land lungs are healthy._ he has the free luse of his joints and limbs. and he de- iclares that he is not subject to fits of [‘- .BRITliH urn nouns. I v u _. tHKHXAMINATIONTHROUGH WHICHiwatch the average recruit under the strum of questions that are then THE SOLDIER MUST PASS' paired out upon him as he stands before ' " i the officers table. and in the presence of mf""‘rhr¢c Thousand Merrill-or Enlist-l [he poi) bet-11nd ‘ hm. 331118, ellâ€"The lPDliram Taken I» Bath and place of birth, natioiiality,_ age, trade, Then Goes luclnd Into the Surgeon's‘place of residence, are swrflly rattled Boomâ€"A Rigid imuuganon4mncr..011. though 116: mfmqueptb it is \er) {muons l‘nknown to the l'andldntclduncuh ‘0 _..-.._._...-m- ._.c_..._-...____. w‘ â€". M ggegpfgia little lemon juice and chopped DEFIED WALLSAND CBMNS. Carrot_ Compoteâ€"Scrape the parrots unumm, pow". on, no“. “4 n." T b and cut in quarter-inch slices. Stew m p Possessed by We Galley slaves. wo o jects cannot occupy the same a little water till soft strain weigh . ~~ ‘- . . t 1. M.1-ichon camitiobe ' 80D- space at the same time. Either one or and to each pound allow a pound of 06ml- by ofï¬cer; and Digging-‘3 m. the other must yield. A cultured mind sugar' and†a teacupfu’l 0f vinegar' Sm- [mills He “'33 a galley slgvg for , '. son with cinnamon and orange peel. can find no ‘1‘00111 f0 Ila-{bor‘lvhe e‘ ‘15 cook fifteen minutes, mashing and s‘tir- condt‘mned ‘0? numl-Nlt-‘SS liberu‘“ h° of petty gosstp. or its twm Sister. act- ring often with a spoon. had taken with other peo ' _ . pie 3 property ual Vice. Ships of greater bur-then are Scalloped Carrotsâ€"Peel and slice and propriety. but. he did not allow pris- anchored there. As it is With the 1118- Very thin, then put a layer in a baking on 'life to become too monotonous. He PUREAnNDsD' CHILDREN: » et over the initial business of settling t name. Whether a name mosgv-MHA: , .. van-c 1.. T art‘s"??? 7W, .A » r. Himaclf. LA recruiting officer at the height of, . . . ' . v ' l at: . the “'4‘. sure" m Janna†531d h {is a matter not easily cleared up. and there was no more of a rush of young men eager to enlist than usual. and less activity than in the navy, says the London "Daily News. "To keep up our full strength we want about 33,000 men: a. year, and we have been getting them very easily of late years." Of these 33.- 000 St. George's Barracks, the busy but occluded establishment at the back of the national gallery in London. rc~ oeives more than most others put to- gether, and Deputy Surgeon General Don, who has been there ‘for ten years, Pkis himself personally examined 100.- 000 men in his time. There are two other medical men engaged with him here, one of them. Brigade Surgeon Temple, having the proud distinction of the Victoria Cross, which seems to have a. peculiar luster for a scientific man. The ease and rapidity and certainty with which these experts in the over- hauling of naked bipeds get. through their responsible work is very interest- ing to watch. There are baths down in the msement of the premises into which every candidate for service has to take a turn as a preliminary to his apâ€" pearance before the doctors, who sit in a. large barelooking upstairs apartment 'in which at this time of the year a good fire roars up the chimney, though it. fails to warm the room as it ought to be warmed for the accommodation of men just OUT OF A BATH. and who may be detained there for some time quite unclad. The attestation paâ€" pers of the recruits lie on the table beâ€" fore an officer assisting the doctors,- each of whom sits at a small table by. himself with a little square of carpet. on the floor near him. “Thomas Atkins," cries the assistant officer passing in the attestation 'pa- pens to the doctor. and Thomas Atkins, one of the line of naked figures on the level along the wall near the fire. springs forward on to the patch of car'- pct. "Put; your arms above your head, ' is the short, sharp order, and the tape measure is deftly whipped round, while Thomas, perha s conscious of his weak points, mach utile efforts to add half an inch or so to ‘his girth. Quite as often as not the doctor has to correct contortions, which rather detract from full chest measurement than other- wise. \Vith unerriug preoisxon the measurement is recorded, and then the embryo hero in pink is ordered under the standard, where, if conscwus of county material, his efforts at elonga- tion are pathetic to witness. Of course, a good many of the young follows who come up from the coun- try to London and enlist for soldiers do so because they have been engaged in some little poaching adventure. The surgeon had recently a couple of young- sters from the same rural district; come together to enlist, and as he was exâ€" amining one. of them he said quietly: “How much did you get. for that ham?†. “One and ninepence," said the felâ€" low, looking blankly amazed that. the army doctor up here in London should know anything about a 'lit‘tle matter that had occurred far away in the coun- try. Of course, the doctor did not know anything about it. it was a more chance hit. The stethoscope is, of course, applied for lungs and heart, and there is a short rapid test of right by holding up cards with dots upon them for the recruits to count from a. certain dis- tance, and then comes a. hop all ALONG THE ROOM on one leg and a hop back on the oth- or. On returning to the carpet, orders are given in ra id successionâ€""Feet to- getherâ€"kneel (own on both kneesâ€"up againâ€"feet apartâ€"dwnd down and touch your toesâ€"stand ailâ€"stretch out your armsâ€"open your fin remâ€"make afistâ€" show me the bucks 0 your handsâ€"bend your arms and touch your shoulders." The surgeon's keen eye glances down the figure before hiui. "You've got one leg half an inch slimmer than the oth- er." he says deciSively, to the evident astonishment. and indignation of the re- cruit. who flatly denies it. and evident- ly doosn't believe it. But the doctor makes him pull himself up straight. and than points out to his visitor that there is a p.‘l‘|‘(‘pliillv irregularity in the po- sition of the hipbones and then twirls round the resentful recruit and shows where. the spine is slightly atwist. "if paivnts would olscrve their child- ren attentively." he remarks, "they might often discover little. inequalities like this. and by slightly increasing the thickness of the. heel of a boot might prevent spinal mischief." However, there is a momentary examination of teeth, and the candidate is told to go and put his clothes on. His chances of beveming ddjutant General of the Brit- ish force-s are. not great. though he. may, perhaps. distinguish himself in some milith for some time. From the. medical officer the recruit goes out to don his clothes. and is hurâ€" ricd (may to another large bare-looking mom above, to which the report on his medical examination is also promptly carried. This and another spacious mom adjoining («institute the domain of the chief xvi-tubing staff officer. and hem a rather filllli.\-li‘:ii~.:l:; liiilc mob of ‘ IXI’l-ZC’I‘AX'l‘ “(METALS are mated on forms, \Vllili‘ one by one they are called out to a .~niail table. at which ii smart military officer, one of the two assistants of ihl‘ chief recruit- ing tlffit‘rl‘. is scaled with papers below :in. if the medical examination has been satisfactory the mrlificaio brought up fmiii below is to the effect that he does not pnscnt any of the strrcial disqual‘ ifimiiuns referred to in the regulations and“ that “he can see at the required distance with either eye. his heart is Henry. as it prolnble. or Har- ry. as the recruit \vili insist upon it. as the only name he has ever known. very queer names crop up at. times. "Henry Wrong Thompson? â€" that’s rather an odd name, isn't it? Is that really yournamc?" . “\\'cll, sir, I was christened Henry Wright Thompson. but. I ha'- always been called Wrong. My father called me that because he said that everything had gone wrong with him Since come." " At. the end of the sixth question there is a break in the string of them, and the officer in a rapid, perfunctory man- ner. gives a warning of liability to two years' imprisonment for a wilfully false answer to any of the eight which folâ€" low‘, a warning which seems to pass lightly over the recruit before the table, but apparently has rather A PAINF UL INTEREST for one unhappy-looking Wight who is seated apart from the rest, and in whose answers there has been something sus- picious. The eight momentous. ques- tious have reference to apprenticeship... marriage, past imprisonment, former service or attempted enlistment, etc., and are followed by some others of a less perilous character. "What. religious denomination do you belong to?" gravely inquires the offi- cer, and the answers all day long beâ€" ing given to this interrogation by that portion of the 33,009 recruits who pass through the recruiting station at St. George's Barracks out to be interestâ€" ing and instructive to the good people who can not for the life of them un- derstand why nonconformists do not take kindly to a religious census. “What religious denomination do you belong to?" . Perhaps it is a Roman Catholic; then there is no difficulty. Or'it may be a. \Vesleyan, or the young fellow: may have been brought up as a Baptist or a stench churchman. Then there is no difficulty. The answer is ready and obviously genuine. But to nine outof ten of these youngsters the question' is clearly a poser. 'l‘he flippant cockney or the Loamshire laborer is suddenly called upon to name his religion, and his evident mental perplexxty is very droll. You can see his mental groping round for a. church to hold on by, and almost as a. matter of course the parish church is the one that comes first at hand. "I was brought up in the Church of England,†he says, with the air of a man who doesn’t feel quite sure wheth- er or not this question is one of the fatal ones to which two years’ im- prisonment; may attach. "Church of Englant .†gravely writes the. ready officer, and the establishment had added one more rbrick to her butâ€" tresses. The young recruits now take the oath. and in the adjoining room the chief of the recruiting staff has a. little talk'with them. He gives them a few cautious and a. little advice, and disâ€" misses them with the hope that they Will be a. credit to their Queen and country, and will endeavor to fit them- selves for promotion in the ranks, or for such ciVil employment as it may be possible to find for them at the end of their term of service. And then comes agood solid meal, and as early as practicable they are sent off-to a depot. __â€".â€"-.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" NEW REFRIGERATING AGENT. It is but a. few months since the rath- er startling announcement that chemâ€" ists had succeeded in turning the inâ€" visible] air into a blue liquid capable of being poured f glass to glass like water. Recent y means have been found to produce this rare curiosity of science on a. large scale for the pur- poses of commerce. It. is to be employed as a refrigerating agent of unrivalled power. _Air was first liquefied by re- ducing its temperature to the critical pomt at which it ceases to be a gas and becomes a liquid, just; as steam when cooled changes from vapor to water. Consequently liquid air. when it is allowed to expand again to the gaseous'state, absorbs so much heat that it is capable of producing a great fall of temperature in its immediate surroundings. Instead of being made by the. slow processes of the scientif- ic laboratory, commercial liquid air is now to be. produced by the aid of power- ful comprossmg engines, recently in- vented by Herr Linda. TH E OLDEST TREE. The oldest tree in England is the yew-tree at Braburn, in Kent, which is said to be 3,000 years old; while ath‘or- tingal, in Perthshire, is one “nearly as old. At Ankerwykc House. near Stain- es. is a. yew tree which was famous at. the date of the signing of Magus. Char- ta, 1215, and lag-r was the lrysling place. of Henry \ Ill. and Anne Boleyn. l‘he three yews at Fountain Abbey are at. least. 1,200 years Old, and beneath them the founders of the abbey sat in ll32. There are no famous oaks that rival any yew m age, _:1,UO'J years beâ€" ing the greatest age attained. Dzimorey’s oak, in [)cvunsliire. which was blown down in 1703. had this distinction. Gow- thorpe Oak. near \\'ctherby, Yorkshire, is said to be 1,600 years old. .5â€" A BIG PYTHON FOOLED. The big"python in the London Zoo made up his mind some time ago that life was not worth living, for it refused to eat. sufficient food to keep it alive. Its usual meal was four or five pigeons or ducks, but it became too languid to seize more than one of them when they were put into its mge. Its keeper, in this emergency,- had recourse to a -..ir:ii;igem which has completely fool- ed the python. Before the pigeon had been swallowed the keeper pushed into its mouth a dead duck. and before that had been dismiss-d of the rt-guizitinn number of birds full-.waul in the same way. Thus the python izikrs his iisnzil quantity of food without. knowing it. couplets. . ' his childish treble is piping some .of his favorites. . The little .imaginatiou. is alive. His little world is peopled \vith ture mind. so it. is, in a less degree. with that of the child. It has not the power of concentration that the man has. His mind flits with lightning-like rapidity from one object to another. And it is only by unceasing labor that one can thoroughly fix those ideas that ought to be permanent. Mean- while the doors of his soul stand open day and night, to good and bad alike. Manifestly it is the duty of the parent to push the doors of good so Wide open that the ones of evil are effectually closed. _ _ This can be done best by anticipatâ€" ing nature's demands. “Line upon line and precept upon precept." ran the old code. It is by constantly iterating and reiterating that pure thoughts are es- tablished. The drastic compulsory style will not do. The child must. be studi- ed to find out. through what avenue he can best be approached. All child- ren respond to rythm. The rythmic motion of the cradle. accompanied_by the soft cadences of the mother’s votce, soon woos slumber to the restless babe. As he grows older, the lullabies give place to Mother Goose’s rhymes and Before you are aware of it, fairies. Be careful that some dark speclter does not overshadow these fan- cles s. It. is at this period of a child’s life that the most lasting good or bed can be done, If you can so fill his mind With good, pure stories, or satisfy his love of timed motion by sweet verses. do so. Do not compel him to memorize too much, or he Will get adistaste for rhymes. Your favorites will soon be- come his. Let them be suited to his years. Don't, I beg of you, harp the dogcrel of newspaper verse into his ears. If he. survives the ordeal, he will have an immense amount of work in after years to throw this rubbish out. Fill the mind with nobler thoughts. Don’t let the tiniest corner open for the bad to find a. thorou h lodgment; for the seed once plante germinates with frightful rapidity. . ‘ Above all, keep his confidence. Treat him so that he feels perfectly sure of your sympathy. \Vhen evil suggestions come, if they are things that. are sac- red, but so told to the child as to seem to be impure, do not. shirk your respon- sibility. If he is old enough to under- stand, explain to him, the mechanism of his body. If too young, tell him that; you will explain this as he grows oldâ€" er. A friend of mine, knowing that her little boy of four years had been told that which should have been left till he was older, called him to her and ask- ed him to tell all he _.had heard. He did so. She then explained what seem- ed to perplex the child. She taught him constantly that everg organ of his body was as sacred in od’s sight as his beautiful golden curls or his blue, eyes. She had gained instead of repellâ€" ;‘ ed his confidence. He is a. manly, pureâ€"minded little fellow. growing up I dish, sprinkle with salt. pepper and a very little flour and bits of butter, then another layer of carrots, then sea~ sgnmga until the basin is nearly full. how fill the basin with milk till it. covers the carrots, put bits of butter over the top and bake till tender. Carrot Pieâ€"For two pies, boil and rub carrots through a colander to a pound. add two gs. and cream to make it quite thin; a heaped teacuptul of sugar, season wrth cinnamon and nut- meg. Bake in a quick oven. Carrot Puddingâ€"Boil three-quarters of a pound of carrots, mash, add half in. pound of breadcrumbs, a quarter of a. pound of chopped suet, six tablespoon- fuls of sugar, three well beaten eggs, half a pound of raisins, currants or sweet dried fruit, add milk to make a thick _batter, and steam four hours, place in oven twenty minutes and serve \vith jelly sauce. Jelly Sauceâ€"Melt two tnblespoonfuls of jelly and two heaping tablespoon- fuls of sugar in half a pint of boiling water. Dissolve a teaspoonful of corn starch in half a teacup of cold water, _our in and when it boils remove from ire and serve. ' Canned Carrotsâ€"Boil till nearly ten- der, peel and slice, re-heat in steamer, pack in cans and 'fill with boiling vineâ€"- gar and water, or weak vinegar. For salad drain them, cut'in bits, covar with cream and season with salt and white pepper. Boiled carrots chopped, sea- sonedwith sweetened vinegar, re-heated land canned, are an excellent spring relish. S. E. \Vilcox. DAINTY HEART DOILY. Materialspne spool linen thread No. :90, a. fine sewing needle,-a piece of col- _ored pa er 43-4 inches square. and 24 little h rts cut from fine linen. one- half inch high. “'ork around each heart as follows: i let row.â€"Buttonholcâ€"stitch the edge 'closely. The second row is a very loose, l l l idouble-button-hole stitch, taking eachl had a trick of breaking loose in spite of double chains. cannon balls, guards and stone walls whenever he felt. the need of exercise in the open air, which 'was quite frequently. One day he was . seen upon the port, unironed and quiet- .ly gazing at. his companions like a igentleman of leisure. He. was taken .back to his bench. to which he “its . chu'meddt was thought immovablmstrict- ily watched and trebly ironed. but the, ' next day he was in his old place on the port, watching his companions again and merrily whistling Postillon de Lougjumean." The commissary, a low ’fellow, without sympathies ordered M. EFichon to the cachotâ€"the ‘ DARK ’L’NDERGROUND CELLS. "Ho's sure to be safe there,’ 'said the ’conimissary, sipping his cafe noir, "for those little boxes are proof against the ;smartest criminals in Europe," and he ‘ smiled at the thought of their sccurit y. 'Next day he espied M. h‘iclion strolling through the town of 'l‘oulon, his hands ébehind his back, whistling as beforemud ‘looking rather critically into the shop Windows. ' “What do you here, Fichon i†"Well, my commissary, what you see. Like yourself, I take a little walk when y in the mood, and try to enjoy)r life. What ‘do you wish from me? 1 wi l obey you. SBack to the old place, is it? You have ‘only to say the word." i "As you please," said the commissary. ‘lronica ly,"since it seemsasettled thing .with you not to obey me. any longer. ' Fichon felt hurt at the unkind in- isinuatibn. and returned to his cell. Two lhOllI‘S afterward the guards found the door locked and Fichon reironed by his .own hands. Never could they find any instrument capable of filing or unriv- ;cting his chains. and he would not dis- close its secret. l A long time afterward a. new gunrdl ; sap}: him taking an airing upon the port, ' an FIRED AT HIM. interfered and the convict returned to his cell. --5' ' a ' M. Dahmiel was quite as clever acon- juror with chains, .locks and stone walls as M. Fichon. but. all his attempts at liberty were serious. Fichen mere- ly wanted a little quiet; stroll without irons, and would not: be denied. Both! seemed to be endowed with the man- drake's power ovor bolts and bars, for no walls could hold them, no chain bind nor ball hit liim.. Only in facility for losing their liberty were they vulner- able. Never could ï¬lmy remain free when they got- T *. Once they os- caped together,~and the guards in pur- suit met ll‘ichon returning of his own accord, whereas Dahmiel was not over- taken till the third day afterwardâ€"his longest. absence from a cell. The consul!“ am? Should be to fill' loop on the needle twice and not draw- - , . . ., - l - the child’s mind With pure thought so ing it close to the heart, made as rich! f‘lfqegtgï¬ggtégngfl tifitictggegughoftor that evil cannot creep in. Teach him legs, but of practical business life, and he will grow up a well-balanced manâ€" one that any father or mother might well be proud of. ï¬sh A PLEA FOR CARROTS. The value of carrots in cuisine has been underestimated. In casting about to find what can be used in a dearth of apples to give variety to the table, the housewife can do no better than. to utilize the carrot. Carrots are easily grown, retain their flavor, and’ are especially nice in stews, sauces and soups. Sliced carrots canned are a good spring salad, a pretty garnish, and mixed with pickled beets are attractive to the eye as well as the palate.‘ The following recipes are recommended as seasonable and new: Carrot Soup a la Cressy.â€"-â€"Put into a saucepan a piece of butler the size of a hcn's egg, when melted add a large chopped onion, :1. slice of ham cut into dice, and several (seven or eight) grated carrots. Fry until the vegetables be- gin to brown, then add two quarts of boiling water, and simmer two hours. Rub through a. coarse colander, season with salt and pepper, re-hcat, add a pint of cream or rich milk and a bit of butter, and serve hot, with small squares of toasted bread. ' Creamed Carrotsâ€"Boil them tender, peel, cut in halves lengthwise, fry slow- ly in butter, season with salt and white pepper, and just; before removing _the pan from the fire pour in two-thirds or half a tcacup of sweet cream. Glazed Carrotsâ€"Peel those of equal size and shape, cook ten minutes in boil- ing water, drain, and put them into a saucepan with butter. sprinkle freely \vith powdered sugar, add a little water, or stock if you have it. cook slowly, watch carefully until reduced to a glaze. Carrots a la Colbert.â€"Peel carrots and cut. them into quarter-inch slices. Boil them in slightly salted water, drain, lay in a saucepan in which has been melted a large lump of butter. Cover with any meat broth, and cook until tender, season With salt, .opper and a table-spoonful of granu lited sugar. Serve with drawn butter to which has been added a little lemon juice. Carrots imitatedâ€"Peel two boiled carrots, beat to a pulp, add two beaten eggs, 3 tablespmnful of sugar, three tablespoonfuls of flour, moisten with milk or cream and‘ beat. well. Dro by spoonfuls in smoking hot fat. \'hcn done drain on brown paper. sprinkle liberally with powdch sugar, and squeeze on each a few drops of orange juice. Carrot Sauce.-Grate a large carrot. i beat a small piece of butter in a sauce- [can when just melted add the carrot with enough liquor in which meat was lu-‘lwl to. make it._ the consistency of gravy thickened with flour. Add salt, rack wheels are. Now arrange four er points outward, one between this and center. Join each to the other with a few tight. button-hole stitches where- ’ever the loops meet, begin at: each corner and work to the center, join all in the lcenter, then one between each opening Inear the four center hearts, points in, one each side of the corner hearts, paints in. Refer to illustration. Press carefully with a. warm flatiron. It is quite a, tedious task to join the hearts and keep them even. 0 l A CHILD’S HOlil-Eâ€"TRAINING. Mothers, remember that upon the home training of your children depends their success in after life. Their des- tiny, in a measure. lies in your hands. Begin this training early, imind is susceptible and plastic. That :which is learned early in life is nevcrl forgotten. The first thing taught should be obedience, and if this lesson be well learned you may teach them whatever else you may desire. A good example is the best teacher. Precepts are useless if contradicted by our daily living. If we are slaves to our eVil passtons how can we expect to teach our children self-control? If we sometimes speak or not an uniruth, we cannot. expect them to be truth- ful. Do not scold; do not use harsh words; for they will surely be reflected in your children. A child may be influenced at a very ,early age by good literature. A good story well. chosen sometimes has more influence. in overcoming a fault than any other means that could be used. Train them to helpfulness about the house, to sweep and dust, and to take care of their own clothing. This teaches them habits of industry, neatness. and selfâ€"reliance. Give them a. corner in the gardenmnd let them raise flowers and vegetables: teach them to watch the unfolding of the blossoms. and the gradual growth of the. plants: thus giVing tin-m their first lessons in botany and instilling within them a love for the beauties of nature. Instruct them as to the names and habits of the different birds and insects. How many beautiful lcssons may be taught the little ones from nature, if the heart of the mother he attuned to her noble mission! A MOTHER'S SCHEME. A clever mother has hit upon a new plan for keeping her children We“ and dispensing with the doctor's services. At; the beginning of the winter she gave thr-m a talk on keeping well, called their attention to the many ways in which colds are caught, serious infilflrï¬- tion brought on. etc. Then she offpr- ed to each child in the family a prize for keeping Well all winter, and thus far has found her idea to work like a charm.. As doctor's bills in a family of five children are frequently no trifle, the prizes will probably be worth win- ningubutdhc greatest. result will l.(-. that. in all probability the children will grow If! love with health and learn self-("introL while the- lmorc than him- ithatcr was more dangerous, :for in his final escape lie leaped into a pond to avoid the guards and was drowned before he could bc fish‘ed out. 5.. 1‘ “.- lTALY IN ABYSSINIA. t King Mom-[ck Goes to War to obtain l’ciicc. Could Italy make'pcace with Abys- sinia an honorable and just terms? it is admitted that, if :lic could, she would save millions of dollars and probably many lives of her soldiers, besides insuring, perhaps, her hold on Kasszila. and the defeat of the dcrvishcs. But she has apparently decided to carry on the war with King Mcnclek. When the King, after defeating her troops a few months ago, found the sur- vivors penned up, under Col. Gzillizino, at Makalle, he suffered them to escape with all their arms and equipments, and, according to one account forwarded at. that time. by Gen. Burnticri, this was intended to be at once a tribute to gal‘ lantry and a practical tcslimony to the Jiing's desire to obtain pcuce Be this as ll may, when later he inflicted :i tro- mendous defeat. on llziralicri, who had ! attacked him, againowiim- from the \‘icâ€" I tor the expression of :‘. desire for peace. \\ e soiiiotimes hour of going to war in order to gain peace, and ‘King Menclck's- seems to be a case. of this kind. ' But it zipiwzirs that. he cannot. get it-’ i Arc his. terms exorbitant! As far as can soon. what he principally wants is his own country, and in that ho Seems to lw (‘llllll(‘.li, just as if, should 'lw invade itzily and lM' dufczilcd by Ina Italians, they could properly dunmud, as “)0 basis of [it'd-('0, the. giving up of 1 what did not belong to him. it. appears, however, that the Italians have bot-n stirred up by his ullcgwl (li‘lllilnd of a large \vnr indemnity. ()n the! min-i hind, lllt' limnull (-nrrosfmndcnt of a London nmv:p.qwi‘ denies that be. hm made any such conditions. The point is of importance, immune, if he asks no money, and only wants it:in to give up what she has: tried to seize since his treaties with her of May :3. and Sept. :19, ill-‘9. he would hardly appear to make (excessive doumnds. Hill. at pro-win nu gvnwusity'ur any re- fraining from pursuing an advzuilago seems likely to avail King Mcnclck. The. modern wmniin, with her multi‘ tudinous activities, nelan an engage- ment list. llcr dcsk should be provid- ed with one. If her means do not per: mit her to indulge in a :iili'cr-fiï¬mict affair. she may make a very good sub. stitutc by removing the glass from a leathcr’bound cabinet photograph frame and substituting a pica: of whi'c slate. On the Slate the days of the it'l‘tfli should be painted. in color matching the loath- or. and tom cngagunonts may be juttcd down in panel opposite each day. point blank, but missed. M. Fichon in-l vitcd him to fire again, but other guards Threats of , __ _ . -. _ _ ‘ 50 times and never even' ' Se†dependence, and give him ‘1 800d hearts in the center of the square of» grazed. Therefore. he imagined business training, not so much of a col- paper, points meeting, one in each corn- lself bullet WOOL