Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 2, Bloomington, Monroe County, 25 April 1883 — Page 4

NEWS CONDENSED.

EASTERN.

xne steamer nestorun, wrncn ar

rived at Boston hat wwfc, bronght 650 Irish

, and children, whom passage

i paid by the British Ooremnest.

Thr were ail in destitute circumstances.

At the Tewksbnry investigation at Boston a witness swore that a Harvard student breogbt a.negro' skin to a tannery at

Wbtourn to be made into leather, and said

the corpse originally came from Tewksbnry.

Pteosa of the akin were exhibited to the

The action brought by Mrs. Mary .

Wnhenlay to attain poearioaof wharf prop

erty a Httabmgn, Pa., of the value of

Matty 2, 000,000, has beea nonsuited

James Treglawm was executed at Vorrtatewn, K. J., for the murder of Minnie

Oiirawta last Jane.

WESTERN.

Fowler Brothers, who own and oper

ate a very large packing establishment, em

ploying" wrenl handled men, in Kansas City, bsra issued an order that all employes.

while either on or off duty, most abstain

front ate use of intoxicating; liquors, and

mat sot visit gamNtng-houaea.

A shocking tragedy was enacted near SaziviBe, Delaware county, Iowa. Charles Smith, a prosperous farmer, while laboring

as la supposed under a temporary fit of in

sanity, murdered his wife and two boys,

aged 13 and 0 yean, using an ax to accom

plish the horrible deed, and then com

mitted suicide by cutting his throat with a butcher-knife. Two daughters made their

escape by Hoeing from the house while the

manian father was dtsTtatrmng their mother.

A party of six men organized in Utah in 1873 to prospect for gold and silTer in Southern Colorado. While in the vicinity of

the present site of Lake City; in Colorado,

blinding storms coming on, they lost their

way and the food jravti out. lor days together they lived on rosebuds. The men became desperate and some crazed. While his

companions were in this condition Alfredo.

Packer deliberately fral upon and butchered the whole party, and for several weeks lived en flesh cut from their bone. Packer has put been tried at lake City, the scene of the

awful crime of eleven years ago, and con victed of murder. There have been sixty eases of small

pox reported to the Health Department at

St Louis within a month.

A wind-storm did considerable darnage to farm buildings in Otoe and Nemaha

counties, Neb. Several persons were Injured

by the fall of houses they were occupying. A heavy gale at Anita and Adair,

Iowa, worked havoc with buildinge, fences and crops, -At the former place people

sought abetter in cellars and caves. Ihrring a storm at East Tawas, Mich., hall stomas fell iiiwaamliig three inches in

A heavy-enow storm prevailed in the region of Deadwood, Dak., on the 13th and 14th of April, blocking the railroad andstage Bnea and tearing down the telegraph wires. Memorial services were held at Springfield, EL, on Sunday, April 15, which was the eighteenth anniversary of the death of Abraham Iincoin. Judge Highley, of Cincinnati, has decided that pigeon-ahootmg as commonly practiced in testa of skill in marksmanship cornea within the purview of the law against cruelty to animals ' At Chicago, one Roman Nowaik, a cabinet-maker, fatally wounded his divorced wife and then saved the hangman a ob by blowing- out his own brains Drink was the cause of the tragedy. Gen. Cook, recognizing; that regular troops are useless in wtrfare against the Apaches in the mountainous country on the border of Mexico, is arranging for the employment of Tnrtian scoots against the hostUes, The General has information that the sTevfciana are not sparing either men.

women or children of the Apaches. The town of Sombero Falls, Minn., was struck by a tornado and badly shattered. Nobody killed, however. Ber. John Schenck, a Catholic priest, committed suicide at Lung Prairie, JDnn., by shooting; Unsete The Saratoga paper mills at Santa Clara, CaL, were reduced to ashes. The loss ie 175.00a Henry Entfl Johnson and James Bonnelly fought with knives at Stockton, CaL, about a wagon, and killed each other. The City Council of Minneapolis has advanced the rate of saloon-licenses from 100tol,500. The "Model" Flouring Mill at Minneapolis, Xinn., was destroyed by fire. Loss, K,000;tivarance, 951,00a The spread of small-pox at Indianapolis is causing anxiety to the health authorities and citizens generally. George SeheDer, accused of setting Bra to the Newhall House at Milwaukee, has been acquitted. The auditors cheered lustily when the verdict was announced. The report of the Illinois State Board of Agriculture shews that the indications are that the Illinois wheat crop will fall 20,C0O,C00 bushels chart of what it was last year, when it aggregated more than 39,000,090 bushela. In the southern grand division the condition of the crop is 42 per eant below what it was at this time last year; in the central grand dlv.'sion SI per cent below, and in the northern Si per cent. This large falling-off ia due in part to the ravages of the Hessian fly last fan, and to the long, dry fteste in the great wheat belt in Southern and Central Illinois during starch. The flooded condition of the Menominee river has caused great damage above and below Kenominee, Wis., submerging dams and mills, carrying off structures and logs sad destroying property.

houses werti blown down and three poisons

fatal ry injured.

One of the great plagues of the

Sooth, the buffalo gnats, are doing an im

mense amount of damage in the oonntles of

Arkansas bordering on the Mississippi river.

The destruction by them of mu'es and horses has been so great as to cause grave apprehension as to how the crops are to be

worked.

Two children were burned to death

in a large box at Portsmouth, Texas, while

at play.

William Dorsey, of Montgomery,

Ala., mistook his wife for a burglar and shot

her dead.

A burglar entered a room in the

Arlington Hotel, at Palestine, Texas, chloro

formed Mr. Reynolds, frightened his wife

into silence by a pistol, and walked off with

3,00ft

A recent dispatch from Fort Worth,

Texas, reports that "between 200 and SCO

cowboys on ranches in the Pan-Handle are on a strike, asking that wages be increased

from 490 to $50 per month and board.

Great nneuiness exists on the ranches near

those on which the strikers are located

The strikers have sent committees to the men at work ordering them to Join the strikers, quit work, or suffer the conse

quences, winch means to be shot "

SOUTHERH.

At McDermott, Chicot county, Ark., arx colored children went to a picnic in the woods, and, gathering weeds for salad, eooked them, and mistakenly put in strychnine for seasoning. All partook and at last accounts ttaree died, and there was little hope for the other. N. V- Monroe and mother, of Halt fax county, To. , were fatally poiijoncd by an unknown perspn. John and Embert August, another German, and a negro, name unknown, were drowned by the caj;. ing of a skiff at Vicksburg, Mian. Robert Massey war hanged in the Jail-yard at Fort Smith, Ark. , for the murder of Edwin P. Clark, in the Indian Territory, in December, 1831. At CarroUton, Miss., James E. BoMnson was executed for the murder of William Adair, in Kay, 1881. Sara Walker (colored), who was to have been hanged at Columbia, & C, cheated the gallows by dying in Ms cell. A negro was hanged by a mob at Winston, N. C, for outran a UtUe girl A silver mine, the ore of which assays 1H per ton, has been discovered ia the mountains of East Tennessee. In Grant county., Ark., the residence of a aegro named Daniel Pratt was burned down, and three children perished in the

WASHINGTON.

A treasury commission has been appointed to examine the charges preferred

again Supervising Architect Hill

The work of the United States and

Spanish Claims Commission has been com

pleted. The claims preferred amounted to

30,313,581. but those allowed only reached

the sum oi l,288,Wt

Indictments have been returned by

the Grand Jury of the District of Columbia

against WCliara Pitt Kellogg, former Senator

and now Csngressman-elect from Louisiana,

and Thomas J. Brady, late Second Assistant

Postmaster General Each indictment contains five counts, charging Kellogg and Brady with receiving five separate amounts

of $1,500 eich for securing the "expedition"

of mail contracts.

The taking of testimony in the pres

ent star-route trials closed on the tsth of April, having lasted five months, and the counsel proceeded to bore the patient

jurors with windy speeches.

POLITICAL, Over 300 enthusiastic Democrats

gathered tit the Palmer House, in Chicago,

to partake of the second annual

banquet given by the Iroquois Club and to

listen to the flood of oratory which followed

the feed. The principal speakers were Sen

ator Bayard, of Delaware; Col William F. Vilaa, of Wisconsin; James O. Brodhcad, of Missouri; William Henry Hurlbert, of New York; Lyoan Trumbull, of Illinois; W. C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky; E. P. Wheeler,

President of the New York Free-trade Club,

and Mayor Harrison. Several of the more

prominent; invited guests were not present

The Delaware Legislature has enact

ed a new law concerning murderers. If found insane, they will be confined in a jail or asylum If their sanity is regained, they

will be liable to trial or sentence.

A projxMed prohibitory amendment

was defeated in the lower house of the Michigan Legislature

Senator Makone, of Virginia, is said

to be making his arrangements forcaptur ing the Republican nomination for Vice President next year, avowing high-tariff views wrd the expectation of obtaining

material aid from the iron interests In Vir

ginia and other Southern States. So say the

Washington correspondents.

The Supreme Court of Mississippi

has decided that, the Secretary of State having declared Manning elected to Con

front the Second district, the court has

no jurisdiction of the suit of Chalmers for a writ of mandamns, and that the question as to whether Manning or Chalmers was le

gally elected must be decided by Congress

The Scott bill taxing each liquor-

dealer in the State 4300 per year, and those

selling only beer and wine 1U0, has become a law in Ohio.

The Delaware House of Representa

tives indefinitely postponed the Senate resolution providing for the submission of a prohibitory constitutional amendment. A similar measure proposed in the Connecticut Senate failed to receive the necessary two-thirds vote.

Chauiicey L Filler, a leading poli

tician and once a wealthy merchant of St.

Louis, who was recently an applicant for the position of Postmaster General, has accepted from the Mayor of that city the humble position of Assessor and Collector of Water Bates.

BPSHTESS FAILURES. Ellis & Kiauss, millers and grain-

dealera, Evansville, Ind ; liabilities S00,000;

40,000.

Gilleit Bros., tobacconists, Atlanta,

Ga. ; liabilities, $40, 0CO; assets, 920,000.

James Marshall & Co., iron-pipe

manufacturers, Pittsburgh; liabilities, i,500,000; assets about 1,300.000.

William Schmidt & Co., wholesale

liquors, Ht Paul; liabilities, W,000.

Boy H. duke, horse fancier, Lexing

ton, Ky. : liabilities, 35,000.

Norristown, Tenn., has been depopulated by small-pox. Five hundred people attended a -funeral of two men who died of what was supposed to be measles and many people were stricken with the scourge. A body, of twenty-three missionaries from Utah have arrived at Chattanooga, Tena,a are about to ester upon a cam. Mgaef wait III hi stiWUti Oik, 4 . robe, of

MISCELLANEOUS, Canadian detectives allege that con

siderable quantities of explosives have been shipped from the United States to the Do. minion by way of Grand Island, to be used for the destruction of public buildings in Canada, The United States authorities have

been requested to take measures to prevent such shipments. Egan, Devoy and Mooney, speaking to a large assemblage at Rochester, H. Y denied that the Land League countenanced assassination. Sericus damage has been caused by floods in the rivers of Canada and some of the Kew England States, The Imilding in Broadway, New York, occupied by the Remington Manufacturing Company, the Bradatreet Company and the Halt Safe and Lock Company was burned, the total loss being 130,0 .0; fire also destroyed a furniture factory at Sr. Louts, the loss upon which is 915,000; eeveral stores at Crisfleld, Md, causing a loss cf $1U000; a warehouse at Menominee, Wis., valued, with contents, at 930,000; and Botoharda block, at Owen Sound, Ont, involving a los3 of 90,000. A fierce hurricane at Victoria, B. C, drove four vessels ashore, one sai.'or being killed by a falii -g spar. Trees and fences were damaged Ihronghout the province. Negotiations have boon completed at Boston for the purchase of the Hannibal and St Joseph railroad by the Chicago, Burlington and Qulnoy Company. Shots fired by muskrat hungers near Ottawa, Ont, caused a report that tho police guarding the Government buildings at Itideau Hall had been fired ox Even Queen Victoria cabled for particulars. Baltimore, telegram: The steamship HohenzoUern, w;th 1,364 emigrants, arrived at t'jis ort this morning from Bremen, An hour laner tho sleamiuln America, also from Bremer , came to whitrf with 1,330 emigrants. Three-fourlhs of both sbip-ioadi are destined for Chicago and the Northwost"

FOREIGN. In the course of the examination of Feathei'stone, arrested at Cork recently on the charge of conspiracy to murder, and who oleims to be an American citizen unJaitlyiooued, document Uw4 on hi

person wns produced, which was indorsed, "A cure for gout, but Which was In fact a formula for the manufacture of nitro-gly-cerine. The triat of joe Brady, the first of thePhoouix Park assassins arraigned, was concluded at Dublin on the 131 h of April. The jury, after an absence of forty minutes, returned a verdict of guilty. Counsel for the defense tm uediotely made a mbtion for arrest of judgment, which was denied, and Brady was sentenced to die on the 14th of May. He protested with vehemence that he was innoccn The Irish National Land League has receivod 3,000 from Australia Bedmond rays the l'hamix Park tragedy and iti developments oro hurting tho cauc in that country. The Marquis of Lomo will probably succeed tho Mnrijuis of Itipon as Viceroy of India,

Queen Victoria is still unable to

stand for any length of tlmi owing to the injury to her knot

Numerous arrests are constantly be

ing mailo in St Petersburg of persons accused of Nihilistic affiliations, and in several instances this month quantities of explosives have been discovered. Of there events, as well as of tho trial of Nihilists now in progress, the Hussion press is forbidden to make mention. Hong Kong dispatches report the probabilliy of a war between China and France, growing out of tho Tonquin affair. China expects the assistance of some European power Twenty thousand dock laborers are on a strike at Marseilles, and business is much impeded in consequence The Queen of Madagascar has accepted tile terms of settlement offered by France. A renewal of the strike among the Royal Irish Constabulary is threatened, the men being greatly dWtt'siied over the neglect of the Government to redress their

grievance

The trial of twenty-six Nihilists of Odessa has resulted in the conviotion of all

The sentences imposed include exile to Sir

beria and penal servitude for life, for fifteen

years, for ton yeais, and for four years.

A London dispatch says six divisions

of the German imperial cavalry and four army corps have been put in readiness to cross the frontier into France on three days' notice.

Charles IL (Louis De Bourbon),

formerly Duke of Parma, died at Mice, sged 81.

The French have occupied Porto

Negro and Loango, on the river Congo. The natives protected to the Captain of a Portuguese cruiser, who in turn protested to the French commander. A conflict is not improbable. Henry M. Stanley is there with

his elephant rifle, in the interest of Portu-

The British Home Office offers a re

ward of 100 for infromation leading to the

arreftof anv person engaged in the illegal

manuf acta.- - of explosives.

The second of the Phenix Park mur

der trials has resulted in a verdict of guilty

against Daniel Curley. and he will bang on May Id The jury was absent but a few minutes. The prisoner was asked if

he had anything to say why sentence should not be pronounced. He said he hod not expected any mercy from the court It was very unfortunate that the Irish bench was never without a Norhury or a Keogh. He was a member of the Invinoibies, but was not in Phenix Park on the evening the murders were committed Ho loved his country and could suffer for her. The witnesses for the crown had per ored themselves Curley also said

he was a Fenian. As the officers were taking the prisoner from the dock he cried out in aloud voice; "God save Ireland."

LATER NEWS ITEMS. Rumors as to the condition of the winter wheat in California are to'the effect .hat the damage from drought will be more ion overcome by the increased acreage slanted, and that a full average crop may )o anticipated. Throughout Illinois farmng operations show great activity. Crop -(ports from Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, .lebra ka and Dakota ore of a glowing chor-'.cte-. The Italian Government is determined to foster tobacoo eultnre by paying joge bounties. At Odessa. Russia, fifty persons were urested Inst week for Nihilism. At least wen;y wnrkingmen accused of Nihilistic .Tendencies wiU bo placed on trial before tho coronation. The trial of the eighteen Nihilists at St Petersburg has resulted in the conviction of a'l, six being sentenced to ("oath, two to life imprisonment, and the others from five to twenty years' imprisonment Those receiving capital sentences were concerned in plots against either the lute or the present Czar. It has been discovered that the Legislative enactment creating the Dakota Capital Commission conflicts with the act

organizing the Territory and therefore they

have no power to remove ihe capital. The Ohio Democratic Convention will meet at Columbus, June -1, for the nomination of candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Judge of the Supreme

Court, Treasurer, Attorney General, and

member of the Board of Public Works, The election occurs Oct 9. Woman suffragists met in State Convention in Troy, N. V., elected Lillie Devereaux Blake President, and resolved that racial order could only be secured and maintained by tho co-operation of women.. It was also decided that it was the duty of women to interpret tho Scripture for themselves, trusting no longer to masculino views. At McDnde, Texas, a young man named Pfeiffer killed his 15-year-old cousin, Uary Dlenhardt, and then himself. It is believed that he was insane. President Arthur spent a day at Savannah, Go,, where he was received with due honors by the municipal authorities. He left that city April 20 for Washington on the United States steamer Tallapoosa. In order to test the constitutionality of the Scott liquor law, a cafe will be immediately made up for trial before the Supreme Court of Ohio. The annual report of the Chicago, Milwaukee and 8t Paul railroad, shows the present estimated length of the track to bo 4,825 miles, and by tho end of this year it will equal 5,000 miles The gross earnings of 18S2 show an increase of 8,0X,C0;l over the preceding j car, and the net earnings show nearly 92,000,000 increase. The total earnings are about 920.000,000. Mexican troops claim to have killed most of the hostile Apaches in a serici of

running fights between the towns of Ures

andGamhiea Arrnegado white man, said to be a former Indian Agon1 named L. N. Stretcher, was captured, a soldier who was wounded and loft for dead during last yw'f campaign identifying him as having acted as chief of a band of Apache?. A loom is being organized in Moxieo for the election of Diaz to the Presidency in im. The Parliament building in Quebec have boon totally destroyed hy tiro. FAILURES. Newell & Wright, oil cloths, New York; liabilities, 9110,000. J. H. Chapman & Co., wholesale jewelers. New York. Jacob White, wholesale confectioner, Terre Haute, Ind. Holman, Coffin & Co., books, Atlanta, Oa Laphara Co., woodenware, Cleveland, Ohio,

i Bravo Deed ; or, ('healed of Its Prey By Mrs. M. E. Ih-dd-n. "Somebody must g for the doctor." It was Itohip de Fisc who kiiu, and her words fell ominously on that little band of watchers. Ono of their number must brave the violence of the st jrm ; a humnu life was at stake. There was silence for a moment ; then Murk Moston said, in a low, iivm vo'eo, "I will fto." Koine heard him, and turned deadly pale, hut no sound of emot:o:i p.!r.pd her liM, and no ime noticed her pallor in the growing .hlt-Ii. A l.iinuto passed, ihe door slnttunel, and Mark was fm. There wore two roads to Paxton, whore tho dootcr lived, tho highway ami the beach. The diatitKcp was shorter by the beach, but the way move onions, for at flood-tide fie ' vavoi lushed high theeliils, which shut oil' retreat inland.

It took Mark Maston but nu instant to decide his course; every moment was precious, and ho miM try the beaeb. He glanced along tho. shorV; the water was about twenty feet from the. cliffs, which presented their rugged front to the whistling eastern bla-t. Thinking only of the loved one at home, he dashed along. Two mihw before him n headland projected into (ho sea, If this wns passed Mark Maston was i-.afV. On he spe.l. The gale caught the spi ny of the breakers, and whirled it against the cliffs, drenching the bold messenger to tho skin: At last the headland came in sight. Mark stopped, and, shading his eyes, gazed fixedly ahead. A shudder s'liook his frame. While ho looked, a mighty billow came rushing in from the sea, and dashed high on that projecting cliff. Turn bnck, Mark Mnston ; turn back or you are doomed !

.But no; with clenched teeth ho ran on on to certain death. Hut is it certain? Can he do it? Can he reach there in time? Yes, gentle reader. I think he con. if ho plods right along. It is only half a mile, and he has got nine hours and a quarter to do it in. Tho tide is going tout. Mark Maston is saved ! The pea is "cheated of its prey -Harvard Lam

poon.

Mark Twain. Mark Twain, the renowned arehwologist, poet and astronomer, is a lineal descendant of the celebrated Twain who were made one flesh. Ho was

born on Plymouth Rock, April 1, 1728, on a remarkably cold morning, and the administratrix of the camphor and red flannel department afterward stated that ho was the most remarkable baby she had ever 6een, At tho early age (f 7, Mark for so ho was cruelly christened was already addicted to science, and his discovery, made one year later, that a spring clothes-pin artistically applied to the continuation of a cat would create in that somnolent animal a desire for vigorous foreign travel is still used by the ' aborigines of Connecticut and Massachusetts. When he was It), Mark went through college. He entered the front door, turpentined the rector's favorite cat, and graduated the same evening over the fence. He then started for California, Milwaukee and other remote confines of the earth, and began those remarkable series of truthful anecdotes for which is he s i justly famed. As an aclneologist, however, he has won most renown, and his collection of Pompeiian, Sanscrit, Egyptian aud early Greek jokes, now in possession of Osgood & Co., of Boston, is considered the most complete in the world. Some envious critics have

claimed that most of these were painfully carved by Mark himself, and tl.e balance composed of hetrogeneons and unrelated parts, but there seems to be no reasonable doubt that ther are all

genuine antiques. Personally, Mr. Twain is a remarkably well-preserved man. He is short, florid and very corpulent, laughs incessantly, and is a rapid and brilliant speaker. His essay on "Draw Poker in American Politics" is conceded to be a masterly treatise on political economy, while his poein entitled "Tho Frog Down by Weight of Shot" will hold its place as one of the most pathetic in the language Life. Fishing for Sponge?. With a good wind the fisheries are readied in eight or ten hours from this port. Then the real toil begins. Lying on his chest along the boat's deck, tho fisher with his water-glass a pane se in a box fitted with handles looks down forty feet iuto the clear depths. With one hand he grasps and sinks a slender pole, sometimes fifty feet in length, fitted at the end with a double hook. The sponge once discovered, the 'hook is deftly inserted at tho rocky base, and by a sudden jerk the sponge is detached to be brought up on deck. This curt description of what seems the simple work ot spougo fishing gives no idea of the real skill and exertion needed. The eye of the fisher has to bo trained by long experience to peer into the sea and tell the commerciallyvaluable sponges from those that are worthless. He must have a deft hand to manage tho swaying hook forty feet down so as to detach the sponge without a tear. Above all, whilo doing this with one hai.-J, he must manipulate with the other the water-glass as tlie waves sway it. sideways and up or down. The strain on eye and body is most intense, to say nothing of the cramped position and exposure to wind and wet, which first and last make almost evo.y sponge-fisher a victim of acute rheumatism. Yet with all his arduous toil, a faithful sponge-fisher earns not more than $15 n month bes:d? 'his "keep" on tho boat, which barely deserves the uamo of existence. Xetc 'ork Post. Facts Worth Knowing. That salt fish ore quickest and best freshened by soaking in sour milk. That cold rain water anil soap will remove niachino grease from washable fabrics. That fish may be scaled much easier by first dipping them into boiling water tfor a minute. That fresh meat, beginning to sour, will sweeten if placed out of doors in the cool oir over night. That milk which lias changed may bo Bweetened or rendered fit for use again by stirring in ti little soda. 'That boiling starch is much improved by tho addition of sperm cr salt, or both, or a little gnm arabic, dissolved. That a table-spoonful of turpentine boiled with your white clothes niil greatly aid tho whitening process. That kerosene will soften boots and shoes that have been hurder.cd by water, and will render tLcm as pliable as new. That clear boiling water will remoe tea stains; pour the water through tl e stain, and thus prevent its spreading over the fabric. That salt will curdle new milk; bene, in preparing milk porridge, gravies, elc, the salt should not be added until the dish is prepared. That kerosene will make your teikettlo as- bright as new. Saturate a woolen rag and rob with it. It will also removo stains from the clean varnished furniture. Ualfx Journal of Health. Pkof. She, of the Hotel Dion, says that the hew extract of lily of the valley is one of tho most important remedies in heart disease known. Jt is a power-fulpoisoa.

GOSSIP FOR THB LAMKS. Cupid in Custody. "t'ui'Hl, little crlminnl. What l:av ytw been (lninjfV .'" I'limr ttnins, '. U'lthimt wrong; .lust a littlo wuoiuif." "Yoh'vo been stealing lioarts, I fear, Ktt aline hrarls by dozens. ".No, i haven't, n, I Itavi'n't; Tiiey wire all my cousins. "Com.' alon. you little finu.lj Von will liavo to tun y In a vviflnn tl I you l.-urti Wooing mc'RHH to marry." "Vory well, horo'p llonnyliolloi Klic shall bo the winn-v." lli nuy b.-uVwiil, "Ottlar. free the lit:le ninner."

"Oh, I'll marry -Bonny!) -11 Known mv truth mxl pu-fyj I HfralSKiKKl Saint Val-njiii'-i

ile 11 bo my Becui'i.y. .Vary A. Ilai r. Alas ! tho Man. A man with more her.rt than taste

Was secretly pleased not long ago when

ills wtio decided to t ike her children

ttud Visit her mother in another citv.

He immediately set to work to surprise her ou her return, got in painters and groiners and freseo workers, and renovated and tinted the house from top to bottom; and then awai'ed her exhibi

tion of delight. It differed in kind,

however, front his expectations. She

stood a few moments in mute astonishment, then burst into tears, and finally

managed to inform him that not a tint nor tone in tho whole thing blent with

a carpet or bit of furniture they owned. The money that unfortunate man parted with to make things tally with his first artistic imuulse has civen him anew re

spect for the judgment of the weaker

vessel m some things. Hoalon Transcript. An Ansel ou Knrtli. In a Western contest of voracity tho first champion was thought to have dis-

tingu:shed himself by the statement that

ho had known an Ohio man to refuse oiliee. This talented flight of the imagination was distanced, however, by his competitor, who narrated his alleged experience at the opera house, llefore him sat a young lady in a Oainosborough hat a very large one. He could hear voices upon the stage; he could judge that a sad story ww being enacted there by the sympathizing faces of those about him. For himself, he could see nothing but on expanse of red velvet and feather3. As the New York Herald tells it, "the curtail-, fell and tho young lady in front turned round for a look at tho audience. She must have perceived that this gentleman had not altogether enjoyed the scene just ended, for she blushed and said, " Indeed, sir, I am but a voting and giddy thing. Pardon me, but my hat shall no longer annoy you.' ' And that beautiful creature of fashion,' concluded the gentleman, ' took her hat right off and crushed it down in tho seat beside her with a seraphic smile. For consideration of the happiness of others, especially nt theaters, young ladies beat the deck.' " Chicago Herald. Adopting: a Stylo of Wulk. The conventional girl has to bi ing adaptability iuto play just as much when she selects her style of walk as she does in deciding upon ihe style of her hat or the stuff of her gown. Cougruity, too, ploys au important part in her street appearance, and is au important factor in her success. The plump girl, who is ull rich, ripe, round curves and massiveness, can bound

along with u quick, elastic step that would be ridiculously out of place in her lank aud sweetly tostbetic sister. Tho first can travel with that easy spring-way thot is as suggestive of physical luxury and solM comfort as a pine-apple fiber hammock under on applo tree; tho other must glide her very appearance suggests tho frailties of her structure and the possibilities of her being jarred out of shape in the bounding process. Every woman has a peculiarity of gait that is es-eutially her own. To one who watches the crowd it becomes a question whether, with a proper description of the steps, and motions of the body, it would not be possible to classify each girl with a tolerable degree of accuracy. The matter-of-fact girl brings down her feet with such prosaic, force that she is readily distinguished. So too is the romantic young lady, whose stop is in itself suggastive of rope-ladders and mysterious moonlight. There is a go-out-among-thc-heathen goodness of gait that will mark the evangelistic damsel ten blocks from a prayer meeting, and the "quadrnpedanto putroni-sonito-qnartitungula-eampum' step of the literary woman has an onomatopoeia about it that proclaims her at once. A U'ortl for Sateswoim'tt. One of the reasons why saleswomen have so hard a time and are so hardly and often uujustly judged is that there are so many f them who practically depreciate their own occupation. It is all very well to point out other kinds of work in which women might profit

ably engage, but most of these require a special training that is not always easy to obtain, and it is not strange that so many young women as well as young men seek employment in some branch of trade. Dnt when n young man goes into a shop he Usually expects to devote his time and thought to learning as much as lie can about the business. Too many girls, on the other hand, look on tluir employment only as a disagreeable necessity which they aro to got away from as soon as they can. While they feel thus about it they can nevor make good saleswomen ; they can never bo successful; they can never gain respect either for themselves or their calling. In these days it is not worth while for either inuu or woman to undertake any business merely as a temporary makeshift. A girl in a dry-goods shop needs to apply herself to her business just its much as she would if she were learning a profession, and when she does fo apply herself she is pretty sure to gain recognition. Go into any large dry-goods shop, for example, and you will readily recognizo which are the women who are interested in their w ork, who are well informed alwut the goods they have to sell, and who understand the art of pleasing their customers, and which are thoso who are thinking of nothing but how they can get through tho day with the least trouble, and from whom the customers turn away in disgust. It is the latter who cause people to speak scornfully of shop-girls. The former command respect everywhere, in the shop or out of it. It is very much better, more honorable, and more profitable to bo a good saleswoman than a poor teacher, or painter. But then tho work must be undertaken in earnest, as a vocation, not as a means of getting along till something letler oilers. Of course, when something better docs offer, or when the 1'riueo comes along and leads Cinderella away, she will follow hira with light heart. But (ho Prince will not come any the sooner, or like her any the bettor, if she has been neglecting her work in waiting for him. How lie I'runoiiod. Madge writes to Amy in Truth: I have really a bit of news for you this week. Evelyn is engaged to bo married, and tho wedding is to oomo off either hi April or June. Tho happy man is something or other; good-looking and well-off. I asked her to tell mo how he proposed, for I am always curious to know how it is done. Aro you not? 1 often look ftfc it man and think, "l oonnot imagine you suit'

J or for a woman's hand," and wonder ! how in the world he ever got over the ' difficulty of the necessary proposal: or,

if unmarried, how ho will get over it. Evelyn would not tell me for a long time, but only laughed and blushed, till at lant 1 gently insinuated that the momentous question must have come from her, as she was so reticent about it. Then, in her indignation, she toltl me. There was a certain flavor of comedy about it, though it was not quite so bod

an i'.ie proposal that Anthony Trolloiio

put Into tlio mouth of Alary Thorite's lover i "DoyonV Don't yon? Will you?

or. t you It seems that .Frank-

Maud and 1 have quite adopted 1dm as a cousin-in-law alreadywas oue Of a din

ner pairtv at Evollvii's ho lse last Tues

day, and after dinner thy were looking

over a nook of sketches together

Evelyu observed that Frank seemed ex

cessively uncomfortable, aid she

guessed what was coming, ai:d she pit

ied the poor follow so much that she tried to help him out So, when they came to a sketch of pretty cottage, she

said, atrlv, "Just the realization of mv

dlvam of a truohome! I should like to live the rest of my life in a cottage like that quite alono!" "Alone, Mi -ss

t irey ! ithont even the proverbial ad

junct? Ull : rejoined l;.velvn, "von re

for to 'love in a cottage' -do von ?" A rid

then she turned away her head a little bit, und the thing was doac. Frank wus over tho fence. He &aid, iu a very low voice, "Evelyn, do you think you could '" That was all iho spoken part, though tho rest, I believe, was

verv interesting. Frank has since ad

mittid that Evelyn's lead was of the greatest use to him; that he had tried to propose to her move than er.ee b -fore, and might still have left the great question unasked but for the assistance she gave him. What a serious thing,

Amv I There mav be dozens of amiable

men ot this moment drifting into dreary old bachelorhood for tho want of a little

timely help at an opportune moment

Poor fellow I YVhyuoeBiiot some one establish classes, both for men and

eirls, to teach the former tho easier

methods of approaching tho important

snbiect, and tho latt-r how thev mav

best assist them? A girl sometimes snubs a man out of pure shyness, and os the memliers of tho sterner sex ere great cowards in this matter, they often run away, though not with the intention of fighting another day. Charlie says

that women frequently propose to men.

Clergymen are more harassed than

other man by this sort of persecution.

Their lady parishioners are perpetually finding out that thev are the "intellect

ual affinities" of their unlnckv pastor.

After all, wo have three precedents to justify such action, if we should ever

feel inclined to follow them. The Queen proposed to Prince Albert ( how prettily she tel is the story in the "Life" ) ;

Baroness liurdett-Ooiitts took the initi

ative; and so did Madame do Lesseps,

then Mademoiselle de I'raga. 1'or

girl of nineteen, the latter showed uueomnion courage, though the gentleman was 60 years of age. Home Jour

nal. Execution of Ruth Bitty.

The execution of females has beon of rare occurrence in New England. The Boston Pout recalls tho case of ltuth lihiy, of South Hampton, 3f. H., who

wos executed at JL'ortsmoutn. Jjoe. du,

1708. Brewuter, in ono of his volumes

of " Humbles About Portsmouth, thus

alludes to it: In Angnst, 17CS, lluth Bl ly, of South Hampton, was indicted for 'concealing the death of an illegitimate child, whereby it might not bo ktiowit whether it wore born alive or not. The English statute preserihed

the penalty of death for this oilense.

This blood-written tow was not repealed until 1792, wt.en a milder punishment was substituted for that of death. The exordium of Attorney General Claggett in the above prosecution is still

remembered for its pompous solemnity,

" He called heaven to witness that he was discharging a duty that he owed to

his country, his Jvmg ana ins tjrocu

An old lady, who was present at the ex

ecution of Kuth Blay. said, as Ituth

was earried through the streets her shrieks rilled the air. She was dressed

in silk, and was driven under the gal

lows in a cart. Public sympathy was awakened for her, and her friends had procured from the Governor a reprieve,

which would have soon resulted in uer pardon for circumstances afterward

showed that her child was probably still-born, and she was not a murderer. The hour for her execution arrived, and the Sheriff, not wishing, it is said, to be late to his dinner, ordered the cart to be driven away, and the un

fortunate woman was It ft hanging

from the gallows, a sacrifice to misguided judgment. If we are rightly informed, she wus a girl of good education for her day, having boon a schoolmistress. The indignation of the populace can hardly be conceived when itwas ascertained that a reprieve fim

tho Governor came a few minutes after

her spirit had been hastened away.

They gathered that evening around the residence of Sheriff Parker (the locality of ex-Movor Jenness house), aud an ef

figy was there erected, bearing this inscription : Am I to lose my dinner, Tiiis woman for to hani;? (".m,linwavay tltocart, my l-oys lon"t stop to Hiijr "amen." Draw away, draw away tho carl ! Judge Black's lleasons for Chewing. One day Judge Black met a gentleman who pathetically related h's endeavors to break himself of tobaccochewing, as it met with tho unqualified condemnation of all civilized people. "You'll find it a hard cose a hard case, my friend," replied the Judge, with a solemn wink. "I tried to break myself of it once didn't I over tell yon? Well, it was when I was Attorney General, and I said to myself, 'Jeremiah Black, we've got to stop this thing.' .So 1 made up my mit.d and one morning 1 tatted down to my oiliee without a scrap of tobacco. ! I begau the day badly and it got worso by degrees. 1 never felt so much like a savage in my life. I dismissed two clerks, bounced a niesvengi r, mado a fool of myself three or four times, snapped at everybody, and started home foiling myself to be o total failure and all creation a mistake. On tho way I met a man whom I respected very much. Ho was a religions man. I told him my experience with leaving off tobacco, aud asked his advice. Judge,' he said, ' my experience is tho same as yours. I tried t leave off, too. I quarreled with several members of the church 1 belonged to, thought the minister was a fool, got tired of my wife, and if I had kept it up I should have boon a moral monstt-r and I determined to circumvent the old enemy by takiug up my cherished vice,' ami so," continued the Judge, cheerfully, "I saw that tobacco-chewing was conducive to virtue, and (cutting o quid) I propose to keep it up until I leave it off." Xetc York World.

A llemaml for Clergymen. There is a loud call for clergymen from all ports of tho country. An English newspaper sajts that a religious denomination in ono of our Western States has written to tho President of a theological seminary in that country to ask if ho cannot sond them a score of young ministers. The Conyrejationulixt says that twonty-five of tho leading pulpits of Now England are vacant. President Eliot, of Harvard, referred in a roccnt speech to the fact that youug men of brains and ambition were avoiding the pulpit. Xew York letter. The greatest pleasure I know is to do a good action by stealth, and to have it found out by aooitleut JjftfliO,

qVVEU CASE OF VIBRATION. SIneiiluy Effort ITpon the Unman Body of m Orcnt Waterfall. It has been held by some that there is a particular key' to the Rounds of nature, and the hum of city streets has even been fixed by some upon the key of F. During a heavy flood which followed a protracted drought in Nort'icrn New Hampshire and Vermont, says a Boston journal) one of the watchmen tf a large factory near it high head of water went up to the cupola, to get a good view of the rising freshet. He was an unusually firmly built man, young, elastic and vigorous. In stature he was five feet aud ten inches in his stockings, and his Weight was 180 pounds just the weight and length to vibrate to tho key of G. It was late in the afternoon; but not time for hint to go on duty for the night. His sleep iu the forenoon had been disturbed, and so, after watching the water for a time and Itecoming satisfied that there was no immediate danger, b.e dropped into a plain pine chair; and in a few minutes was fast asleep. But whilo he slept the water rose. It was about eighteen inches deep on thodam, and the broad sheet that poured down was in a visible quiver from end to end from its own vibration and that of the volume of air behind it. It was jus t the vibration to strike the key-note of the factory. A tremor began to be felt even to the foundation. In the fourth story it was disagro 'ably strong, and in the cupola was even violent. It awoke the watchman, ar.d he found himself under its influence. In every part of his body he felt the peculiar motion. A numbness and lack of power to control his muse'es overcame him. Ho knew not the fttal influence wheh seemed to hold him resistlesly, but tho truth was that his key-noto was exactly the same as that of the factory, and his closely-knit body was vibrating many times a second in unison with the bnilcting. No sound was yet audible from the vibration, but as the tremor become stronger it seized upon his vocal cords and set them in motion. Frightened and desperate, bo mado a determined effort to free himself. He

struggled to rise from his chair, but could not command his muscles. He'

opened his mouth to scream, but emit

ted, instead, a prolonged, tonoroils note

of his fundamental pitch. This sealed his doom. It was a fatal error, caused by his lack of scientific knowledge and forethought. Up to this time the vibration had seized upon his vocal organs only, but this strong note, added to the quivering of the mill, which was of itself on the point of taking entire possession of him, threw the wholo body into vibration, violent and uncontrollable. His vocal cords would no longer emit any sound whatever. His wholo body began to hum ; the entire man vibrated

so intensely ond rapidly ns to make a

singing aounu, ana lus vo.oo was incapable of separate action. His fingers trembled so that they liad on uncertain boundary, like the edge of a buzz saw. His heatt quivered violently. His feet were not to bo clearly seen. The inevitable consequences followed. Human flesh could not endure the strain. It broke nt the ends of the fingers; blood oozed ont. The nose and ear-tips became blood-shot. The incasi:ig boots were not strong enough to protect tho feet. Gradually all the extremities became frayed out, like a flag flapping in a gale. The larger blood-vessels were in turn exposed and ruptured. With the increasing loss of blood, a:.d utterly helpless to move or to cry, the poor watchman succumbed to his fate. He

fell upon tho floor, and, welerting in a

pool of blood, gradually lost consciousness. Life could not long remain, aud, though the flood subsided within two hours so that the vibrations ceased, yet the relief came too late. The unfortunate man was found dead the next morning, and no ono at the time could explain the cause. The Coroner's jury returned a verdict that ho came to his death by causes to them unknown. If any moral is to be drawn from this hitherto unknown calamity, it is the danger of singing too much in one key, and if anything can teach the moral with vivid force, "experienlia does it."

A Wooden Leg Under Fire A fashionably dressed matron sat in the rear cabin of a Fulton terry boat. She was accompanied by a thin-legged,

restless-eyed little girl of 4 or therealioHt. A few seat3 away was a man

with a wooden leg. With unerring ru

st-met the child's eve had l'ght-il on

this man. That eye at once became fixed, dilating with concentrated inter

est. The child crawled down from her seat, upon which she had b.en kneeling, i . ... i .... l. ... t 1 :

in oruer to ouo.a ur cyo uciut liwui-

t:es for obf-ervation. ihe object of scrutiny squirmed uneasily in his seat. Turning to the mother tho child ex

claimed in a portentous whisper:

"Oh, ma, look at that man. " "Hush, my dear, you must not be

rrde.

"But ma" (in a very audible whisper),

"do look at his leg."

"Be quiet, Ethel, I tell you," frantic

ally urged the matron in agitated tones.

ino poor man lias lost nis leg. - it s

very mde to notice it."

"What's that one made of?" "Hush ! of wood, mv dear. Look at

that pretty little boy over there. Sec how good he is."

"Did you ever hove a leg iiko tnat,

ma?"

"No, mv dear. Look over there at

that "

"Will no or tncle John or l evtr

hove one, ma?"

"No, dear. "Could ho kick a ball with that leg?" "Hush, do!" "But, ma" At this juncture the man with the

wo idea leg sought, in turn, to create a

bversion. He drew trom Ins pocket a

prettv Utile bonbo;i box ami offered the

child some sweetmeats, ljse child accepted them with some hesitation and

mistrust. Au instant later the boat

reached the slip. The mother rose, and, smiling graciously, said:

Thank the gentleman, lutiiei, ana

say good-by."

iithel ailvaiuvd, uer eyes suit nrraiy iixed uion the object of interest. She

held out tho tips of her littlo fingers.

Oood-lv, sah, m a voice fun

of cmot:o.i; "good-by, you poor, poor man."

The mother serzxl the child bv the

hand and, hurt ying through the Injat, gained the bridge. Xair York Her

ald. Tho History of the Alihibet, "The Origin and History of the Euglish Alphabet" was the t.tlo of an interesting lecture delivered by Gen. Sir John H. Lefroy at tho Workhiginen'a College, London. He said tho source of the English alphabet might be found in the writing, of a people who lived in the hills of Northern India some 3,000 or 4,000 years ngo. As tho time went on, these jMv-plo were, scattered from their native abode, and mauy of them took up their residence in Syria, the people of which country adopted their method of writing. A thousand years later the merchants of Phomioia carried on businets iu every part of tho then chiliKod world; but, finding that trade conl I not b; carried on to any very great extent without some method of coinmnuicntioi, they searched for son:o suitable diameters for writing, and those used by the Syrians, being the best obtainable, were adopted. Tb Phoenicians carried their newly-found alphabet to tho Greeks, from whom it was adopted by tho Rowans. We now used tho Howon alphabet, with slight

j modifications. In passing throngh tbf i hands of so many nations, the alp mbet ha I undergone a great change; thug, when it left the Indian mountains, ea;h letter represented a syllable; but when . it appeared in Bogla'id each letter was j only part of a syllable, and that, only

part of an ideo. Anecdotes of Judge Chase, When rlahnoh P. Chase wae a young man and lived with his uncle, att Oliio Bishop, he was neat-sighted, had an impediment in his speech, fax stormshouldered, shambling and slouch. He was stopped by a grungef one" any, but, walking on in an obsont-nluided way, Chase- did not notice birm "What fool is that?" aked the- granger t(f allother man; "Why, thatfs tlie"; Binhops liephewj" s.id the mau. hij wad, oi course; told to. young Chase, yrlio a both mi or tilled and ardused b it. . He began systematic gymnastics; and Qiie day he felt something give way . in Iii3 side, and he fainted fiway; .but he wWi no longer stoop-shc-u)defed, rind edasnmptive. Whether it cured .liis Revvrsightedness and impediment hi Id sp eslt, the account does not say; While in the Chieinnati College som one set fire to tho benches in one of tlrf rooms. The boys ware' all qUef-'ioned about ft, and all' denied auy knowledge of the affair. Finally Chaw wart washed. "Salmon Chase, do vox. know who set the fire.?" "I do." "Who w it?" "I refuse to t?U." Tl e ci.se was referred to the President, when young Chase said: "I did not itt -nd to insult the professor, but I do not desire to lie. I know who did tiie mischief, but I will rather leave the Kchool thaut3ll." Hp wos reprimanded and excused. While he was at Durluioata, a studeut of whom Chose w s vey foad was suspended, i-s he though;, unjustly. He t Id the facility that if lu friend left ho should go with him. The (acuity did not see fit to reconsider ihiir action, and so th i two boys startel i.way together. They bad not proceeded far when they were ov rtaken by a slessenger sent 'by the faculty, who informed them that they were requested to return. They thought it wos now their ' turn to lvunish the faculty, and .so ther

I WSM.1-. fn l.rtY.1., nvwl mnl A iTI.it Ittflin.

' icg in triumph a week later. On leaving college Mr. Chase was for a long time very hard np. He finally tried to teach a private school in Washington, and wus umuccessful ia that. At length, becoming entirely discouraged, ho applied to bis ur.c'.e, Dudley t'hasi?, who was a Senator, for an ap-po-ntmei.t in the Treasury Dapartmont. "Salmon," replied the Senator, "I onoe got a position for a nephew in the treasury, and it prove I his ruia. Til give you half a doUar to buy a spade t- go out and dig for a living, but I' will not get you a place under the Government." Knlmon said Ls wculd uot trouble him for the half-dollar, and ros, choking wish resentment, to leave. "i'o.i think me harsh.'' said Dudley Chase, parting from him at the door, "but yc u will live to see that this is the best advice I could give you." "Perhaps," syd Salmon, coldly, as ha walked away. Alcoholic Insanity. A eminent lawyer ia Hartford, who inherited a consimptivc txiit, was nerv.uTs and pa si-mate, but of Jiilliant t.ilenb, nmb.tion situluslriausdovout and very teaq er.ite iu all thicgrexeept eating. ' He b.-g-in to use whisfcyfter a s vero attack i f typhoid fever, tad drank thro.; yoais. Aftt r ft 1-jcg cams poigj of poMli.'al shaking, daring which he drank considerably he -suddenly called for paper, wrote a w8L avowed that ho was going to die, di posed of alii he jjorsesseit, retired for the night and awoke the next moniinrf ' wi,h no recollection cf what he hod done. A w?k later he repeated thb testamentary farce with great solemnity and'duriug the succeeding two yooTslte wrote 100 wills, all of substantially' the s ime tenor. After a while tho aspect of his trance assumed the more ablrming description of suicidal impulse, in which he insisted that his wife ransdja with him, and reasoned with .her that, if she loved him as devotedly as she professed, she would be anxious to die at the same moment that he did;" He was filled with alarm the next c!ay Vrhen. the state of affairs was expLimetlto hira, but this aspect did not occur again. On the other hand, it was replaced by jealousy of his wife of morn than Othello's intensity, during the

paroxysm of which he dictated an elaborate statement of hi wrongs to a friend,' and mode a will leaving the woman penniless. These he deposited in the hands of his friend, with s-'card of explanation to be published in t)be mwsjHipow after h's tV-fs?b. He was

finally per&uaded to sle.-p, and, awoke without any recollection of the long tale of secret sorrow that he h4 dictated a few hours before. Pending his next trance he bought a pair of pistols aad ft knife, with a viow to avenge his imaginary wrongs upon an enemy equally imagiuary; but friends interfered at this stage of the new tragedy of Othel- -lo, and he was committed to a lunatic asylum. Delirium followed tiie abstinence from alcohol, but in a few days ho began to improve, tho trances disappeared, and he gradually recovered. New York Timet?.

heard

"ni ni

"m m" instead

Short-Hand Talking, -Among the common errors in the rs-.i of language are these: The mit-

pio'.iouucing of unaccented syllables, (-

of a letter or short syllable, as goiu'for 1 gomg, and ev'ry for. every; and the 1

tunning of words together without giving every one a separata and distinct pronunciation. I kuow a boy who says, " Dont . wanter," when be moans "I doa't wont , to;'' "Whajev say?" when he means " What did you say ?" and Wcere de go?' instead" of " Where did he go?" Sometimes you hear "ilcood" instead -of "if I could r "wilfercan" inat-sad of W will if I can," and "howjerkuowPfSip "Imiv In vnn triirtw'"

And have you never

instead of yes, and

of "no?" Let me give you a short conversation I overheard between two pupil: of OW High School, and see if you never heard anything similar to it: " Warcjergo hunight?" "Hadder skate." "Jerfind th'ice hard'n'good?" "Yes; hard"nough." "Jer goerlone?" "No ; JBill'n Joe wenterlong. "Howlate jorstay?" "Pastate." "Lemuieknow wenyergoagin, voucher? I wantergo'n'showyer howterskate." ' "H m, flfoodn' akato bettern'you Pa sell out'n quit." "Well, we'll tryeraoeVsoefyeroan. Hero thev took different streets, and

their conversation ceased. These

write their com iiosil ions irrami oat

and inisrht nso irood language tad I

it distinctly if tiny would try. Hut they have got into this cureless way of speaking and make no effort get. out of it. Christian et Work. Stubborn Thing "Facts are stubborn thing! said s lawvor to a female witness nn er examimition. "l'es, sir," said the witness, "and so are women; and if jr

get nnvtiiing ons or rae mm let mo know it. "You'll be comsaittod

for contempt," said the lawyer. X

well." said tho witness; I shall '

justly, for I hv the vmm

m every wjwaww"

m

toally,

9W

MOM