anew i e fnai a-fsrmis-a iv-ayr a JiTjr." tiif-n- i:e c-atir --cm-. was C.: lrff -"-!. in lb tirhx day trf lilt tie fiTKJiil J-1 of Ti-X WIS m- lit v - 'u-v rcJy a ft bair-i. kv5 a farv. fee ij6oi ly iLiS it rti tias it auii i Marl Sijr.c-.- w early rel es tare owrtf of Skz FriU-'-i haj farta e at cf a i- erM. E bai grown aad f .- e ar'rra: t tares, aisd wbt-a Lari jrssiC cx tried to court? atrv- Ey One tlcb'.or wjs jii-ive to r.e i-s nt, bit tXfrOIJ imrf. iy nand-rj ore r to Mr. istx.2 k-zj sat Lti in wtat ai Markrt szvei, Sas Fraccisea. Sand lxs were not very Taijc n those dy&. aad Mr. Si.ciio f-x-jsd as opportunity to d-;..sr cf bis ut.ti be saw that be nugit m fce a pretty of them. S3 be beM on to theai, asd there is no more vai.kabie real estate iu the Golden Oat city today thin Mark SbehWs Market &-rel property New York Tribuue. t il wpiipii twr if im . lhmai -n-i TJiwr ffclif t riiri.-:'".).' jiTfiTiJiiwuf "it -sj.iimr-r u.xenfci: ! ywevwiuflt ckn. p:r. if n.i.i.,T,r he- sty U h 1..' " iit v. Mtrt& am b J-" I - f 'iii ' & T"J l- t!K UJ-JiC f U StttilbKTIi f.r. t rBfci i:;i uil t el it kii--f fl.L.H 1C 10-tWft.lif M' V7'"if New i -.: T;bm. t- si Ki.xe- :y war Khol IL-nl Vtran. If yoa meet ei-Goveraor Lad J, Ehode Island, . 11a- tt-Z-Z-Zi.Z-f iZ ask bim how be turned Lt'' i-ej-Lt- Tiif 'T.-xj-rrji :mt. ' a rJf C2L. -a d:s.-.'T,-.'fi .!. Uit war 3 V r::ia-. a Frwtft tvrii:er i .! a bin;k iinsvi atfic: f irry iwb , j:ox aaattrry irtie Wii.:ib tiJ s.-rrad ii'iTTit.-e . .tj fiiria:. Tb i- f th ia Grri. ti : toi a ci:iSiK-'i bif-fC-yi'-ii-t,be tl.rd a:-boriai T.t.:. a fjas i ertry cay at- Aftrr years E treble asina.aed lU; tb tire ii- ' T.j.TKiTtf ' rs :. f a u (mw. r.f .?. oi lT!jerrT Kn.t-h.ot-i by 1 1 fir4 l"jry;t. ! T-rr ".lit J Ut. ", reif cw a:Mi two t:tari before f ti 'f--r i: r of tie tbrUiS era.-M- a, ex-t r" II'- Tt.f Kid ' :! farmer a J-.a a; r-?'r:--'- .a:.ir.- :.r. iieit . , it ?tc ::e. t.'ir4 ,...-i..i-s. iar lb farrc hois ;aiys coa- :ct Aqu.ti.1.-. ;3totbe est rre ;n m- tie ixp Iii-an.g, u.c were Cone. fhea p'.owed in i i. s-.Ij so.: "f ii ;t rr'ii: '.iie 'k-5- kt2 Kra;-:ei .11 a .-t-K-ra ai -t ra-wCta aI 1U ; ti rr.r r- waf a a.f verii.-. jt tt-r af.ertj.il i t :.r . a.- ibe :.r:.t of l:. ire-altaost as unei "' . .Vi m.iJ virgin's BAod were eii a Iaorer ia i iiout .r. earth do you reid such SvAs'"- aJ "-'s'l,:e ma ,.., .Mto a worurn ot a bo bad jat been througli ,J ,sn Of MaUe) 8 lev highly tie thon- I;i larkfi . .1. l .. -im t.ill!ll.C imh - n.vr to read to you. a Lt.e of l hem. fellow the more of of the laugh on the group of disticgtiisbed people amid whom he sat in the preai- j Winch Shoe AVar out Firt. y'axir.TT of tie r-T;e who bay shoes .. , 6 , . . . . (jo tbJ bouse kaTe tbeirold oues. I pre- display, .iwdjwhoisonspeifcnr h( housA Unn, w.thhim kno that be b;iuk, tU: of the proud of his little state as though it . , . . ,. j i i r.rbs iTjoe I meaa the old shoe is was as big as Texas, and the charhec to ' . ;, ... . . j . .. v .worn down verr thin on that point which he was subjected while tbej n,av. . .. . . wbere tie baZ of trie foot rests. 1 Iiae tnousanos ot men in me aeparcnieiiis , .. . . , .. seen maiy such that I gut to think II 'Jill iuc K:k owa wuc iaiviK . , , . .. . 6 ..... , :r.r a:cut it. and have come to this past was nos caicuiatea to maae mm , . . ... . , ....... , ,ki .coaclasion: ear:y everybody in a "Don't forget your spyglasses when little Khody's department is due," cau tioned Governor Burleigh. "1 say, Ladd, don't you want to bor row a man to carry a fiar for your boys?" shouted Governor Bulkeiey over the heads of rows of people. "Is it possible that Ehode Island has a department by itself? provokingly queried Mrs. Alger. And so it went for a couple of hours. Finally lb tie Khody's department flag was descried turning into Huntington i venue. Then came the department iommander proudly riding ahead of a rtaff as numerous as the largest Then ame Reeves' splendid band, and then Platoon after platoon and post after post f splendidly equipped veterans. Mr. Ladd was surprised himself at the dis Dlay made by his state, and when after ,he division had passed he turned to scan the faces of his persecutors they -ere looking abstractedly at nothing in articular. They saw his smile out of he comers of their eyes, however: it as so broad. Boston Herald. Pilot Knob Gives Out. St Louis Republic, The celebrated Pilot Knob mines have been worked iiuce 184C and during the years inter vening to the present time have pro iuced an almost fabulous amount of are. The mines reached their zenith in 18M when they produced 200,000 tons. This output was continued for about three years , when it began rapidly fall ing off, and two years ago the Vulcan works, whose capacity is 15,000 tons per month were closed for want of suf ficient ore. The company continued to prospect however, feeling confident that it would soon strike another paying vein. The prospecting failed to develop a vein, and as a last resort the company sunk another shaft 140 feet deep, the expense of which was enormous. This failed also, and the conclusion was forced upon the company that the mountain of iron was exhausted. Pros pecting was continued but very quiet ly until a vein was struck neirer the surface. The vein was nothing like original vein, however, the output be ing only seven care daily. The mines were quietly stripped of all the machin ery, and scarcely any of it is to be found there at this time. Tue furnaces and forges were buil in 1847 by the Pilot Knob iron com pany, and in 1858 were acquired by Chouteau, Harrison & Valle. Before the Iron mountain railroad was com- pleted to this point the output had to be carried over the Ozark mountains to city l.ke Chicago rides on the street cars. Nearly everybody gets off his or her car on the right hand side of the car, and in alighting the right foot is the first to strike the stone paving, or whatever the paving may be, and it strikes on the ball of the foot. This in time wears down the sole of the right shoe at that point Interview in Chicago Tribune. Courted "ine Girls at Once. V'illiam Anderson, arrested on sus picion of larceny, is quite a character, says a Lowell, Miss., dispatch. In his possession was found a memorandum book, recording the fact that he was courting nine girls. For convenience sake he had them numbered from one to nine inclusive, and when lie had oc casion to refer to them in the memor andum it was by number. One entry is the fact that No. 1 be came aware that he was escorting Xo. 6 to places of amusement. His descrip tion of Xo. 7 would make her tear her hair if she read it. While traveling Anderson recorded that he had letters from eight of the girls in a day. An derson claims a residence in Portland, Me., and was at one time a polo player. A woman came to the station house this afiernoon and identified the mar riage certificate found in Anderson's possession as that of her brother, who was rooming iu Haverhill. Litiv exited, and f,r a tr.n.ng rent, sm ouli Irnsit the farmers on b-J iaai to cat the.r turfs from las bog or ,ve bxirbs from his forest. I uel m-wooi ouiv actuary but relatively rit m the middle ages than today, 4 ... 1 1 . V- ..c a fi-p not drained in dar the torest covered great expanses, aid the cost of carriages made it al most impossible to transport their pro duce, in almost every shire of France . 3 . ... ..f ft, ..1 tvaa in Xjjr l iaa : and England me supiMj " 1 us worwrrivu , nf ,. demand. 1 he hospitable fire flared up a chim ney proportioned to its size, lighting the huge brick oven, the iron firedogs, the bellows, shovel, gridiron, Udles, cal drons, saucepans, mortar, tin pails and other utensils that stood on the brack eU of the hearth, and irradiating the brass and copper pots, the mental can dlesticks, the lamp, the lantern, the not unfreouent silver beaker, and the glass drinking cups that were ranged on the chests and cupboards round the walls. Near this fire stood a high backed set tle, the masters comer, and under the great mantle of the chimney narrower benches were set in the brick. AVithin easy reach of the hearth a deep oak chest held the logs for burn ing. It was generally matched by a handsome wedding chest with carved or painted front, long enough to con tain a grown person full length, but more usually tilled, it must be admitted withjthe best clothes, the trinkets and the savings of the household. The reg isters of the chatelet record no crime so common as the breaking open of such wedding chests; and it is surpris ing how many clasps of jewels, girdles of pearls, golden headdresses and rings, and purses full of gol l were stolen from quite humble households. Our forefathers invented their capital in cups or trinkets or precious metai. pretty to look at, easy to hide, and readily converted into cash when nec essity demanded a sacrifice. Fort nightly Review. , r , V,..i oncht never to rea What" she ansvvereu ., i ct,,ii) 1 justified in :. .. : .....t nm misery and , kerpuig juwa... - - ( ' degradation of m.Uious oi cij j creatures.' ! -y"vc23 his answer, : im.ut of such things lienwns like I tou keep themselves, the surer their i chance of -eiiig sunny and helpful m i fluem-es in the world. The record vt i these horrors simply paralyes you. It I works on vour sympathetic imagir.a- 1 . , i l . :..r nr abund- i tion till the wimw neau is ... - whole heart is taint, ai mgi"Juu "v down, and in the morning you VV in darkest Africa yourself. Had you spent your time in reading something beautiful and cheering you would have been healthier and happier and a huu dred times more use to your husband, till I .....W.I O " those to your ennureu mm w ow.vV. Ju the esiK-cial case in Iianu uie ma" was right, and the case stands for thou sands of like ones. Overwrought sen sibility is the suffering side of life, and the gloomy sjiell this exerts over the imagination, is an actual disease of the day. Nuiulierless are the people whose" constant aim in life ought to be to get away from the contemplation of distressing objects, and who should take as much pain3 as the florist with his roses to expan the broadest possible expanse of clear glass to the rays of the sun. Without sunshine, and plenty of it, they can never thrive. Just as some plants can flourish unaer the densest shade, while others mildew be neath it, so it is with different human organizatioiis.-liostou Herald. To Measus the Sea Level. A new apparatus for measuring the mean level of the sea has lately been installed at Marseilles. It is based on the principle that when a liquid wave traverses a capillary tube or a porous partition, its amplitude diminishes and it is retarded in its phases without the mean level of the wave changing. It consists of a glass tube, the lower end of which communicates by a flexible pipe with a plunger which is lowerer beneath the lowest water level. There re two cells in the plunger, the lower A Itniiiirkable IMaiuond. A large diamond was recently found in the Ie Beers Consolidated Mines at Kimberly, South Africa by a native, says the Jewelers' Weekly. It was in two pieces, one weighing l'J 1-2 c; rats end the o'.her 2o 1-2 carats. The re markable feature of the stone is its shape, as. with two pieces joined, it measures 2 1-4 inches long, 1 inch broad mid 3-4 of an inch thick. It is crystallized more in the form of ordinary quartz, except that, instead of being sexagonal, it is of the pris matic form, having only three sides. At one end the base it has a flat cleavage plane on the slant, aud there is do doubt that to make it as perfect crystal, there is another piece about three-quarters of an inch long that should be added to it and which may yet be found in the sorting. At the other end, or top, it come to a blunt point, and it is this piece that was broken off. U is a light brown color. To any one not thoroughly acquainted with rough diamonds it would appear a piece of brown quartz, as the cleaved or broken end naturally forms the base of the quartz forma tion, as if it had grown on the rocks. The coating is more like that of the river diamonds. It is valued at 2,000. I Heroic Mother or the Poor. vrnmhio experience as a physician 'in the cast of London. lr. Wward Berdoe wti in the Fortnightly Review ; that the mothers among the poor, and ifcven among the paupers, are willing to i make anv aarniice ior uie ' inl attendance upon their children, kI i could not give the fathers," be said, by any means so goou a ura. this rect. The U-ery and self-indulgent pauper male parent is too often careless enough of his family; but of themo'herlcan, on the whole, say nothing but C'xhI. 1 have very rarely known a sick child to want for any thing within her means, even if she bad to go without necessaries for herself." One example which he gives of Hie self-sacrifice of penniless mothers is worth quoting in full- M,,"e Monday morning." he s:ns, ' in the depth of the late winter, a thin, poorly clad little woman came through a snowstorm to an Fast find work house to ask for food for her children. Her husband was lying ill i" the infirmary and she had live children to support by charing and doing odd jobs. The relieving oflicer at once assisted the family with food. Ten minutes after the applicant had left the relief oflicer 1 was fetched in haste to sec the poor woman, who had just reached home. Mie tiau placed the bread and meat on the table and had fallen dead on the bed. I was jurprised to see the live chubby, well fed children standing by the bed on which lay their dead mother. The storv was a common one- the bread had all gone to the children. The mother had sacrificed her life to save iheirs. 'A mother,' says Coleridge, 'is '.he holiest thing alive,' and I should .ndorse the sentiment, even had 1 no jther experience wherew ith to illustrate t than that gleaned from my East London parish work." Look. J IIUI ...II .alUBjl Tte prevailing , J ing me larger to.,,. eellent inus.nt. 1 nes,free reading. "ittUlIoid l -"'uaeuieiiL Tll nu-iiude, andtheffi ' "nqnestW southern in iuia... , ' ifti . i or lh , amusement i. I tie theater, and clubi almost as luxurir.,,. Mall or I'iccadifiv r. ( f 19 It . BeesStinga Team to Death. AVhile William Harris Jand his son James were at the Mc Kim farm, Steu- benville, on the West Virginia side of . fiUed with jand and open to the the river, two horses, hitched at the side of the barn, slipped their bridles and started to run away. Harris, see ing the run away, tried to head the horses, causing them to turn and go through a fence into a yard where there were thirty bee hives. Three hives were knocked over by the horses. Thousands of bees swarmed over the horses, which lay down in the harness sea, the result being that the column of water in the tube rises and faUs very little with the tides, and the mean sea level can be read from a graduated seals. Xew York Times. ?3 The Attorney's Dog. A Boston lawyer who resides in the suburbs is the owner of a dog that cer rnoanin? uiteously. As vounir Harri i caml? possesses uie instinct ot an at- could not see the horses suffer he cut I torney- The other day he 8aw another the traces with a butcher knife, whde i dog can7'nff off a temI)tinS lookinr the bees attacked him. He started the ne' A 8coua ao I01J0VVeu at a horses off. When loose from the cattle i 9hort diatan(- Tlie lawyiVs dog crate the horses ran in all directions in i quickly conceived a Pla of action the fields, utterinir unnatural ! worthy of an eminent legal mind. He .. ... 1 l. -..... at times rolling m the grass moaning terribly. One hone lay in a creek, where it rolled and shreaked till death ended its sufferings. The other horse was caught and hay burned under it, but the horse died in a short time. Both were fine St Genevieve, Mo. It finally come in- jan',il,s- "i'oung Harris was stung tub of poison, i Louis ore to the possession of the St. and steel company. The location of the mine is histor ically interesting as it was one of the worst nests of bushwhackers developed by the war. It was at Pilot Knob that Ulysess S. Grant received the conimi sion as general It was at Pilot Knob that the United States headquarters for the southwest were established. It was budly, but he was bathed in soda wa er, counteracting the Cincinnati Enquirer. Whltelaw Itcld. Whitelaw Reid is sparely elongated .t I rr . . t i r n y Ve ! While native fishermen were out fish. ,,.w ulKlu, 1C(.Bu1, proiusion ing with nets at Waialua, on the other immeaiatejy urougtit action against the dog with the bone. The third dog at once quickened hi3 pace, and lost no time in instituting supplementary pro ceedings in his own behalf. This assis tance proved equivalent to a decree for the plaintiff, for the laywer'g dog left the third dog to bear the brunt of th3 litigation, aud seizing tile bone fled to n;s own Kennel, where po ;session was truly nine points of the law. Bos ton Traveler. An Immence Shark. IngcrHoll aw an Entertainer. Last winter Col. Ingersoll gave re ceptions to his friends on Sunday even ings. His parlors were always crowd ed, and the great agnostic was the most delightful of men. He laughed with the girls, talked seriously with the men, cracked a joke at the supper table, and seemed to be as contented as man can well be. I noticed on more than one occasion, whenever some ill- mannered person brought up the sub ject of religion, that CoL Ingerooll deftly turned the conversation. But upon one memorable night that I re call, Grace Greenwood, the authoress, turned to him and said familiarly, as do most of his friends: "Bob, what do you think of Shakespeare?" I suppose the question was prompted by a mag nificent bust of the Bard of Avon that stood on a pedestal near by. Col. Inger soil was not at a loss for a-i answer He walked over to the bust, looked How Herbert Npencer Herbert Spencer is a man somewhat bove the middle height and not look rig his seventy years by good decade His head is well shaped, but not no- :iceabiy large, and is pinky bald, w ith I fringe of not very gray hair. Round 'jig cheeks and jaw grows a scant whisker to match with a narrow canal rut through at the chin; the nose very lelicate and aquiline, the teeth strong and well preserved, the skin ruddy, nd the whole expression fine, simple, and intellectual. Of course, he wore joft, square-toed boots, and a baggy, broadcloth coat. They are badges of men of senilis the elderly ones, at leant and even Rudyard Kipling af fects them. Never iu all my experi ence have I seen a very great man wTH such absolute simplicity of man- j 'jer. Peculiar Divorce Suit. Kate 1). Edgerton, for three years a resident of Minneapolss, has tiled com plaint in the district court, asking a di vorce from her husband, Erastus I). Edgerton, president of the Second Nat ional bank of Helena, a leading capital ist and church member. She asks for 850,000 and her share in his present real estate holdings. The couple wer3 married in 1S79 and came to Helena three years later. In her complaint she alleges that Erastus procured by fraudulent means a divorce from her in Yellowstone county, this state, in 1887, Thomas A. Carter, present com missioner of the general office, being his attorney. She alleges that he forced her, with a drawn revolver, to wrte a letter dictated by him, author- izing E. I). Weed, present United States district attorney, to appear for her in the Yellowstone county proceedings, which letter Edgerton carried to Weed and the latter accepted service aud consented to a decree of divorce on her behalf, without know ledge or consent. She has a suit pending in the district court of Jefferson county to annul this fraudulent decree. of all, excellent L.i...., H tl- Sn rink . . , ,, u all(j into towns hi, v ' ""-""nag crowds room for expansion to J pliancesof tram, suburban resident aiijuuru not onhs population, but aUaio mi uouiuiance which i oui .luirncan. and for continental parallel can an ouisiae o jserver th inuigs seem j rmt. n-ilhnitf 1 r" - v ua dm k-i ly interesting, as illiisu,) of national growth, to extreme democratic M The concentration .l enabled the artisan dan D equaled present adranum. J Lis justification for tbeTktJ by many Australianithat, foundation of permanent i unless a check can be gravest problem before b apparently how to get lK) ricultural population to &, lanu. j ne temper of tin nnt favrirnl.l.. . .t . ltT , uie patits oi uie larm, with hnwj and slow Accumulation. last few years the curiom J nas occasionally preaentej serious dearth of U , places, while in the tonf unemployed were besifginiv raeni onices witli ilemi works. Sent, soinHimtn ernment expense, to the mJ the "unemployed" sooo 4 the mingled wants anddeipi lile.-Century Magazine. Scleut flc Waifc In 'order to present is ....... .1.1 1... 1 .1 buuiiiu ix covereu wiis.n mixed with vegetable tr j The effect of remori corn is to turn the stretjin to the ovaries, and so pre, amount of grain. Seaweed is nor tfv paper, which takes thepatf slass. hen colored the a lar to stained or painted . An Instrunient caM i tokrit, based on centrifapi-l been invented for determiaii ume of corpuscles pretest M Dry ropei immersed ta in a bath containing twentj sulphate of copper to a q are for some time preaemta attacks of parasites andrtt The speed with whicti known as meteors enter through the atmosphere iti excess of that ot acancw there is no comparison m two bodies. In iU native habitat tbt ovster is always a little croscopic waving hairs tM which carry the food tM mouth, wbere they a" afterward digested. OT Peculiar Find. Joseph Paulus has made a discovery of a peculiar kind of oil or gas well on his farm, three miles northwest of Go shen, Ind. Paulus rium a sawmill in one comer of his farm and has it loca ted near the edge of a large marsh. at Some time ago the water Biipply which the face affecionately, and then in a I 'el the engine boiler gave out A 40 low voice began as eloquent a tribute j open well was dug and the custom to the great poet as has ever been paid ary iron pipe driven down still further, him. For five minutes he poured forth Subsequently a good supply of water his eloquence in a low, calm voice, and was obtained, and it was fed into the when he looked up he found that all boiler. The engineer noticed three or the men and women in the parlors four Uilys go that the water acted were on tip-toe eager to catch every strangely in the boiler. He said it word that fell from his lips. I wish I spluttered and bubbled. The water was could reproduce those words now. but examined and found to have a pecn- C row 11 andSciW The story goes that the cj sia does his own marfceun. King George of Creese of only 30,000,000 francs. spends little money and psi ings into solid investment Princess Clotilde it - . .ij nvor tlie of her Napolean. The annuity which be received HIU government will be contM TI,.M.VmnreS EugelW tliA ,lniriBf. rlesiirns 1 01 " ........ Vl. n-eura USUalif t....n 1 i imi'n ling oouicp au" - majesty objects to a dress of any kind. I can't. X. Le .der. Y. Letter to Pittsburg bdiiiidhiseais. He is unbane of man- .i,u r r.ui,,, J.... ner, though he married money. He is tanked in one of tt, ,,.. ,i .... at Pilot Knob that General' Hardee aUo thr-and-ufty. and make his first hauled ashore on tha beach. AlmrsUhe surrendered in 1861, and it was on the same spot that the celebrated battle of Pilot Knob was fought in September of 1854. And now, like the tales of the war, the erstwhile famous "Pilot Knob mind,'' the supposed Golconda, is a thing of the past, a shattered strong hold, A Girl from the 8onth. " A southern girl ia here, too, in all Iter Buucesi, 111 lunniaiisin as a war r.nrmu .i.,.i ..:n.... .1 j - rtiiiMc village w :iit uuvvii aim Kiuea 1113 pondentunderlheg.gnatureof "Agate." mcn.ter with axes. The shark meas- Af ter the war he wrote an elaborate ured eighteen feet in length. When cut .story 0 Ohio in the War," which up into piece, two good sized re, attracted the attention ,of Cheif Justice 0neof which was still living, wer ln(i -"uuiena wip in eighteen inches across. Other things of liar odor-something like that of arti ficial water g:is. It w heavy and Oily. This x-culiarity inert'iited, an J Uie engine had to shut down. The si mples which have been submitted here show a substance in mixture with 1800, an account of which lie wroto. a varied nature were also found in the The Tale of lilitcbeard. The tale of Bluebeard is familiar to every child, but many have speculated ti,p- water or about the consistency of on Uie original ot this bogey merciless B1Jccnlle- -mine oruinary oil in mix tvrant. Some vif. '.. t,.,r. !t 'ail,l"t ' disconnected or iWnrvVIir nf i 1 " ; shaken into Rlobnl.-s. It has a clear Jleury VllJ.of wife killing notoriety, color, unlike that of regular petroleum. Dr. C. Taylor thinks it is a tvne. nf 1 1.0 Paulus is positive he baa mmU a rirh castle lords in the dys of knight errant- trikp' ,m mit samples to exert8 iy. According, however, to a popular The chief justice introduce him to Zl .113 Horace Greeley, who made hiro his tec hZi. . 7 ,, , lsaroe or "JHuooeard,1 or retandnaHngingitoro'f'lieTS tSZ " ST;G T"J belief, Charles I'errault, the French author of this fascinating story, found. edit on the history of a certain GIIm de Retz, lord of Laral, who during his i W city. What d' ye study 'C lifeUme was known by the namecf Little Nepliew "Oh, every uarue jen, or JJluobeRrd.,, on ac for analysis. Atunlhliig Pr(ro. Aunt Miranda (to little city nepliew) "I m glad you go to school reg'larly Th Princess Lot JlOISieill, rlliv." , 1 verv haiia"" .. ..1.1. man. uer nil""'"""' . are perfectly prort'" .i..rir 1 ue ey- 1 ' . .. wfa n tn her subjects w - lm& Whenever sue - il( irreetedby the V'r"Vt.0. ...!ui. t.n nv -" are wtuius.- . welcome. , of Turkey j 1 the wipfy a j 1 ... . 7 wioKxa uu CAIliUltlun. 1 im tavi VtmUij won wirn coloring, Oil OITK UD, mnii I1IIC8 Uroclev fl death in lg7J k., fft, n, , .ye, and graceful, willowy figure. You he ha. beeu editor iZbU. ntT touches full v can, her daily at anyof the big oneOme.uperinUnoentof School. S tl or lath, corridor, of th. hotel Chleston, 8. C.-Frank 1,'a. . ZlZr hun )f hia beard. The lord had a mni. for sorcery and magic, and was ac cused of murdering six wives, iu . tltimatoly strangled and burned in Mcape.-Honololu Timet, U0.-JUw York Ledger. grade haa a different set of text books." Aunt Mlrlnda "Land sakes! The way things is goin'l Can't folks find zts enough in the bible now days?" Washington Post: A man who de clares that he has vainly pursued a tutu of Integrity, says that he U a i TlrtM-ewt-to in bojMetjr. - , The sultan i.i.,.,nl with ingcreyed P 3 inh,s8iteafllcted;J of vision in one w - wa.toousefi.1 to was extirpated. A KlngMenelek" not only of W' ' butofthefar"J! ofAbyssin.- fore the mo., tod 10. own JwS JjpHtMH0jrr