Weeksâ€"“lfyou were in my, place, you’d probably be so mad that you'd paint it red, just to spite the people who gave you advice about it." Miss Belleï¬eldâ€"“Mr. Spotters is a good sportsman.†Miss Bloomï¬eldâ€"“Is he? He never shoots anything." Miss Belle- ï¬eldâ€"“That is whyIcall him good. I think it is real wicked to kill innocent animals and birds.†“Hallo, yellowly! You are looking as bright as a dollar." "1’17; feeling as bright as one, too.†“You must have been taking a long vacation.†“On the contrary, I havn’t taken any; that’s why I’m looking and feeling so well.†Mrs. Youugmaâ€"“And so, my darling got the prize at the baby show? I knew he would. It couldn’t have been otherwise." Old Bachelor (one of the judges)-â€"â€""Yes madam, we all agreed that your baby was the least objectionable of the lot.†His mother (after the sudden change)â€" “Jamio, dear, go and bring in some kindl- ing. We'll have to make a ï¬re.†Jamie (grumbliugly complyinglâ€"“You had me hunting the ice wagon all day yesterday. took his watch from his pocket and laid it on the grass beside him, and his eyes nar- rowed as he lay and watched, and waited for more pain. ' At length from his resting place he could note the murmur of voices grow fainter; there remained no single ï¬gure on the ter- race ; the crowd had disappeared, and for a while there was a bush. Then from the big clock in the courtyard clangcd the strokes of noon, and the sounds came up to the man as calmly and relentlessly as they had always done. That had ever seemed a heartless clock to him; in his infancy it had clauged him from his play and sent him to his sleep, when play was happiness With out alloy, and sleep mere wanton waste of moments, in boyhood it had brought dis~ grace upon him countless times, sounding its unhesitating knell when two ï¬elds and a dishevelled person lay between himself and punctuality ; iu manhood he had learned to scorn it, but its exellence had wearied him and humbled him as a persistent and accusing conscience. Now, as the last stroke of noon clanged out and reverberated on the warm. still air, in the place of the murmur of many voices came the strident tones of one, and . ' the sharp raps of an auctioneer’s hammer 000 square "11188. and taking 2,000 odd struck on the man’s heart, and there was a thtvos. _ The only 'block .Of work now un- stab as of a knife in every blow. As he ï¬msbod‘ls that in the neighborhood of lay there he could again picture the gaping, Mount Ls‘5- E1|M,_ which does not resent slow-minded crowd ï¬ngering, pricing, cal- features of espeCial difï¬culty. Mr. gilvie, (muting, with no idea but the obtaining of in whosesection it 15, cannot complete his somethin more than the worth of their 18.130“ this 3831‘: fetumlug home as soon as money. is mother’s room came ï¬rst upon his survey is made to Letuya bay. The the catalogue. What blustering squire American arty were engaged all season in would possess the bed in which he himself Igan calla determining the relative posi- hgd ï¬n; drawn breath? what curious, tion of St. Elias with the coast line. The moth detecting housewife would yield her country explored by the Canadians this trumpe shillings for the chair in which 9031300 900%!“ FONSlderfl-ble 800d timber. his magm- had breathed he;- [sat The indications of mineral wealth, little ï¬shing man uttered no sound, but.his hands were and n0 agricultural land. Prof. King, tightly gripped as he lay and thought of boundary commissioner, is expected to m arrive here shortly and all the chiefs of the Throughthe daintysitting rooms,through “‘3 WI“ then return to Ottawa to onto, the stately guest chambers, through the old upon the extension of the season’s notesr nurseries and schoolroom, he followed on ____.____ with his imagination The“ t° “1° bud‘ Cause of the Ingrowing Toe-nail. some dining hall. where his father had so . _ often held his revels and violated prudence; Most authorities state that the ingrow. ing toe-nail is due to the pressure of tight- to the studyâ€"save the nameâ€"where that father Nd Snmbledamy hl'wtflmony‘nd ly ï¬tting boots. Dionis, however, he observed this disease in unshod monks broken his wife's brave heart; to the and Biuaud in bedridden tuberculous At a meeting of the London Missionary Society at Leeds, the Rev. J. Chalmers, of New Guinea, told a rather ghastly story. He remembered, he said, one day when sit~ ting on the doorstep of his hut, his wife beluga short distance from him, an old native came up. Knowing that the old gentleman had been at a cannibal feast, which was being held in the neighborhood, Mr. Chalmers asked him what he wanted. The native intimated that he had brought a present for “his daughter," as he styled Mrs. Chalmers and forwith placed on the ground a small cocoenut basket, and asked Mrs.Cha1mers to open it. At Mr. Chalmers’ request, however,the native himself opened the basket and presented it to Mrs. Chalm- ers, and it was found to contain the breast of a man. Mr. Chalmers prevailed upon him to take back the remains. Before the old native died he becamea member of the Christian church, and remained so up to his death. â€"-â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€". Physicians’ Duration of life. One of the most curious statisitcal records that has been compiled this century, is that by Dr. Salzmann, of Essling, Wurtemburg, on the average duration of life among phy- sicians. He found, on going over the au- cient records of the kingdom, that in the sixteenth century the average duration of life among that class was but 36.5 years ;' in the seventeenth century, 45.8 ; in the eighteenth’ 49.8 and at the present time they reach the favorable average of 56.7 It appears from the footnotes to the above, that this very great increase in longevity is due to the disappearance of the “black pest,†the introduction of vaccination and the great diminuatiou in the numbers of typhus epidemics, three classes of diseases which formerly decimated the medical practition ers. _ 4,.»- < , ‘ J ..... ..~ â€"â€"Vâ€";.-â€"__‘ PROF. KLOTZ AT VICTORIA. â€".â€" Seven Thousand Miles or Coast Explored During the Season Just Closed. A despatch from Victoria, B. C., says:â€" Prof. Klotz,chief astronomer of the Interior Department, with three Canadian-Alaska boundary commission parties under his immediate direction, returned from the north by the steamer Mystery which was made the floating headquarters during the season. Their territory was from Portland canal to J unean. Past this point westward Mr. Ogilvie had charge. The work is now practically completed in the long district from the canal to cape Spencer, Mr. Klotz's parties having covered over 7,000 miles of coast this year, surveying upwards of 20,- military exercises, bcating,athletics, cycling, ' and ballooning. ‘V British sailors discharged in forcignports are protected against land sharks by a re- cent arrangement made by the Board of Trade. On the arrival of a vessel an agent of the Board appears, who ï¬nds out what men wish to return home and the sums due them ; he then provides them with money for trvelling expenses and warrants of the board for the rest of their wages, payable in England. A silver box was recently found at Au- bonne. in Switzerland, containing the heart of Abraham Duquesne, the great Admiral of Louis XIV, after whom theï¬rst settle- ment at Pittsburg was named, and who was the only Protestant allowed to remain unmolested in France after the revocation of the edict of Nantes. His sons, who were banished, had placed the heart in the church of Aubonne, from which it is to be sent soon to Dieppe, Duquesne's pirthplace. "4 .At Cempuis, in France, M. Robin, the V director of an orphan asylum, was recently discharged for carrying out peculiar ideas k‘ in the management of the institution. He _ .‘~vâ€"~4’-â€"‘~r-e-,_..-. ‘ ;~ “me n, _ An Average Man. Doctorâ€"“Your husband does not appear to be getting any better, butI think the trouble is mental or emotional, rather than physical. Isn’t he worrying about some- thing 2†Mrs. Blankâ€"“Letâ€"meâ€"see. Why, of course he is, poor deanâ€"I never thought of drawing-roomsâ€"scenes of past orgies and a dead magniï¬cence. The man in Crumple ' _ n . . - believes in coaducation and th bo " f 11 h l ‘ . Seems to me on re awful hard to suit. it. He is robably worrying over the fact , y I rew ys ‘ ï¬criilflxgortczgdwzt:::nsu;h:::glh: patients. Poucet, of Lyons, has shown “D Z k †.d h . u I that he ispmissing three square me,“ a audkglrlato ether at their meals, and at, I ! ‘dmg “am. that, pal-.03. of lymphauc temperament, oyou t in , sai t e into ectua day." wor audp ay. He carefully kept; an". H in whom the big too is thick and the cor. responding nail flat and small, are particu- lar y subject to ingrowing of the nail. But the disease is frequently seen in the robust in whom the great too has been deviated from its normal direction by narrow-point- ed boots. In these cases, however, M. Regnaultascribes the morbid condition of the nail to injury, such asa blow, combin- ed with wunt of personal attention, which allows the culture in the groove of ordinary pyogenic microbes. Interro tion of the sufferer will often bring to lig t the occur- rence of a contusion of the nail, followed in a few days b suppuration at the ex- ternal groove. aken in time, these cases are easily treated by means of carbolic foot-baths and antiseptic dressings. young woman, “that there is any truth in the theory that big creatures are better natured than small ones?" “Yes†answer- ed the young man, “I do. Look at the difference between the Jersey mosquito and the Jersey cow." The hours were on ; that cursed clock in the courtyard told them out with never a moment's mercy. The loathly, fulsome voice of the auctioneer as he perpetrated his rofessioual witticisms, the rapping of the ammer of ofï¬ce. and the occasional murmur of the purchasers. came up, home on the breeze, to the ears of the owner as he lay upon his land. For an hour or so longer the meadow was his own :the stables were to go before the estate, and the man looked at his watch again and loosened his lips for a moment as he waited for the next art. It soon came. There was a trampling of many foot- steps, a sound of tongues, long repressed, set loose again. and a stream of beingsâ€" men,women and children-came forth from the man‘s home, heated and excited with the entertainment, and made their way toward the stable yard. The man raised himself upon his elbow as he followed the scene with his eyes, and a certain unreasonable fury rose within him ~ on those brutes who were doing what he wished them to do. who were giving gold in return for his possessions,io the end ligious instruction from them, but taught them that war was a crime, and that it was ‘1' right to avoid military service. This led the Government to interfere with the experiment. In the convention just made between Great Britain and China to settle the Burmese boundary Great Britain gives up her claim to the greater part of the Shan States, .China agreeing to cede no part of the territory to any at or nation without the farmer’s consent. For six years Chinese products, except salt, will be admitted free of_ dut into Bur-rush, Chinese vessels being a lowed the free navigation of the Irrawaddy, while British manufactures and Burmese produce, except rice sent by land, are to be admitted into the Chinese empire on the same terms. The Old Man’s Advice. Heâ€"“ If you don’t intend to break your engagement with me, why do you allow young Richmann to make you such valuo able presents l" ' Sheâ€"“ My father advised me to accept them." " He did? Why 2†"He said that if I married you they might come handy on rent days.†Mr. Sharpeâ€"“I can’t pay you for three or four weeks yet. I lost a lot of money this month in speculation.†“You don’t say! Whose was it!†‘ Enjoyment of Ill-Health. How it Will Be. Mrs Meekeâ€"“You were on a jury with eleven men, I believe 2" Mrs. Gingerâ€""Yes." Mrs. M.â€"“Did you ï¬nd any trouble in agreeing with them 2†Mrs. G.â€"“I didn’t agree with them ; The monument! t0 Empror William I. they agreed with me.†“4 Empreu 5080!“. recently consecrat~ __ ed in the mausoleum at Charlotlcnburg, Remedies not Wanted. are in a chapel adjoinin the one in which ' Queen Louisa is burie . Th t t Bobbyâ€"“Theme a man down 8‘3 the white Carrara marble are recufnbehtuze'tl‘i): corner selliu' something to cure every sort 01d gm ,0,- [leg barehudedm the 'f 0f ache 01' Pm- L999 w“ "13mm 3'30“- of the irst Regiment of Guards, :iihfhn; it." . i y _ imperial cloak of ermine r d ' Johnnyâ€"“1V0. don t- She" belwpl’m' shoulders and in his hand thtemfwordhdf our school headaches with it.†state, with laurel leaves wound round the Mexico's Unlucky day. Tuesday is the unlucky day in Mexico. If you were born on Tuesday never admit it. You probably have been a disaster all your life. but people will ï¬rmly believe that you are an unlucky dog and have the evil eye into the bargain if they ï¬nd that a Tuesday was honored with your birth. I that he might go forth I“! honest man. know a men who started on a Tuesday Then followed the auctioneer at the “ll of ‘ with money to pay off the hand; in a. he. the crowd,talking to efamiliar company†tory near the city and went instead to Doctorâ€"“I told you plainly that you ‘ hilt. The Em recs wearsa (1' one Wins Vim“! “5 mummy. ""0 Acapulco. where he took the Panama should rub the brandy 31m Iordered for Rival Belles veil of lace, afoot delicatelyldadggd.-niib: they also wound their way toward the s_ta~ steamer. The board of directors of the you about your stomach. and now you have 119â€"" Have you met Miss Richgirl 2" holds a cruciï¬x in her hands, and pas'slon his yard and prepared themselves to enjoy manufacturing company . aresolution drunk it." - Sheâ€"“Once or twice." flowers are scattered over the folds of her more pleasure. aï¬rming their end mg alth in his honos- Patientâ€"“Yes, but you see, doctor, I Heâ€""Pretty sharp, isn't abs 2" dress. At the door of the hall stands an And when the auctioneer had selected ty and attribu his error to having have never in my life much for ex- Sheâ€"“Iahould nyso. Onshsstoksep archangel with a flaming sword. The ternals." his position. when the purchasers-and INN for “I! will on Tue-5.37. away from her elbows." sculptor Prof. si. Racks. (1