- zr oe . * Re aT Wane --- 2 H . hangs over on to the Italian Bae 4 of the | It appeared that he had been ont.one da: Redeemed His Promise. mountain. The actual ri sp sharp, | after » heavy fall of snow, and had 3 ' and on either side of the bg? the cliff] in an avalanche, his body being swept away PART L. "Franz, how sixtat the Lyskamm to morrow? The weather looks sertled." ** The weathe: ig gant, Herr, eral * But what, Franz t" "ldo no like the Leek falls away so steeply to the glacier, that the t cére is necessary in order to keep no oneknew whither. and the shattered remains of hia rifle, in- deed, were ever found of him again, was only by their recovery that it waa giies- sed what his fate had been, To lose Frank wasJike losing an old friend. Sadly I thought over bis many admirable snow only, ie li slightest touch. So deceptive isa cornice a this description that even goo gnides amm." 'Asal why don"t you hike the Lyskamm, rang! Herr, there ian fearful cornice there this | silled 4 wpooth surface of sap "We'll take our hance of hat. We cant tell what it's like e till we try, and if we tind it too bad welcan always tarp back. | When trust we start "Lt will be time if we leave here at two. " jin ee vt const titetes the danyer of the Lysk at ata Joss to distinguish sometimes be- | qualities so.seldom combined in ene of his {ore whativeafe and what is not, while His truth aod honesty, his cheerful- a novice what may appear te hg one | bess and good nature, his skill, hin courage snow mag be safe] in moments of « anger, aml then I called ta to tresd upon only to the width' of a few re ches It is this di oe of telling where the ir: uted ord where the cotnice he Giind that last expedition which we took ipity that it should } wad bey 'I toyether, teen the whear the end bed been purposes had his life have More than onre it hag led to t * (pedal! you ' th about ze es act 2 VM ws ala f csistalees neo the pertef the guided, ant it ith a force positive Guten Abend, Fran we ' neod of the mst éwful i oa = re . ty . Si 1 ae # 1 ) oo ©" U9 Ue - . ' . ' ys :* . taut Abily Here ae lesa tragedies that ever ocenrred to mountain You will one day be in difficulty, in . se radtien te le e , "y ; A pes ah fe ite te} coll K site! 'eere---the fatal accident to Meare, Lewis | anger, but fear net, Franz will be there, wey gue wen Feasee ng fs j {and Daterss a's party in 174. The Lysk. /erd be will hase come to eave your life." ote r de dhotelwasc mith or ee am by this toute ia emphatically sot an oor fellow | Tt was écarce worth while to aaveritdage of clim'ebrs, gocles, ant 1 ot. it a ent te be rocuminens fede think about it U lens the yrave pave up wae Soe . Watojing fire dechuing light of a it« lewd, Franz crt heves w redecin hing iow ty away | Frang was ever 'celebrates! for hig caution, j ht rumice 7 "es . "9 of the Marzer- eget n thie day he exer ~cieetl even 1 Teure than ! ' er wen mit of tl at, ' bis ordinary care, Not a step did) he nt a so all the at texting the snow in front with PART IT, teu gE a) ie trib g done but, wit hth © fiteapect ¢ oft ue We ath er, of which that moruitc had given unmist at wok hinrt, and the 4 tere at Quce planned for the follow ing day Was sone thing astonishin, ng. very eC gtide was '* booked," and the rteous lady 'who at that time pre- sided over the Riifell was at lier wits' ed to know where to accotimodate all who asked that might for slecping space. I myself Was neta novice at ¢ af #pent several reasous in the Al sone years I had been a member of the Al- pine Ciub. I had been up most of the great peaks around Zermatt, but [had rot yet ascended the Lyskamm, (14,888 feet,) and it was for the purpose of doing the Lyska:nm that I had come up to the Riffel. I was accompanied by « fellow-member al the vine Club named Barns, an ad- mirable wheter and & charming cobpaaton. and 1 had my guide Franz, whe ad been | with me on most ¢f tay previous experi. tigns, and in whoseisteadinesp ani skill I; had reason to have the greatest confidence. Franz was a man of|forty or 9, tall, and of «splendid physique, with honest ; weatherleaten countenance, to which long mustache gave B somewhat military ap- | pearance, In intelligence he was greatly superior to the ordinary ran of yuides, for he could talk ! { eames beides the one | geod ! ia what was ahead, and be never moved for | morning, rd 3 of his ice-axe, posto njake eure It heavily all the bugtnntug go lock had been snowing atters were ruta) quite cemvinoed that it wae safe! serious, day acnony tie gla iors in the paren i" ost.awfal weather, and pot) one wine 'Taus our progress was slow, and it was) ofthe party in the least couscious of onr not ti!) ne ary eleven odlogk that we topped Y be srings, We proxpent, t ¥ the Jenst the Binal riccce and stoed = tegether upon the | i very ren -: Adtnse mist hang summniutaf Lae Ly ajc, The view the sky was ; over ux, heavy enow in the sky, heavier geraptiely bright anidclear as | mui underfoot, a wiklernest of white on at day, marvelously | at! rijes acd no prospect of any improve beautiful one, ut it ia not within my pro-jmeut. Such was our position on Auy. 31, ¥ince to describe it here, anc eed, were | Lss-- I to make the attempt, I shoald fail to --m Four fire yents ailven- subeegnent to o vey an idea of the impression it made u } tare on the Lyakamm ri bad not been to the me at the time. Besides, it was not for tena s Alpe. that we were permitted to enjoy it, for | he viz Franz was all eagerness ta be down the arete I « before it got much later | love of the mountains still strong within We were soon on the rape ay , 1 had gravitated once more to my old led, then I camé, then Burns, and nee , posi guing ground had engaged ne --an admirable man for the purpose, on ac-! regular guide for the peason, for my days count . - weight and strength -- brough ae for ere vver, I now Increase of work and the dislike of } o Vi,vrons -- w up the It was in this order , that we | felt that I must gate myself to only Aamo the descent _ . wit perhaps an occasional peak. All went well at first. Each man was fing that delightful series of careful to use the rope as the rope ought ae expedit rts -- aathe "Tour of to be tisedl---that is. ry keeping it taut be | Monte Thad cromed*the Weissthor tween himself and histman in front. Franz. with some friends to Mae ughege, and from [moved downward carefally, and at ea ro there alone with oue guide Get quite a Wise | 'step sounded the anow with his ate as he | Prov weding, qachape had made my way he ld one on the way up Loecie to the lit: ie pesition, in; over the OUnlle de. a | mountain inn in the ¢ Colle d'Vlen, with the | ain te Zermatt by thought it potest} ts fact, was one which needed « U per oar lft the face of fell sharply away distance of over 3, not leave the edge of the arete to pass on to it; far upon thia face there lay eoentity ti intention of returning a 'th mor intain | a Lysjoch, 1 baw Ci (en to make «third og the rope, it on artiving ta my disgust, I found that no one was available. there, tee of fresh snow in a loose and dangerous con- ; Va urneand I, bei rain in some favor with the| dition. Or, oar right lay the drended vor. |! I scarcely knew what to dofor the beat. | authorities at the Ritfed, were fortunate in| nice | To atte oat to croma the L ag alone =" getting @ room to ourse Ive "a; but a score or | Suddenly ~ Franz ted. Something | { q@ne man wae an act of folly ; had not the so of 'travelers, for whom no other space | | seamed ole hin, yw moreithan ance : ast integition commit! tring. Of othe could be found, had to repose as heat they' he struck hisfixe inte the snow ip front of parr rnatives one Wis - down the i could on the floor af al 7 ide I hal with me to the valler te ne ~ Um "<4 were they who could secure # mattress, for even mattresves gare = at inet We turned in early ; but as I can never sleep on the eve of an -- I was pot) worry when Franz' kno: "me ---- one o'slock, warned usithat it was time tel i This getting up is, I think, the moet dip cemble part 'of an expedition I have a particular objection to dressi in a bad Light, fecling all the while only hal awake, and--but low be it speken---more than half disposed to envy those who are not leaving their beds at such an senate hour, I dislike, too, the early breaktast----a mel ancholy meal, to le got over as expeditious. ly as possible ; and on this point every one eeums to be agreed, for at the Riffel, at all events, I have olwerved that it [Is usually Ciapat. hed in pi silence, he very look of the sleepy servant who brings in the coilee exercises a depressing influence, as well it may. Then there in -- getting into boots (for I am not one ome inconsiderate individ- uals who pats his yrs stairsa: pounding down, to the a of loch in ra those who do not petting up so early,) and boots, to begin wie fecl hard, if not absolutely mneomfortable ? Hat, after all, what are _-- minor disa- grecables beside the extraor: amount of pleasurd that is to pe get oes of climbing? } They perhe -- it we did but know'i i We w air od earlier than the ma- jority, but there were two or three sleepy: | looking individuals in the breakfast-room, | evidently 'novices bouml for Monte Rosa, Kiving one the a by their appearance that they werenlready beginning to think climb- ing s a ns' Ae than otherwise. t was close upen two o'vbec k---the hour ve rang had nares ' i The date was August 18, 187 Qur pathy had receivedsan addition in the shape of a porter whom = had engaged over night--e bi red-Jooking fellow, and very usefnl man 3 have on 4 rope, as we found subsequently. The morning was splendid, ad the stars shone down upon us from a cloudless sky, butestill Franz) seemed dissatisfied, and re ogeplained more than once of ita fee ting | el The atmosphere was certainly heavy bat as we noartd the glacier there came | toward uga breath of cold air deliciously ) refreshing and ihepititing. ft was still dark when we reached the ice, before we hed ¢rossedl the glacter the had commeticed to break, and behind | the giant mass «f Monte Ross and the L ye j kima there cane oter the heawens that unearthly line which is seen at times! :anow and aky intermingie WAS & orkai ively fisie morning, 'and sav ba aah pede « } i. jaud beside him without moving forward, | I the pleasanter if lh a | the fall length } up @ companion, (which meant low of time | this he added very inh prensively ~ in great danger here ; pear toiling up the stony path leading from He had hardly spokea--in fact the words the valley but my « id friend Burns, whom weré still in bis mouth when I hdard a loud | 2*4 not the smallest idea that I should meet Tac a gound such as I have never this ride of the Alps. heard te fre or since, aud I cam only de- ' Burns was now a leading g lighe ef the legal scribe it as being like the grate of a heavy | Profession ; he wasevén spoken of --- wagon upon frozen snow. T without | bE ously as @ future. Judge, but anything mc further warning, the side ef the mountpin | unjudicial' than his manner in the Alps "tt seemed to bre: away, and with it Franz | iwas imponsitd@e to jangine, ped bad me we he! dinspipeare was ever the and j For onaansonil 8 tals paralysed. The next, | friend that he had ever bebe je scarcely knowing what I did, bot with the! He had left a party of frienile at the Ital-; instinct of self vation strqng within ian lakes, and had come '* to doe walk," as me, I sprang to the left over the precipice he termed it, in the mountains, oad he hai on the opposite side to that on prhich poor j brought age him tenjporsrily a young Ital- Franz had disappeared. The rope ran out isn gui amed Ansoine, and .a porter, to its #4 length, and then I fodmd myself! and he, too, 7 found to my great satisac- comes | P?' ; tien, -- bound for Zermatt by way of the ye i m Wek deciled, as & matter of comme, to join which was well-nigh iatolernsie. Burne forces. Burn's porter was paid off, and sent and the porter had seen was coming, home ; Antoine and my guide Josef were re an a a themselve flat, so that tained, and the er owing morning we had when the jerk ome bs lenp had come started on ovr expedition, i they were re well pre rs meet it, i The weather had Jbecame doubtful soon } few sbonnde, th though, it wae a dead. after we had! left the inn; but we kept on ock. Then | heard a faint véice, which! notwith#tanding until well on the glacier, j seemed to come from Franz, calling ee help. and then, wheu too Inte, we had begun to ' Somehow or other, but how I hardly know Ww inh thet we had had the mors! courage to | to this Burus eo managed vefore. For the guides had lost the rope thas I was exiabled to gerainble up | themaclves. They were neither af them first. on to the arate again, iand then ts difficulties began to na det-to work to haul up Prang, It was not) thi: ke n they proceefied to lowe their heads. - easy matter, but presently ap ashen face | bn fact, to such « pass did matters conie -- ared over the edge, and © with moan | Surns aa tnyself had to assume all reapon. | ; p from himeelf we 7 peas in raising aibstlity. | Franz toa position | h@ storm was raging furiously now, not He was badly shaken, "and te horror et a lantimark was visib le, and the pave the situation, as well/it might, had c clearly , snow clliterated everything. Toe add & affected _ nerves, Until resched his life -- we found ourselves without a cam literally hung upem @ thead; for be had | pass, the only member of the ay sermmowmend | ruspieed cbapento' over an awiul p nice tor one being Burns, and Foy broken many thousand feet in height, ithe nothing Only the day hefore ! e could not thus but the rope around his waist letween him tell even the direction in Yuen we'ought to and certaig destruction. His face was very be going. white, and a small wound on his forehead, I bave heard of peredh siost inthe desert from which the blood was slowly trickling, | wandering for eg in @ circle, so that they him a ghastly appearance; bet there' came bac © the very poist from waa a strange lobk in his eyes ae he grasped which thev meen My my hanile, and exclaimed with all'the eh-} To those who bave not experienced it it iw ergy, at oe. gratitado--- a te cobvey the feel ting of utter uhave saved Py life, Think hoy» lenpnoss in euch a case. It was fated we not that I th all forget, ark this, You shouhl foel it on that day ; for after" may will one day be in dittic nity, in anger 5 > but an eon ® weary ye knee-déep in the fear pot, Franz wil he will soft snow we " unl that our labors had beea ' i have come to save ) yqus "4 in vain, and we only returned again to the ev greatly exeited, ard it waa to! tracks we "atin made before. Stil, aimless this fact that T felt in lined te attr Sbute hia ly as we might walk, it was necessary to ry wards ; tut yet there was a st trbnge carmeet keep moving, for to stan: i still, and for acy on-oe lated clouds floating above the . ness In the tanser he apoke which impress: length of time, meant to perish m that awful clesthor the eky was perfectly « joi me deepiy in spite of myse@f, and with cold, We - brea ktaatid hear the well: "nai halt: (an inwagd presentiment (1 cas 'call it no We were white from head to foot with i © parties making the avceh te ning elfe) that some day of other they the snaw which had frozen upones, ancl, and soon mfterward we left o-- ipevitalty cog true "| had the cocasion been, less serious, we could that mix i tain én our left te keep on ep the tm what we learned aubrey ue atly ifep- have lyaghed at the strange appearance we (peng Glacier toward the summit af the | pes ioe iat, in by ite a rans'? precautions, presented. burns had assumed the load ivaioch | OUT ap wpre track te punee iu paseat i had he teotrted that he shonid go hiret Tr seemed cértal ww thut 1 penlel gtx : the tae © rate boi 1 ' f et, Antoine and have a fide day, but Frans was i ' . ed ti brut Tm titwing te iwoid t . wat, sa for k P ewe, and grumbled comstantiyv of ti in tt it ihad la 3 t nutter t wl eat in the t, = | fe t wi t i! fearepi, the i f. that we shonld find the L ye Pas of t hae te the ¢ ete nt, aed till on, tell the mcianet had comdition, ermicg, firty feet pr ao of which doubled weili nigh net uratle No Hix sjdrite, though, recovered somewhs at mep ands Hern Heal « z ® nbongteis abcde ng, always the sare white waste about ' one we got hi dr, and certain] the went her ; carryis iy Frans along with it., Asa matter us, sree here, there, everywhere and fall lett lit tle to be ) detred. fore: A ; lder de he tit Was # very Barrew * for al he avily than ever ght epread over rock and suew, till oven) , the ¢ hollaw af the glacier in which we stood bicame bathed fin the plorions light In bee i vee cond not have choses amore porfecdt day 'ler our axye tite Th We ' Progrons, ror We were marty, and whiie oe st af the ep fro minater tn the summit s ET SOs » * tet ; Pal ae Dae > ries straig To my mind thix arete coustitutes one of the pesthbest bits of climbing in the Alps. It ie not dittcalt, bat it tp long, aad alsgoet its le length "langercits. Ite danyer arises fhe m the cormios, which in an iinmenre maa af ; for, any other pty gque 'tomas the snow as weil ss anz, the others gould net have held, asx r went weactig" wmust shave been + draggel * Whe tre i ats ta lowe heart, and erie shuidered inveluntatily we I gazed inte the abet their wives and ot wry into which we should ave fallen, wo, began to feel net quite mys goght that tiers would mot hare firmly as ever, kept plex a been left, tauch of us ty the the we reached forward, forward. I pe wyeel the 4 267th | the { sing whem will de) No Further incident, occarrpd during the rt t life, of things which ' do, 4f things which I done bat which it would bave been better } os left undone ; and thea l thougint of a mtel minor matters which at such a time neotie pong ely trivial Then ran \ipine expeditions, and of that ncicdeayte descent, Wat, froma having ta gusiowly ov I bad tale i Frags @oconnt, it w tH fate in the evening thet we yor ed ne to the Riffel. wat in December of shat same year that I beard of Franz's death.) He fell a victin te his passion for chameje hunting i Nothing bat his hat and it jeome of us, * come th _ ,, ---- be able to pick up a man at t! si You'll take me, of course." "fores of all of us I caught myself say yngnett alyind 5 "* Yr rang! Franz? Oh, fer one hour of viour cuidande, atiive | come back to earth to redeem your pr And bo yet s werent cere voloe shear an!» } sto Tm . "ter sblire . " ap- We bad atered our course, -- Alracat in- parently that the free i. o many sensibly I felt it, bat Dwes «« wally" Sage why I make td et for that (f was wn I logked ents Weak thet = dpa whi 1 still leading but not somehow the ord ive men jieglec I do had been changed. on that i 'tia! on epeak on sadvisedly. Tt has ae lot} not see aright, for T could not reamem| ri tol have as lar perience in the care ot any alterstion being in Pesitions thd siek thin Bie tc the i Biost women, n the rope, and yet 18 wad qilte vertein gui! TP) have seen this bac know in mer it wees burns who wow wont little Sing? Meplayed say pre vegan to cout. There was Josef, the: not be--there wae yet another ! 7 re- usod to tc lieiove it, Twice agata T counted, twice with the ve result. And. then came over mea feeling of dread, fag T falt thet he he ™ war lear! ting ne wasnot of this life. comid * and the form seemed familiar. tall and tes "ud conigareds -- in its movements that I nm but in one gui cough it trod, the over the =" 7 increased, " rons the glaci ier, ¢ slope grew steeper, then still. W « crossed what waa eee ale and . oe we uti to fring thea beyan to ond. we over «how we went, till suddenfy the clouds lift. | ed,and there benesth us the famil form-of the sier, all rosy = the light of « flery sunset. We were side of the Garner. 7 san ao they bad maregl anea sre, | j whl le Iturned to thank y now oAtgisted but + eat & if, old fellow, ace are so glurs about? I'm x *jand he looked r ta j toine and Jonet ) ** im ge eet gt out as a g aide when all ies It was Burns whe | itot seen what I lad, PEARLS OP TRUTH. Selt fetta ton & He called to me to pay out The joy of th . ce alée to eade achora | ptrength ig ou , betwoen be wat ~ him, wh i i = le ; pr pce hag her where - he wass | All he valthy heen are sweet-tempered. did, and again he advance am, (oe ge hy (ieniue works in eport, and goodness smiles | Then be stopped, and, turning raiand to, for 7 ZeerTagt os Op: = . ban I might | tes the » last. r w tones anil : ' ne Ne! Hl wih Ty eels ° a r ful'bew yon eed | : a co pod sg 'Saly tol 'sunning myself in front of! If sleep be thorough, a short spell will do | 9 sai ae feet im the ae * + sales to c le t hing over matters, When a more remned than "« mitch ldager duration of a o™ ) ata) H ' I 7 'vo ve sir' eheery voice hailed me, and who shoukl ap sicep that ix incomplet _ itnperfoct both in its nature and in ite & Not uttering what is tales or deabtiul is but a emall part of real trath fulness may céusist in concealing whit '« t to he ayX xcken, in exaggerating or diminishing wit a purpose, in seeming to agrot when there is Be agreement, in feigning sentimenta which | are wot felt. It in ex enoe of every trae worker who taken a sumpler vacation that ~ satisfaction of getting back to work ono more is more eubstantie!l and lasting then the pleasure of » hy gay though. lees in- tense. Ree oie but an aide in tife. tet ie che acuroe lade means of com Not * more ra comeing and clevat | ing ae "ye love of flowers and trees: le it as some men may, there ix oe in whas they call mere sentiment. When the / trees which luscions frait cease to be | beautiful, and when natere becomps badly utilitarian and tox »misefly for the produc tion of anything but sordid fiecessari may inan follow e on shut bis eyes to state and his cars to miewody. A Trip into Greenland. i The only American explorer in the Arctic! regions this year Was Lieut. Peary of the United States. Navy, who went north last spring to examine the inland ice of Green land. wae his purpose to enter Green land in the latitude of Disoo, and if possible to travel eastward on the great ioe until ecame within sight if Pi which lifts ita snowy -- ioe ee etl the sea on the cast Peary: © hoped in this way to sanertael the physical conditions of the island from coast to, obast.: Lieut. Peary has retarmed to Bt. falan, _ ~ telegraph reports that he island about one hundred m: r sterwnier weather' might witness the closing scene in the. lives Then Frare's words cumoe'back to and, afted toward | ye A lay there Burns, and thete---tut no, it ' deceit , aid 4 pri ae difficulties. He found in daly; ! havi N . is wo ot intent 'enter into mighty form of the amm/|was towering =, ee of pr baa ' pore somewhere above us, Jost to iaight among ry Ay e the cam of the sick. | the clouda, Even the « August 13---~! There none of us who, ifwe look-at the was the same, It seemed ae if by astrange candidly, will with Dr. irony of fate that that ecen® of our pe ¥ ir Mitchell when he pelt pel be yatary atul all would he well! Oh, that you voukd _ he " sim ouwasion of this id they "Seat i make $< j i of}we pes Bird oy ve tite a 'ahead on 'a wey sm mehr ags Saher en ri fire th hete I beg Sees that I ukean to » c#lticiam of t nates, & corp s ko wher 4 I think tow much honor aft. be reslered, aval ware ib left to y ilmem of owet a weck's dura- ever fur tat. I phould aiways call ina tgaherd wares, i Bgt'rs one! eter ¢ my shuple lidereth frotp another, ao do |, distinctic ti rate, since it # fot posible for Lipergle to have any Buree gt all, no any the Wworveifur Ee are few greed! things for a pidhews joe ; few miore office ing in attacks of names. directians ge I have ra elon for preparing t we firewml th => Ers55 af & had | ¢ great im this w yA y- po ane 4 wet it in Wiodew bople never b a w. They aac ray ee simpl ing tre pe ith the aid of the needle! ud by following be gmmin of the ioe (the the big nardly- -prp- An-} steail pieckesd los Soak he Spidey pe pee Nothing | eon venient, ax veir way into Very) a tex forme. we I have never rth. ate « raced down to F antey edbs rocks on thia | : a them in the text books for nurving, aad i Trent 'to + hea 3 mente---@ ¢ and a thimble, car » ovGid ie more ir heer at any hoe of ithe might or of it mix dinches In every = be kept ince sivk room | far. imphy wrapping ntl or af oO joan pide of lines shout then be put ever if to Reop off the lint of the fannel. rapypingy it all ae and thickly in flatnel, Somewhere near @ china lx is best, uf cur ot bart almost an where in the rvom, unlesa cloew to the @ pieve of ice six inches @yuare and thick +i keep for tweive 1 It is always | well to have two pieces of fanned. on ' a thiat ohe can be Te, ried whi is in use. This "keepe the ioe bet , aed prevents being any of y of thgee yi: smells or exhalativns that always ' arise Grom wet wool, i] Naw in regard to ping tis orpcked » by the side and within reach of patien F i 2, lomwe he i¢e, i if tt & 'Whe etal acting as comdiictor, the re melts o-- el bs 2 & eanier, Ley the bor in an uncover- are te be found in 4 eiihenen cériain vatant on the taide of which woo! is tightly a kuepe* the < water tool, Batt have auc in vor seen hut one or twat there, I think Tky pomtti ble not act ae subject --a encountered in September three years age aah when he floundered duriig eighteen day through thé deep enow that covered the icxj, cap, aki then sent his Lappe forward some seventy miles further, Lieut. Perry thore fore, it same latitude, has' ipenetr satel the islund only a little more than half as fad} ae Nordenskiohd's men. At his furthest poipt Peary was 7,300 feat' abeve the sea, an elevation dee, prolably) as auch to the inereaging thickness of t ive cap, which ie belier oe to be from 1,008 to 3,000 feet thitk, aw to the greater altitudd ; of the land. Ketarning coastward, he rodd ; swiftly down the steeper slopes of this Ting field om hie siédye pr ypel end 'by the an of gravitation that drives (ereemlan.! 4 mighty -ice riverrte the sea and wun hey their froxen stroame inte the coean ae ive Although Lieut. Prary ha» not acwtvers) a ad jaunt * that wil 'Ts gneover fangel, fittel and ' tase tumbler, thereby New hr the melt- : i 7 nothing ner is offered by the flanned Te © ea, then jare difieult to find, A deuletitute, they, nit a besutiful one, I allew, Het very al in a sick room, is an ordinery!y te 1 sewed te she originated herself wre wera l tite. te put the whole inaide of still en . ther vexne « rome material which would ; made Sdme a conductor. out tf wood I shoutd thitik whe the [kaye space to mentier 'but ome mere astber simple at ot ent k ie 9s tremens ri it, pe i yet im ae cases cut af fen thee hurse leaves here ray nothing mope imple ner more | effiract é than placings wet over the 1 in y ert im this ind the pareage cf ten the oully way to way, sreoaetions, the same sort ft sail. pose of linen prevent aty vapors, This is rev¢nt milk seuring er. I bave seth idtk kept perfect when, next it, witheut- thease tk became milk vessel, tinh weit & Milk arranged ig 'thik way oan with pettoct impunity #te, weber fi ing wail tas Fett, it y all niet hy the bed- Hyope who needititeariy in the morn yet who hesitate yes call any one whee put hoge coder -- snmamenqsmrasenedihin Co plinhest all that he desired, j Stan taedtn ney, wath val y cae Cnr ogg LT pene vt | Whe truest and lhegt ony wption "f right thone of eae wird Kethatees ke went, and | ad caty which & soa ot: tore east hia in tocol only te thet of Norde nakictd 1 ' sthociars rt a8 ; hele me a tne Hie weccini atllesipt & ows tireehleted Bh and goMe life, increadina ies ed Tig i wi 1s3 Fi dé¢m, and lowe will o@miagie t my » till 4 | basher and better conaiptie dar to marrow Out of His Blement. i be ¢ cmnrict always dwail i ao Gitprtive 4 | Siete, be It over "J um aryl good nor wenld ' Jamee," said a grocer to the new mot it) the. denirable ek di faced acd heal 'what have you been «doing im ther bes | Filthy ateorhe Pe | of ur titre asi) i Tekin the dead flies ' Av ht + ve You had lamer F TG emeemes ' Mother," anak] a little girl ta her Pr ent, who takes « great interest in charita ie institutions, " | wieh | were an orphan." "Wis ao, my dear?" © Because IT staged ape mone of yom y for you: are slways grdhy to the orphan asylum." 4 Karke 4 Wihy eeu tivieesd dari} wing" ** Wins Fee « t ' 'ih, & goon the equal welling bry gai nity and ker rt hy tise 1 ite be * tieng deus t &@ dhsay periant treet: tt . Wat gh wot distroes vou 'area te oo ots unggemelated. aieehe thinks Phe tun ne aul =e bs t ert fe f ope et tee o " Sad Sob v0 o08 incon Syarey, Tosemvo, | 'aupx Marea, ree Tillen the | MAGES pe FOR ak, orb malt * on late } % ds souea tho Fe Test of Worth OLL PILIS AND OIN KW thag pe loos if yt er memos hing t& that kind." i. ae te death hy the te him" pend fellow wan talk od OWAY Su MENT oe none Feveryw here. URALGI apn OXFORD ST., LONDOD ¥: . Be O41, bs. OF. Tiny Be wit, ane in| Comedn Cf cbsii* nd the hanger wines ed Mee ahs agit i a Ket fre fa: wet mee ro ta i ' TiiuMaa 2 rewn sa, ee The Detal wie fiat. Joris ¥ om: er i were thir. ae a tie tab at nena at my hptise fast ; ppt % Jyuies Wal, young De Hester died this th oat 8 ae Hees: 'M that metic! 1 won! ton girl whe + i ' Parente and thachers wonld do well tr tiatnber that p@tmanest deafness hee aeeneed hey mae homely rep sae ue wt io : Wr et