A Sequel to It. He had a push cx-t full cf "the latest and best" novels, says the New York Sun, and hud just ope ned up on the corner of Third avenue and Twenty-seventh street when a young womau stopped and inquired: "Have you a real good Ux k ':" "1 have, lady he replied. "Here is the latest tiling out and just what will please you. Lets see:'' 'Is it real entertaining.'" "The entertainingest book published for a year, inks, as I'm willing to swear to. 1 was so interested 111 it that J sai and never went to the up all night hank next dav. Ah! he-re it i.s: How! She Won Iliro." Tells you all about how a young woman of of well about 24, m ss, and the very picture of your self, begging pardon, won a lovely hus band that he was so rich he gravel roofed his stable with pearls anil dia monds. It gives you au insigh into "How much?" she interrupted, as she took out her purs?. "Fifiy cents, miss, and m 1 was going to " "I'll take it." She dropped him a half, took the book, and passed on, and the old fellow had a twinkle in his eyes as he looked after her and mutteered: "She will be along again in three or four days, and then I'll sell her the sequel to it: 'How He Skipped Out After lie Was Won.' (jot to study hum-J.u nature in these dull times." The Heroism of a Child. In the Bodlean Library at Oxford is die most touching record of heroes and self saci ifice on the part of a child. '1 he lower door of St. Leonard's Church, Bridgeworth, was left open, and two young boys, wandering in, were tempted to mount to the upp?r part, and scramble from beam to beam All at once a joist gave away. The beam on which they were standing be. came displaced. The elder had just time to grasp it when falling, while the younger slipping over his body, caught hold of his comrade's legs. In this fearful position the poor lads hung, crying vainly for help, fur no one was near. At length the boy clinging to the beam became exhausted, lie could no longer support the double weight. lie called out to the lad below that they were botli done for. "Could you save yourself if I were to loose you," replied the younger lad. "I think I could," returned the elder. "Then good-by, and God bless you!" said the little fellow, loosing his hold, Another second and he was dashed to pieces on the stone floor below. His companion clambered to a place of safety .Chatterbox for March. There is a Hoy I Can Trust. We once visited a public school. At recess a little fellow came up and 3poke to the teacher: as he turned to go down the platform, the master said: "That is a boy I can trust! He never failed me." We followed him with our eye and looked at him when he took his seat after recess. lie had a fine, open manly face. We thought a good deal about the masters remark. What a character had that boy earned, lie had already got what would be worth more to him than a fortune. It would be a passport into the best store in the city, and, what is better, into ths con fidence and respect of the whole com munity. We wonder if the boys know how soon they are rated by other peo ple. Eve'-y boy in the neighborhood is known, and opinions are formed of him; he has a character either favor able or unfavorable. A boy of whom the master can say, "I can trust him he never failed me," will never want employment. Our Dumb Animals. What keeps the Bicycler Upright Let us suppose a 'cyclist mounted on his wheel and riding, say, toward the north. lie finds himself beginning to tilt toward his right. He is l.ow going not only north with the machine, but east also. He turns the wheel east ward. The point of support must of necessity travel In the plane of the wheel; hence it at once begins to go eastward, and, as it moves much faster thanme rider tilts, it quickly gets under him, and the machine is again upright To one standing at a distance in front or rear, the bottom of the wheel will be seen to move to the right and left, just as I moved the foot of the skeleton frame a moment ago. I conclude, then, that the stability of the bicycle is due to turning the wheel to the right or left, whatever way the leaning is and thus keeping the point of support under the rider, just as a boy keeps upright on his fingers a broomstick standing on its smallest end-Charles li. Warring, in The Pop ular Science Monthly. "PrOTtrlM" of Medlela. People who are fond of taking medi cine may gratify their taste and put money In their pockets at the same time. A homeopathic college pays persons to take drugs and keep a rec ord of tbeir effect. " These drug-takers most be sound in health and not habi tual aaers of tobacco, tea, coffee, or ticohoi stimulants. For converting their atoniochs into laboratories the Drovers," as they are called, receive 99 Torture in 'l.'x5-i. j Torture is probably net infrequent in Mexico today. It is known to have been used in some instances within comparatively recent ears to extract details of s'uspeeu-.l political crime. The Mexican method is the bowstring or cord dr:.wn around the victim s( neck, and sV.ily tightened until the sufferer is re:idy to tell the story. This is done ia the dungeons with which; Mexican prisons abound, and which j are relics of the days of xpanisli occu-; pation. Mexicans would no doubt in- disnaiitiy denv that torture is a part of ; their judicial procedure, ilut as rel.- able Americans state mai mej o seen the victims before and aiter the inlliction, the denial amounts to very little. Muring the days of the Tudors, w hen the rack w as in constant opera tion, its use was contrary to Knghsh law.' So it is in the Spanish American countries wl.era despots are a law unto themselves. The Middle Ages are not as much the past ages as they might be in a good part both of Kurope and America, letting alone the barbarous regions of the world. ' I'lim I'lonV N ikuamp. Illustration American: I'riuce N'a poleau was duiL he was incapablvj, lie was a coward. Helpless, hopeless, he was the degenerate bearer of a great name. The public hurled great epi. thets at him. He returned from the Crimea to the Talis Royal to be re ceived as Craiut l'iomb, (tears lead) which afterwards becanii 1'lou l'lon. Xot satisfied with tacking this fock name on him, the press tore his reputa tion to pieces, and so it was that when his engagement with the Princess Clothilde, daughtes of Victor Emman uel, was announced, all Europe and America was shocked. Purity of Sea Air. Professor lloster, of Florence, lias re cently examined the air of the island of Elba, and come to the following im portant and practical conclusions: 1. The air of an island, even when of con siderable side, contains fewer bacteria than the mainland. 2. When the wind is oil the ski the number of bac teria is enormously decreased. 3 A comparatively narrow arm of the sea is sufticient to purify the air blowing over it. 4. Atmospheric bacteria in crease in proportion to the velocity of lie wind. o. P.ain is the most impor ant factor in purifying air of its con tained germs. An Old Settler. An English naturalist who put n. two years in a boarding house spent the next five in tracing the bedbug back to bis native lair. He found per fectly authentic information to prove that the insect existed and was full of business in the year 120 B. C. lie was even found in the camps of the army and no war lleet was deemed fitted out without a liberal sprinkling. Hie fh-Ht Hank. The Bank of England was estab lished in 1003, and is older than any of the institutions of the class in any other of the great nations. It was not the first of the important financial houses, however. T he I'ank of Venice was created in 1101, that of Genoa in 1 107, that of Hamburg in Ifiltt and that ofllotterdam in ICo. In 1803 the ank of Franco was established. Butter From Cocoanuts, Cocoanut butter is a new food stuff, which seems to have a useful future' before it. According to a report by the British vice-consul at Berlin, the production of an edible fat from the marrow of tlie cocoanut has been carried on for the last two year3 by a firm at Mannheim, the process having been discovered three year3 before by Dr. Schlinck. Factories having the same object are about to be established at Paris and at Amsterdam. Tim nuts come from the Soute Sea islands and ! also from certain places on the African and South American coasts. The but ter, which is sold at less than half the price of ordinary butter in London, contains from CO to 70 per cent of fat and 23 to 25 per cent of organic matter. Its color is white; it is of an agreeable taste' is suitable for cooking purposes and is being purchased by the poor, who prefer it to margerine. Being free from acid, it digests with greater ease than dairy butter, and is prefer able in other ways to tlie bad butter which too often finds its wiy to mar ket. It is also a more attractive c. im pound than the various preparations called margerine, some of which havs such very questionable origin. A Logic' Sequence, A tramp, putting his head inside the door of a grocery, asked: "Please, mister, gi' nie a piece o' paper to wrap suthln' in." A piece was given him; the door closed, but in a second opened again. "Mease gi' me su'thiu' to wrap in it" Judge. A Twenly-Aere FobA. A twenty-acre pond bubbled up out of the earth in Center county, last winter, in tventy minutes. Th people round about tbeits thought too foundations of the earth bad rlrso ' ar:ay. Physical Culture for Women. T hiiv irivt-n pd all interest," said A ....... C- 1 intuiiiirpiit. woman in the Providence Journal, "in the movement for tl.o tul i.hvsical culture of women. so It is not that I do not believe most heart ily in the full and symmetrical develop ment of the tody powers, but the whole cult is being perverted to sensualism. The beauty teachers are devoting tneni selves. not to wholesome training lor health, but to making -visions of live liness, with direct regard to ti.eirehect on the other sex. and after as rank methods as could ever have been ein- nloved in fitting Circassians lor uie harem. V won! HIS Urt liueieai. i. physical culture is to till out her neck, so that she mav look better in decollete gown. It's ail in a line with the mani cure business, which is making very ornamental, but worse than useless hands. It all goes with our heaps of cushions and shaded lights and retine ments of perfumes. It's the de.elop ment of curve3 and tlie study of poses and the absolutedeilicatiuii of dainty sensualism. It would be a good plan to let in on the business a little wholesome sunshine and air." liank of 1'iiirliiinl l'njx'r. livery one may not know that the Hunk of England notes are made from new white linen cuttings - newr from anything that has been wo: n. So rare tullly is the paper prepared that even the number of dips into the pulp made by tach workman is registered on a dial by machinery, and the i heeU are counted and booked to eacli person through whose hands they pass. They ar made at I.averstroke, on the lliver Whit, in Hampshire, by a family named Portal, descending lroin a French Huguenot refugee, and have been made by the same laiiniy ior more than loO years. They are printed within the building, there being an elaborate arrangement tor making them so that each note of the same denomination shall differ in some par ticular from the other. Luck and tlio Knipi ror. A eentleman who has traveled in Russia relates the following: "I remember once when playing ecarte at a ball given by the empress to the late emperor, the hitter, who was wandering about, came behind me to watch the game. My adversary and I were both at four, and it was my deal. "Xow," said tlie emperor, 'let us see whether you can turn up a king.' "I dealt and then held up the turn up card, observing, 'Your orders sire, have been obeyed." 'The emperor was greatly astonish ed and a dozen times afterwards asked me how I managed it and he never would believe that it was a mere haz ard, that I had taken the chance of the card being a king." Effects of Frost on lJuililin Stone. Experiments on the frost resisting power of natural and artificial build ing stones have been made with twenty one different kinds of natural building stones, three to six test pieces of each being used. The tensil strength, dry and wet, their capacity for absorbing water, their alternation in volume, tensil strength and behaviour toward water after freezing and thawing twenty-live times and their specific gravity were determined. Out of this number of samples, ranging from limestone to sandstone, only six were found to resist repeated freezing, viz. : One of dolomite, ono of diorite and four sandstones. Four other samples were found to resist freezing fairly, but not absolutely; but of forty-one samples of artificial stones similarly tested, only three were found thorough ly unaffected, w hile eight proved fairly resistant Duration of a Lightning Flash. Until quite recently all ofjthe author ities concurred with each other in the opinion that a lightning Hash was in stantaneous. Liite experiments show that the (lash is not infinitesimal, but that it lasts a measurable period of time. This interesting fact was ascer tained by setting a camera in rapid vibration and exposing it iu a plate so as to receive the impression of tlie flash. Upon taking out the plates it was found that the impressions seemed widened out on the negative, showing that the negative had been moved dur ing the time the flash was in existence. St. Louis llepublic. IIuw Tall Chimney Om-IIsi. The extent or degree of the oscilla tion of all chimneys may be exactly taken by a close observation of the shadows they cast upon the ground. An instance to the point is that of a chimney 115 feet high and four feet in diameter externally at the top, near Marseilles, France, the oscillations of which were observed by the shadow durina a high wind to attain a max imum of over 20 inches. A Yankee Trlek. The king of Wain won't buy show which do not squeak, i nd of course his example is followed by ids subjects. A Yankee iu buiw in Hingapore has the run of the market, and the way he keeps it is to subject all his stock to a low beat until the rieht nltch ot 1 wueak U arrived at, . Ma.u.;.. turc of Salt I ..it which is -x govern, in " , , . ,....,,! is obtained I'T tlit iiieui. n- l .... - evaporation of the water of t..e brine it ells which abound m certam uis'.ncis of ,'-ch!'-n. Hie wells aiC lou.iu. about IT'i n. !,-s from linugMiif;. v.., ..... ' 1 .-.!. i he bank ! an ati at-iit ol ine i j .. . i.i,, ..it lit J 7.U- I lliver, near uie ii'jui-""" i 1,,,-tsm. The manufacture of s.dt, , u-hi.-h has Wn carried on here for six teen humlmi to two thousand y i ..,1 v...niv!iat as iol!o .rs, is . ac- cording to a recent Consular l.eport. l!v means .f a rude iron drill. ledesh im-hes in diameter and varying from a f... rt,-, t to) jiuior ."" fee- ;.. ,r.. U.rril 111 tilt TO The .ears lit urj'in i - - Wi.." sometimes lasts for forty years ltfdiri' hi ine is leaciied and is carried to generation. ,. from .-em-ration to generation. When brine is I'mali found it is urawn up by bullocks i in long bamboo tunes bv means ( 1 a rope huge drum. In the vicinity of the salt wells, natural-gas welis are also found, from which a is supplied to 'valor ate the brine in large iron caldrons, leaving the pure salt as a deposit. The product ol salt in the district is euor onions. Th-re are twenty lour gas wells and about a thousand brine wells now in operation, producing annually 2H0 a 0 tons of salt, valued at s:.,imhmi. ... . 'I he Wandering Albatross. The Liuncst of l werful living birds are, I believe, the tvander- ing illi::trosseS and the Njiitli Ameri- can coii'ior for tlie roc ic I rejected out .f the most re riubt a? worthy ou'y stritted Ar;d. in and nocturnal ornith- ology. Seen on the wing, or even wuu the wings expanded, both these great existing birds have a most majestic and colossal appearance. Hut feathers in such cast s are very deceptive; they make tine birds oU of very small bodies. For example, our well known little English swift, which looks so im posing in Hight as it passes overhead with pinions poised, is hardly as big when plucked as a man's top thumb joint and weigh only half an ounce. So, too. the albatross, though its ex panse of wings is said to exceed that ot any other known bird, amounting sometimes to nearly ten feet from tip to tip does not average in weight more than lil'te'.'ii pounds, which is just exactly the poulterer's statement for my last family Christmas turkey. As for the condor, while he spans from wing to wing some eight feet, his length from beak to tail is only three and a half, ind 1 doubt if he would pluck into anything corresponding to his tiiagiillceut cuter show though 1 am bound to admit that I have never personally tried the unpleasant experi ment III So. "Mother, the teacher says Ceorge Washington naver told a lie." Well, that's so, Johnny." "Oh, 1 don't believe that. I know- lots of boys here in town w ho tell their mothers lies "most every day and their mothers think they ntver told a lie either. High 1,1 1 Hi;. The effect which living at high alt i tudes has on the blood of animals has been recently investigated, and the re suits show that the proportion of oxy gen iu the blood of men and animals acclimatized there was the same as that of dwellers at lower levek A (ieiiulne 111); ISiix. The biggest insect of its kind in the world is the Hercules beetle of South A merica which grows to be six inches in length, It is said whether truth fully or not, that great numbers of these creatures are sometirces seen on the mammj;a tree, rasping by working around them with tbeir boms until they cause the juice to flow. This juice they drink to intoxication, and thus fail senseless to the ground. AbKtiit-Mlurtcd Maine Women. An absent-minded woman in ' this town started down street the other day and fell flat. In recovering herself she got turned around and started back home. She is a cousin to a woman who started to prepare the eveninc; meal recently, when she sneezed, and upon recovering thought she Wis ''doing up" tlie supper dishes. She put everything away nicely and sat down for a quiet evening. Vew l ue of a Waterfall. The proprietors of 1,500 acres of farms in the Western Pyrenees have applied the power of a neighboring waterfall to the generation of electric ity for lighting the property, for work ing . wine press, and for irrigating the vines. To connect the apparatus re quires some sixty-two miles of wire. Jn.t riala Snake. A Pennsylvania says he knows of a spot where at least 6,000 serpents are bunched together for the winter. There are no fancy snakes among them, but just common, every-day snakes, such as blue racers and rattle snakes, and he aiks no particular credit for his discovery. According to a German authority it has been found that zinc will rapidly corrode when in contract with brick work. To prevent this, roodng-feUij placed between the Unc aud tuo brick, work. .. . , " The Ait "i Transparency. Unlike fog, haze couiuio.dy occur,, during an unusually dry stat of th lower stratum of air. lu considering its can. t I' l'c "'e'1 llj;,t "ie small qaasitity of uonlranspa,eiit matter reoiiireJ to 1 rodc.ee the d.m nungellectsiiould always be borne in mind. If the eye t-.til ul-seive inr . w u tireii ui . . change that come water when the lit')' , - milnoiitti of a giamot fiic!uine is introduce 1 t. a.ililv l " ....... .1,11 nut iiiiiil. ... 1 1 ..,i;,.o f..r visibility in a greater wouiu uon coluum of air i.t'JU.iw leet long. 1 lie -.i-r a at a'l times charged with dust ...h.i..1 to a dejree diflicult to reahe. . ... 1. t L ina Tiie purest air tesu-u oy when making his uietsuremeins ou .. .. - ..;,,uil utir.nt t ie ton (it lien -en cu""-"" Hw dust particle, to each cubic inch, which would give ;W1VJ particles to ,vcrv cubic loot, or 5."W. ' r.nua column of 1,0 W feet. This being the case, it i mauifeit that a condetl satbrn upon a small portion of these or i momentary ahe ion by eiectric at traction would sutlice to produce the jplical etlect called "haz M. Louis llepublic. in 'Jiazinesb Music 1 1 tlieSpheifx. The origin of this everyday phrase is licientiy lu'ercrilmg to even bear re- elling to tiiose that already miok h. I'ytliagoras, the hreeK pnnosopner, bile experiment mg on the vioraiious jf tiirht drawn strings ui.scovereu ui.u trings of certain lengths produced io'.es. lie then Idogicaiiy coum-cteu mets known at that time with nusxal notes for the reason merely bat the radii of the seven spheres, which, according to then existing lotions, the planets were set in lengui md therefore ('!) produced Uillereut lotes. These notes be dubbed the music of the spheres." This music as of not supposed to be caused by the frilction of spheres in the sockets in which they were set ai is now cur- enlly thought, but was produced by he vibration of their unequal radii. New York llecorder. The Young of tlie. Sea Devil. You may find in the sea devil a cu rious illustration or natures nysiem for adjusting reproduction. The cod ays several bundled thousand eggs at spawning, because nearly all of them must necessarily le lost while floating jn tht waves and those which hatch ire mostly devoured. But the sea devil, which produces but a sing.e young one at a time retains the latter n its belly until the infant creature is from four to six feet iu length, so that when born it is able to take care of laulf iind i in no danger of being lestroved. Interview iu Washington tar. III Cases of lilccdili Wet tea leaves or scrapings of sole leather w ill stop bleeding. If the blood is bright and comes in lets, apply linn pressure upon the irtery above the cut nearest the heait An obstinate case of nose-bleeding may be stopped by bathing the hands for a half an hour in cold wider. If ignorant of the location of vessels press with the linger or a piece ul cloth lirectly under the wound. If the blood comes ina steady .,. rom a vein apply pressure ,. above from the cut furthest lroin the hea-t If the severing of an artery press the point firmly with the finger until a blood clot is formed. For a slight cut let Die blood liow for half a minute, then dip in cold water or apply ice. Baudaim if n-. cessary. If bleeding h, I rom the leg the artery in the groin must oe pressed very forci bly with three linger? aided by the weight of the body. Bleeding from an external wound from the nostrils can be checked by the use of powdered alum, which coagulates the blood. Bleeding from the stomach can can generally be checked by lying or ths back and taking occasional swallows of iced water or lemonade. The following treatment for bleeding from the ruoutli, throat or lungs Is recommended: Strict rest iu bed with the head raised light diet and ice-cold drinks. A Belled Kit ard. A buzzard with a bell about its neck 88 found dead in the wnrtillekl of Cor nelius II, Shipley, near (list, about six miles from Westminister, a few days ago. A small bell was iittached to its neck by a wire. On the tongue or clapper of the bell was the Itoman numeral I and the letur I). For several years past a buzzard, carrvimr a bell in the manner thus described, oeen seen in many and wldly separated I places in the western counties of Marv- mnu. n netner this is the same is not known. Baltimore Sun. A dog at Hern crept into a counting- house when the owner's back was turned, and after stealthily appropri ating 260 francs in notes, scampered off with them and laid them at bis own roasters feet. An instrument called the haemato krlt, based on centrifugal action has been invented for determining the vol una of corpuscles present in the blood. An IiiIam,i. Of all the native people in North America, uomjT louiore man the pUfb;0 j -New .Mexico, who are, 1 to the largest of thenar, in the I nited Mates. Thw " UW souls. Tlw, have nirw-u-T ' i i 1 lAiiti Mvrii in Ari7Ar.o. . j --"'. ana tjj little outlying colonien n. Arizona: ftfian ki7A if ia tK... . ' j U w 1 nur, iZuiiiihas onl I .it ... . , smallest onlr about lm. i I "uuitujj are, nevertheless. , And each city, with iu field. kJ republic-twenty-six 0f th. .-J and rhaP8 the 0,dMt. repubta! u'.irM f... IUb ... .... l nCie umuiy 80ci j vue urni. j-.uropean eyet Mw I K.lli lm.u ita itavj..,!... :. v",u"i " eoi , oheriirs, iU war captains, and oti. eials who are elected animallj;, J unwritten but unalterable, whidl more respected and better MifonwJ the laws of any American eogj its permanent and very eomjj houses, and its broad fields, nisi uj .-jinui oiiu later ny pvwl the I 'nited Mates. Tlie architecture ol the 1'uebioW is qiiniiii. iiuu cnaracteristic. in mote pueblos they are as man? t. stories iu height -built $utstb me snape oi an rnoriiinui W pyramid. 1 be Pueblos along J Orande, however, ha hlt.tln-jujJ of Mexican custom, and t heir 3 nave out one and iwo sio iej. a j buildings, including the huge, qJ church, which each pntblo has. J made of stone plastered with J mud, or of great sun dried bridil adolie. They are the most comfor dwellings in the south wbit-,j summer and warm iu whiter. 1 he Pueblos are divided itij tribes, each speaking a quite im language of its own. Isieta, tLtqaf village w here I live, in an Indium w ith Indian neighbors and tmdei dian laws, is the soittliernn)jtto!l pueblos, the next largest of ttmi and the chief city of the Teewatoi All Hie languages of the l'ueblo b are txccedingly diflicult to lew. Besides the cities now lubbM ruins of about 1,500 other puebkH some of them the noblest ruimil country dot the brown va&jii rocky mesa tops of New Mem these ruins are of stone, and tremely interesting. The lE( savages by whom they were jurrar made necessary the abaiiduDBg hundreds of pueblos. ttiMe The Pueblo Indians haTe for ??I' two centuries given almost no tPjJ to the European sharers of ttrj; 1 t Jtw- main, but their wars ci ue- i"" i;ny- m l uca liu -mi iy"-vj couiDlelely. with the AJr-VfT I omaiicnes uim i i--- a i .. .... 1 ...a I'jsim Ufe very few years ago. They are m lighters for tbeir homes, but prw- honorable peace but industrious nev are uui m.- -tilling tlmit &h tending their stock and keeping affairs iu order. i .. aT Ti. women own the houses w contents, and do not work ouiik the meu control the fields t An unhappy home is almost it; known thing among them, im I veisal affection of pareuts iraV aiid respect of children for F ' .. . i ..uourMflll'L , , " d, a parent j . . ' a MM abuse extraordinary, i iic"c , . inn1 i dressed or a ylayma-e auu - j long and intimate BcquamW 1 r I unimll la me rueoio. . " Nicholas. Cutt-hing Terrapin In the Hbnal waters along Btiiilh of furot llonliiueii vttm " - " " .. caugni iu various -j i . t a nreure crixl nlniis in Mm n uke of H tiimi i.ifk Ilium nn Nets SlrelU"" r - I....M some narrow arm of river or wj cilo tlio fM.t. nf unw stTSV teral - " I " ' or their inesnes, nut weae re'i""1 save the catch from drowning' winter, iu the deeper water, U ri.se from tbeir muddy quart" sunny days and crawl aloug1 Tliev nr then lakdl bV 10P ntiuvouviuq " l.nl.l.n.y Turtles will risA at any no uallv the fisherman only t-:f9t,u thousrh each hunter ban lit" o1' nltraxllno Ilia lorrallin. I auiv nt tared a l 'le-er iniuA ll.al wxlriMl tit flS frOW AVIm.ever the noiw. all tur hnnrlrn.wlic.ther terriipi" to .vlll t.ut their heildi ''rt ilrilh ur uKlcnma and ! ?uiC to the n.arketmen. 'l'henrf' aiiDears and disappears, l?in iy a ripply, and the lu"ller (40 approaching usually 'kw ...ii i.ni.ln until w1 coot? lltll. iudiciiriioii I hi 111 quick, and will Cesceii' i has net a uirection. so mat a ii" iinhna Iim hmilieiiS to C conifl "Pi If he is near enough the m 'l io, 'n.-iiuu. fur hunting V bird hour at either sunrise of Nicholas. The habitual nshermn harbor say Uiat tlio motion there caused a" j strike out for deep i Uiey are slow about ret or' I Tim French cheiiilw ..uf mnntha a an ailft.!Cedcd I" A rubies haveruw overcf j . il.elU1 ilea and can mase i 'larger dliwsivilons.