K " PrafipN f s ' ST " * > SSfsSl Sl 9S f sSSMISm * - ' I * _ „ . - . . - f ® r BY " R0 T LOUIS STEVENSON. Hr . INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION. H | ( jnArXil.lt VJU. CONTINUED. ; Hf "Have you been to Franchard , Jean- HB ifclarie ? " inquired the Doctor. "I fancy # 'oot. " J Be J , "Never , " replied the boy. Hip "It Is ruin in a gorge , " continued Ms Desprez , adopting bis expository voice ; Hii * * the ruin of a hermitage and chapel. Hfc < 7- History tells us much of Franchard ; l | "bow the recluse was often slain by rob- Hjt * bers ; how he lived on a most insula Mf bers ; how he lived on a most insufil- A -dent diet ; how he was expected to pass Hy bis days in prayer. A letter is preserved - V -served , , , ad dressed to one of these solitaries - H -taries by the superior of hsorder ! , full B | * of admirable hygienic advice ; bidding B % "C11 to go from his book to praying , Br , and back aBa , in' for variety's sake , H lu" * and -when he was weary of both to stroll fj \ 'about his garden and observe the honey Hy 'bees. It is to this day my own system. " HtiL ° u must often have remarked me Miff -leaving the 'Pharmacopoeia * often C 'even in the middle of a phrase to come * i/ * "forth into the sun and air. I admire B& 'the writer of that letter from my heart ; 1/ / ' ' * e "was a man of thought on the most J important subjects. But , indeed , had I If "lived in the Middle Ages. ( I am heartily I Clad that I did not ) I should have been mh * xn eremite myself if I had not been . professed buffoon , that is. These 'A , "were the only philosophical lives yet 14 -open ; laughter or prayer ; sneers , we M rznight say , and tears. "Until the sun Tyl of the Positive arose , the wise man | E % ad to make his choice between these PS ; "two. " Eg "I have been a buffoon , of course , " ; yjp -observed Jean-Marie. iW "I cannot imagine you to have excelled - # f -celled in your profession , " said the * , X > octor , admiring the boy's gravity. J | * * * Do you ever laugh ? " gjt "Oh , yes , " replied the other. "I ; fif * 2augh often. I am very fond yf jokes. " jnftf "Singular being ! " said Desprez. "But W\ * divagate ( I perceive in a thousand- ft -ways that I grow old ) . Franchard was Wl 'at length destroyed in the English f ( "sraxs , the same that leveled Gretz. But | not smumg ; caras , dice , opera singing , orchestra , castles , beautiful parks and gardens , big ships with a tower of sailcloth , all lying unborn in a coffin and the stupid trees growing overhead in the sunlight , year after year. The thought drives one frantic. " "It is only money , " replied Jean- Marie. "It would do harm. " " 0 come ! " cried Desprez , "that is philosophy ; it is all very fine , but not to the point just now. And besides , it is not 'only money , ' as you call it ; there are works of art in the question ; the vessels were carved. You speak like a vessels were carved. Yu speak like a child. You weary me exceedingly , quoting my words out of all logical connection , like a parroquet. " "And at any rate , we have nothing to do with it , " returned the boy , sub ' missively. CHAPTER IX. ! HEY struck the ( MM 3F5 | Route Ronde at /4HSl2 * at moment > and /fflfjjSl | the sudden change lflisJlirUiil } t0 the rattlin5 fff causeway , com- fv ' bined with the -t " " Vfp fftp Doctor's irritaition , df mf h& . to keep kJm silent Ji - ll The noddy Jtesed V /V along ; the trees went by , looking on silently , as if they had something on their minds. The Quadrilateral was passed ; then came Franchard. They put up the horse at the little solitary inn , and went forth strolling. The gorge was dyed deeply with heather ; the rocks and birches standing lumi nous in the sun. A great humming of bees about the flowers disposed Jean- Marie to sleep , and he sat down against a clump of heather , while the Doctor went briskly to and fro , with quick turns , culling his simples. The boy's head had fallen a little forward , his eyes were closed , his An gers had fallen lax about his knees , when a sudden cry called him to his l WHOOPED LIKE AN INDIAN. HSf i : Wm here is the point the hermits ( for II "there were already more than one ) had "foreseen the danger and carefully cent - t art * L -cealed the sacrificial vessels. These * jt * -vessels were of monstrous value , Jean- pi "Marie monstrous -value priceless , we | L -may say ; exquisitely worked , of exquisite - * * -quisite material. And now , mark me , f they have never been found. In the \ Teign of Liouis Quatorze some fellows p -were digging hard by the ruins. Sud- Kj -denly tock ! the spade hit upon an K -obstacle. Imagine the men looking one 9 \ to another ; imagine how. their hearts bounded , how their color came and l -went It was a coffer , and in Fran- \ chard the place of buried treasure ! "They tore it open like famished beasts , [ Alas ! it was not the treasure ; only 1 " i -some priestly robes , which , at the touch F \ -of the eating air , fell upon themselves | \ and instantly wasted into dust. The l > -perspiration of these good fellows \ -turned cold upon them , Jean-Marie. 1 i will pledge my reputation , if there was ! ? k -any thing like a cutting wind , one or | $ -other had a pneumonia for his trou- * ble. " R "I should like to have seen them 1/ burning into dust , " said Jean-Marie. d "Otherwise , I should not have cared r\ " -so greatly. • w "You have no imagination , " cried \ * "the Doctor. "Picture yourself the I -scene. Dwell on the idea a great { treasure lying in the earth for centu- 1 Ties ; the material for a giddy , copious , • opulent existence not employed ; dresses and exquisite pictures unseen ; the swiftest galloping horses not stirring • a. hoof , arrested by a spell ; women • vrttii the beautiful faculty of smile3 , feet It was a strange sound , thin and brief ; it fell dead , and silence returned as though it had never been interrupt ed. He had not recognized the Doc tor's voice ; but , as there was no one else in all the valley , it was plainly the Doctor who had given utterance to the sound. He looked right and left , and there was Desprez standing in a niche between two bowlders , and look ing round on his adopted son with a countenance as white as paper. "A viper ! " cried Jean-Marie , run ning toward him. "A viper ! You are bitten ! " The Doctor came down heavily out of the cleft , and advanced in silence to meet the boy. whom he took rough ly by the shoulder. "I have found it , " he said , with a gasp. "A plant ? " asked Jean-Marie. Desprez had a fit of unnatural gayety , which the rocks took up and mimicked. "A plant ! " he repeated scornfully , "Well yes a plant. And here , " he added suddenly , showing his right hand , which he had hitherto concealed behind his back "here is one of the bulbs. " Jean-Marie saw a dirty platter , coat ed with earth. "That ? " said he. "It is a plate ! " "It is a coach and horses , " cried the Doctor. "Boy , " he continued , growing warmer , "I plucked away a great pad of moss from between these bowlders , and disclosed a crevice ; and when I looked in , what do you suppose I saw ? I saw a house in Paris with a court and garden , I saw my wife shining with diamonds , I saw myself a deputy , > aJ&r . t . " • ift - "fc -i a- > < < > u I saw you well , I I saw year future , " he concluded , rather feebl"I have just discovered America , " ho added. "But what is it ? " asked- the boy. "The Treasure of Franchard , " cried the Doctor ; and , throwing his brown straw hat upon the ground , he whooped like an Indian and sprung upon Jean- Marie , whom he suffocated with em braces and bedewed with tear3. Then he flung himself down among the heather and once more laughed until the valley rang. But the boy had now an interest of his own boy's interest. No sooner was he released from the Doctor's acco lade than he ran to the bowlders , sprung into the niche , and , thrusting his hand into the crevice , drew forth one after another , incrusted with the earth of ages , the flagons , candlesticks , and patens of the hermitage of Fran chard. A casket came last , tightly shut and very heavy. "Oh , what fun ! " he cried. But when he looked back at the Doc- tr , who had followed close behind and was silently observing , the words died fromhis lips. Desprez was once more the color of ashes ; his Jips worked and trembled ; a sort of bestial greed pos sessed him. "This is childish , " he said. "We lose precious time. Back to the inn , har ness the trap , and bring it to yon bank. Run. for your life , and remember not one whisper. I stay here to watch. " Jean-Marie did as he was bid , though not "without surprise. The noddy was brought round to the spot indicated ; and the two gradually transported the treasure from its place of concealment to the boot below the driving seat. Once it was all stored the Doctor re covered has gayety. "Ipaymy grateful duties to the ge- n4us of this dell , " he said. "Oh , for a live coal , a heifer , and a jar of coun try wine ! I am in the vein for sacrifice , for a superb libation. Well , and why not ? We are at Franchard. English pale ale is to be had not classical , in deed , but excellent. Boy , we shall drink ale. " "But I thought it was so unwhole some , " said Jean-Marie , "and very dear besides. " "Fiddle-de-dee ! " exclaimed the Doc tor gayly. "The inn ! " And he stepped into the noddy , toss ing his head , with an elastic , youthful air. The horse was turned , and in a few seconds they drew up beside the paling of the inn garden. "Here , " said Desprez "here , near the stable , so that we may keep an eye upon things. " They tied the horse , and entered the garden , the Doctor singing , now in fan tastic high notes , now producing deep reverbrations from his chest. He took a seat , rapped loudly on the table , as sailed the waiter with witticisms ; and when the bottle of Bass was at length produced , far more charged with gas than the most delirious champagne , he filled out a long glassful of froth and pushed it over to Jean-Marie. "Drink , " he said ; "drink deep. " "I would rather not , " faltered the boy , true to his training. "What ? " thundered Desprez. "I am afraid of it , " said Jean-Marie ; "my stomach " "Take it or leave it ! " interrupted Desprez fiercely ; "but understand it once for all there is nothing so con temptible as precision. " Here was anew lesson ! The boy sat bemused , looking at the glass but not lasting it , while the Doctor emptied and refilled his own. "Once in a way , " he said at last , by way of a concession to the boy's more rigorous attitude , "once in a way , and at so critical a moment , this ale is a tiectar for the gods. The habit , indeed , is debasing ; wine , the juice of the grape , is the true drink of the French man , as I have often had occasion to point out ; and I do not know that 1 can blame you for refusing this out landish stimulant. You can have some wine and cakes. Is the bottle empty ? Well , we will not be proud ; we will have pity on 3our glass. " ( TO BE COSfTINDED. ) The Precious Volume. The highest price ever paid for a sin gle volume was tendered by a numbei of wealthy Jewish merchants of Ven ice to Pope Julius II for a very ancient Hebrew Bible. It was then believed to be an original copy of the Septuagint version made from the Hebrew into Greek in 277 Bi C , careful copies of the Hebrew text having been prepared at that date for the use of seventy trans lators. The offer to Julius was 20,000 pounds , which , considering the differ ence between the value of money then and now , would in our day represent the princely sum of $680,000. Julius was at that time greatly pressed for money to maintain the Holy League which the pope had organized against France , but in spite of this lack'of funds he declined the offer. Hot Milk as a Tonic. If any one doubts the nourishing properties of milk , let a test be made of the following preparation of it. When very weary or weak from ex haustion heat some milk to a scalding point , until a thin skin begins to wrinkle upon the surface , and then drink it as hot as possible. It refreshes almost instantly and restores the ex hausted vitality to a surprising extent as soon as it is taken. It is more nu tritious than any of the best beef teas made from meat extracts , or that made from fresh beef which is carefully strained , as many of the recipes direcl that it shall be. metallic Finished Cambric. Metallic-finished cambric , which has all the gioss of a real satin , is a iww lining for thin dresses. It comes in all the pretty colors , costs only 35 cents a yard , and is fully a yard wide. TALMAGE'S SEEJTON. "the first woman" last Sunday's subject. "Ami When tlio Woman Saw that the Tree Was Good for Food and Designed to Make Ono Wise , b'ho l'ar- toolc or the I'rult Tliereor Gen. 3:0. " | the first Sat- ( % = : > | 3 urday afternoon in -/bvjs sj I the world's exis- j5sqfi tence. Ever since S fefj JH sunrise Adam has § p3i cSp5j been watching the fMji& brilliant pageantry $ n iV' &c ° f winss au < i scaies y tf and clouds , and in < S&E7N5v his first lessons in zoology and ornithology elegy and ichthyol ogy he has noticed that the robins fly the air in twos , and that the fish swim the water in twos , and that the lions walk the fields in twos , and in the warm redolence of that Saturday after noon he falls off into slumber ; and as if by allegory to teach all ages that the greatest of earthly blessings is sound sleep , this paradisaical somno lence ends with the discovery on the part of Adam of a corresponding intel ligence just landed on a new planet Of the mother of all the living I speak Eve , the first , the fairest , and the best I make me a garden. I inlay the paths with mountain moss , and I bor der them with pearls from Ceylon and diamonds from Golconda. Here and there are fountains tossing in the sun light and ponds that ripple under the paddling of the swans. I gather me lilies from the Amazon , and orange groves from the tropics , and tamarinds from Goyaz. There are woodbine and honeysuckle climbing over the wall , and starred spaniels sprawling them selves on the grass. I invite amid these trees the larks , and the broTCn thrushes and the robins , and all the brightest birds of heaven , and they stir the air with infinite chirp and carol. And yet the place is a desert filled with dark ness and death as compared with the residence of the woman of my text , the subject of my story. Never since have such skies looked down through such leaves into such waters ! Never has river wave had such curve and sheen and bank as adorned the Pison , the Havilah , the Gihon , and the Hiddekel , even the pebbles being bdellium and onyx stone ! What fruits , with no curculio to sting the rind ! What flow ers , with no slug to gnaw the root ! What atmosphere , with no frost to chill and with no heat to consume ! Bright colors tangled in the grass. Perfume in the air. Music in the sky. Great scene of gladness and love and joy. Right there under a bower of leaf and vine and shrub occurred the first marriage. Adam took the hand of this immaculate daughter of God and pro nounced the ceremony when he said : "Bone of my bone , and flesh of my flesh. " A forbidden tree stood in the midst of that exquisite park. Eve sauntering out one day alone looks up at the tree and sees the beautiful fruit , and wonders if it is sweet , and won ders if it is sour , and standing there , says : "I think I will just put my hand upon the fruit ; it will do no damage to the tree ; I will not take the fruit to eat , but I will just take it down to examine it" She examined the fruit. She said : "I do not think there can be any harm in my just breaking the rind of it. " She put the fruit to her teeth , she tasted , she allowed Adam also to taste the fruit , the door of the world opened , and the monster Sin en tered. Let the heavens gather black ness , and the winds sigh on the bosom of the hills , and cavern , and desert , and earth , and sky join in one leng , deep , hell-rending howl "The world is lost ! " Beasts that before were harmless and full of play put forth claw , and sting , and tooth , and tusk. Birds whet their beak for prey. Clouds troop in the sky. Sharp thorns shoot up through the soft grass. Blastings on the leaves. All the chords of that great harmony are snapped. Upon the brightest home this world ever saw our first parents turned their back and led forth on a path of sorrow the broken-hearted my riads of a ruined race. Do you not see , in the first place , the danger of a poorly regulated inquisitiveness - quisitiveness ? She wanted to know how the fruit tasted. She found out , but six thousand years have deplored that unhealthful curiosity. Healthful curiosity has done a great deal for let ters , for art , for science , and for reli gion. It has gone down into the depths of the earth with the geologist and seen the first chapter of Genesis written in the book of nature illus trated with engraving on rock , and it stood with the antiquarian while he blew the trumpet of resurrection over buried Herculaneum and Pompeii , un til from their sepulchre there came up shaft and terrace and amphitheater. Healthful curiosity has enlarged the telescopic vision of the astronomer un til worlds hidden in the distant heavens have trooped forth and have joined the choir praising the Lord. Planet weighed against planet and wildest comet lassooed with resplendent law. Healthful curiosity has gone down and found the tracks of the eternal God in the polypi and the starfish under the sea and the majesty of the great Je hovah encamped under the gorgeous curtains of the dahlia. It has studied the spots on the sun , and the larva in a beach leaf , and the light under a fire fly's wing , and the terrible eye-glance of a condor pitching from Chimborazo. It has studied the myriads of animal- culae that make up the phosphores cence in a ship's wake , and the mighty maze of suns , and spheres , and con stellations , and galaxies that blaze on In the march of God. Healthful cu- rlosity has stood by the inventor un til forces that were hidden for ages came to wheels , and levers , and shafts and shuttles forces that fly the air , or swim the sea , or cleave the mountain , until the earth jars , and roars , and rings , and crackles , and booms with strange mechanism , and ships with nostrils of hot steam and yoke3 of fire , draw the continents together. I say nothing against Healthful cu riosity. May it have other Leydcn jars , and other electric batteries , and other voltaic piles , and other magnify- ing-glasses , with which to storm the barred castles of the natural world un til it shall surrender its last secret. We thank God for the geological cu riosity of Professor Hitchcock , and the mechanical curiosity of Liebig , and the zoological curiosity of Cuvler , and the inventive curiosity of Edison ; but we must admit that unhealthful and irreg ular inquisitiveness has rushed thou sands and tens of thousands into ruin. Eve just tasted the fruit. She was curious to find out how it tasted , and that ciiriosity blasted her and blasted all nations. So there are clergymen in this day inspired by unhealthful In quisitiveness who have tried to look through the keyhole of God's myste ries mysteries that were barred and bolted from all human inspection , and they have wrenched their whole moral nature out of joint by trying to pluck fruit from branches beyond their reach or have come out on limbs of the tree from which they have tumbled into ruin without remedy. A thudsand trees of religious knowledge from which we may eat and get advantage ; but from certain trees of mystery how many have plucked their ruin ! Election , free agency , trinity , resurrection in the discussion of these subjects hun dreds and thousands of people ruin the soul. There are men who actually have been kept out of the kingdom of heaven because they could not under stand who Melehisedec was not ! Oh , how many have been destroyed by an unhealthful inquisitiveness ! It is seen in all directions. There are those who stand with the eye-stare and mouth-gape of curiosity. They are the first to hear a falsehood , build it an other story high and two wings to it. About other people's apparel , about other people's business , about other people's financial condition , about oth er people's affairs , they are over anxious. Every nice piece of gossip stops at their door , and they fatten and luxuriate in the endless round of the great world of tittle-tattle. They in vite and sumptuously entertain at their house Colonel Twaddle and Esquire Chitchat and Governor Smalltalk. Whoever hath an innuendo , whoever hath a scandal , whoever hath a valua ble secret , let him come and sacrifice it to this Goddess of Splutter. Thou sands of Adams and Eves do nothing but eat fruit that does not belong to them. Men quite well known as math ematicians failing in this computation of moral algebra : good sense plus good breeding , minus curiosity , equals mind ing your own affairs ! * v - Observe also in this subject how re pelling sin is when appended to great attractiveness. Since Eve's death there has been no such perfection of woman hood. You could not suggest an at tractiveness to the body or suggest any refinement to the manner. You could add no gracefulness to the gait , no lus tre to the eye , no sweetness to the voice. A perfect God made her a per fect woman , to be the companion of a man in a perfect home , and her entire nature vibrated in accord with the beauty and song of Paradise. But she rebelled against God's government , and with the same hand with which she plucked the fruit she launched up on the world the crimes , the wars , the tumults that have set the universe a- wailing. A terrible offset to all her attractive ness. We are not surprised when we find men and women naturally vulgar going into transgression. We expect that people who live in the ditch shall liave the manners of the ditch ; but how shocking when we find * sin ap pended to superior education and to the refinements of social life ! The accom plishments of Mary Queen of Scots make her patronage of Darnley , the profligate , the more appalling. The genius of Catharine II. of Russia only sets forth in more powerful contrast her unappeasable ambition. The trans lations from the Greek and che Latin by Elizabeth , and her wonderful quali fications for a queen , make the more disgusting her capriciousness of af fection and her hotness of temper. The greatness of Byron's mind makes the more alarming the Byron's sensual ity. ity.Let Let no one think that reQnement of manner or exquisiteness of taste or superiority of education can in any wise apologize for ill-temper , for an oppressive spirit , for unkindness , for any kind of sin. Disobedience God- ward and transgression manward can give no excuse. Accomplishment heaven-high is no apology for vice hell- deep. deep.My My subject also impresses me with the regal influence of woman. When 1 see Eve with this powerful influence over Adam and over the generations that have followed , it suggests to me the great power all women have for good or for evil. I have no sympathy , nor have you , with the hollow flatter ies showered upon woman from the platform and the stage. They mean nothing ; they are accepted as nothing. Woman's nobility consists in the ex ercise of a Christian influence ; and when I see this powerful influence of Eve upon her husband and upon the whole human race , I make up my mind that the frail arm of woman can strike a blow which will resound through all eternity down among the dungeons or up among the thrones. Of course , I am not speaking or representative - ; resentative women of Eve , who ruined ' the race by one fruit-plcklnc ; of Jaol , m > who drove a spike through the head fli of Sisera the warrior ; of Esther , who | overcame royalty ; of Abigail , who a ? stopped a host by her own beautiful IE prowess ; of Mary , who nursed the * § world's savior ; of Grandmother Lois. | gj immortalized In her grandson Tlmo- fl thy ; of Charlotte Ccrday , who drove 'M the dagger through the heart of the .4 assassin of her lover ; or of Marie An- I toinettc , who by ono look from the bal cony of her castle quieted a mob , her 1 own scaffold the throne of forgiveness and womanly courage. I speak not of these extraordinary persons , but of | those who , unambitious for political I power , as wives and mothers and sisters - | ' s ters and daughters , attend to the thou- * sand sweet offices of home. When at last we come to calculate * ' the forces that decided the destiny of ± nations , it will be found that the mightiest - * j iest and grandest lnfluenco came from 4 * home , where the wife cheered up despondency - * ] | * spondency and fatigue and sorrow by jl her own sympathy , and the mother ? | l trained her child for heaven , starting - . 'm the little feet on the path to the Ce- jrl lestial City ; and the sisters by their # 1 gentleness refined the manners of the * , I brother ; and the daughters were diligent - > gent in their kindness to the aged. 'I throwing wreaths of blessings on the I road that leads father and re other I down the steep of years. God bless I our homes ! And may the home oa earth be the vestibule of our home in I heaven , in which place may we all meet father , mother , son , daughter , brother , sister , grandfather and grandmother - mother and grandchild , and the entire ; group of precious ones , of whom wo ,1 must say in the words of transporting I Charles Wesley : ; l One family we dwell in him , I One church above , beneath ; Though now divided by the stream I The narrow stream of death ; I One army of the living God , ifl To his command we bow ; U Part of the host have crossed the flood , And part are crossing now. LORD NELSON'S KINDNESS. A Clmriulnc ; Anecdote Showing IIIn He- H markuhle Human l- > IIi > ivHhlj > . H Capt Mahan , in his "Life of Nelson. " H just published , claims the following a3 H an original story showing the inherent H kindness of the great sailor. The Fleet H letters had just been sent off , when , M Nelson saw a midshipman come up and | speak to Lieut. Pasco , the signal ofli- M cer , who , upon hearing what was said , H stamped his foot in evident vexation M and uttered an exclaitfation. The admiral - M miral , of whose nearness Pasco wa3 M unaware , called him and asked what M was the matter. H "Nothing that need trouble your H lordship , " was the reply. M "You are not the man to lose your M temper for nothing , " rejoined Nelson. H "What was it ? " H " "Well , if you must know , my lord , I M will tell you. You see that coxswain ? " fl pointing to one of the most exacting M of the petty officers. "We have not a M better man on board the Victoria , and M the message which put me out was this. H I was told that he was so busy receiving - H ing and getting off the mailbags that | he forgot to drop his own letter into | one of them , and he has just discpv- | ered it in his pocket ! " H "Hoist the signal to bring her back , " H was Nelson's instant command. "Who H knows that he may not fall in action M tomorrow ? His letter shall go with H the rest" And the dispatch vessel wa3 M brought back for that alone. M The Strangest Dinner. H Perhaps the most remarkable dinner M on record was that given by an antiquary - H quary named Goebel , in the city of | Brussels. At the dinner were apple3 f M that ripened more than 1,800 years ago , M bread made from wheat grown before H the children of Israel passed through M the Red Sea , and spread with butter M that was made when Elizabeth was M Queen of England. The repast was | washed down with wine that was old H when Columbus was playing with ths M boys of Genoa. The apples were from M an earthen jar taken , from the ruins M of Pompeii. The wheat was taken M from a chamber in one of the pyramids , H the butter from a stone shelf in an | | old well in Scotland , where for several - M al centuries it had lain in an earthen M crock in icy water , and the wine was M recovered from an old vault in the city M of Corinth. There were six guests at | the table , and each had a mouthful of | the bread and a teaspoonful of the M wine , and was permitted to help himself - M self bountifully to the butter , there being - | ing several pounds of it. The apple jar | held about two-thirds of a gallon. The | fruit was sweet and as finely flavored M as if it had been preserved but a few | months. H In Street Simplicity. H Truth in sweet simphcity expresses | the thoughts that bind and the words | that burn conviction in human understanding - | standing , and steadily , with unfailing | eye , detects and discloses to the brave | spirit that stands by what it believes. | One has said that "truth , like light. | H travels in straight lines" that it is a | divine essence. Philadelphia Methodist - M dist M Taken from Life. H Manager I wish to congratulate you. M You have managed to draw a picture of M absolutely consummate repulsivenes3 M for your villain. Author Thanks , awfully - | ' fully ; but the compliment is due to my . | better half. It is a description of me | by my wife when I refused to buy her | a new bonnet Tit-Bits. H 3IetaphoricaIly Speaking. i H Skillet So j'ou traded your old horaa | Cor this one , did you ? What did you H get to boot ? Skittle MyselL New. M Fork Tribune. H