1 fol air .. -J i I TALE OF A BALLGOWN. Before I U-giu ui stwy I want you to look closely at me. bee ray patterm -silver cak lea vts and iic-oixs ou a white ground. ow examine my text ureah! they don't maie such brocades nowadays. Be kind enoog h to bear iu mind that I am not an heirloom. J was woven in France and brought to Newport, where I was made up to wear to a colonial ball I was trimmed with point lace ru flies then, aud ny mistress hair was powdered aud decked with ostrich feathers. i he wore a coach and four of eourt plaster on her forehead and other co quettish patches on her cheeks. Her daughter wore one when she danced a minuet with Lafayette and her grand daughter w hen she threaded the mazes with Aaron Burr. A f ter the A aron B urr episode I was carefully pinned in lavender scented sheets and packed away in a cedar chest, where for many years I lay in undisturbed seclusion. I was comfort able. The combined perfume of cedar and lavendar was grateful to my senses. One day I received a rude shock. 1 heard a click above me, the liueu cover ings were torn away, and I was liter ally dragged out and violently flung upon a chair, while a silvery voice cried "Oh, look here, Sue! isn't this a stunner 'r J.nen two young women who were, 1 must confess, reprehensibly pretty, though their manners lacked the patri cian repose of my former mistresses examined me with great delight, point ing out my beauty and suggesting so many ways of utilizing me that my lace ruffles thivered with indignatioa . Jrom their conversation, which was extremely difficult to comprehend, so nterlarded was it with extraordinary words, I gathered that they were grand neicesofmy last mistress. The old Xew England home, where for many years I had peacefully rested, had come into their father's hands and they were ransacking it for heirlooms. My existence in New York began with a quarrel. Fannie and Sue fell out over me. Both wanted me the one for ameteur theatricals, the other or a ball gown, to be veiled in tulle. A compromise was at last effected and I was handed over to Sue. f I must not dwell on the physical suf fering I was forced to undergo when Hue's dressmaker snipped and clipped and ripped me the story is too painful I felt the cruel scissors and, most terri ble of all, I wj constantly put through an engine of torture, which ran with a ceaseless click. At last I was again joined together all but one bredth, which the diess ma er put away to make a sofa cush ion for herself and then they draped a lot of Huffy stuff over me, packed me In a box and sent me to Sue. A maid took me and laid me tender y on a lace covered bed, where for a rew hours I lay iu utter exhaustion. Then 1 was lifted from the bed and lipped over my new mistress' head and hooked and fastened about her. When I was fairly adjusted and my last fold in place, she stepped back a bit, took a long look at herself, and said: "i'm simply delicious." 1 blushed for thejaudacious little bag gage, as I did later, when, bavin sent the maid into the next room for her boquet, she said as she drew on her long white gloves: i r 1 i . . .. j i. m . . " " gown uoesn i ietcn jack Fm sure I shall give up in despair!" I fetched Jack. That evening in the conservatory he put his arm about me and drew me close to him and told Miss Sue that he wished her to become his wife. And she? Why, she interrupt, ed him. in my day maidens were more shy. But Sue needed no besieg ing. She did not look down, blush and Blgh, but only snuggled more closely to the bold youug man and said, "Yes. Jack." bne wore me once or twice again. men, pronouncing me a perfect rag, -1. i . , . one jiuug u:e iguominiousiy away in a dark closer. Some time later a hand clutceed me arm brought me forth. It proved to be that of Fannie, to whom Sue had given me. Fannie, I soon found was tae struck. I learned tbat her father left very little money, and she was pre paring to elevate the dramatic profes sion by entering it Of coarse she made her debut in Juliet, and, equally, of course, l ap peared with her. 1 was furnished with band of snowy feathery and some long, droepinf sleeves 1 believe they called Uest anfel sleeves were fastened to ny sbeulders. Thus renovated I went in oa the potion scene. "Fannie made a hit. So I gathered fro sa her conversation with her leading man, whom I heartily disliked. He had a way of stepping on my train and of referring to me at an antediluvian piece of dry goods, which certainly was not respectful. His treatment of me hastened the change In my fortunes. Fannie, I judge, was desperately in lore with this young man, for one night she said tenderly to him, "I'm going to give this thing away you dislike it so." To which bo replied with giat earnestness: Thank heaven the country it m ,. 4 ., I oaojfla't for the lite of me see how aSeeted the condition of the country but 1 v.as rehfird : knew 1 ts ' leave the stage. The next day Fannie' maid bunJStd rue up and took me to a second bai.d clothing store, where she sidd me lor a ridiculously low price. Months afterward i was taken off a shelf and fnrend out before a raui whose w icked eyes stared gr edily i t me. He cursed we and tha price ask d for me, but took ine away w ith him lie earned me to some handsome fu -nisbed rooms, and tossing me into the lap of a youufc woman said: '"There a a frock for you. 1 want you to fix il up and wear it when the boy here. 1)0 you understand'!1" r-he looked up timidly and said tremulously, Yfcs, dear." 1'ay by day she worked on nie.chan ing me here and there, ihe did not hurt me as the fashionable dressmaker had. She handled me tenderly, and sometimes glittering tears dropped from her soft blue eyes and rolled down upon my silver leaves and acorns. 1 saw that she was unhappy and lived in terror of the mau w ho would some times caress her but oftener curse and threaten h;r. Shall J ever forget the first night she wore me? She was tall slender anil fair, and when she had put me ou she went into her little drawing room and stood before the long mirror a minute, gazing steadily at the reflection. I thought she looked like an Easter lily. but she took no pleasure in the beauti ful image. "Good evening, Mrs. Ormonde," some one said. She gave a little start and turned. A tall, fair man, with a frank, boyish face, stood there. His eyes beamed with kindness. "Good evening, Mr. Howard," she said, and gave him her hand. lie pressed it gently and bent toward her, warm light playing in his beauti ful eyes. "How lovely you look," he said. lovely and lovable." She looked steadily at him with de spairinher face. I could feel her heart beating violently against me. 1 recognized those symptoms only too well and knew instantly that my mis tress loved this man. "Be careful how you play tonight," was all y.ra. Osmonde said. She scarcely breathed these words, but even as she spoke Ormonde came from the next room, smiling and bowing gra ciously. He cast a look of rage at his wife. He had heard her warning. Four or five other men came in soon aud presently they all sat down around' a great green baize covered table and began to play cards. Mrs. Osmonde sat by the fireplace. She was very quiet, but she constantly watched her husband and Mr. Howard. AVhen the latter was playine she seemed to hit her breath, and when he won she dre a long sigh of relief. Suddenly there was a crash. Every body started up. There was a struggle. They were all talking at once, but I heard the words: 'Chett! Swindler! Blackguard!" Then Howard seized Ormonde's arm and sliook it. Down from Ormonde's coat sleeve fluttered several cards. The other men drew away from him as if he were a leaper," and one after the other quickly left the room. At first Ormonde gazed upon the floor stupidly. Then he lifted his head and stared with bloodshot eyes at his beau ful wife. "This is yflur doing," he said. "You warned Howard. 1 heard you." He snarled like a dog, and came to ward her with a gleam of murder in his eyes. She caught the talbe to keep from falling. "You have ruined me," he crieu "Take that." iJ cirri: KUiril bv tii ir.i 'l? 1 he d M X- TOdtiCiliij fast-tens ma; be killed by a current cf electricity. a has Uu shown by eipt-rimenU 'iith bottles of water containing them. By pasJug the current from a la!'ery through a loop of wire su-pemh-d in the wa:er it was found at a small voltage w&ksuflicieut to deprive the must active bacttria of life. The consumption ba ciliui d;ed under two aud a quarter voits. while othtr more hardy species could net survive more than three volts and a half. Unfortunately, this electrical cietln-d would Us too tx,eusie and lroub!e S'line for the householder to pursue. It is siiested, therefore, J.1 at cities oi a.rr i'oii.i:iiiH-4 sl.all tttrfonn the en tire us. dtliver;ii lii water to con sumers in a condition gu;irauteed harmless. According to the plan pro posed the killing of the microbe is to be accomplished at the reservoir. uth iug could be easier than to apply the energy of a battery by a current at one place in the supply pipes as to kill with absolute certainty every microbe that passed through in the flowing water. A dynamo with a capacity of l,uO volts would do the work perfectly fur the biggest possible pipe, slaying all the bacteria going through and rendering innocuous all the mil. ions of gallons daily that a metropolis consumes. All that is necessary is that a length of the pipe shall be made of insulated niattr iai, and through liok-s iu its sides will be inserted wires representing the pules of the battery positive cnone bide and negative on the other, het the dynamo going, and the current springs through the water, lillin it with powerful elec tric waves nece.-s irily fatal to all living organisms floating iu the stream. -Sew York Telegram. A tIelrlor.dll.-1 li Mniai' hiter t She 1 dilftitl'd Mfrelf. The n 'iy endured dtirin th-e-e ; I'.ot-ii J.mrnal: Among the graJu r,..,,r ir.n!h! Douner lake in our lit- aU-s of the ) r oim brave young o- tie hirk cabins under the snow would man has comple'ed a course frankly till pages and mako the eldest L art taken in preparation for niatnin. ny. ache. Christmas was near, but to the ' IJk many girls who make swift y st irving iia memory fave no comfort, amusements their chief existence, this It came arid parsed without obwr-'jw'n woman did out resit; e the du van. but my mother had determined fluencies in Ur education until stio . l-for that her c..:UrcU Uui lad won the friendship and love of have a treat ou th:s on, Ly. M e had ho was her superior hi irtellectn- , laid away a d.ied apples, me 1 requirements. With the realisation beans, a Lit of tripe, and a small piexe of her ignorance came the determine e bacon. tiou to study for self-improtetnent , ... .... , , . i Jintering as a pupil a wtl.-lnjw hen this hoarded s:ore was brought- , , . - , ... j i .. .i i ,,i l-, school f.r girls, the Iook courtK-s in out the delight of tne little ones knew , -, , , . no bounds. The cooking was watched , ; ' 1 ' :arefuily, and when we sat down to ., . her the methods ot thought Mie tn Thefo ru .k-yJ!'' wall boy intl.o! f.'rdav aften 1 . I . . iv iruoet da y . aJian. moht of t! i.. ' 06 afU.T irin . ,;.., nonm, U-an u t..t u tiJ n.-o rweand i: ,.,?' 1 At Twelfth ntrw.lL: III lJi.-i OIM5 l,... An aud Date Klectr c Time Stamp. in these days when the exigencies of business require an accurate record of the time and date at w hich transactions are effected, the invention of a piece of mechanism that w ill automatically and continuously record the time of ttay is evidently of great value. Among the numerous cases in which such a record is iudispensable are the Stock Exchange transactions, the records of police and fire ularm signals, the recording of legal documents, and of many am use men ta, such as boating and billiards, the cost of which is based on time. The inslru ment which has been successfully use for these purposes consists of a cluck connected with wires to a stamp, the variable characters ot which are mounted as type-wheels at the end of swinging arm. i nose w netu are con uecieu iu u simple manner with an electro-magnet placed at the other end of the arm and worked by an electric current controlled by the clock. The wheels revolve with the clock, and wheii it is desired to stamp the lime it is only necessary to press a button at the fron of the case. our Uirislmas ti inner nioiuer Children, eat slowly, for this one day you can have all you b isli." So bitter was the misery re.ievei by that one bright day, that I have never sat down o a (hristmas d.auer without my '.hough' -i go'ng buck to 1 Miner lake. t a time, and we would have to cut! . . . ... ;hips from the h.gj iiuide hich formed jur cabin in order to start a lite. We :ould scracely walk, and the men had aardiy strength to procure wood. Wd would drag ourselves through the snow from one cabin to anolht r, and some mornings snow would have t be shuv- ;led out of the fireplace livt a fire :ould be made. oor little children were crying with hunger, aud mothers were crying because they had bo little ;o give their children. We seldom thought of bread, we had jet it with out it so long. Tour months of such suffering would fill the bravest hearts with Ie:-pair. Cor. Century. She dropped at his feet and her blood poured over me. Her pretty hair fell down and covered her face. The n-e' light gleamed brightly. The man staggered back and pressed his hand across his eyes. For an in stant be stood still. The awful silence was broken once or twice by a feeble moan then all was still. I saw him steal stealtily from the room. I lay there with my dead mistress for three long frightful hours. I heard the shriek which Renee gave when she came in from her evening out Then in quick succession came cries for help, the arrival of the policemen' and the crowds who tried in vain to bring the poor lady back to life. So that's why I am here today. . I have run the gamut of the emotion, I bare no desire for further experience' I really hope that Renee will cut me up into pincushions, for I am old and tired of life. New York Evening Sun. Warktef Fr Their Board. Two famous philosophers Mene- demua and Ascleplades when pursu ing their studies at Athens, were en abled to day for their rapport and schooling by acting as millers after school hours, receiving the munlfleont sum of thirty six cents (twrf drachms;) par nigbt Happily their fellow at in dents, upon hearing this, raised a sub scription Kufllcient to defray the ex- penxes of these deserving young "-Detroit roe Press. Important Itus ian Invention. A teacher by the name of Malykhyn of the city of lJaviolT. in the province of V oronej, has invented a fireproof paste which has been tested by the Moscow imperial f-ociety of Agricul. lure and proved a great success. smau suauiy entirely ot straw was built; it was covered with ifalykhyn's paste and subjected to the greatest possible heat The straw turned from yellow to reddish brown without in the least crackiug. It is prepared at trifling cost, about forty kopekas for every seven feet square. This inven tion is looked upon as a great blessing for the Russian villages, where the houses are nearly all thatched with straw. It not unfrequently happens that when a fire starts in one of these villagesevery house is consumed within half an hour. The Imperial Society has deemed to introduce this great in vention throughout the liusiian Em' pire. ' A London Smoke Annihilator London is troubled by the Immense smoke-cloud that hangs over the city like a palL Recently a smoke annihila tor was tested by some of the Sanitary Committee of the Comin esioners of ewers, and they expressed great coiili dence in its ability to abate so much ol the nuisance as comes from the factor ies, and large establishments generally. The contrivance exhibited consists of a small fan, which draws the smoke from the chimney and forces it into a tank of water at a point near the bottom. The water is agitated by revolving stirrers driven by an engine, and the smoke and water are thus churned together. All the solid particles present iu the smoke, as well as the sulphurous vapors and noxious gases, are arrested by the water. By this device it is claimed that not only is smoke destroyed, but valu able products recovered. - A wealthy Londoner recentlv nnr. chased some Ceylon tea at the rate of osw.su per pound. The tea was of a One chop and had come overland from Russia, avoiding the supposed deleterious effects of a sea voyage! .w u 1 ire hint to a bad bo, that his evil courses will wi tulnr-aaks an enquiring father. A wp-oeary club often hat beet found a very effective meani-Ne York hecorder. , man's lJi;;lit.s in Sweden. The evolution of the Swedish unman toward equality with the Swedish man furnishes instructive reading fjr the ViX everywhere. It is a capital illus iratioii of the rich fruits to be gathered w hen the gospel of moderation is faitlL tuny preaeneu auu practiced, .As wise is serpents, yet hanuieis as doves, those ladies of the fair north won w ithout jinking a blow, every concession which their sisters over here have fought gallantly to snatch from the irudging hands of mankind. They worked warily from the inductive sys--em, juilgd the individual, and up plied the knowledge thus gamed to the whole body. Then appreciating the folly of attacking the citadel before storming the walls, they laid Beige to small tithes of mint, anise and cum min before assailing weight. er mat ter of the law. Wit h wit deserving of ma-ess, leaders of the woman move incut ignored political privileges a the very outset, and devoted their energies to righting small greivauccs, knowing that tho natural coarse of events would bring the ballot in good -imo. lheir first effort, marked by Jignity aw! an entire lack of camliat veness, was directed toward ojieiiiiis cue universities on equal terms to the .ces. inis accomplished, their next request was for the privilege of practis ing on equal terms the learned pro lessions acquired tidy by side with male students. All commercial pur uits were then petitioned for as proper minings ior women qualified to liil uch positions, and thus, one afier an .'u.ei, gainers were hud low by the strategy that no violence could have captured. Had fhere been the noiiv lampaign of the uncompromising suf rigest to drowii their voices, it is ex tremely doubtful how fast or how far lie progressionists would have been permitted to advance J.tit them u,. o battlefields, no heroines, no martvrs and so, with cordial imn ti. - ,.,i;. i. nen granted whatever the prudent, v.eueaiing iMveuish woman wanted it is a pleasing and grateful liktorv in .cu oi me gradual unfolding of wo manly ambitious, fostered by m.uilv i) nijiauiy. tered classes of political economy and (tudiL-i the newspapers uudor com petcnt direction. 1 rglng her teacher to correct nil imperfections iu her epeech nnd la u -ner, she fnade constant eiTort to attain might bring ).r nearer to an equality with her future husband. The struggle was not e.tsy There were trials of pride in studying with girls of a inoie youthful age; there were many moments of mortifica tion from tlie exposure of her igno rance. Determination to succeed won its usual rewards. The society girl, whose bright mind hud been eclipsed by the routine ol pleasure, became renowned iu the school as one of the most earnest and satisfactory pupil When slie gradu ates this year into the refined home that has been m preparation for her she v. ill met t her huibaud upon an equality and entntai ; Jus friends with a feeling of cheerful confidence, S ic says that the whole world teems more stable since she has been sure that her sentences are grain mat leal and her pro nunciation according to the best authorities. uid the umall - ft ! ab'e Urffc-d t.i.."!, musclet by dan-..;-., J .trans. "4 i-i. i . i ..o .nip, oiu gni. Ill J Ifirt i iinall Ix.y Han Dt W?J !d rentiemtn. Hm'J irid anon w hi.ihi,., i ind. i torif!. As eae H 'avort-d her ilh a 1 l.l gentleman A Heroic Wouinri. The latest heroine t come before the public is Sister Margaret Trance, c.f St. Victor's convent, near Montreal which was burned at 4 o'clock in the morning. The convent contained a large number of deaf mute children as pup Is, but seems to have no lire es cape, lilthouifh the child reli Were odged on the sixth lioof. At un hour in the morning w hen sleep is the sound est Sis' er .Margaret, iu charge of the sixth iloor dormitory, awoke to find the room on lire and the children flocking around her. i lie stairway was ou fire, and would be rescuers who came from neighborhood had no ladders, i gathered them in the comet of building farthest from that part the the Hie the In which tho flames were raging, and making a rope of bedcloihing lowered her charges, one by one, to (he ground. She kept at her work for half nn hour and until the last child was safely landed; then slipped down the rope herself, with her hands and arms blis tered with the heat and tho hair singed irom ner nead, and when she reached tho ground- fainted, -i'hiiadelphia l iiues. j.iocK island fishermen are having poor luck with mackerel, and sevaral boats have given up trying to catch the fish. 'Thus far the total catch It auout naif what it was at tho same time last year. i The Wheel 1 ThouMn.li of Yrr Old. Thft e:irlJ.ef m...,.:,... .. a . ..ic.iuiuil OT U' I tel. a in uie j,iuie is in Exodus xiv, 25, when u.o cnariot wneels of the Egyptians "..Dvaneuoiiuyuiel,ord: but flu, inta fiM r,i..., . ; i .-. . ...c.uuneu m (jem.gls Xjj 43 But (here were older nations than' the Egyptians. The Chaldeans use,! rh. lotsstlw Creeks-Homer's poems date "O.liaUOUUWJJJ. C- lll.f rl.,l,.i ... theseigeof J roy, l.ruX) U. C. Probahiv a reality the wheel is about as e,i. . Piece of machinery as any now exist log. Of course it has been dcvehu,i out the bicycle wheel of today )9 ' meal descendant of the section of !! og or wood used by the ium,h peoples thousands of years ago -..w York Sun. I "1 believe in the exU-iiiiou of th fr delivery system," said Mr.' Wanam.,Ir 'Free delivery is like town. Jt llicrirases its character. All ( i Some day railroads will ... .... io dangen.-m and deadly , " half n,o ! '.v""c UV(-T - ...iirous COlllHlo.iS arge percentage of run-ons "juives, ur courRn and a re caused ii ...in met be found difflculi L . out a curve and keep a g E grade: but ir n. r.... .... . KPlm Tutn re1u' rail- "r "ui in all cuts and other dangerous places 7 . would be devised by'; t l T "'m bedonc-LallasCletews 8 tiletronolitan It adds to its attraction a business and a residence community I believe that the introduction of free unlivery extends the circulation ol newspapers and increases letter writing. convenient ior a man to go to -no poaioince ior ms newspaper -it i... ... . 1 1 r ' "untwiufeui delivered at his uoorii would be a welcome visitor rt jouilg couple, for er!imU oviugmu small Ioiml The hushio.-l is at work all day. T he wlfa do -s not care to go to tho postoflice. or iwri..u, ,. .' 1' va.n.ut K,fj especially if there is Ii'i tiv lit tl... I ii. , Mouse, jinn man would a uauy paper perhaps Rut he is too tired to go to the uostoni . r,.. 'veiling, and so he taken weekly paper or no paper at all. ' a i ........ .1... . . . . - . mo ex tension of a free ivery system would increase l,.ff,.r ".uingioo. nis astonishing w hard it is to convince the ,ople that you can increase the business of the postoflice."-WashiiiD-fo., rv., m... adelphia Press. 'Wi I nU-mi the car and rs fc.TJ l'h.old centlemim A null aci.uri v l, , J 1 "i the firt of ih.. I-. i . ite .uddcnlyhU rye , ioftlv to hinielf 4 -ITeml over the n',,1 i ind a Hurtled gae oml:i y featutv &i a i(HnJ ,TI land. niai-luil .;.' T i Itained Vliicji i.!,. ,m.yH ip, thl instant and give ady. (,'reat giKliMj ,iye to w-ea boy of mine rhbjtilnfr while a Is,., u . IVhal - ill . . . f. " ' hen I tll her xhWt wmJ 9 ... j -j.. .jvi v m.G iixgratw my name ttrtln " The small ooy lisUieM oJ w me pentfH tlrndo &r,d trying tn wriggle out of thus, now suddenly found himf ( fa down, over a large brrd , nuu l.iisi iime M) cn-ii). " m yum wnen mere onw4 uvM.-riut;u hi one o! the rvM u.imb iiiiiii-iricai w liftcltifigi d minit.U.Tfl in this i,r any i uring inn vw ) i . t , uid i . - , thn?o tiiu.j., ... i. .... 1. 1, tln-n he was set uiw.n tl, jJ The conductor, a man of &ri eviui-ntiy, lieru IIihul' it it h In U.rft-rt!. H;re hi said, ' vmi that Ixiy if he n no i-i tation to J i never noeri nun tn.-lort the lov. What? whaty' saidlberfl man, "dK the youi.g rajii ii own father? ' Then be put on his cluwi i expn-slon or aetonintmivnlie ful to WHJ. W hy, bkiMi it.," Le aa "why, I thought It iMn)rji( William. Dear niel I l.ir, T inconvenienced you, votmj tirj excuso me, won't vi Hero tho car was rurmit; mnA I wenty-tiixth strn't, ami Mm bd somethlnir that wiinninl hc"d I'll, you ant to to t hlatlon?" said the old i-ntletttt. olently, "lkji'ti ciiniiij too ell, we'll rectify that t.-'i oncti." And that large, klmllroMj th! unit l.iv Ivthfimlir him gently over the Vmi pissjlorj urviptH-u rum. Tho liov wan my b wiWered J st-oiKl on tho road until k run over by a hain-iin while gentlcmati .topcd ha. k Into whore the men all lunched tin- whil.) nix IhiIIoh r..-- and em with fucri other fur the v4 giving him a seat.- ltit.-rJ.;iL 1'AHIK AM) HClSHUltl. An fll.ff.mall.. J.-.t . ...Hvlv ucv.ith in ul . . streeU car. fn, ..." 7 ua on Trupnr.1 Trd html,. Captain Weruer, who, during the last wo years has explored Urn coast region between the mouth of the Gaboon river jnd he delta of the Congo reporu i a e I-rimeval fore,,, of tha lowland, still swam, with apes, but that the ",7"v"' l0u fcjiy to studv their "-bin m anythinz like close range,Md guard the.ryo,,,lffwijhgl ,tonJ2; makes it a inrfect ,.i,.m. native hunters can contrive to Och Um alive. Capture. uf lhat klnJ nevcrUiele, pretty sure to feltoi jBsi -of twenty mark, in cash (about 0, bat the successful trappers refuse to divulge the secret of theVjS Kt. Ivouis has i'titliiii)njd ih old txichelom. This is nut m able. Kverv haehch.r t-bouid pelh-d to muko a hmnu tor ii and for Ms wife. blgnur ( orlo. the Italian bus. New Orleans, is nuiiin! at KunJ eternal city can )nw liira . . . . . ni in as far hm this country a He will never U tni il ua Ihki the water. Katisaa City blur, (.eueral 1im ciaiM. f! ntfi the treanurr. is remai kalily viM 1 1 years. Ho break! f M i WW at i o'clock. ii-iicIks t i-- dew o'clock und rt'im.iiw tl.eie bardsl till 4 o'clo.-k. The bulk of hit pot to old witdiera sua otter claimants on his charity. You're a doctor. Huwcsgera sick ask for you. How grstetodf turn their wonderuit' eves placid counUmaiHN', therein boM fTnd some signal for )if!' Hj family nress about you! Ifow esBJ tl.ev !-. enii In "i h!I Ei'liill Tli.n tut rifithirwr l.rf. eiK-.i tot tbl tor. Convalescence cwnes. U rocovcre, visits are citded, ho I then'' What do dnclois whose I bills are disputed, what do whose honext bills arc wijiii. New York l'resf. A number of tho KnlgbtsTcBipl thin Kljiln l.nrn 1,1ml thfl ltIw of ChfcATo for a vovuire screw lantic late In July, when 8 thom will maki) a Knromftn tour. arc very much put out, bo5 new received from umuon i-j lr Lincoln has foiled to get per", for thora to wear their n'1-"1! swords whilo in England- im tended to march through tneui uniform, executing thir ncuvent, but Home Si erelary "J lias told Mr. Lincoln that ' n m..nl ..iiM ...,r l ist V'"" Mimtiu .,..o )-i-n K'tlt "1 Dflicials of tho other countries tiiml li viiil I B.i.l theV hi I" 1 favorable nu'li'.- ItoHiniuro uo Th l. i Uuna mrainut alle"! nir real cl.itii has Ikm'II severely J Iu...l . ..l ll...... Ij yilllll L'OOU Tjfe If lid ..iil'.ul H LU l.utv- M 1 x'7J v" I ;ff,red 111 UH V If II, II fJBV7 lAJ-tt . and which have threaU-ned to lively danireroos to tho mm"1" ilm v.init-u ll'ii waul i l- l li. l . -.1.11 urr vant Ul land In tho UnlU-d Stales for RU serves or srrl:iil turavl pun U .1.1. m..,nlrv. NOW naaalaw nron inning , -- herltloir real cHtsto. J",c,', that atate nKrd it WrJ meanimr b "t K work " Jusllce on anv one but sh"!'' rJ teet the affairs of the coimty too powerful foreign i""" mcrclat Garjlto Vnii.1 III mtf.