HHFFLAL HH ttt ttt 444 444t44 dette ttt te ttt ttt Face to Face SEO0CSO9-. OR, GERVASE RICKMAN’S AMBITION. next fo Sibyl.,, You Raye-heen more than “Iam ree & brother,” he replied, she paus “this has been a fortunate day for me, mark- Jng my fire step in public We; <L have, ‘ou know, a little superstition about home dave tha i hope this may prove dorluaste:in Snollieg sense. -Publle life, power, success, e do not. fill a man life. ‘Thete are deeper ininge that ‘e the superstructure of active ae A happy | m created a stronger need for the healing of affectionate intimacy, and she uncon- sciously threw herself more and more on Gervase's _friehdshij man tells a woman of his struggles and difficulties, it is not only sign he 5 Py < af m new, He believed that Othello would have sighed ur the hi tinct which Telate the peril \dventures ear’; in which case she suffocation and lived + + + ¢ bp. Ps 4 About the Farm 3\° EFT 4 44444444444 44444 PRODUCING THE LAYING HEN. When the chicks first come out of the shell, I leave them in the incubator till the last hatched is 24 hours old, then ttt+t+t+++++ > +++4 oa i io work in the "wat \- part. of Dido | Pale weameecnire DG poe ey go 4 2 ; pnts @ heart o} would never ae mounted] of 90 degrees, the brooder floor bei hallowed: au. by, uneatipfled. yearn: Therefore he fell into vs ee i : FHF FH 4 tH ttt tt ttt tttt tt ttt44444t 444444444444 | ings and vain : confiding his ambitions, aha T'inch of cut catalfa and oye CHAPTER Il. soft and dreamy mus! é y graver as she ei aims and struggles to Alice—with sae and water {wo hours before feeding, 1 imagining, as she so frequently did when to the deepening Abrations ke the ‘mel- c or it is not 0} feed a dry grain chick food containin posline Baker received as guerdon for} seeking to express het feelings; she|low voice, which was not nvariably apposed that Desdem in a9 per cent. chick grit and. 50 per cent. metas Orieimpexpectenl-five-- shillings beeeng drawing the inspiration} mellow, but sometimes han t | Position. fo compiles complete Biography | sma) granulated chareoa}, ‘The brooder trom psi Rickman and an unexpected tfor her music trom the tranquil star-| heart ached. She kney of Othello, while Dido was very far from|ys cleaned every day by sifting sand ast i Ruth; for he had not omty.tvtorids “toward which; her» face. was fing; the old trouble Which she thought | knowing the whole his yo Eneas;|through a cornmeal sieve. Beef scraps MEAvEG kak ae sy Ct hich he | med... Sibyl was ing in a chair, | forever at rest, was starting afresh into| il is even possible that both these war-| are xept efore them after they are four bore th cot in & et eer ase he doing nothing but sintering to“Alice and| life. He was very dear to her, dearer|riors, like Goethe, may have mingled a le proof in rent g stroking the cat upon her knee, to the| than she thought, and the prospect of j liltle Dichtung with the Wahrheit out of ‘Whatever call had y ta anger of Hubert, who was observing| having to ¥ him an hour so | their lives, it is certain that Gervase was ing ve when yon knowed Me. Ricken ‘was | puss with one eye, a3 he lay at his mis-| happy, and casting such a cloud over his] fa* too clever no! “a Thus Ger- tress’s feet with his muzzle on his fore-| fins triumph, was nexpressibly. pain-| vase had ually become dearer to TW | or dree was laying about them,”| Paws. Mr. Rickman prep audibly in his|ful. She could not mi is gaze; 5} lice ; he made her life sufferable in the he explained, “wand 1 thought I med so|ehair on one side of the hearth with a| averted her head and watched the fire- | heavy sorrow which had desolated it, well jine i xplai anion that did at newspaj folded on tis knee ; light playing over a panel and maki The pale resolute face, ali in- Balisfy Ruth, whose feminine mind Rickman slumbered. peacefully in her | t tof armor in front of it stand out | tellect and energy, and spirituallzed by not room in { amit the obvious tact chair on the other side of the hearth,| grim and fh stile suggestion. |the worthiest passion he had kni that no sensible man c: til. when |the future ruler of England, if not the| Hubert sat. up swith his hs just above | the slight but strong, figure, imposing there is good fighting to be had for no-| world, appeared te be following his par- mee, and. a 1eok of 5 pathy in bis|though small, haunted her, and thi jut these: confidences took. place | ents’ exa: in. the corner of a sofa, | eye: e d0R ‘tL least is faithful and v mellowed and deepened by feck Tras SR gare alee after the visitors had left the cottage, | but, thougn his ees seemed to be closed, | true,” stot Sertigaiiee mina witha aip-|ing, rang in her ears. Most great me ais.avs hefore them, At five months old very que did, _ walkit they w e in reality as watchful as Hu-| parent ota § for whom did she sus- | hay nm small, she remembered, and {begin teeding ene enh cots! . ‘over the dry dead leaves lying une in bert, “ahh ere aware of every sligh att of falsel mly men with voices of a certain power} vi oot one part: barley “and “hwo aria ir path, with hearts r movement of Aliee, as she swayed over | “Oh, Gervase !” she exclaimed, * in directly influence democratic com-| Vie" One Part ie sare suppose it is true, Alice,” said M Rickman, pausing v giving beneath the sycamores. and’ 1ook- ing ¢tbiously toward Medington at the crim&an~ western sky, which — glow through the dark elms, the delicate leat- inks of which as one or {wo liquid stars appeared above its chimneys in the pale ee sky. is surprising,” ‘ickman con- ” Ally “that your hase and T won fa two Bows ewes children. ‘0 he ure we ewtQuallty. as better, hen susnbiy re- | her, pled Alice, wondering if Mrs. Rickman ise and Sibyl Inhered at believe that 'Siby! is writing a bbal: Alice,” Mrs, Rickman said with a mys- terious air, as § they reached the Aight of steps leading into the porch, through 4 half-open Ea pe ie Gees ligh! streamed. “Her father says that she is capablg.ot anything after that last article of here education ; though I d her all the ide halt of x And now 1 should ike to see him ried to a really athe" “So should 1,” quilly ; MutT nice girl, were {oo fond of her. sooner had they entered the hall than all the servants came crowding into relurned Alice, should be jealous of the it. with Johi 9 iff, and his wife, all eager to proclaim the good tid- ings ; ly had the congratul comments subsided, when a carriage drove up to the door, an Rickman and Siby!, the latter radiant with excitement, sprung out, and the 5 congratulations began over again; wine} ni member's i health was enthusiastically drun! little apart, with ‘Hu bert lying at her feet, as if studying the scene overhead, the glitter of glasses, and lecantel hich Sibyl was pouring the sparkling wine with a face infinitely more sparkling; and the U came to her that ws tho et ta. ‘of these peo- ple, who wel r to her, she too ene inde a Tittle glednest, 1 enou, die igh spirits like Sibyl difference ir aments, and calling herself selfish, Bu mn ‘ould this happiness last on- mbit the y and uncertain career On which he was Jaunched. She \ he door than t athiers, and the pricking of Hubert’s ears called ‘her tion e rumble of Pa te aca Upheerd shy ihe bacchanalian group’ before, the hearth, He e glowing light from with-| em! te wi ith ane wath el bert by her side, decked with hig It was the sw fecleat. Toment in the day Pefly wahie had cleared the sleps, and was standing with both han clasped in Alice’s, receivitig her cordial ere veoting, ae ink 4 all lost our senses with ww niensure She was not surprised that his hands their pressure long affer she hers, or be he did not ak for some momen the congratulations pasa. upon. him, He was tired and excited, overwrought few. weeks ; which had been made ready for him, and administered it before any one time {fo think of it, with the observation your colors he con- iv ih his statel He “ne “while of his eyes yas distinelly vi A reaction is ‘inovital ible after. excite- ment. ‘The family fae a after ae a couple of hours quiet. They were all ei te. while draw- ing-room, one window of which was un- curtained showed othe quiet night s but throbbing with. the of slars, and-oceasionally pale bi Frradiated pe the ee trail of a me- scatedsat the piano,.could resis bimsel fla: sii ywed | thoughtful face, uh y pop ip Pasta that mj|heart with an in! -| deep inward sorrow. ie gin! to whom-T could fe tran- f Aunt Jenny; that is, if you], “| ping for .; Was so provokingly confident that the re- | diges' he snatches fro Gervase, 1 am glad! J) w | favorite yee sport was king the fo pain. too evident that evening on twe a "fateful words, right ;” summer ed bloomed md fae again till the fourth waaay from thi in-all that time he had in he “Quite @"Annesleys chanded to be @t cmehiin it happened that Alice was not at Arden; she was more often away from home than in former days. Had it h ih her? Gervase won- While he was thus observing here with nsfigured her face and stirred him_with’ a: vague trou He left his. place ore drew a chair to the piano, on which she continued 16 play. “I thought Fad eaught you nap- once, Gervase,” she will never do: that,” at said. Tooking up from. the cat she was petting and: teasing, “he ie: the proverbial wea- ide in his oom ome 0 if he a really _s Word,” “he 16 sweat ordain. and wakeful watches evei to abide.’ Am I quoting rightly, Sibyl?” Thero arse a dispute about the quo tion, the music died away, and Sibyl lines occurred in a sonnet, atten ai giana seal s ting the’ cat and taking A tho. piano; setting sin ‘and T believe its ulning her byt biayed in Yar spasmodic teshion rs, B3 arose 5 parent on, and Gervase gradually, after a fashion of his lich, and we can fall at. o1 Alice wonder such: ie surfeit ot ev suring: the last few did not take the opportunity of en- ioving a little anions but took her pla ee on. the. Cae laying the great book ©) the table} a id told him bellows, with of a e leper ‘upon: rousin, Kk flame from the log oe AU lai made a ae fre, the t brightness. of whic into Ali which ‘was: Tradited roy the ba that es ee no! @ spol and of ae rivalries and quarrels over the Selione e5,” she “1 think {he pleasantest thing in’ ie ‘s to remember what one a as a child. But none of us ;| could make such a fite as you could. It fea pity? abe conslided, “a really. flist- a sloker has been marr tenfidhe- in. politics,” he “But So Alice, 13 will not be in- aitferent, it ait thet Ho He pallens tic ee “tt Touche hee uaa fag ace her hesitate to “Tl co through ll these vents and sp fs Allces be-| imposs! ly | facts to suit "ala 0 had | refus cret, id lost its enietye you had kept your promis “I did keep wean Bese such a iv perpet self? To crush ss best and dearest tee! ings? Oh, Alice! have I these years? » Have I. nobys silence and seen others pce rouble, and yet silent? Did 1 es) by word or look La A d_unless you can ever be any good , nor found anything to warrant any | °"S con tet oti 2 indulgence: of his hopes, and during that| pyaq, | 4" at Ei gee bwals I tive rat gime, Allee had ‘scarcely seen would never have slayed near you to encourage false hopes. t realize them- he returned in a k mble; for it recalled his passion assertion on the downs so long ago thi ld win her int spite of herself, with that of Gorvase was as silk to iron. ® had a secret mastery over her whieh Engels nepal when she felt not one of those singularly constituted spect revolted at the notion-of subjection. ‘Whendien sue wee conscious of this heart turned from him and eave th change: is produced in-her, and knew he ‘on which he has- her cheek as she hardened her gaze to meet his. “It is so hard to have no “hope,” he added, in a tone that at once disarmed ner. “Life is new to youl oats of time. eo eait bina, bot. Seance fell Then he told her tow he had tried tried in vain to conquer his fealings exquisite pain of be part he had had to. play, of seeing her suffer ‘and being impotent to help tie spoke of their years of ‘tetionas afresh with néw rr was full of duty te seeponsibiity, and to make a fellow-ereature happy was no mean ae She ieved every word he said, and her: heat ‘bled for him. He believed most it himsel the habit of manipulating statements of | N their. own es, the dis- ing-room fire, feeling that ing, however slowly. heart was uttering ‘the pastonate wis re his life. The star made him almost tain of success; he asked. Sibyl if she had ae it_and remembered to it} and set Mr. Rickman off upon one ot nig stars and the. fancies connected wi em, thus giv- leisure i be silent and think yy her ite “hal night nates sot going % bed; she was to which predominated the foreboding that she would ultimately marry Gi 3 te at “herself, She tha » speat under that roof, of the ee ifieradieable ways ‘othe Gerv: 6 tal ni done homage to the etter os his ‘se the charm of his societ of yi to-say that,” es ios at jee “T hove — tel od sister to you, 's trust in your brotherhead | I thought A abo use fee all w me ‘bid kind ot ‘passions ate surprise, most. tenderly Sarasa Mie tateste. Seas A Alice, fresh | ful i | interests might still arise for you—in the ing is and yet so far off, of the difficulty of the ‘space Rails ee rm ‘ase in} ~ thought of the years| th own oat What bi but for the welfare of that fe hen spring flowers and fa the ae Lp ae life stirred within in the days of innocence. sin to marry one man when she felt this for another. (To be ¢ymtinued). ee a, MOST SONOROUS OF VOICES. Marakech, Morocco, Has the Most Won- a a. ‘ful Bell in the » Worl Marakech, the town in Morocco which Parisien explorer. ‘This famous bell,” he says, “is no- thing less than the voice of the muezzin (the public crier a Mohammedan coun ywer or minaret of a ost marvellously: solemn and torts at, alt human voiees, ced the muezzin how he came by iL. He answers oe ss that, voice Me inheritance, dating some 300 ye er Sultan {Alla uplift him) ape on ancestor mine to-be the muezain of M with the provision that until the day of com his descendants shall fill the same lofly place. For three hundred years my ancestors have called daily to the faith- Koran verse, to son we have all pos- sessed this Rass which is the astonish- ment ©! and the West, It is heard above the storm: above the nse and the voice of Hien Nacer car- ies from the mosque tower to the Jew- as S we ane 55 5 3 8 fs rainy or fai, noe in h this I am con’ hi eit day) my~skill develops. Aili Ibo Al 's voice will be as powerful, as S01 , aS 6 and erin mine, the most beautiful bell there is on earth, and so will be the voice of Ben —_+_—_ GREEN SUNG OF EGYPT. volume, she f vase standin, 8 Herculean labor fore the hearth, gazing thought ins] ming ao be ie lative to Deat tothe fire, ace was gettin, r. But ae could only tell him, as gently When. she appeared, he Mekal’ 0 as possibl Se vaey Pemnena t. Theseus, pnd: nob: Ne into “place, tne’ tirring the decaying Red than: they Peres InterrUnl moon, that {s made of green ch fee: oud making some fresh wood} Gervase was not sory for the inter-| The Rravaraine of a green light at sun- ee uption. He thought enough had been|set, like many other phenomena sup-| ae e said, pointing to a carved | said for the tim id was as saline posed to have only recently attracted at- Oak sel nice here, ae Sal as it is possible for a man who is very hapan was notic commente the ancient. Egyptians, and more particularly so because in the clear aie of Egypt the tints of sunset are pe- culiarly distinct. ‘As the sun there descends nearer and se, bul eS. extent. Sometimes, just as the last of 3; eens disk Ss its solo Pee ue, and m_gre also after it oe siesppenret the sky, near the horizon oft is green, while towards the zenith i is Tite, This was alluded to in Egyptian writ painted green. The S} the high Ae of Amnon pate y fies pict the Ere} sun the funeral dei-| tee colo! iso Breet are innumerable instances in of . representations relative to death being colored green. ‘The practice ‘undoubtedly arose from the n tints o! Bae ake and sunset. The kK menon. — “Ah, jw that we are en- ty. aged i feel ‘ob Phe eyes of the world “She eould never forget that ; ois the | ver toriety | {ne fo de Foucault, the} 7" Ben Nacer's throat th 1a Reason for Apmeaance of ya in Relies | _ in; ery to 5,000 years | UPON ago in Egypt. This is “the earliest known record of an astronomical pheno- pu A. Chinese sonia fee ranges from | cents to 10 cents. ~ i hen fetarcoal in. the same Becaae tion, or fed Lest in win inter. ens it is growing all the t Nothing ever has been will be profit- @| able brought up in idleness. Mt y following the above regimen and B: altending to proper cleaning of the chicken houses, sesttovibg all injurious min, insects, etc, and using scrap meats exclusively, I have reared! ens that have no superiors in laying qualities. 1 do not breed for yearly come, wanting eggs only from Ne 1 to July 1, and I select none for eles that do not lay at least 150 caes in that period. In selecting my breeders 1 weigh their ae Jaying qualities and standard points, LIVE STOCK NOTES, 1, frequently ocrurs that hotses go olf their food without any apparent rea- in such cases. thelr ated hgetlie nay often be simple plan of onlting ual feeds of grait Trouble with the ‘teeth is. frequently the cause of horses tempoi thelr appetite and not feeding properly, and an examination of the should, one of their ,| therefore, always be made on cine hi is food and no reason can te ed. your horse’ “begins to tor ie out of his mouth when driving, have the teeth examined, f a habit, and is Tost peat Harsh. bits will al- so-cause this he Gel Tid of the graflers.. One horse in the sta ies is a poor worker, so we use the others oftener rather to Potier, with him. One cow in the maeter giving thin or little ‘ill, ait he still boards with us. One ewe re- fises to Own her lambs she did the sam last year; why don’t we er? tis always the that gives is cow the rienest milk that Mls the pocket: farmer put this truth to me the other day ‘mybright words. In an- jer ta the statemenbthat a eeriain ict cows gave mil ich that sixteen ter, h sixteen of butter,” ‘The quarters in which the ducks kept should be dry, and. filth is inline s to them. The floor should be well Iillered with straw or leaves. them to make the pound uf easily restored by the} of rarily losing | oth e* by bringing to the surface st <eeper in the earth, 4 solu eer SSE has. been fo! "y good destroyer of mustard if put cn Just before blossoming. — A WEIRD ASSEMBLAGE. (By a Banker). The most weird and. gruesom cle to be witnessed upon the ae of tn whole earth a pte tr be the Catacombs of .. Descending a long flight of ate “he visitor is soon in the atmosphere of death. On a embalmbed or petri skeletons on which the 1) their winding sheets, some ve clothes in which ‘Siellian : re Sie Tel eet ee fifty yea ne verous 50 projecting teeth appear to be uttering a] ph snarling deflance . ni till proceeding down the some sights tier from floor to eelling of whole regl ments of, apparently, paupers; row after row of females clad In white flow- some “id cthel boxes, others 1gink in a plague pit. But sis ‘of these repellant sights ; fank miasma of this house of death, An is again reached, and the gl e flower eels phere have dispelled the depression a lugubrious melancholia of the place, the thought crosses the mind that a Day © will come when, at the sou Archangel’s trump, all these dry’ bo will suddenly star into life, ‘Then wil some, who aun their time of pro} ion have served and obeyed thelr God, who have. “rejected, hp Gospel | and hay preferred thelt own opinions to the Word of Almighty God te ges A DOMESTIC EUCLID. Definitions. p 1 boarding houses are the same A ‘earane hous 2. Boarders in the mine’ on the: sane “NOOR” wre. eel vg one another, 8, A single room is ane which has v0 boarding house i$ an oblon, together, but are not on the same floor, other rooms being taken a sits ew is said to be a double room, Postulates and Propositions. te A pie may be produced any number times. 8 ‘The landlady may be reduced to her lowest terms by a series of proposi- A bee line may be made from any. vetoing house to any other boarding |» 4. The clothes of a boarding pan bed though produced ever so far will never. mee! et. two meals at a boarding house the water of @ pond all day, yet when | are {o gether less than one square mea ney are kept in a damp place at night| ¢ jf jine be drawn rtrough the op: they become apparently rheumatic, ani Na cenue Bt a boardlnet soon have leg weakness, . Nothing’ con- |) beet er io tr Soa ee eee of dae they | throuith all the rooms in tum, the stove ces re to 3 nan | pipe which warms the boarders will be y_ quarter: Aonved, out intraw, within that half, ret ay, or anything of the in the Same*bill and on the si ind. will answer, on-the fh 4 given comfortable quarters they will be m disease and lay more regu- plane po The ceed ittigeniy at all in cannot be main- en, the feed ingredients required by the animal system vary amounts eand proportions with aiterent and the same animals perform- nts -| This is very true of a dairy cow. FARM NOTES. yy should not farmers advertise their business the same as other busi- ness-men. We ‘nearly always ie something to sell, and there is ofter something wanted. The maintenance of guide boards at cross roads and forks is. less practised | » than ee this decline should be ide boards should He es tablis! fet on rever Dees ii er | formatibn afforded in this wi es is tendered by ee to abs From “the records obtained from com- mercial agencies and other sources, is ascertained that at 45 years haye lost everything, ord. years 96 per cent. cf men are de- in their younger and productive such as wild mustard years. Some weeds, we seeds of suclt re- and wild oals, ‘ha "a- mn you. ih, George, do I look} markable vitality that they will lie in a ent behind?” the gr years, ready rmin- ia ate when they are brought near the ince} sim—How d’yer like yer new teacher,” |surface.. Weeds of this kind may be d Pe “ mmy—"She’s ae worst we ever had. | Stroyed by growing a succession of see 2 wears smoked glasses, so yer can'j|cTopS and keeping the soil well culli- = tel which way os Tookin’*% vated, taking care |. In th_ weeds ‘of this kind, ep pl a hoed crop undoes practically all that as been accomplish- se OL IL there ahall-notine Awo- bir ges “ tho same thing. i ere be {wo boarders on the TO-l., then shall the weekly bills, of the {wo “boarders uel, each to each, For if not, one will be the greater, wen the other bill is We ie it might hay: " been, which is al —- WHEN MOTHER CUT MY HAIR. Just under the shade of the sheet That grew by the kitchen doo mang | that @ comprar in a heap as though | P ame boarding | 4 SUITS AGAINST RULERS MONARCHS WHO ARE BROUGHT TO THE BAR OF JUSTICE. King Leopold, the Principal Sufferer— The Kaiser Has Been Summoned to Court. he almost universal adoption of the e ees which has ruling monarchs than ever were dream- e 10. pold, King of the Belgians, has The first ruck by the sree and sent flying jnlo ‘ihe ditel his identity in order effect his release, THE KING LOST HIS CASE. The victim was badly hurt and col ‘The King to thing of-a-fine of =f 3 = een effect resent the King of ig ster is be- AL pres lamages in con- ear sued for vel om relies al fe The ari whose was St ae was mien over the front of the cart, and one peel oe et him, beealin gay several ribs and He died from. his arltrha, ie the King offered £60 to his family. ‘This offer was ee and suit enlered for he ten times that sum. PUTTING mi KAISER IN COURT. Pied a anyone hav- iser, One a oe io passengers throne the Imperial Estate o! West Prussia, The road was the only ate leading to @ station belonging to & y railway company, and sorely against his Imperial will, to open > hi resp SUING A PRINCE FOR TAXES, Kings are, as a general rule, complete- either Imperial or local, Buckingham Palace nor on and the Kaiser arlene the But this Heed 8 does not sine to hath -apparer Crown ales | » Silesia r moe ine 1 i 3 Oels, in Silesia, and taking a les his peers ’s book, refused lo pay £250 rit tax: e ‘istrict council, therefore, took action against him, and His Royal High ess actually anpakeit in court at 8G He his case, and, like partes offender, was given & wea to pay. za same pri ‘At the some time there is an’ ancient prerogative of ee Kings Prussia which enables them to intervene when any member of their family Is threatened with @ rages on i civil law, Only a few months ago the aes invoked this per ‘ogative he Nave irae’ rother-in-law, 6 foolish Duke Ernest Gunther, from Paastution for conspiracy. Tho no- torious ioe his cranky , gotNt ins ead that the Aes -nsvaling hed hea and promptly had hi The lady has since cleared herself of revenge, in- doubt but that he oonvicted, ‘The legal punishinent is five years’ im) esi a yehen the mad Empress Carita ‘Ai anion thtown. Over: ny shoutdees— uupor e amount exceed: ile I smile as I live it once mor ae ” sterling !_Pearson’s Weel ‘The blue gingham’ apron that “enoked —_—— My toes in the rounds of the ehairy Lean he: y laugh as he joked me, While uiglher waaveulling Tay hale O11 Shep sitting uprigtt belore me, And licking my hand with his tongue; The billows of grief sweepit P o'er me, stung. bei ae of my sorrow, Fete SKeaer was culling my hair! 1 never forget ty! what passior mall onsen fas 2 1 in the me ii wh at Wal out “Rosy a “say when she a Oa py how Badiy 1 thret How u wished Angel had Aare ie While mother was cutling my hair! tlhe shears of the forlies have shorn As the ‘prophet of old am 1 guyed; Fach barber is fain to adorn a But they only awaken my And yet ‘it give fugtk: oe resis ren| If only Justa day fn the shade oe the alders, While maker was culling my hail rh Paget THE WORRISOME FOLK. ae peopl le,” said Uncle Josh this ning, “is worr! om a wen they’s sleep, ‘cuz they stiores so like Sam Hill thet notedy ‘ce ‘in ele in ta’ same vieinity, Db’ jtnks!” NV ‘s 1 must bear, PHONOGRAPIL coals! THIEVES. u bet Ge ae “Police When Flat of ner is Inva The wave of baa) which has been a over Paris Jately arid which the family has $0! ac stand: with i rob cod sessing 0 specially loud Squawk just in- side their sietescald most every one in ty) i As ole ngineer, however, has a. ph soda the best possible ; He locates it.with the me- phone allachinent directed to the door d i all and arrang- that. the moment the ea tine si the phono- aph gets in te ne It begins to beta Police! Help! Mur- der! Thieves!” ‘and it. keeps it up unti he gets out of bed and turns | oft the cur- His flat is well furnished with plate have yet withstood the phonogré bombardment. They run so qui sate that they are never caught. ~ sf mothgestaas The record wreck,’ ers a aya of life is concerned, was that ’ Bae a Voloty on eh pee Tne 1774, hundred