n - - t S V . i - tr.-! ' it ADrrri ID DrDA "Cut, out, esniaw cue Cat car . w , ,W .A W Ma Ban! wikUy around aaoog Terebinth Rockwell s da-Uss axi cams- po tions, with that fair maktea foSV-wi-g j jmo,, tvni on Purl-hill eom eioae in pursuit her cheokeJ suLK-em . that uitrht Calu- waved above her bead like ay3 of war. Leander flood aad watched the pursuit with the cool, ir. amil of a ointered spectator ua-.l U apeekled fuiUTa beihour hmsf tc dartbeadkooZ into the najfaWthm, rrora Klriw Atkinson and taatooawall,wbthtfrkijtomiteto,,tU(, Wchsi of ripening tonuses basked oa a 1 te pjn.h-4 lin wooden frame. At the surHW Caji1. Cell and pretty be swooped no-Jly down fram j Aljw Affies wlipM 8 W' unaeenTantage oint aad i , t fcnd , f ro -thM 1 Speekte by her flutting wxngv , wJlh Mis& Tere- IVfWiTTx,intTlS! IbinthMdnertrirna, Hannah UdeclarerdMmTern M lit !itl who had he.n i at r dtaain'the creature this tea minutt. Jgoin'tohaTeafricasfdin.". "Company comin ? "I mean to ask Elder Atkinson and ' his wife.' Don't ask -em,- said Land. It It off till some other time, Terebinth. "Got goodness sake! why 5T Leander drew three squares of yellow pasteboard from his pocket. "Look," said he; "I've got tickets for the circus tonight for you and me and Ally Ames." Miss Terebinth's careworn risage brightened up. To these simple coun try folk the annual visitation of the cir cus signified opera, theatre, polo and athletic games all in one. "Good !" cried she, releasing the strug glingheu. "Then I'll let Old Speckle go this time. But, Leander, have you asked Alice ?" "I'm going there now." "Are you sure she'll go ?" "Of course; why shouldn't she V Terebinth hesitated as she tied the Bimbonnet strings under her chin. "Perhaps that young English tourist that boajds at the hotel Capt. Cassell they call him, don't they T' Leander's handsome, sunburned vis age darkened. "What of him? " said he, sharply. ; "Be may have asked her. Don't be vexed, Leander," aj added, pleadingly. :. "Folks do say she's dreadful took up With him, and I don't know's I wonder . ao much arter I heard him talk t'other . ' Bight to Mary Bailey's Chinese party. Be' traveled most everywhere; and if yon could hear him describe the tigers be killed in Ceylon and the elephants he's hunted on the Niger river "Oh. hand the Users and the ele phants r impatiently broke in Leeadet OJaa't beU--Hlrtoit I dare . I v aay he's nil very well; bwt, for my part, I haven't much tfiafcmof a fellow that fmfr around a hotel piazza in hay mak ttm time, doing nothing, with a white amrf on his hat, and a sash, for all the Vorid like a girl's tied around his vaistr . "It's the fashion," said Terebinth. "A queer fashion, I think," comment ad Leander, "He's a very brave man a regular hero," went on Terebinth. "II in her majesty's White Jtbar a Horse once duringjMBfttiuon riot, and " 'And did wonders, I don't doubt," in- "terrupted Leander. "But I don't see what all this has to do with us and Calumet's circus." He took up his hat from the grass where it had been reposing among but tercups and white clover blossoms all tuis time, and started off at a brisk walk. Terebinth looked dolefully after him. v "Poor Leander," said she, half aloud. "I'm afraid he's going to be badly dis appointed." Alice Ames was sitting on the porch under the green, shifting shadows of the hop vines shelling Lima beans to dry aa Leander Rockwell's fine tali Ague came swinging up the path. lie was very handsome, thought the girl, bat be lacked the ease and polish of the dapper little captain of "her majesty's White Heeled Horse." His clothes bin evidence of country cut his boots were powdered with dust, and his face was bronzed with August heats. "How do you do, Ally?" said he, and Alice, remembering the deferential saaniMir with which the captain always addressed her as "Miss Ames," an swered, with a toss of her head: "I'm pretty well, thank you!" 6 "I've been gettia' some tickets for the circus to-night, Ally," said he, ftangiag eon amore into his subjectl -Wm you go with me f "Thank you, ever so much," said she, gaaonwg for a fresh handful of the vel- wetar .green pots, "but I've promised Cert Caseei to go with himr "Sasap&r observed Leander, "so I'm too tour , TsSralKas too lata." - it tabs always so. AllyT 1" ntaatksjow whs you mean, Lean- CxT vv- 'Vv. . TaaeiUeereforeahttJe be tiCJM laarts j; r;Mn of bona cam ncafnifdi mmk bow, Lean yr, ..- '---it r-"i r-sZZza? KU Alice. ; aland f the Ug bunting hero. Wr- oi 1 . " - i.:.. irt .i.in n.wu ! "IWiliWe. A Thi. mtin BMtl ' owuf-tw. eu, ' . i- TU and 1 will have ' sni to, owttwft. . ' ' . , , ... ; M , the circus o nrTO . i- tart's r:rcu was a wwwiw and i i . . . , .T adwrtwwl. T1 h8d J)A) nmnv opjv.rt.mitk of i ' rf ..rment and did nnt proivse to! 010 cote Every one j i eit'VfiilB lionr 'imr " -v j . . Vj TereWnth had said. r -niiparalleJed attrac- Uoiis" had le put forward -the time . nv. rfii-n the srotneled coiuniuine. nA -u.-ih.r,ts tiie bicvcle riders and v' r witll tl,e I gold crescents dangling from ! and the Rreat glittering stag" his ears diamond in the front of his turban. Oh, isnt it wonderful.'" c.ied Alice Ames. Tretty fair, pretty fair," answered Capt. Cassell, tapping the ivory knob of his cane against his teeth. "But those rattlesnakes don't compare in size to a cobra capello I once killed in our tent at Dungapore when" And the rounds of applause drowned the end of his sentence, "Ah! a tiger taming act!" said the cap tain, consulting his programme. "The Marvelous Signor Mahmelli and his pupil, Rajah!" Call that a Bengal tiger, do they? I wish you could have seen the fellow I shot, that last summer in the jungles at Hoodah. My sister has his skin on her drawing room floor now, made into a rug. It had killed four men and a sacred ox, and the natives called liim 'The Scourge of the Shore." Oh, yes, I don't deny that the fellow handles hira very neatly, but" At that second, just when the "Beast of the Tropics" was drowsily going through with his list of accomplish ments, the lash of his keeper struck a trifle sharper than usual, or some other unseen cause ignited the powder maga zine of the atuaaaTs slumbering savag ery With a ferocious roar be sprang forward, felling the keeper with a single blow of his paw, and leaped toward the row of footlights, whose fitful nicker aaecaad to irritate him as a red rag en rages a bull. There was a shriek, a rush, a moment or two of wild confusion. Ally Ames uttered a scream. Capt Cassell had turned as pale as a tallow candle. "We'd better get out of this," said he, hoarsely. "Quick! quick!" But Alice, paralyzed by fear, sat as still aa Heath a. "I I can't mover sheigJI! think rmjroinfcifjr i?'" ltrti( hesrUt.Hl a second, and y decided matters by taking to his heels, with the rest of the flying crowd. Alice shut her eyes with a cold shudder; she could not see the tawny death spring upon her; but in a moment she opened them again at the sound of a triumph ant shout that went up around her. Leander Rockwell was in the arena lately occupied by the vanquished band, struggling with the savage monster. She could see his set teeth, the veins standing out on his forehead, the red fire in his eyes, and she knew that it was for life or deatlu "After au," said the minister, 'these circuses are sinful risks to human life. I shall never see my way clear to at tending one Again. Suppose that brave young fellow had been killed before our face and eyes in the noble effort he made to save our lives." "Golly, though, pa, wasn't it grand?" said John Henry, the good man's eldest hope. "Most equal to a Spanish bull fight Everybody knows that Lee Rock well's the strongest fellow inDurklil Four Corners, but the old tiger'd got the best of him if it hadn't been for that lick Lee gave him over the head with the sharp edge of the cornet that the music men had dropped when they got under the stage, like lightning. It was as good as a Damascus sclmeter, Lee says, and once stunned, it was easy enough for the property men to kill him. ItH be an awful loss to the cir cus folks, though," reflectively added John Henry. "There ain't many tigers of that size in the traveling ring in this country. 'But wasn't it funny, husband," said the minister's wife, "about Capt. Bas sell's being found hiding under the sin the trained ponies' stalls. with the door tightly locked. A Inaa who, according to his own account, has killed scores of leorards and half a dozen elephants in India, and is afraid of nothing. I'm toil that the engage ment between him sod Alice Ames is off, and that she is spending a week with Terebinth BoetwsfiL Tbsfricbt andtaadancsr bars suds poor Tara- btathoiiteEl.'' Eat if sUaiators win kada&iy kaswatt, Zsnbteta was a great deal tZZxiam, wad aba aa J&$ warn busy toft hw snd rib- ARv, laughing. -jwtir- -HT'd a lOSSl .M.-fit to i who i -nnq.wr a tipw oupritfil to triuivl bv a womim. ttMn r MlJ Von rwtUj- love- me, t!xn ? 'smter, I "1 mt1!v low yon. fr -" i ..... j "i i m sa rr. vert r v proud ol yoii. a ui; i"u,i'" ort '- ,-Uably who York Ledger. Cured. saw the Brvpolis aloue lart :ih d effect a weapon i.nih lnrod efficacious in deling j titeHiLlerof the Hut. One of m a parasol with a loug and ihich ended in a point j J, ' M brad awL She SunT ely occasion to use it in a jTwrd avenue. She and her paln occupied a cross seat, and the double seat opposite was soon taken by one of the most offeiive of the masher tribe. Xot satisfied with staring impudently at the ladies he presently attempted to insinuate his foot between the feet of the one carry ing the parasoL Apparently by acci dtut, she brought the point of her parasol down smartly upon the fellow's foot. He gave an involuntary ex clamation of pain and withdrew to the end of the seat opposite the other lady. The lesson seems not to have been severe enough, for a few minutes later he insulted her in the same manner. This time he was punished in earnest The woman carrying the parasol watched him, and suddenly leaning over to look out of the window she jabbed the bard and point into the fellow's instep and gave it a quick turn before tie could draw his foot away. 1 lie man cried out with pain, jumped to his feet and limped out of the car. The passengers could not understand his actions, and the lady with the parasol looked as much surprised as anybody. X.Y. Sun. A Tragedy Enacted ia the Swamps. It was down on the Great Jackson Route. A freight train had met with an accident, and so our train' going south was off-time and had to run in on a siding and wait for the lightning express earning up from New Orleans. Many of us were strolling about, pick ing blackberries or gathering flowers, when some on suddenly shouted: "Everybody keep quiet and listen! Hark!" It was toe deep, far-away bay of a hound, and after half a minute we re alized that it was coming nearer. "The dogs are running a deeri" shout ed one of the men, "and if we string out we may get a shot!" Fifteen or twenty men, each with revolver, strung out along the track, and just then we beard the iron rails begin to sjj(Bakluat the express was fuetf&ig. Two minutes later we heard her whistle. There were three or four dogs in the chase, and as they drew nearer it was evident mat the game would cross the track below the bridge. We ran down to it, though no one cared to risk the crossing. We were hardly there when a coal-black negro, Dare- headed and in rags, leaped out of the bush on the track and stood facing us. The dogs had somehow lost him and were baying in the thicket forty rods away. What his crime was we could not say. He was a powerful big fellow, and as he stood there, arms folded across his heaving breast, his face had a terrible look. He was only a pistol- shot away, but no one raised a weapon, On the contrary, one of the crowd shouted to him. "Off the track or youll be killed!" He turned and saw the express thun dering down the level stretch and then faced us again. The engineer blew an alarm, but he stood there like a rock, The train was running over the stretch as a pigeon flies, sparks of fire flashing from the rails and a great cloud of dust whirling behind it, and the speed could not be checked. The black man looked to the right nor to the left The dogs were coming nearer, but they were too late. Those who did not turn their faces aside saw the pilot fling him fifty feet high, and as the body fell it splashed into the creek at our feet and lay there, only half hidden by the shal low waters bruised, broken, dead. It scarcely struck the water when five or six dogs broke from the thicket and crossed the tracks, and close upon them were three or four men. But they arrived too late. The hunted man had taken his choice of how be would die. Detroit Free Press. tmaaias' "P Har Frlnaa. Mr. Hankinson (at the party) What a dainty eater Miss Kerjones is! Miss Kersmith (bosom friend of Miss Kerjones) Indeed, Mr. Hankinson. vou do the dear girl injustice. After hr tea and angel cake at a banquet like this you have never seen her at homo la front of a plate of cold sausage. . ther Will Be Thar. Miss A.: "I wonder why angels an always represented as woman V . Miss B.: "I guess it is because tats nerer go to besven." . Has A. (with decision): -Then 1 ma 111-7 lrori XV R W. Richardson finds that Is I tax of Queen Elizabeth the an aal dkath rate of the whole of London tasttper 1,000; that the death rase krgely exceeded the birth rate; that be death rate of children under 5 was 0 per 100; that only 7 persons in 100 Cached the age of 70; and that it was koasted that there was not more than Ine murder annually fur each 2,000 of population. The purification of Ue sty has added much to its beaanrui iesa, which, however, is yet far below i hat could be desired. The anuual mortality is now about per 1,000, but one-third of these Waths are due to preventable causes; be birth rate is much greater than the teath rate, while the death rate of ihildren under 5 has been greatly re- tuced, but still is 27 per 100. Even in he city proper IS per cent of tlie In- Ub:tants-a proportion that should be buch greater still live to the age of K); and good local government has re duced the murders to an annual aver age of not more than 12 to the entire population of 5,000,000. Arkansaw rraveler. A Joke with Variations. You ought to get five cents worth f chlorid of lime." "What for?" "For a nickel" The above was passed around freely imong a number of St Paul's citizens. ind was in each case recognized as a practical joke of considerable merit acting on the suggestion, a prominnent Merchant of this cify determined to vork it off on his bookkeeper, with an iriginal variation. So he said; You ought to get five cent's worth f potash." Contrary to the merchant's expecta- dons the taciturn bookkeeper meekly towed his head and went on footing lis trial balance, while his employer re tired discomfited at the affaire flam bee. Fbe next morning he received a note from his bookkeeper to this effect: "1 took the five cents' worth of pot- ish, and I am as sick as a horse." St. aul Globe. A monster grape vine at Athens, Ga which covers more than a quarter of an acre, has been known to produce uiough of grapes in a single year to bake 100 gallons of wine. It was slanted by Professor Rutherford about thirty-two years ago. Lancing Abscesses Without Pan. The pain caused by opening small ibscesses is almost always intense, 'or a few moments at least, and many people naturally shrink from the sur geon's knife and prefer to bear with (he troublesome visitations until they tpen themselves. It cannot be general ly known that by the use of a spray it Is possible to so deaden sensibility trer limited areas that such operations u lancing boils, enlarged glands, fel tns, aad the like can be done almost, If not quite painlessly. A spray wblch Is most effective is composed cf ten tarts of chloroform, fifteen parts of hilphurlc either and one part of meu IhoL This produces local anesthesia ti about one minute, ana the same lasts for four or fire minutes. Fall ti er Herald. She Favored the Tunnel Route, A young couple entered the Union lepot and bought tickets for Troy. there was a belt line train ready, but ihe persistently refused to board it "W uy won t you come, Maud?" he fsped. "Oh, Chawley, I don't want to go ui n this side," she gushed in reply. "But, Maud, we'll get to Troy just (he same. j cb, vuawiey, oui we won t go through the tunneL I want to go inrougn the tunneL "What do you want to go through tunnel for, Maud?" queried the (lense young man. "Oh! Chawley," was all she said. Then Charley appeared to catch on, for te Diusiied, They waited until the belt train went the other way. Albany Argus. The badger s scientifically classified ft one of the plsntigrade carnivora, which means that he puts his whole oot squarely down on the around whn he walks, and eats animal food. Hs lias a somewhat remarkable endowment In his lower jaw, which locks itself into ne cranium in such a way that it can. (lot be pried open; and his grip upon anything which he has seized, there fore, surpasses even the bell-dog's in tenacity. His feet. too. are arm4 it. fiowerful claws, though he uses them mostly in burrowing. t - Wbo't to Bla-at Wife Horrors! Our daughter hai poped with your typewriting young Husband-Well, you wouldn't let n tire a romur woman. Va v Weakly. ' E?W,rrlt7. of "3 whmaTo uSbvsS wdlaat to rasiathsheartof STLSZ ac4 to aay those things which s-oaS enaartatn and mak w t v J ' ' mm . wmot. FORTY MINUTES LATE. 1 be most fearful accident that ever . s happened on a locomotive r ecnoea the engineer, looking round at mo. The brave man was a member of my parish, and I was sitting at his tea table. After a momeut's thought he pushed back his chair, for the frugal meal was finished, and looked hard at his wife. It was a curious gaze of his houest eyes, and the lady met his glance with an almost pathetic entreaty: Do not teli it!,' wriit.-n oa her kind f jce. "?he don't like to think of it, he re turned, laughing at the same time he shook back the long hair thU fell in waves over the left side of his brow, uncovering a blushing scar and reveal- ng that he had 1-een dismembered of an ear. "Hut 1 am not so uaa a loom ing fellow, after Jill," he said. In fact, he was singularly fine looking. "Itisoue of those memories, his wife interrupted, rising, "that one fears to recall. But, thank God, it will be no more likely to occur again for the tilling of it, aud he may tell it while 1 put the boy to bed upstairs. It was one of those accidents that nothing can prevent, resumed the en gineer. o loresigul can guaru against the hidden flaws which the best of steel sometimes hides in its own false heart The best crank or shaft ever forged will sometimes break on a steamer in mid-ocean. So of s connect ing rod on a pair of drivers. Now, I think the thing I am going to tell you is the most terrible accident that can happen on a locomotive, because it is the worst I ever experienced. It forked the most havoc and scared me core than any otlter I ever went -irough. 1 cannot get over the dread Kit evn caw, and probably never ihall. KUU another man might single it another as the worst" My friend still runs, as he did that al most fatal day, the fastest train that ipeeds between two large cities. At ue end of its flight the train is obliged o traverse a long tunnel Millions of u-ople pass through that tunnel yearly in perfect safety. But if they knew ihe hair breadth escapes of the first lew year, aud especially during its con struction, even now they might not al ways sit to comfortably; but the best .if appliances have somewhat lessened the dangers. "When we were ready to leave the depot nt the new general manager of the division came along down the platform with the agent and was intro duced to me. 1 pulled off my greasy zap, and was about to get down, when he said, "Never mind," that lie was go ing to run with us. Of course I of fered him his choice of seats, as you wouldn't do to your own father; for whoever rides in the cab he must take a stand up or the fireman's box, if the "ellow is good natured enough to offer it A big officer, like the manager, was different, however, and I gave him anything. To tell the truth, I was re lieved to know his errand was only to ide; for this English gentleman, a tiiismaii of our big owner, had been turning up lots of good men. lie eemed to think wb Americans couldn't (rake fast time, and be forgot that our machines and cars are heavier, our viuls not so straight as the English. ' We are forty minutes late,' he said, is he straddled in front of the fire box md consulted his watch. This occurs bout every day, r.iy man, more or less, nd it is about time the blamed prac .ice was stopped.' " 'Traffic is heavy in October, sir, I said trying to smile my prettiest. " 'Can you drive this machine in on time? lie kind 0' growled at me. "I gave him a real Yankee stare back for a moment, and then my blood was up. That was ten years ago, before I s d any wife and babies. It is wife babies and a ditch or two that takes the dare devil out of a locomotive engi neer. At first a man knows no fear, but any of the aforementioned things kind 0' tempers him down. He can't keep his pluck up as at first, do what he wilL My wife, by the way, was ex pecting me to come around, with the minister to be spliced a week from that very day. She had sent out some wed ding cards rather showy for humble folks to do. The wedding had to be de ferred," and be tried to smile as he re ferred to that incident, though it was evident that the remembered tragedy was oeginning to overshadow his owtt manly face, as it had his wife's before she left ut. "Well, nastor. 1 hi.t frowned on the Englishman, and said. 'If you'll choose which seat you'll take, and let my fireman get in some of hit work, we'll show you what the Saga more can do when she is mad.' " 'I will take the stoker's box,' he said; that's English fireman,' you know. And be climbed up, rolling a cigarette and lighting it with a funny kind of foreign machine in his hand. "I started her easy, we pulled ten cars. We had a run of seventy-four miles, schedule time two hours. I was to run it in one hour and twenty min utes. There were to be three slow ups, aad one dead stop at a drawer. Thai would give me most of the miles to do in sixty seconds. We often do that for Xtlte or two. Every fast train does every day. But seventy four such miles iirs mifbty trying on machine, now I tell you, before you get through; and light onto t end you don't know what minute the poor aid break her heart on you. I Vsaaedtb gagamore over as 1 took her oat of Us shop. I always do that with say owi eyes, but if I bad known what wa war to try on I'd given those cwnsetlni rods more attention. Wo used t wedge them on the wheels; yon ha seen the steel keys? Nowadays the; are fastened so the men cant weds them too tight It is this now way o fastening that causes the ringing Boia that you now hear as the big drive wheels pass you. Did you never notice' "Well, I soon began to feel of ha wind. She wss not long in nuinf that fireman's box too uneasy form; general manager. He danced like a toj man. Then he closed the wiadot ahead. Then he shut the one at Us j ..ui Ira Tl ka ! ilk uv wi w - the windows aloue, though they rattle open, and he lost his hat, which Un fireman caught on the baggage ca brake; but Mr. Manager could not k go his clutch on the seat to replace bit hat The hat was all coal dust, any way, so it was put into the tooichest Xow we were just flying. I never tool my eyes off the iron, but out of the cor uersof my eyes I saw bow distreasM he was. He undertook to holler some thing, but I paid no attention. Th fireman shoved in the sprinklings fine be knew exactly how. Firing is hall the battle in a big run. Well wa wen going so well that I was aftetwardt told the paymasters car, which wi were pulling home, could not keep tbt dinner dishes on the table. No, sir Twice, going round curves, every disk the boys had was swept on the door If we hsd had dining cars in those dsyi wouldn't the soup have spilled?" I should have thought your con ductor might have interfered," I sug gested. "I expected be would," was the reply "But as time went on, and our rati grew simply fearful on the passengers I knew well enough the conductor had been scolded as well as the rest of us No; he told me afterward that he sim ply sat dowu and said his prayers But to go on; I saw that he had madt up twenty-eight minutes, then thirty, then thirty-three, being only seve4 minutes behind. But there we hung, She could not increase her lead, do m) best. "1 knew then that we should soot begin to lose them, for she was beating W hether the boxes were lugging on thi cars or engine I could not be sure Then, too, it might have beeu tbt curves, at all events we were lugging and losing. We fell off, I calculated some five minutes, when we struck thi tunnel. It was a heavy rail and I straight track there, and I palled hei out for one more spurt, lire or die, at we dashed into the aterm and darknet I of that long hole. In there you caul see anything but signals. The Saga more answered me for just one plunge But the next Instant enrsh' God hell me! The whole side of the cab waj flying in spliuters. I knew what thai meant. I jumped from my seat it front of the fire box. There, unda my seat, was the general mana ger. He had been merciful!; knocked in instead of out, but In was senseless. My drivers held theii rod yet but I knew the strain oouli not last long without snapping that rot too, as I could not find the throttle U shut her off. It was so queer about that throttle. 1 turned round an round, trying to find it; I kept turnini to the left I thought I had an extn eye just over my ear' and my other twi eyes were blind. That new eye showed me a clear beautiful light, but not th throttle. Round and round that fear' ful stell hammer, the broken rod, kept crashing and tearing out the shreds 01 the cab on that side. Then the othei one twisted, which threw old Sagamon plump into the granite wall We wen all piled up there, dark as pitch si about, and finally still. Mow, the curi ous thing about it all is that with mi new eye over my ear I actually reaj the time by my watch, and we we only seven minutes late. Yea, air, wi had made up thirty-three minutes li the seventy four miles, slow ops and stops included, and a minute mon would have brought us to the station I just yelled, 'How's that, old tEngtisbi aud raw new eye seemed to go out it darkness. "Were there many injured fl added, in the pause that followed his cojclu sion. , "Don't ask me yea. Thank God) I'm alive! Now, Mollia," addressing bis wife, who bad just entered, "I've (old that story for the last time, excepj in my prayers., Emory J. Haynes iii New Y ork Ledger, v - ( A physician has succeeded in graft ing the skin of a frosr to that at a tor toise, and the skin of a tortoise to that of a frog, and also in securing the growth of s frog's skin upon the skin of a man M years okt Bone grafting is not so far advanced, but hat met with the time success as akin graft- Have lots of tan US a!l m ess and keep the suilshhM la your heart U you want to be WeO. and popu lar. The world haiai a ' with t grievance. It payato kekfistly hrf py. There Is abaotatT bo aroflt iit being blue and Terr Ki ercset-T at tending U.