~3- ...,<~wu..,u.,.a.. \<..- . ,. Fumcumma \VIN'I‘ER NIGHT ON THE PARK. Heap pp the logs still higher and . higher. Till up the chimney roars the fire. And spreads around its ruddy glow To make our hearts with joy leap so. The myriad shadows on the wall Dance mlrthful steps without our call. As through the room the soft warmth weeps And frolic gay its revel keeps. ( Here gathered round the old hearth- stone Are or; three boys. {We're not alone. For. sitting in her big arm-Clair. Is motherâ€"smiling. sweetâ€"faced, fair; And father. listening to our jokes. Which we relate through numerous chokes. In trying to swallow at a round, The big soft pippins. plump and round. Soon corn is upping o'er the coals, A gnome-White east for hungry. souls; And hickory nuts and chincapin _ That autumn mids had gathered in Are cracking merrily. Then just brought up rom cellar’s depths in foaming cup. spicy cider. like sparkling wine. Causing lips to smack and eyes to shine. Thus 5 ds away each happy hour._ While owling storms spend all their power- Outdoors in vain. With cheer and fun Our evening’s sport its length has run. When father says, ""l‘is growing late."- Then work begins with book and slate. And problems rack each stubborn brain Which drowsy grows beneath the , strain. ( Boon flung aside are mental cares“ nd clambering up the old back stairs, Ve tumble in big feather beds Like downy seas beneath our heads. ulled by the winds with wailing song 0 dreamland fair, we're borne along, Thus ends, unknown to care and harm, A winter night down on the farm. APPLE AND PEACH TREES. I think that it is a mistake to plant ipple among peach trees, for two rea- sons. viz., the apple and peach do not require the same methods of cultivation and fertilization, and with ordinary orchard management, a. few crops of peaches impoverish the soil, and the apple trees become stunted and diâ€" seased, never producing satisfactory crops. So says W. \V. Stevens. in ans- wer to a correspondent. But now that A. D. M. has his trees started together. the question follows. VV’hat is best to do under the circumstances? While I hould not have applied the lbarnyard manure on this new and at all, still the management up to this time isn't bad. But don't use any more manurel It isn't the best thing to use for trees that will soon begin fruiting, neither is it the most economical fertilizer even though it cost nothing but the haul- ing and handling. The cheapest source of nitrogen is clover and cow peas grown upon the orchard, and turned tinder at the proper season. Use aci- dulaied phosphate rock for phosphoric acid and. wood ashes or muriate of pot- ash for potash. In mixing the acid phosphate and potash use about four pounds of the former to one of the lat- for. In applying this mixture use from 600 to 1,200 pounds per acre, thoroughâ€" ly incorporating it with-the surface soil. and distributing it evenly all over the orchard. 1 would not use less than 600 ounds annually. and as much moreas felt able to apply. I would increase the application “when the orchard begins to bear. The peach trees will need feed- ing as well as the afpples. and the more liberally they are ed the less will be their tendency to impoverish the soil and in'urc the apple trees. A great many ruit growers would recommend- and use raw bone instead of the acid hospbate, and I used to think it the ear. source from which to obtain phos- phoric acid; but experience has taught me that it becomes available too slow- ly to give best profits or results. The acid pliesphole that is manufactured from the Tennessee rock now givesthe highest grade of fertilizer. arndis tobe referred. Make the application of fer- ilizer late in the fall or early s iring, whichever is most convenient. Vhen the peach trees begin to bear, don't neg- lect to thin. out the fruit, and thereby save fertility. It requires just as much mineral plant food to perfect the pit of the sma l. knotty unsalable peach asit does the very finest specimen. And as soon as any of the pouch trees become diseased or fail to produce vigorous growth, cut them out of the way and allow the space to contribute its avail- able plant food to the apple. \Vhen chemical manure are relied on to keep up the fertility of the orchard let the cultivation be shallow, and in drysea- sons. especially. as frequent as possi- ble. so as to conserve soil moisture. which is needed to give vigorous. heal- thy foliage. as well as perfect fruit. Without the one we cannot have the other. PROTECTION FROM FROST. The losses sustained by many fruit growers by the freezing of flower buds. which expand on their trees. have caused agoneral inquiry as to the cheapest and most practical way, if any. of preventing the injury. It has occurred to me to call attention to the California plan of building fires through the orchard, to produce a dense smoke. which raises the dew point and prevents freezing. says Joseph Meehan. This plan has been in opera- tion on the Pacific coast for a num~ be: of years. Those who first tried it were thought to be visionary folks, but they are not thought so nowadays. as it is too well known that the dense smoke produce will prevent the buds Inning. Those who possess large or- chards of fruits which are liable to injury. will. without much doubt. find the details of the plan of interest. It had been the custom of those who first used the smoke cure to build fires on the windward sic of ‘ the orchard letting the wind drive the smoke and perseverance through it. But the present ml is to have what are call- ed portable udge fires. the up paratus‘ to produce the smoke bein driven to various points of the archer. The construction of the apfamtus is described as follows: “Wire mines are built on farm truclc wagons. of chicken yard fencing. stretching them from four wagm stakes, heaping over them wet straw or manure. Earth is then thrown on the wagon beds to protect them. and pots of burnin tar are sets lunder the wet straw roo . A barrel goes with. it to keep the straw wet all the time. The wagons are kept on the move throughout the night. from place to place as needed. to keep smoke hovering above the trees all the time the frosts lasts. Sometimes the frosty period may last three or four days, but at such times the tempera- ture usually rises higher in the day. so that fires are only needed in the night. One very great advantage of having the fires on sleds or trucks is this: As the smoke rises_ and passes through the wet material it “falls back of the w on. and the fire being moved an away rom it. it is heavy and falls to the ground. where it spreads. slowly through the orchard. It is said that where an orchard is so treated it Will alt daylight present the appearance of being covered with afog. from the ground to about twenty feet above. it seems like a big undertaking to have to be on the move all night, but those on the Pacific coast who _have_ tried it. claimed that it saved their fruit and left a. good profit. the expense being less than one percent. of the value of the crop. The Jan seems so entirely feasible that I ve been tempted to mention it here, believing it to be of much. value to many readers. FEEDING VALUE OF APPLES. \Ve do not think enough. of the value of the orchard for feeding its fruits to the farm animals. Apples are nu- tritious. and an aid to the good diges- tion of other food. The mild acid of them is excellent for the health of the stock and we all know how gratefully; they will {receive a. feed of them at.any time. For the cows they are espeCiaHy desirable; a. peck of them chopped and sprinkled with meal of any kind. will. help much to add to the flow_of milk of the cows. Horses love this fruit, and they tend to help in the shedding of the cost. by their gently laxative effect. NVhen. the selection is made fold the spring planting, a few of some of the swaet varieties. ripening from the summer to the winter should not be forgotten for this use. \Ve may begin with. the early Sweet Bough for the first. then the autumnSweet Bough and the old Pumpkin Sweet. and £011 later use there are the Tillman Sweet and the Winesap, all_productive sorts and unexcelled for this use as well as for market. -. CARE OF CALVES. The best place for the calves is a box stall in the barn. Have the stan- chions placed on one side of the stall and put each calf in the same place every time before feeding and they will soon learn to go there themselves. Feed milk first, then a. small quantity of cats. In this wa they Will not suck each other. \ hen :they have eaten the cats, let them out and scat- ter hay in front of them. Always keep the stall well littered and feed warm milk, and the calves will keep clean and look sleek. l of water PAINTS WITH HIS MOUTH. Bertram llllcs, an Armless Englishman, Wins Prizes for llis Decorative Dc- signs. The achievements of Bertram Hiles, an Englishman, surpass in earnestness those of all other armless artists. IHiles is a young man who is making his mouth play a double part in his existence. With tis aid.- he is taking prizes in drawing and art deâ€" signing, and making not only a living for himself but a reputation for the excellence of his designs and composi- tions. . ".Vithoult arms of his own Hiles paints beautiful women with exquisitely mod- eled arms, and does work that any one in possession of all their muscular capacities might be glad to lay claim to. ’Hiles had arms, but when eight years oldawas the victim of a train-car accid- ent and lost both. Before this_event he had developed so strong a passionl for drawing that the loss of both arms in no way diminished his determina- tion to become an artist. oil, for brushes were beyond his wild- est dreams then. First he learned to write, and then to draw firm: lines. The muscles not only of the mouth‘ but of the neck required training, and it was between five and sux‘ years be- fore such control of them had been ob- tained as permitted Hiles no work with ' a free touch. From that time Hiles has continued to progress. and has not only obtained a number of English medals and prizes in the decorative industries but won a Scholarship at the National Art Training School tenable for two years. Hiles has visited and studied in Paris, and now is_ earning his. living in England, combining decorative art with pictoral work. A strange case of a handless man be- ing charged with forgery has occurred in Alabama, where 8 Rev. A. R. Fowl- er is accused of forging three rent notes and a mortgage on a farm. l 1 Fowler lost his hands one often the other while out gunning. and as both accidents were preceded by his taking out accident insurance policies, the mm- panies are now fighting the payment of the policies on the lost or blown off hands. It is not explained how the headless reverend gentleman commit- ted the forgeries. I MUSIC FOR. TEE_ DEAF. At a meeting of the Royal Society in December Professor McKendrick de- scribed n method-by which it was pre- sible to stimulate electrically the sen- sory nerves of the skin "so that some of the elements of musicâ€"rhythm and in- tensityâ€"might be perceived and even enjoyed by those who had become deaf." I So Hiles edu- . cated his mouth until it grasped a pen- ; HEALTH. l SENSIBLE MANIC’URING. 3 Everybody ought to desire to have {clean hands. and unbroken, tidy finger lnails, for their own comfort and that 3015 their friends. To carry a pair of re- ipulsive hands is unnecessary and un- kind to one's associa' tss. Hands need not be repulsive lfthey are used to Lard work. and hands are not always attractive if the nails are highly polished and daintin curved! Even shell-like nails will not conceal the bad character that some bands re veal. neither will toil worn fingers con- demn the truly fine hand. Cleanliness comes first. and. therefore soap and warm waiter, a crash wash .010“). for rubbing the hands or a nail brush. are the first requisites. By the 'time the hands have been soaked and rubbed till clean. the cuticle around the nail is sufficiently loosened to be easily pushed back at the sides and root of the nail, either by the pressure of the fingers alone, or using the wet cloth. In drying the hands, use the soft bath towel the same way as when drying the fingers; the habit once formed of touching each nail with this backward movement when bathing and drying the hands, one almost unconsciously gives their nails “massage treatment," not less than three times a day, and as man ymore as the nature of their em- ployment demands. The home keeper, who is a. worker, may have occasion to "wash her hands twenty times a day," but the deftness which she may acquire in pushing back the cuticle around her nails, .will not delay her an appreci- able number of seconds. The hands must be cleaned after sweeping before turning to cooking. or to her sewmg. and so on through the day's_duties. and she may as we‘ll dry them in the best way as the worst; dried they must be. and it takes no longer. to _do it properly than improperly. This Simple achieve- meat of clean nails and. Well loosened cuticle lays the foundation for an atâ€" tractive hand. I If the skin is not permitted to up and lie on the nail, it rarely and cracks, and therefore there are no hang nails and no broken. edges that need cutting with the cuticle scissors. To know when the nails are perfect one may look to see if the skin lies around the nail evenl withta narrow edge. like a hem! The manicurist in her ig- norance usually cuts this hem off; and when she does not draw blood often the edge swells, looks red and remains ten- der and perhaps even sore for two or three days after treatment. Never recommend the wielder of t-hOSe ow. ’scissors to a. friend. and resolve to use ries common sense and home treatment in, . _ . lweaghlt upon the paper, letting it rest the future. Unguent is very well to remove stains there several days, from under the nails or on the nails if not used too freely. But it is safest to have a bottle of lemon juice; dip the orange wood stick into the juice andlhair brush. A little flour or as under the nail once or twice, and ‘ jaing cleaned each nail wash away the sol . One-half the usual manicure set is en- tirely unnecessary and one-half the re- mainder optional. and scissors are so unwiser used, that one dare not recommend them. The average person'is safer when confinedtbetween the ï¬ngers and rinse it in to the five-cent orange wood stick, to' fresh alcohol. pass under the cuticle carefully raised; towel and .take one with the dull point of an old pair of. and. while it is still damp, pick it open scissors. Not so "stylish" as a. sterl- in silver cuticle knife, of the injurious to the nails, which are so sen- sitive and easiiy injured. _ . Polishing the nails is entirely a._mat- ter of taste, and one that is uesttoned . A few foolish. peop e of both. sexes like a high polish, as indicative of idleness! _ Most hands would be improved by the use of some emollient night and morn- ing; but it is a matter of mdiVidual need which must be found out. One finds vaseline just the thing. another pair of hands are made ville by the same, but may thrive under the use of gly- cerine diluted with an equal. quantity of violet water, or of lemon juice. The .alcohol in the one and the actd inthe {other “cuts the g‘lycerme and modifies | its action. Almond cream is inexpen- sive, and best suits some bands; but emollients, like soaps, can never be pre- iscri'bed; each person must learn by exâ€" } perience what he needs. A file that costs ten cents. if thin. 5 so that it can be placed under the nail . to remove any roughness there may be , is of far more practical use. than a more expensive file of clumsy thickness. Nails need filling usually once a week, and ' ten minutes is a fair allowance of time to devote to them. if proper care is tak- . en daiily as advised. Manicures seem to have sprung up Like mushrooms within a few years, and at fifty, seventy-five cents and even "one dollar a. treatment," they find no difficulty in securing atrons. "All of my customers have t eir ‘hands done' once a. week. and some of my swell ones have me visit them every morning. Then I treat their wrinkles. at a dollar each, or give them 'an a‘ll-over' at two dol- lars an hour. Land-aâ€"massy ma'am, I'm taking in eight and ten dollars a day. I be,†so saitih one. who caters to the needs of those who know nothing :of common sense and self-help. : l l ABOUT HEADACHES. Headaches are all too frequent among women. and they arise from many and different causes. but in almost every instance it is smile very simple disturb- ance, and simple methods should be re- sorted to before using medicine. A moment's reflection will often enable i one to fix upon the cause. Giving the [feet a hot bath. but as one can stand {will often one a headache. which is caused by a rush of blood to the head. 'aocompanied by slight. fever. ' If one has been conï¬ned to the house. then take a brisk walk in the open air. And if the trouble arises from over-fatigue in shopping or si litâ€"seeing then tr ant; indulge in ahal hour's nap, or tilt the back of the neck in warm water, Moral: I on the paper, I The cuticle knifelbowl and put in the lace. Cover .the l l grade} very carefully with the nails and open soil in "department stores," but less‘each little loo ,fi'tly called cobwebs. . .....-‘ HERBGEAN pavilion? DEATH 01“ MRS. CARSON. AN EC- CENTRIC LOVER OF THE SEA. or in spirit: of camphbr. and relief will often be found. Nemaigia arises from starved nerves as much as from cold. but a hot flannel applied to the affected Ext Will be found the quickest relief. the trouble arisa from a sour stem- cell. a dose of u illow charcoal Will of- fer correct and sweeten it, and clear the head. To walk backward up and down the room issaidto beavery goodcure for a headache that arises from nervous causes. A Story That She Had (‘rossed the Atlan- tlc 250 Times and [led Never Missed a Trip on the “renninâ€"Salt] to llnve Let Her Fortune lo the Lueanln‘s ofï¬cers. Mrs. Elijah Carson, a lover of the sea, died on Friday night at Anumcm, Iowa. She had crossed the ocean 250 times. and it is said had never missed a trip on the Lucania since that vessel was in service. For thirty years Mrs. Carson has been travelling across the Atlantic on this Cunard line. Mrs. Carson was the wife of Samuel Carson, of Belfast. Her name was Ne- well before her marriage. and her bro- ther, \Villiam B. Nowell, was a mil- lionaire, of Nashville, Tenn. Shortly af- ter the death of her husband in 1864, Mrs. Carson, accompanied by her daughâ€" ter Elizabeth, came to America to visit her brother. This was Mrs. Carson's first ocean trip and was thn beginning of her infatu- ation for the sea. Mr. Newell preâ€" vailed upon her to remain in America and on his death-bed bequeathed to her a. half million dollars. THIS lNlll'llLITA‘NC’E gave Mrs. Carson ample means to per- mit the indulgence of her eccentric de- sire to be continually on the water. It was in the year 1800 that Mrs. Carson was first at liberty to follow her pen- chant. She left her young daughter in the hands of friends and took her sec- ond trip to Belfast. She returned in a few weeks, saw that her child was in safe hands, and from that. time on un- til she was seized with her last illness a month seldom passed in which she did not. take a voyage across the Atlantic. in the year 1883 Mrs. Carson‘s daugh- ter was ’married to Julius ltohrbiich, a travelling man of Chicago. Mrs. Car- son then felt that she had no more fam- ily tics which would restrain her from keeping continually on the sea. Since 1880 her entire time has been spent in her voyages.- - Mrs. Carson had a strong affection for Capt. Molx'ay and all the officers of the Lucania. and remembered them in her will. It is said that Capt. McKay Will receive $50,000, and the subalterns sums proportionate to the esteem in which she held them. The exact terms of the will, however, cannot be learn- ?d.tas the document was filed at Del- as . I Mrs. Carson was well known in Chi- cago..Abourl; two years ago 'lier son-in- law. Julius Rohrbach, by the advice of his Wife. made an effort to restrain Mrs. Carson from taking any more trips acress the Ocean. While she was stopping at the hotel at Chicago, on a visit to her (laughter, Mr. ltohrbach went before a court and asked for the appointment of a guarâ€" dian, making the statement that Mrs. Carson had already spent $250,000 in her sca voyages and that unlessa stop was put to it HER. EN‘I‘lRE FORTUNE would be spent. . Mrs. Carson violently fought this 104 gal move. Slim announced that she would submit to no restraint, and that if her son-in-law dared to interfere with her liberty she would cut him off with- out a com. .This so alarmed Afr. ltohrbach and: his wife that the proceedings were drop- ped and Mrs. Carson was permitted to resume her jourileyings. The inci~ dent, howevor. had inside an impression on her mind, for on her next visit to Belfast she made and had placed on record. a will in which she gave only $1,000 to her daughter. $25,000 to her banker at Belfast, and $25,000 to her agent in New York city, and the re.- mainder of her fortune to the officers and crew of the Lucauia. Mrs. Caracn made her last voyage â€" INDIGESTION. The "Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette" says there is no more fruitful cause of indigestion than indolenca. It is a rare experience to meet a. person suf- fering from dyspepsia who earns his bread by the sweat of his brow. Al‘ vast majority of all the cases of indigestion met with is due to a want of strength of the organs of digestion from lack of exercise and. not from any special dis ease of the stomach. Active exercise of the entire system is imperativer de- manded for the continued healthy per- formance of the digestive function With complete nourishment of the body. While food is essential for the nourish- ment of the organism, without exercise its limpose quickly fails of accomplish- meii . For fumigating a. ck-room, burn lavender stalks, which. have been dried to crisp. or set a hot poker on a lump of camphor, placed in a pot or saucer. Either of these scents act as well as the usual pastilles or scented tape, and the perfume will not hang about the room so long. ...â€"__.__.____. CLEANSING OF LACE. The possession of beautiful laces is a care as well as a pleasure, particulâ€" arly in the case of those laces that are very fine and delicate. and are often Such laces are frequently very tender. perhaps having been worn by the grandmother and great-grandmother of the owners. Fine. valuable laces ought never to be folded. When they are in frequent use drop them into a deep satin-lined. perfumed box in whatever manner they may fall]. and allow nothing to be plac- ed upon them. laces not in frequent use will keep best if laid upon strips of thick dark blue paper, the paper and lane to be then rolled together, thus keeping the (lace compact but not encased. Fine laces that are not too 'much soiled may. be freshened and cleansed with powdered magnesia. Sprinkle some magnesia upon a. smooth sheet of wrapping paper. lay the lace upâ€" and sprinkle more mag- nesia over it; cover with another sheet of paper, and place a. book or some light Then take the lace up. and what powder will not shake off brush out with a. camel’s corn i starch may be mixed with the mag- ne‘na. with some laces will oftentimes do as well. For cleansing fine laces with alcoâ€" hbl pour alcohol into a small earthen bowl and let it stand a while for any soued spots to soften. Pat the lace Roll the_1ace in a clean piece at a time. with the fingers. Pull out the edges _ _ on the edges with a pm, which will give it the appearance of new lace. The lace should be kept damp while it is being handled. Lay the lace between sheets of blotting pa.- 381: and press it until it is entirely. Ty. 9 . Fine, delicate lanes that require washâ€" gï¬pghglfl](inlbhglmwrgigélybeiizwzgdupgg l across the Atlantic five weeks ago. On catch each littleï¬oop upon the edge of the trlp_out from Inverpool she was the 1m with E‘Sï¬tch. R011 this striplseized with pneumonia, and when the or lace-covered muslin smoothly and’SLL-‘qmer returned . New York She was tightly around wsmooth bottle and failing rapidly. She was taken to a fasten it securely Make soap s'udq of hotel where she remained two days. warm, 80ft walel‘. and white “Stile when her daughter, Mrs. Rolirbuch, of soap. and let the covered bottle soak several hours. Make clean soap suds and put the bottle into this, {sitting the lace frequently with the ingers. Rinse the lace iii several waters. and then with a soft towel pat the water out of the lace and stand the bottle on one side until the lace is perfectly dry before removing it. If a little. . . . stiffness is desired in the 1m. 3 little any of them. Ior one, in particular. lguztn arable may be dissolved in thel'sho had less than no use. as rinsmg water. . ‘. -.._. I . .v. ' ' '_ \Vhen small pieces of lace. such as a ï¬n" $1.0“ l lain-I1“ guilmg m a 1†collar or Sleeve News. are to be wash_ cycle butt, am will u e in“. in the par-4 ed, a, bottle my be wound with 39v- Ior M'Lth the pretty girl, the pretty eral th;cknesses o'f flannel and theigirl's little brother solved the bicyclu ï¬gré’f’btï¬â€˜iny 11112:: [ï¬zgcg‘gieai l cap firmly down to the corner of the decided right and wrong Side to them hull table and than dumped all the oil look better when dried upon smoothlfroui the i'allcr's bicycle lump. Dull glass or marble. Spread the wet lace * Mr. Blank never murmured while he out very evenly, the wrong side next picked thi- stitches from his cap as he to the glass. and pick. out each littleï¬said good night. and walked the two loop and figure with a. large pin. Cer- miles and a half home without a com- tain laces dried in this manner are plziint. -. very satisfactory. Uf (illul‘b'f‘. the pretty girl thought. To wash black laces dissolve half a that Mr. Blank would nevi-r show up teaspoonful of borax in asmall cup- again and gave little brollu-r half a ful of lukewarm soft water and add dozen lu-ar hugs us a reward for one tablespoonful of spirits of wine. bouncing him. But ten days later Mr. the late in this liquid. rinsing Blank umwarcd again as if nothing had it in and out and pressing it between happened; this time in evening dress. the hands to extract the dirt. Then with a silk bat- it was an‘ awful bot rinse it in a tumbler of hot water in night. but little brother was on deck which a black kid glove has been boiled. ’ust the sumo, and a thin slice of lim- Pull the lace out evenly with the fin- Air or Cheese Went under the lining gets and lay it smoothly between news- of t lat lint before the evening was papers. .Plare a weight upon it and let over. , it remain until perfect y dry. Old Mr. Blank did not deport until 11.30 black thread or French laces that need that evening. but nothing was ever renovating are improved e2“: being heard of the Ulllti‘lvz. This time the dipped into asolution of w green pretty girl and little brother 'mtide tea and then spread out upon several bets at odds of 16 to 1 that birmlank thicknesses of newspaper laid upon a. would never call again. But Mr. Blank flat surface. With a pin pick out each did call again and with a smile on his little point or scallop; then Cover the innocent round face. At about 9.36 lit- laoe with sheets of newspaper 85nd 91,113 tle brother strolled into the parlor and a weight upon the paper, letting it walking up to the clock mulled the remain twenty-{0111‘ hOUIZ-‘i- Black {888 hands around a couple of ours ahead veils thaehnvesdt stringy may be and strolled out again. silently. Mr. freshened in a like manner. Blank went early that evening and has not been back since. Anamosa, 1a.. arrived and took her West. Mrs. Carson was 74 years old. ONE NOT EAb'ilLY MOVED. ;A pretty girl living near New York is affected with a large number ofl would be buaux, but has no use for ..... ..._ .. _ _....s._.. .-. â€"~.. A NY OLD SCHOOL. Mrs. Crimsonbaok. Does Dr. Goeasy belong to the old school? ? Mr. Crimsonback. Yes; any no school. I guess. GONE \VI’I'II A HANDSOMER GIRL. What makes you look so dejected.Miss Elderly? _ [ feel that I'm almost like a grass .vidow. The man I provesed to last leap year bu eloped with another girl. 3.. p v 'K. .. pâ€"â€"-. .1