A. ' x i : ‘ I ' ‘ ’ ' ' ' '4’ “N ' ' ' t, t t. t t' , [a (1 I'll lax" you to blaze it out. +32E+20E+§JEWMï¬m+n+3ï¬+£i+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+fl+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬mmm+n+n C 0‘ 01‘ gue W'w 0 amp :1 ion n e (, eh 2" 35 yril," he said, succinctly. ‘ _ _ +: “'And yet I have Vowed to keep go? Anything in the shape of"â€"â€"he 31 my secret." hesitated and colored slIglitlyâ€"“well, NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN a "Tlie foolwmakes a voxlv,J_tliE wise 1.101 plut itrblgiltly, anything in the oxâ€" IBULI‘ AND HIS PEOPLE. man {eeps i ,†murmuret ac’. (5 NIKE? Inc. _ “_ + _ “Didit CVOX‘ occur to you, Jack, “That’s JUSI; like you- JQCR- NO: Occurrences in the Land, Thai: I that though you and I have been thank you. I ve enOUgh for my most Reigns supreme in the Com- WWW OR THE STEWARD’S SON ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ ‘Q + E + £6 g +â€" 35 +â€" , '+ $n+u+u+um+ 31+???31i+££+§£+3§+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬+ï¬ï¬ CHAPTER IV. with the peculiar bearing of a man . - 7 ., who has “one in for athletics and The owner of.the VOlt‘e which i\o ah ‘ o v . :with fcc. tha was not on] hand- had hem‘d' under such pecuhar mEdisome abelt epossefssed of that \{insome mysterious circumstances, felt his i case and grace which one is accustmm Way down the Steps to the lower tor-led to associate with good birth and race and from thence to the lawn’ Ihigh training. His hands were small, and there almost stumbled over alyet Strong_looking; his clothes young man who was sitting. on .a u . H. 1. th hshion which bank with his knees clasped in 1115- Don mm ‘ m e ‘ close friends for nearly a twelve- month, you know as little about me as you did the night we met. You remember? The night you found me sauntering over Waterloo Bridge, and looking at the water?" “Yes, I remember," assented Wesâ€" ley. “I was without a penny, with the key of the street." “And generally miserable. Having been in the same condition myself, I knew the signs and felt a fellowâ€"feelâ€" ing." . “You stopped and spoke,†resumed Cyril, his voice so full of music that it stirred the heart of the listener, “and insisted upon my coming home with you and sharing your supper. You asked no questions, and there- modest wants, and I shall workâ€"no, you needn't smile; I mean it." “Well, then, I’ll go to bed," said Jack. “ lood night." “Stop! Weâ€"We shan't want to talk over this again toâ€"morrow, and I’ve remembered one thing you can do, or rather refrain from doing. It's this: I've an idea that possibly some- one may _hunt you up and make inâ€" quiries about me. It's not Very proâ€" bable, but it’s possible. If anyone should do so, will you tell thenl as little as you can?" creet. I'll forget that such a person as Cyril Burne exists." ,“That’s just what I rIvant," said Cyril. "Good night, old fellow, and pleasant dreams.†Left alone, he resumed his seat on .. I d. .‘n MERRY on) ENGLAND mercial World. The largest deer park in Britain covers 2,500 acres. It is in. Cheshire. The Admiralty have decided that the whole of the guns of the navy shall be 'rcâ€"sighted. Aliens who cannot read, speak a‘nd write English moderately well will not in. future, it is said, be acceptâ€" ed for naturalization. Lord lladdington, who has sat in the House of Lords for thirty years as a Scottish representative peer, owns estates in four Scottish counr ti'es which extend to 27,790 acres. Beer in the United Kingdom cone tains 8 per cent. of proof spirit. while the lager beer of the continent contains only 4 per cent. brini‘eth deli -ht to the. heart of the fore got no ï¬bs. And you have askâ€" , p _ ‘ H , , , . hands‘ tailgr, and tIIei‘e was an air of com- ed none from that hour to this.†the table, and fell into deep thought. I Shm‘lus 3'0 mo“ ‘ll‘deOflO {n-imy “Hano' what the dcuccâ€" Why' mand about the dark eyes and cleanâ€" “Which proves that I have not in- I’resently he. took some money from 0f any Class Of 13118115111 Tollway it’s you, Jack!“ he exclaimed inl . ‘ ‘ ~ ' . cut mouth noticeable even when as amazement. “Where on earth did youl ' ' ‘ ,, now, he was in repose. come from? ,, r, . . His friend stared at him, then lhe other, Jack Wesley, “as, of a laughed shortly. -It \vaS'a pleasant more commonplaee type- no “(as laugh, that matched the voice and rather aWkWal‘d 1n appearance, With the face which was Strikineg hand-.bent shoulders, and there was that some an'd manly. ilook about him which belongs -to “Why, you were up there just the brainâ€"worker. It was a good- new!" iiatured,‘ shrewd face, though the “was I? Then I was quite “ha- eyes behind the spectacles had aeâ€" Waw of it“ My deal. Cyril, I havmquu‘ed something of a cynical expresâ€" never left this bank. I know (it-Slep- bank†’lliese two young men were fast “Do you mean to say You Were not ("imi‘ls' JaCk thought Cyril the P01" up there?" interrupted Cyril incredu- fection of manhood,. .and admired lously. “Why, man, I heard you_†him for all the. (lllitllt‘lt’s.\VlllCh he “Did you? Extraordinary! I gchib‘Ian.) lacked; and Cyril regarded you my word I havgu't Opened myibis friend as a geniusunrecognized as lipsfl. yet by the world, but as one whose “What/yr exclaimed CyriL HOh’ light would shine out brightly some come now, Jack, you are playing it day. . , a little too 10“. down_ I tell you, I And yet as Jack regarded his 51.1â€" heard you quoting that line about 0111. companion _there “115.11, certain the moon from Romeo and Juliet!†curious questioning expressmn in his The other turned his spectacles up elves. . to the handsome face with slow and “1. WT} reluetant .to dISt‘n'b your profound surprise, meditations, on which no doubt the “Upon my word, Cyrih this busi- fate of nations depends," he said in moss, 0,. the moon, has been too his slow, goodâ€"naturedly cynical tone much for you. I quoted Shakes-. "but, my more mammal nature 15 peai'e! My dear fellow, I have sat |crav1ng for awhisky and soda, and here since you left me, and I haven’t Um ,C’llpboal'd IS immediately behlnd opened my lips! In fact, I've sat 5’0‘3- . r . here long enough to grow a crop of («3’1‘11 Blfl‘ne started Sllghtly and the very ï¬nest kind of rheumatan wheeled his chair aside, then got ‘up This midsummer madness of yours is "mfl b03311 133101113 the 1'00111 With growing serious_ F01. Heaven's sake, quxck, restless steps. let us get away while,we’ve a chancel 4*le “TC-“3103' _ml?\'0d 9- QOPP10 Of About Shakespeare! Why, my dcar'dr‘i‘nks With deliberate,preCismn. fellow, I've been in too much of H Walk up, walk up! he murmured, a funk all the time, for every inomâ€", the 11011.15 110‘" about to he it‘dâ€"01‘ em, I’ve fancied I heal-d aniratlier drinked. I wonder how much Ihohcst watchdog or a keeper or a Mrs. English, the landlady, wdl gardener, or something of the kind. Charge for the Carpet; perhaps 1f Come along!" and he rose and stret-Iyeu'fl take a 181" Found the other clied himself. side of the tableâ€"â€"" ' “Butâ€"butif it wasn't you who Th‘m '{tejm‘edu Pyi‘il Stopped Shql't» were up there and Spoke, who was and taking up his glass, seated himâ€" it‘?" demanded Cyril. Self 0“ the Leblc' “ASk me another,†responded his “That's better," remarked Jack friend with a stifled yawn. “Cyril, Wesley, dropping into the chair; you have been star gazing or moon “now We can talkâ€"that is, if you raking until you have lost your can tear your mind away from the senses. Who should be up there. Do romantic episode of the mysterious you think if any one had been he voice on the terrace; and I should would have stopped to talk poetry just like to ask you, my dear Cyril, with you? Not be? He'd have rung what you intend to do?" the alarm bell, sprung a rattle or “What I intend to do?" riddled you with a revolver; and “Exactly,†said Jack, pufï¬ng at that‘s what will happen to both of his pipe and nursing his knee, a film us if we don't clear out," and he orite trick of his. “When a week ago almost )W‘Vlwd his SDCCta-Cles Oh.- you came intoâ€"burst into would be “5101) Chamng for a moment, Jaek- the more exact expressionâ€"my cham- I tell you that I Sawâ€"“en heard bers with the proposal that Is'nould some one up on the terrace! I Went accompany you on a trip to Sang i up there in the dark and was sitting ! [Gig-h, Cotmty Berks, you asserted, in 0“ the top Step wait-lug for the response to my question ‘Why?’ that moon to Clcal‘. When a "Diceâ€"YOUI'Sr vou wanted me to startle the artisâ€" as I thought, imitating a woman'sâ€" ch world, and blazen your name on said: ‘Swear not by the moon!’â€"â€"you the head you of Fame_ you also 1-0- know the lines. And I answered. I marked that it would he a capital went on talking to you, as I thought chance for my getting a few rustic and though I 3913 “0 reply I fancmd l ideas for a poem, a novel, or a play. you were too frightened to carry on IS not that soy, a conversation in such dangerous Cyl-n nodded with a half smi10_ lleill‘nf-‘SS t0 the houseâ€"‘andâ€"‘end H “In a weak moment a very weak '~ 1 . lie )ut his hand to his browâ€"“Great . _ Holman,†a bumh rose to his tanned moment, I consented. I may remark ‘ - ‘ {that I always do consent to your face. “I-“I. thinking you had -3.on proposals and that I never fail to down. littered Seme “0115mm†NO’ 1t rue my weakness This inst'iiice is n ' . . . . . 1_ . ' ., . . i c “as not 11011503350. but. 3130:, I_ We? no exotiption to the general rule. We not alone! home one was 111010- .1. y 1“ ' r '- “’h was it,†ia’xe )ttn in this secluded spot two . “$711055 u). tell. A womquh voice whole days. Your sketches are re- .) ‘ ‘ - ‘ 9,, ‘ ' presented by that insane outline of a you say, Aie you 81110. t. n 1 - -. - “(wit sure now “ iee, ie pomted his pipe at a can- ,“ 1131;qe,,mh1 probablv†YRS on an easel, “and my rustic I ~ t . -' ideas have not yet suggested them- “Well my dear Cyril it's the only ‘ ' . ‘A _ slli‘lrosthIIL I can inalie. WhyiSOIVQS' [Instead Of “'thh.’ as the t 551; P I . 'id u t‘ Shakcs_:iiiagisti‘ate observed, we have perpe- 2112111052111tfmtgplllzcgtdï¬hcqi:{:8 mallyltrated a sample of mad trespassing Gt v r n ‘. . . ‘ V ‘ . ~, which ought v - ' nowadays to know him as her mis- D 1011“ e landed “5 “1 the tress is.†Village (111ml. 01‘ obtained for us a "Bah! it was the voice of a lady." Ch???†01: 01‘ a revolver bullet “Thanks; you said just now you apiece .1 111:0 ‘allVOIItUI‘Cs-T-for other thought it was mine." IPOISOPS'FS 101 me, Wl‘llvlng‘ abOUt "I saidâ€"â€"†retorted Cyril; then em_ 15 Bee“ enelfél'h; and I bog to with a stifled sigh he allowed hisisï¬iuje EIEaE'IV POIIILCIY, but emphatic- companion to draw him away. ï¬lmy-1i} If ‘is‘jlt0t actinupany. you in any Keeping in the shadow of theE .1. ‘01 éxl"01_i_“_10t_.her it take the shrubbery they made their \vaylsmm' 0 P10“ mg like burglars at through the ornamental grounds, crossed the park and reached theigï¬â€˜o‘l‘llilllg :11th fl: chl'p'ch. And I would village, and stopped at The Shequerslio' r Lure {3 115-- .' iz’i’en me you gomg as the inn was called. Inn is rather ‘ e. n 0 0“â€~ a dignified name for the little place, Eyl‘ll Bul‘he lal'ighed slowly again which was a rambling cottage owned- dack, it you (1 been 1,0,.†dumb bv a widow of a former Court ser- .Vou d have been as nearly perfect as vhnt, who let two or three of the fl‘l‘nan could be,†he suid_ rooms as lodgings, and sold beer, 'lhilnks for your kind appreciation candles, tobacco and pegâ€"tops, and but allow me to remark that that is other articles too numerous to menâ€" 110‘? an answer to my question_ tiou, in one end of the tiny place. 1’10i‘fS0â€"I ask it as a special faV01~_ The two young men entered the (1011}; Regan tO‘IJl:nllC0 up and aowu sitting room and Jack turned up the Kagaml 1401‘ Cyril had got on‘ the parafï¬n lamp, while Cyril dropped table. and threatened to resume his into a chair and stared thoughtfully I‘GSUOSS paCing. Ile desisted, how- into vacancy. Over, and went and leaned up against; Jack got a pipe from the mantel the mantelshelf, anddookod down at Shelf and lit it; then, adjusting his the spectacled face with a. chriOUS ex_ spectacles, gazed reflectiver at his DY‘F'SSIOD. half-Sud, half-\Vlfs‘tflll: musing companion. Jack, you are the only friend I Now that thev were in the light have In the world, and sometimes I one could see the contrast between am sorely tempted to tell You, to the two men. The one. Cyril llnrne, Conmleâ€"†llc stopped, and Jack was tall and straight, strongâ€"limbed, Wesley regarded him seriously. midnight about a noble mansion, or| lierited my Mother Eve’s crowning faultâ€"curiosity,†put in Jack under his breath. "You took me on trust, helped me to gain my livingâ€"were, in short, that rarest of all rare things, a friend in need; and. as a return for all your kindness, I refuse to confide in you!†There was silence for a moment, then Jack Wesley looked up. “Why should you confide in me?" he said. “Keep your secret, whatâ€" ever it may be, my dear Cyril. I am quite content. with my ignorance con- cerning it. 'A man's a poor kind of friend who wants to pry into his chum's .private affairs. 'And now, will you come back to London to- morrow?" “No, Jack, I cannot." “Then I must go alone. All play and no work will make Jack a hunâ€" gry boy. You paint down here as wellâ€"better than in town; I must be near my books. Yes, I'll return; but â€"â€"-" Ile paused, and getting up, re- garded the handsome, pensive face with a shrewd; kindly smile. “You didn’t see the ladyâ€"401d or youngâ€"- who quoted Shakespeare on the terâ€" race to-night, Cyril?" “No, I know what you mean, and I plead guilty. Jack, I'll tell you what keeps me here. You will langh â€"I can’t help it. You’ll think me mad, even if you don’t say so; per- haps' I am. Well, then, this afterâ€" noon when I left you for a stroll I sauntered toward the court gates to get a view of the house. 'As I was standing there a carriage came up. It stopped while the lodgekeeper was opening the gates, and I saw an old man and a girl inside. She looked out for a moment. 1 only caught a glimpse of her face, but"â€"â€"he paused and looked straight before him, his eyes glowing with a look which Jack Wesley had never observed in them beforeâ€""I see her now! Jack, it was the most beautiful face I have ever seen. I stood rooted to the spot. She did not see me, and her H eyesâ€" . He paused again. “Do you know that picture in the leftâ€"hand corner of the large room of the National Gallery, Jack?" Jack Wesley nodded. He was not smiling now. “They were like the girl’s in the picture, but 10Veliei‘. Her hairâ€"-â€"" He stopped again. “If I Were to talk for a month I should give you no idea of the face that haunts me,†he went on in a low voice; “of its sweetness, its purity, its nameless charm! The carriage went on, and I â€"just woke!" “And found yourself in love with a face.†“Yes, I fell in love with a face! Why don't you laugh?" “I was wondering,whether youjd mind my crying," retorted Jack Wesley, in a low voice; “for, believe me, my dear fellow, love is more of a crying than a laughing matter. Did you discover who she was?†“No. I asked the lodgeâ€"keeper, and he could not tell me. I came home, and the face hovered before me.†His head droopedh so that his eyes were hidden. “And it was on the bare. chance of getting a second glimpse of the face that you ventured on the burglarious expedition to the court toâ€"night?†“It was," he assented grimly. “I would go through fire and water to .see her again!†E “And you imagine, suspect, that the voice you heard was hers?" sugâ€" lgested Jack Wesley. “Yes, I think so. Now you know why I cannot go back with you, Jack." “I think I understand,†said Wes- ley, gravely, “and you make a great mistake if you think I am going to try and persuade you; but you'll let ‘me say that, if I were indeed the friend you call me, I should secure you by main force and conVey you as a lunatic out of harm's way; that [is to say, miles away from Santleigh tCourt and the girl who resembles Ithe De \v'inci picture. Cyril what lgood can come of this? For all you Eknow she may be engagedâ€"perhaps -marriedl ' ’ Cyril almost started, and bit his lip. “At any rate she is on a visit to an earl. Edie may be no end of a swell lierselfâ€"â€"â€"â€"" “And I am a miserable painter,‘ broke in Cyril. “I know. There is ‘nofhing you can say that I have not thong-lit of, and yet I cannot go. Leave me here, Jack, for a few days at least. I kimuf’i't's madness. butâ€"- well, knowing it won't cure it.†"I understand, old fellow, that ar- tistic nature of yours has caught fire, ; suggest some idea. to him, for, boldâ€" ing it still in his hand, he opened The woman’s voice murmured comâ€" plainingly for a moment, then all his pocket, and counted it out on the table. It was anything but a large sum, but he appeared satisfied, and returned it to his pocket. In (loâ€"l ing so his hand came in contact with a small fusee box, and he drew it out, and looked at-it thoughtfully. It was of silver, and bore an elabor- “The. Sphinx shall not be more dis- Lte monogram, and it seemed to the door and went info the street. There was a horse-pond (lose by, and he walked to it and flung the fusee case into the middle. It fell with a little splash, and he stood absontly looking at the circle it had made in the water. “I don’t think there is anything else," he n'iurmured, feeling in his pockets. “No, that was the last link, and it is gone to the frogs." Then he was turning to retrace his steps to the cottage, when he heard a voice, a woman's voice, in the lane on the other side of the pond. “You are hardâ€"hard! Why do you treat me so? Do you think I am made of stone?" Then a man’s voice came in re- spouse. “Nonsense! I am prudent for both our sakes, that is all. Trust to me and be patient. Go home now, and don't fret over nothing.†was silent. Cyril llurne smiled to himself. “I'm in for adventures toâ€"night,†he mused. “A lovers' quarrel, I sup- pose.†' At that moment he heard a step, a man’s quick, firm step, coming to- ward him, and instinctively drew back into the shadow. A tall, thin young man passed him rapidly, and went down the road, glancing to right and left as if he were anxious to avoid recognition. Cyril Burne looked after him with a faint wonder and speculation. “If I were the young lady, I should think twice before I trusted you, my ’ friend,†he said to liimself;“'you are too cautious and careful in your movements." _ Then'he went back to the cottage, and the incident vanished from his mind. The canvas at which Jack Wesley had pointed attracted his atâ€" tention, and, going up to it, he took up a piece of charcoal and rapidly sketched head. Quickly as it was done, it bore a striking resemblance to the head that he had seen at the carriage window, to Lady Norah Arrowdalc. He looked at it for a moment with heightened color, then muttering “A libel!†smudged it out impatiently, turned out the lamp, and went to bed. an outline of a woman's (To be Continued). -_+___.___ LARGEST HOSPITAL. Berlin will shortly be able to boast that it contains the largest hospital in the world. The new institution, whicln is to be called after the fam- ous physiologist, the liudolf Virchow Hospital, will be fitted with accom- modation for 2,000 patients. When fully equipped it will have a staff of 650 physicians, nurses, attendants and servants. In connection with the hospital there will be a patholo- gical and anatomical laboratory, bathâ€"house with medicoâ€"mechanical institute, section for Rontgen appli- ances, and a separate building ,also for apothecaries. .llitherto the’largâ€" est German hospital was that a Eppendorf, near Hamburg, with acâ€"l commodation for 1,600 patients. The size of the new Berlin hospital iiiay’ ibe best shown when compared with the London Hospital, with 78‘") beds, and the Marylebone Infirmary, with 74¢. ___+__._._._.. ‘ PAVEMENT ()I" Wl-IALEBONE. i A curious memento of the whaling industry of Monterey, in Mexico, re- mains in the DaVenient leading up from the street to the west door of the church of San Carlos de Borro- nieo. This is one of the churches founded by the Spanish missionary fathers, and is still in excellent re-H pair. The round, mushroomâ€"like ob- jects in the pavement are the. verte- brae of the great mammals. The pavement is in good condition andl seems to wear Well. 4+... llE'lt BUSINESS. “What business is Miss Caddie in?" “0! she's in everybody business.†"Ah! l’iiliolesale. eh?" “Yes, except when if comes at a scandal. She retails that.' workers. One in twolve is injured in a year; of station iniasters only one in 617. Women teachers, especially those UIICCl'tiflCatC‘Ll and without friends in. South Africa, are warned by the Colonial Ofï¬ce against going to that country in search of employment The Calholic Herald states that plans have been passed for a' new lioman Catholic church, to cost about £30,000, the gift of the Max'- quis of Bute to the Catholics of lioth'esay. A strange effect of the religious revival in 1110 north of England is the increased activity of the Mor- mons. This is especially noticeable in Slinderlavnd, where a Mormon. com- munity has existed for over thirty- five years. Gambling amongst the pa'upers- has led the West Ham. Guardians to stop cardâ€"playing in their workheuse anid iiary Betting news has been blacked out of the papers, and the inmates are to forfeit all sums of n‘ion'ey exceeding a shilling found on them. Between sixty and seventy pounds of honey was obtained when. a swarm. of bees had been renizoved from a, reâ€" cess near the signzboard of a wellâ€" k.nown hotel in. the neighborhood of Bulwich. The name of- Grace Darling stands forth prominently among British heroines. The cape she cast about her shoulders when she went to the rescue of the survivors of the For- farshire is to be exhibited at the forthcoming Naval illlxlhibitione in Lon-don. There is to be a Nelson relic exhiâ€" bition this year at the Royal United Service Institution. The Lords of Ithe Admiralty have consented to ilend the Nelson relics at Greenwich, 1and Lord Nelson will contribute his linteres'finvg collection of relics which is kept at Trafalgar, the family place near Salisbury. In the grounds of Luval, II-aslemere (Surrey), a green woodpecker Was found hanging out of a hole in a tree. '.l‘he bird had been accidentally killed through its long tongue havâ€" ing become fixed to a crevice of the trunk. ' Leicester hosiery manufacturers find that the competition of Germ-any and An'ieriea grows keener every month. The Germans are able to produce hosiery at smaller cost than. English makers, and new the Ameri- cans are following in their wake. Methods of dealing with the wound- ed on British warships have been under consideration by a special com- mittee appointed by the Admiralty. As a result the newer vessels are being fitted with lifts to Work up and tloWn the large torpedo hatches, with facilities for discharge between decks. . +_______ l l SULTAN ' S KITC MEN. The private kitchen of the Sultan of Turkey, is a veritable fortress, consisting of a small chamber sit- uated to the right of the great cm trance, and is guarded by barred windows and an armorâ€"plated door. fThe cook ofllciates under the ever~ iwatchful eye of the kelardjhi bachi, lone of the most weighty functionar- ies in Yildiz Palace at Constantinoâ€" !ple, for the health, the very life, even of the ruler is at his mercy. ,When cooked, each dish is fastened {with red wax, bearing the official 'seal of the kelardjhi, and remains hermetically closed until the seals 'are broken in the Sultan’s own pro- sence. llis Iifajesty's life is passed lin ~a’long series of elaborate preo- icautions. However, in spite of the care he takes of his health, 'Abdul Hamid, after a reign of twentyâ€"five years, looks prematurely old and broken. Ilis Weakness is extreme and his body so thin that it is little more than a skeleton. + ENGLISH STATURE. Statistics have. recently been col- lected of the height of 10,000 Engâ€" llish boys and men. At the age of seventeen these averaged 5ft. 8i=.\.; ,â€" lat the age of twentyâ€"two, 5ft. 9m. \t seventeen they weighed 142 1119.; lat twenty-two, 153 lbs. No nation iis incrimsing in height and weight so lrupidly as the British. In fifty years [the average has gone up for the ’whole nation from 5ft. 74in. to Sit. ‘RIiiiâ€" The average height of the Bri- tish upper classes: at thirty years of 'ag‘c is 5ft. 9.5m; of the farm laborer, 'Sft. 7 34in. The criminal class glii'iiigzjs down the akuge, 3.4 their lheight is but an 5 4-5iu. l _Zâ€"A‘K ‘1“ "'M‘ “A 'A "1‘2'3" A‘AK I“ l.‘ A‘A-n‘ AAA ' mmm