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A R.AL SNAKE STORY. kh lserpe-t Get Itt.o the larsets' oeso to Catch hl lih- r 'etl. A citeia of IFrederickburg. Vs., -laims t 'iat wrhile tratelr n to Tappa lhtn'noek h:" saw a lar,; b acksnak-e sliwly er::w!ing tnont Li the branches of a tree that stood Ih the roadside. Followh:.g the snake with his eye the observer saw on unT:sually large ,,rnuets" raest attachedl to one of the b.-rancheh of the tree. and toward which the uza!ke was advnancing. When clo.e to the nest the snate unotied itelf a:bout a limb, releasing Its tall, and with it rave several hard raps upon ;he exteri..r of th.- rest as if Roetl:in:r for armis , 1,. The noise of the blows asd the sv. uying (.f the nest caused the hcrnert to lease their home and prepare for an cttw :k upon the In truder. The antke ceased tapping with its tail as suon as the hornets left the neas. uncoiled atself and quickly disappeared, taking the place of the hornets within their nest. Presently the snake's head was seem to peer out. and its bright black eees glistened as he anti ipated a feast from which the bravest man would shrink with fear. The snake drew his head within the entrance hole to the nmet un til nothing was seen of it except an oo easional forked tongue that darted Ia and out with lightning rapidity. Think ing the coast clear the hornets began to return to their nest, when the snake took them in as fast as they could enter. Watching the proceedings for some time our informant concluded that all the hornets had been safely hived. and he stood up in his buggy, tapped the a nest with his whip, and awaited the se- 1 sult. No hornets appearing, the nest was then knocked to the ground, opened, I and his snakeship found in a torpid a condition, with his size greatly in creased. The snake was killed and a post-mortem held with the following I result: Stomach stated with dead 1 hornet 1 ESQUIMAUX IN SUMMER. Wa Wllm R e to Keep ThLm - Closs and Healthy. 1 Considerable anxiety is expressed by 1 exposition offlcials concerning the etect the Lsquiman village at the world's M1ir will have on the reputa tion of Jackson park as a health resort The entire park has been sewered and its sanitary conditions rendered as nearly perfect as possible. The village, however, has been located in the one eorner most affected by every unfavor. able feature. A part of the spaceas signed to it is occupied by asheet of water that is generaily stagnant Isn spite of all endeavors to heep it pure. The Esquimaux themselves, says the e Chiaew Inter Ocean. are not the clean- h eat people in the world, and unless f they are very closely watched they are i liable to assume a condition not pleas ing to the fastidious. They delight to a ldaab themselves with oil, which often becomes rancid and very ofeadsve. C The attempt to reprodnuee the oadi- C tions that surround these peculiar pe- a ploe i their native land induced the oom-. pany owning the concession to erect t hbats that are impossible to ventilate. , Then, too, ther are the hounds maina tamed in the village. These ani s are neither beautiful nor clean, and un leas given better quarters than the t; now oceupy will prove a nuisance. t; 'Eve now the atmosphere that am rounds the village is not too sweet , SWhen the hot days of July arrive it will a be difficult to keep it from giving of- ti asse. Should an epidemic break out d, In the village it will, at least, give the F olcials a good scare, and prove mor tl serious to the Eanuimaux themselves. Those who are in charge of the village, u, however, declare that they can keep t h, as clean and healthy as any other pr. tica of Jackson park. They guarantee i their wards to breed neither the ehot era nor the smallpox. At present the , attendeae as the village is quits lib N SOME SUBJECTS FOR DEBATE, a Laees vsar ot gesIeseem s The hallege detating soiletses at Cambrkdge, England, seem to disc s a erious variety of qemstioae. A remet motions, as given by the Toearto halades the followlng ollo of odditem At Christ's. '"Tha~ RobEaon ourht not to have been trighteed at the fotprint ina the sand," which a cid great variety eof opainions, sad ultimately was lost by twentdai vot es Cr I ayes. eight auditors remaien b undedl~ed. At Jeas, the still more a~rtling propositim was moved, "That radicalism spells rnl;" whleh was, of w eou .esarriod by a large majority. At - Qu k a dlisapmpm ofr "Womma s *-i egenhbments upon meak dominion" was rled by ahnineteen to thirtee. And th st 8t ioh the heeres, That uanive. sity udan ts a msa for prandtial , ib," as rqjected by twenty-e agal dsx. Att Kinaga the soetysltomd them-_ solruve eu dlivided as tothe truth of the asertion, "That art had ceased to exist." At Trinilty hall it was decued pa "*That politiol prisoners shoa d wear the prison dress." At IPebrcoe a resolti.on, "Tha parss nlierty i t too moch restrited this uniaversity," op we, slaglar to ay, rejectl. ldacy eollege vote, by large* masjoriy, . "That the larnd prfessons are not yet plst out-" sd Caveaddish, also, by an a large majoritoy, Lead Tea- he nyasaasbdoctrine, Tbtto have loved sad est ILbetter thea never tohasb eloved ast al" Ayeu o ball retfum to oudeml -C theaters, ad Selwyn voted "That war o l e- to the welfarme ot ar aio" £ geeses nawar mote n Norway l thre is a premium on marriage by givir married people a dissous Thnus a man sad his wif n ean. buel for a fare and a half. a T aehatedof rates much more estisfying h tealOe the "ehiladresn half prica" sam ak Ore reseamablo It is ssgc a gestad that a privtges liable to abseL A prudent mas might prolong t Mi otrtehlp ads~nltely at rerld wit s ths. however, ould be ~y or 1 -it~-pbn marrild people. y thek cr earteates abeot with tee4n sthqer s seeddslso red L~'L ~peb i··-;ebb OLE MAKES A GOOD CITIZEN. res Thie tead'asvlasm aKeatly Adeapts BU aelr to Amerlean Imstlttuts. a., The is no nation in Europe that is spa. more adverse to violence and has less l:ae syVmpathy with 17topian aspirations than of the people of ',orw-y and Sweden, says ide. a writer in the ,orth1 American Review. the They have been trained to Industry, rge frugality and manly self-reliance by the the free institutions and the scant e. Lch sources of their nntive lands. and the moderation and sclf-rcstraint Inherent sae In the cold blood of the north msake its them coastitutionally Inclined to trust aps in slow and orderly methods rather if than swift and violent ones. They of come here with no millennial on est perlene, doomed to disappointmenat, me but with the hope of gsiniag, by In- hard and unremitting toil, a modest lag competency. They demand less of life lft than continental immigrants of the kly corresponding class. and they smmally, Le for this very reason, attain mire. The Instinct to save is strong in the majos s ity of them, and save they do, when o, their neighbors of less frugal habits omn are running behind. It is thereor., a k fact, which all students of the soeial od problem arising from immigration have a remarked, that the Scandinavins adapt o.- themselves with great ease to American in Institutions There is no other clams of k.- Immigrants which is so readily asaim an dated and assumes so nat r Amer he lean customs and modes of Lought er. And this is not because their own na. me tionality is devoid of strong character all Istics but beause, on account of their ad ancient kinship and subsequent devel he opment, they have certain fundamental e-. traits in common with us, and wme therefore les in need of- adaptation. is The institutions of Norway are the I id, most democratic in Europe. and those 1 id of Sweden, though less liberal, are do I in- veloping in the same direction. Both I a Norsemen and Swedes are accustomed 1 ag to participate in the management of I ad their communal affairs, and to vote for r their representative In the natnal par liament; and although the power given i them here is nominally greater thae • s that they enjoyed at home, it is virtual. ly less. The sense of public responst- c b bility, the habit of Interest in public I affairs, and a critical attitude towad r he the acts of government are nowhere so a general among rich and poor alike as la - Norway and Sweden, notwithstanding ' ad the fact that the suffrage is not ali. a " vernal "' t a- NOT 80 VERY REMARKABLE. i r- A Oseers e Harder a a elrs" v Than tla Germass. °- The recent test of speed of hores and ' that of the endurance of ofises and e men in which a hundredGerman oees engaged from Berlin to Vienna, and a - s- hundred AnstrH-lIungarian ofoess a - from Vienna to Ileriln. have free Slvy comented:l upon. but are not con f sidered by army olteura s so very an- - l markable. - In 1877. says the New York TrIbuaes L Capt. Ezra Fuller, of the Seventh' SUnited States cavalry, during the par Ssuit of Chief Joseph, was sent out by SOen. Miles from Fort Keogh to acer o tain and give warning as to the routse - which Chief Joseph w taking over a " the mountains. Capt. Puller rode his 'I i-un private horse, his guide had two ra i sI talian ponieas, and an extra horse was t 7 taken along to carry the ratics os e a the party T They were gone twelve days, during o . wn'h they rode more than six hundred C Imile1,- nut over the king's high wy, but a R through an unknown mountlno wig. t: t dernees. During this twelve daysCapt, d " Fuller was unable to procure more than t! " three feets of grain for his horses The a Sndian ponies gave out on the third m hdsay. and the guide then rode the trea s horse. d Capt. Puller onee rode sixty-del misa in nine hours in search of desertes Adji. Bell. also of the Seventh esy sI Salry, rode through the Bad Land, in m Noeth Dakota. in 188, one hundred and w Ave miles in twelve hoursm Many instaces of lo ridof United f tsttes cavalry oficers might be men- do Stined I which the endu ra of both sea nd bors was tested, and compar- to Isomsa would show that dAmeriasn ma t mad horses a meoond to asme n tests ti of thia chacter, I A MODEL CLUB, e SF Ibmle * S Iutrtat, Clabme Wrtm tt Jacklu* Park Nat rrer, t SThe "World's Fair Club" is the nsame or of an orgllation now being feormed TI Sby the most prominent eluamen of the a Sity. The ides is to comineduct within ty Jackson park a model club house be whlhb will be open during the fairto smbers ad their guests. The elub cli is intended for the accommodtiom of fn the ladies as well as the gentlemn of w this city, and for the members of reog s naled clunbs in other cities who may vhit the fair a The appeintments of the club house r will be of tho Lighest class, and the as comsamodations will inchdo dining, read- th Ing, reception, bU!iard and smoking pr parlors; Ialso a central court and a roof I For the tfurther sonsavlene of visit 1mg members, it is contemplated to open a branch of the club in the center of the city. where information and a. afl rltance can be rendered In relation to .i the cashing of drafts, securing of hotel c, and other necommudation. tre.ar of " baggage, etc. t:. A list of the beat clubs of theeountry in will be prpad, and members of those 's recogaaniad wii beweomed to thin elb Ili house. of P eerpetuesea A op The search has been contimed w throaughout the centurela. It senat may th a scholar to an asylua. But w, at last, h;a been discovered at Coustandt- w, n.ple the secret of ptrpctual maotion c Tiw, nrFpetthctle truc ermicn write facesa t that t'i:y. e are 'loakmakers by " -trade. aJ hare just ,nvented an te- ly I madtie -e, haism of a force of &ty t pounds u hi. .a ill w:r'k contautsl ~ in whatcvr p'sition it may be, aad without t'.in- mrove.'e hrbyasprinaR, Ce or by steam:n. ,r by eltri. .ty. orby any motor povrc whatever that coMld im rt Imo npnlse to itiinfa. et. ~pe oh .etual morion. prcnemoMu dwse _h · e..1ULcm' 1 . ORING IN THE SEA FOR OIL. Amekrs Dueflr as Work hr the lssm atIs d's Goeiamet. less The Japanese government has had in than its employ for over a year past two oa ays pert oil drillers from the Pennsylvania Iew. oil region. who are superintending bar str, lng for oil in the waters of the Japem a by sea, one hundred and fifty yards from t ra shore, Just outside Idzmozaki, a city Ithe about thirteen thousand popa went lation on the northwestera eoast abke of Japan and about fifty-five miles rat southwest of Niigata. They have ther met with sucoeas. This venture is r~ ye gaded by the Pittsburgh Dispath as o-. promising some Important deve'op. oat, ments, especially as, instead of that by government importing the refined all dea from this country In the quantity they aWe have been doing, they have now eret the at four or ve refineries. With these lly, they are refining their own oil, the The produeing of which is yet largely lad jo equate to their demand, and also be. bea ginning to refine the crude which they bts Import from the United States sad Sa Russia. The most of the refined oil ,dot which they import from this country ave eCmes from Philadelpha. Their native p oil is similar t to the Pennsylvania oil To but a little darker and of forty-three Sof g.*avity. The present price of oil there n-m- Is from three dollars and twenty-Mle e.n ents to three dollars and twenty-nine ek cents a barrel, or in their native cur .. rency from four yan and ninety sea to ae. five yan. A yan varies with the pries tbir of gold, but these drillers said it was eel- worth sixty-five and three-fourths tal cents in gold when they left. e At Idamomaki, which is noted as a I . fishing town, the available shore line 4 the is very narrow, it being oeaupied by I ose the city, immediately baek of which i de- the "mountains." about two hundred I oth and fifty feet high, rise. The wells aed are crowding out into the waterm of I of the sea, much as they have booen doing for at 8L. Mary's reservoir in the north- 4 e. western part of Ohio, About four ran hundred and fifty feet out the water is e isa only some three and one-half feet I al- deep, They usually put down a a.- cribbing of logs or timber, which they I lie 'fill in with earth and thus obtain the e -ud necemary though somewhat limited t so space upon which they can proceed r ,I a with their operations and boring. c lag They run out to the derrick from - a.l shore a narrrow wall: upon which the t natives carry to land on their backs i the oil, a few gallo's at a time. I-a t Sbar is very cheap there, and natives a s, work for seven yan a month and t "finSad" or board themselves, a yan be. -a ing, as before stated, about sixty d eents. They are not organied, have - eas no such things as labor unions, and a stril:es are unknown. They have as ere net time for a day's work, which iso se practically during daylight, frequent. m ly beiinnin~g work at the wells at fta v .. o'elook in the morning. h A CIG CLAM rMlNC. p th Theseds of t.e D:avlves stered as w h Ap Monh. o; .ie aware Ca-. a by' Alam mine. full of live clams.adnd 'I - of great brealth and depth, has been b te discovered at t':c mouth of the Dela- 't wr ware bay. off tie Fishing c orel shore. 1i iLs This has proved a valuabie ad, and I so recently about one h:mr,d boats, con- ti as talming from three t, :e men each, ti r were at work on the mi-'e. ~ss the - Trenton Free Amr'aran. T.he product a fg of the great hod Is shipp- d-:iiy to ad Chicago, a sp-cnlator c f that city is ut agreeing to taoe the en'!r. catput of bt Il- the mine at abot thirty .-.nts per hun ea it. dred delivered at .er.:,tt a stn.ioa, e. w m the West Jersey railroa.!. There hia it he recently been a eorr -r in the clam ti rd market, and choice artles have been 0 ra sold at as high as one dollar per ha- di dred to restaurant koepa.'a. p s The pocket of cla:. rovers a wide IS srea jurt beyond the low-~ster mark, -s r and, consequently. ll who wish toe La may dredge witosout fear or favor. It bi - was disoovered some d-. agno by Wil. 1 liam Harper, of Green Creek. whr w d found dozens of prime clams imbedded be e- deeply In a small casie of ice washed i h ashore close by [IIeGhlazd and Arlingw a - ton beaches. Mar.:ia~ the spot care m fully he waited until the Ie was en ha tirely out of the bay, and then tal-Ing e boat he patrollod the bayside from - end to end until he leated the mine. Fora day or tao h: liberal finda at i tractnd no atenti n, but one by one the idle fishermen r: farme.rs rowed I - out to the mine r' !:', I themselve. SThe find bein.lo e: , :, and the low- r e water ::.'rk the m: ,.. publie proper -r a ty,andl i.; hin, wor d ol orall it will a a benr he * 'i . other day o¶"r flIty thoumsad b clamr startol I on :r journey wet f from Unn-tt's t ": . The ba, _ f were piled :o hihea .,.almost hide the - sLati."n ho- "e. It L-ry now ate, then a disnover p 'omet'minT i::eC m" n '-. but the .re : et mie c" .'rvious find n,, n ,- to A.., c- 4,. About i. thr'-, :r .r, r ' "e1 for clams to a g s.row pr... . -. .J a marhetable a" Ide ad 'na. i ;,si I by ea parts to be i.is:;t ears ol. * Why Lon. 'm.- c't o':eD . Dw __ r The lat I.nr' rnrou're wasn a Salbino. =. i :- t f"ct in hiseye- ph Si ht a p:, .. .. II t' e house of i crm,;mn_i ." re he be. - Sc-'.e a ..r I • r rofn- O u* l b r an. came T. Sinto t'e . to ma'*e a m lsshi r ai=try. U bli i ": prroise r,i opene krtore on t .....-vy before he was reduced to .. r hl'lesneuss by tl the dircovery tiat t mcro was some con p I In his note-. ':'inl owvnhy to his I Mo won r:-'t he c:' 1 not r:ffy,. A! dog c,.i:.. ~~.' t• '*' a stI ;. but ', tic r, -'. I eu i morti. l :'td b. • '.e cempleto ly io t . -". , r:n-mebers otf the hou'.t r. i - .. :.... ' tbuched by the painful br' :,:I' :edeathof m Loud rher'o- ...- . five liina 5. e-cha~.-!', ,. of t., ";,l"ur--Ur. dai Chilb rr "r ":. ::i .-:Lach, Sr, uWill a r, ;,:. .;.to. LorJe EanhO do! .' ( 'ir'.'! V r '."'i.tone, ig. who :. fear :a, .' 1 tL l hi':h of- 5* -e. ":o praeset iinuam.amt is ir. wh !_ ILONE O WATTERSOW'S STORIESU mA aant.*s. a.. IT, Leulawe awm . "That was aqmer story Henry Wat. lin teson told O bit leture sabout ado e-" falatlon cm at Louerille," maid a als gentleman wboheard theloquet jouer Or mallat to The Man About Town of the me t Louis Republic. "Be maid tat tew om aal years ag. a gentleman holdinga Iy commanding cmmao eia and msoal po. -a sation In the Kentulky metroppus hbd at aed the fads of the corporation of les which he was the rstesd lamemalm we head, sand when thes day of accouanting I em hee fondbe was abort to his ac a eoante. The taime was too brief to Wp make the decit good and his own at fands were in eoc shape that he was oi l trably entangled. He was an el bhoeat man, but lat oment of ver t- mao dence had permittadhimelf to deo mse viate tfrom the marrow path ust enough li te am the lrm'as cmk as a temporary id- l promllag b return it t a and - promptly. As is always the mes, he keep hit p mlta, and the d. d layIwadangero-w thetimeasme eil he coald et. laneed of waiting th ey Iwitable disawery, he called a met re aing of tde diretors m sra ghter. L ward conemlah om, ra hi pe a eton, threw hlmelf upn the mer-y we of theeurt, so to epeak, and pledged SMaimeit to pay vey dollar if me he were ant epso d sad prenoenta. o- An animated dIsmoeao followed, nde a to large majority were i favor aof giving a the delinquent a chance. His hithelrto a hsh atsadig and undoubted baimas be blity were is hi favor.ot to mse. tiosthat he might haveskipped if he a had desired. Two of the directoes held e out. They thought t would be aom. by pounding a felony. anad t was as awful eh thing to let m a man loose upon tie ed aseetlng community. t they l. were outvoted. ad he defaulter was of iven anothe chance. He is now a g pmpsseous and wealthy baissia mo h. of Louisville. Two years after h misnl .r fortune oe of the two men who hed is objected to hiselease was a fugitive et aIn Te as charged with embIamlemet, I Sand at theend of another yearthe other a sy de to Canada to esrape a, et on the a Iea ehargeIn thei whirltgbigof I ed this preosaproa mercant whome early ad aisfortune these two msa had end . 4 . med to turn Into dligrce and calamy, .a Smid Col. Watterson, was the forema of o the grand jury that ndicted the two Shfugitives. eware the ale step. o en a. tioned CoL Wattereon, but don't always * condemn the victim without giving hi. I id the besetof the doubt." y MESSAGOE 10 THEIR DEAD. ,e Mulel / Ceuet Ie ml mmat o amg * .d 1se604e10 u ot aem. 1 N e At full moom i October and aal at t full moosa in ovember the throe days' t t show is held, says the Saturdy Re-. a view. and for mme time previousl ty L houses of grandees and pesant, the d markets I and basses show slga of d preparation for the comintg event. The a Shublesu style Into which the earmoy e car- be prformed it yet pretty enough. 1 d he broad, stroa lea of a plantain I P a bet or folded into the hape of a at b . or irft. In the middle of this ihple e. trrture a tiny taper it fied upright. d ':' "hatnag," er raft of whih this i is I. tco simplest form, is then kept rady In u d, the house until the amaepelo moment t e -predicted by the tmaily prima-1a G narived. u SThen at th moment, wh the water i y is sivered over by the bamsef the i broad ridl o om, the taper is lighted Sand the tay raft is lne med ap . Swaves. Very slowly ast it makes e its way alongthe edgy of ae eMa r s tide: then, wafted gently by th still a evening air Into the wifter earat It Sdrifts further ad arther away until only a bright pC of light dista Sgue mi fri t e rippling arfce all h Saround. When the aight is fine thou ac mnd of them little saw of light may t I be sae twinkling the berod boaom di I of the Mesam al wild ag their eBent Ut r way toward the boundles . all ae I bearing arlet m ages to departed it Striends who have already ge to he great saknows loed. i entiado joeht rea in glmde-peak - arovP*ingly ao a new metod f manu tfcaring eeastie wade chloriem e d Sother obmial proe cta diretly from a water wth the Md o eleetriety. - SThere i an Imese amysng time, _ labor ad materl tn t the prea s I t Sreadily eem that man g a freak gramp on thoaeses treemea o - ature through seok aditoverym .Per-b hape time mos ItO tig mggon e aade nt connwcti with this new method of maubfaturing ehbeMia L is thatof Slence Goeimp to the eot that electricity ayypes enableusa to purify m sa water a to it it foe drininl pur poea One of the greatt terrors that ecatfeot the ehlpwraohad would e th I anished by sk a diaovery, pIroided b that the electrlal apparat could he h made sortable enough to k d·saen salbo e ___Ith £'t***sar ml me Pump. en The common water pump of today t bet an Iaprovement on a Oreciaa o no vention which art came Into general me daurag the reign of te Ptol-ia en Phiedeipes and Raepesg e e to at a sal language, it derived frome tha reek word "paipd," to mad or throw. h The moot ancient demeription we have he of the water pump it by ese of Ale- dik ader There it a athantie Macnmts e of its general ma enatd eof Egypt pe ea nos to its intredmotion into the Ge a man proviacas ntsthe opening of I plgers and pittoma were navented by a Morland. an Eaglithman, in iat the 1 e doable acttig pmap by Dse i Bir. She he Freahb *,Iadelcla,,5 aume twmaotyyas tI Later _l * as ways hemeds he werS. arouad the earth by a ma wnlldngdep 7' dayse a esprem train, forty daym l honses: ca allL ttar heamie emeudi eer sy ever eepp elea l ittle amt da Ss ~i ES. HEREDITARY FOES am . ase. The meamsry of the Pum sor de Pe i tmaslates ran so far bark that 5aor al -. enmity with the Apo-hes di d aot ' • the The irs thing the Pima child is tmIm . s to hate theApec. the sandal ofthe vs reat Amerlea. desert, and he seM -p Mats hb i teaching. Thgh it in ad so bad now that the Apacýhes hb" of radred to the ailted Stats ~ lom Sal meat. still the hatred exists, lad wha a the opportunity is prsensted the PIs a spit at and beps all kinds of o-ta to ly pon the heads of the Apache' S As is known. the Plma seldom MVo ra their alley homs, and. as the ApOai as mare now on the resrvaton under the le a. arveillsnce of troops. It Is reny tht; ihe , hey meet, though last winters g pany of the Apahet soediers mo.r iy benrht through this ity amder S ad United ttes oer. Before they had he besM ben sa hur their old asreh gI the Pi , and Marleopes, all IaNwof me I saa by the middle fs the ftsra e h fully two toumade were in town to a r, them. The Aasehe sentinel had bem W. taught eoagh military disipitie to Sknow that he mt ant reent thei y salts heaped upon hi by the Idaim ad onlookers but It mast have besa as ha if trial to bis wild ature. ii. Ya ago the Apaches. am the Sofe settled their dl aerd eoby soba or pitched battles. ad thes r i -o _w ps* Pha livin w kfllUld si m Apehes aIn one day is slagle combt 2. ear where the Sacatos agemy is lo he eased The Pmr aed ahis baswoeo , uelab, sout two est IL lengtha , a the - Apaches their spears and war elaiW. it Sis woderful bow skillful these Plekes he ae Il the am of their dlabs, Sfedlg y with them equal to th emxbiMls as hch meaterof thbs Ms A STRANGE FRIENDSHIP. Is meain Ame semes a ceaseef% Anem of "M fath lemoa dh Mm t has a wage emiadship darkug ae o Mtye at Douloga," writes ti9 6 ne authors daughter s l'mew aR ome Joura. "There rled l a st If tags on the street which lei bum * oar m to the town a eebMalr g, hed to sit at his window working of day with his dog-a Polmsmal e the table beside him. The obblm., a a whom my father becae very ak tr Staed lehes of the atelligeiee of a is poodl was taknll ai d obr may mosths wras m ble to work. My father wr ie 'The eobblr has bess thuas mway mesth The ittle dog si at ,hM door so happy s to I help that I everyday expe atMto M ' s beginning a pair or top boots' Aother e time batme writes tI telling the hietry o. of thil little anemal: A abblere di a llefhd B 8 little Sdogs talwgs ass is his a-rnmy wear A dow waterMb him at his work, ahd as met I woauld agth de om as be Seould't aahrd to pay the t lor him. SThe eobbler sad the deg btig both my Spartialer frieads I complie.. The sob a b wr hparted wit s do bsoares. SWhllam thdg dgot home be m ma 4t IHesdse mat he ia, m ap as/ fa the untied him. The momms the gain a waopen, the dog (on the very day a t th bi arrival) ra ot Neai day r Geosgy sad I saw him lying aaseveed with mud, dead, oatside the asighar Slag chaurb. HIow am I ever te the a cobbler? Ie is too poor b m to a for la sad ay ha thah dog fi a d IT IS HER NOSE THAT SUPPERS iIt war me tOae -"Seaklng of Sai weather, I hs LI dncovered that the coldefetsben a"d e- women dicremtly," seP a writer Ia ? the New York Herald. "I men that a despite te facst tat both sem e of t the human kind they have not th Ssame valM polts fr - u Punt 0 "You uas hoave meis as I hae, ta woma when ostl*Iie ah oeM dar gee o M n appenmelYe m a "It is tihe p of hbaw mthrt as tesbe hed of aad weomIlsg Es ebeelms adtheraohlameerms ter but haoe always gets sud ada eald "I believ that phytrhle my thre me1 esn bp sernae, or rather by te lesln a whis th ge wlug uam . " they isle otly m e a be the meuat ry s ead es tamthe sth b notemh tI ' mlames that ah wl xWhname n bs*gg u ~.. I h er'a Thesewb os sal, eat he S tm em etb, In he wom K attys 4 a t D th i w rlae tk p mea.Iascus uset a., - the. r..g 3. the 6 bm 1oc h.ama she m emIYw 4 , 4, telle radl sagiaw a S & the war aftewrwhe al d, Ia twe matteom on hhmlm womanswear g~e weM aat anweas 11 TH. . ohe, .:-TEK8A8 AZ.Ek'fE.:. w. A weekli uewpaper p b SIishe ST. J2BErni LA. ral eto THE A 1 eI I. Ir " 4 r OF . I :1 Board of &iool I.tuI --NDO.TE-. the bDt Lereesta tat. andiu ohr .~era - hop . 7 I SIIM 416t D OiRiC. ++ 8 9+ - C *+ " ' t++.+ -+*;+