OCR Text |
Show u THE HOME SENTINEL BV I. Til J4X. T. O. I. Kilruy lt) ra KVIIVH(irm. K ST, .llana-e- r. JtkK'UV, I'. T. Ball, was a vegetable being a psid'er bo- pug-ilisl- The Ein pros Frederick has an in come of aboat f.'tjO.OOO a year. A COMMITTEE is being formed for the erection of a st ituo to Garibaldi in Paris. Miss of the Helen Gladstone, daughter great English statesman and president Of Newr.hara college, contends that the fall cultivation of womans intellectual powers has no tend Sucy to prevent her from properly domestic duties. The eldest daughter of the prince of ales, w ho is to marry the carl of Fife, said to have but little claim to good .ooks. Her face is long and ungular, A is He Saw Her. Els Wife Burke was. sustained amid the Anxiety and agitation of public lie Every care by domestic felicity. vanishes, he said, the moment I ?nter beneath my own roof. Ilia description of his wife is too ong to quote, but we must give an fpitome of it. Of her beauty, he said t did not arise from features, from She has Tomplexion, from shnpe. ill three in a high degree, but it is lot by these t lint she touches :he heart; it is all that sweetness of tenqier, benevolence, innocence, and which n face can express :hnt forms herbeauty. Her eyes have I mild light, hut they awe you when jheplen-.es- ; they command, like a 1 good man out of otlice, not by luthority, hut by virtue. Her itature is not tall, she is not made to he the admiration of everybody, but the happiness of one. She has til the firmness thatdoesnot exclude ieliency; she has nil the softness that does not imply weakness. A PrimlUr Eating-IIons- e. Elalelr IlaH in Sew Tort Sun. I visited an eating house in Berlin which for primitiveness is rather the statistics on- - this point says, ahead of anything else I have seen in through the American, that the enthe world. The dining table con- tire cost of all the news in the papers sisted of a log in which eighteen in this country is 20,655,000 per cavities appealed at regular inter- year. This is curiously divided. The vals. Each cavity was about the special bureaus, which are principally size of a large soup how Land fastened located in New York, with the right near every one was a big iron spoon to look over the proofs every night attached to the log by an iron of some of the morning jourals, cost chain. The method of dining was 045,000. This is divided up among neither complicated nor prolonged. 100 of the leading provincial paers-ThA table d'hote dinner consisting of business of the Associated Ireso one course, which by the way. was amounts to 1,250,000 yearly, now the only dinner served in the house cost five piennigs about one cent and that of the United States foots nnd it quarter of our coin. The up to 450,000. These two sums, diner enters and planks down his with the for telegraph special outlay money before taking his scat. Then he chooses one of the broad cavities, tolls outside of the organizations, seizes the iron spoon, nnd waits for place the total to all the papers of the waiter. That functionary is 1,820,000 for this department. In combinaddition to this there are to he reckusually a sort of Poo-Buing in himself the duties of cashier, oned the special services of profesproprietor, head waiter, nnd bouncer sional correspondents in adjacent in eliicf. After the guest is seated towns nnd important centers, whose the waiter walks up to him hearing salaries aggregate 1,000.000 betwo steaming cans and asks shortly sides. This makes the total cost of The diner all the service about 2,880.000 per Thick or dear soup? usually after sniffing the fumes of annum. Intlie larger cities of the I the cans and giving the matter it costs all the way from 400 to weighty consideration, makes his 2,200 a week for the working up of ('xision, and the factotum fills up local districts. Mr Camp reckons the nearest cavity with soup, turns this yearlyexpcnseat about 15,600,-0(1on his heel, and washes his hands of This is a, correct analysis of all further consideration. I did not the expense in collecting news nnd gain the impression from a casual the proportion in which one branch inspection that the waiter had ever of the service is related to the other, washed his hands in any other than there are three lines on which this n figurative sense. The diner scoops work proceeds thegnthering ofnews the soup out of the wholo in the log by the local reporter, the news of the with his iron spoon, and having telegraph and the special correspondthus dined wisely and well, is prompt- ent. Each method is closely related ly ordered out by the bouncer in to the other. The statement shows chief. There is no lingering over nn that there has been a great developafter-dinncigar, nuts, raisins, ment of journalism in the matter of fruit or coffee. The expedition ot news. Every effort is made to get the meal is its most striking charac- the news and one combination only teristic, except, perhaps its simplic- paves the way for another in order to keep the lead in this department ity. The greater the of n newspaper. combination the greater the result, Dangers at Billingsgate. the paper that hns the news is It is pleasing to learn from one of nnd the one that the public is most willMr. Lawrence Hamiltons recent leting to pay for. h, Her voice is a low, soft music, not but tho expression is pleasing. Of the ormed to rule public assemblies, hut threo princesses tho youngest is tho to charm those who can distinguish prettiest. They alldress alike and are i company from a crowd; it lias this very quiet in public, but are vivacious id vantage, you must come close to ler to hear it. To describe her body uough when by themselves. lescribes her mind: one is the trun-icriof the other She discovers A camel coach is to bo tried in tho the right and wrong of things; not Darling River district. New South Wules. Tho sultry climate tries ayNoreasoning but by sagacity. person waseverlesscorruptedby so horses severely that the manager of that knowledge. y Siie 1ms a true l lino of coaches thinks that a team of temper, the most extrava-ran- t Df camels will answer farbettr, owing cannot be more unbounded in to their capacity for enduring heat their liberality, the most covetous md drought. Much curiosity Is felt lot more cautious in their distrihu-,ion- . s to the result of this noval venture Her politeness seems to flow in coaching, considering tho h usty a tlier from a natural disposition to ihlige than Irom any rules on the temper of tho ship of tho desert. iubject. It is long before she chooses, but Tennyson was always absent-mindeind the progress of time brings him no then it is fixed forever, and the first relief in this It is told of the lours of romantic friendship rire not vnriner than hers utter the lapse of co on in when full conversathat poet As she never disgraces her fears. tion with Iiobert llrowning lie said, rood nature by severe reflections on apparently apropos do buttes: myboily, so she never degrades her wonder bow lirownings getting on? migment by immoderate or ill exclaimed Iiobert, I am ilaced praises; for everything violent Why, Nonsense, llrowning. replied s contrary to her gentleness of dispo-iitio- n Te niiyson, with almost an attempt at and evenness of her virtue. ters that, in addition to its old familroguish raillery; I know tho follow iar shortcomings, Billingsgate is peNonsense Abont tlio Upas Tree. well, so you can't tell mo you are ho. favorable to the develop, culiarly ill the Year Round. ment of bacteria, microbes, and all When Gen. Lafayette eanio in 1K24 Supernatural, almost diabolical, the elements of Simon Cameron went to Philadelphia putrefaction in which nfluences are attributed to all ac- In tho suit of tho governor of tho slate dead fish are specially rich. The ounts, is so deadly that if a hot to welcome him and at the banquet wnlls, floors and stalls of a fish marwhich was given to tho old hero of tho wind passes over it an odor is carried ket ought, by rights, to be faced with revolution drank champagne for tho ilong which is fatal to whoever some hard, smooth, No one at tho table, Mr. breathes it. Old letters, written from first time. material, such as marble or glazed Cameron used to say, save tho generaria in 1612 by The Turkish Spy, tiles, which will afford no harbor for al and tho host, know what It was. describe a cultivated in n gar-le- n these microscopic abominations. It plant All of us thought it was tho best cider in the city that blasts all that seems, however, that at Billingsgate we had ever tasted, but every ono rrows within ten cubits of its loots. the stulls are mostly of rough wood, wondered why they got so tipsy on it. the wnlls of plain brick, and the lie Fliey call it ill neighbor. floors of porous stone, and all are cir-:le there was withered that a Tua Bismarck-lovin- g inhabitants of around it, while t he tree itself was worn, honeycombed nnd rugged with a village ill Posen have just celebrated rreen nnd thrifty. There is n tradi- age. The whole place is consequentthe completion of their monument to the tion of n poisoner upas tree that ly impregnated with putrefying filth, chancellor, and tho following pompous jrows in tho Island ot Java, from with not merely its peculiarly ancient fish like smell, but also with the inscription grimes tho front of the stone; which a putrid steam rises and kills and To the glorious first chancellor of tho whomsoever it touches. Foerscli, a most objectionable results to such Dutch physician (1783), Bays; Not wholesome fish as are brought into powerful German empire, his highness tree or blade is a I of be it. For all this we have to thank to grass 1riiico Otto von Bismarck, this monuGod nnd Magog, who not only keep in :ound the or valley surrounding ment is dedicated in gratitude and revmaintains. Not a beast or bird or up this outrage on civilization, but erence by tho Parish of AYinitzo, 1889. reptile or living thing lives in the charge rents ranging from 6d. to f)d. On ono side tho words are engraved: ricinity. On one occasion 1600 per square foot for such accommoForged witli iron, cemented with blood, chigoes encamped within fourteen dations as is to be found there. Lonunity grew. It weathered the storms miles ol it, nnd all hut 300 died with- don Truth. of tho time, and cm tho otlu-r- , The falsehood of Wo in two months. Germans fear Gol, and nothing elso in this story is pxposed by Bennett, Big Sturgeon and Big Stories, who says: The tree (upas), while tho wholo world. The is quite innocuous, largest sturgeon ever seen in though the juice Si'EAKiso of the prlnco of Wales nn maybe used for poison; the whole this part of the country was sent up American newspaper man now In Lon- qeighborhood is most richly covered by Otto IVters, of Deer Island, to men may fearlessly Frank C. Barnes. It don says: Personally there is not a with vegetation; weighed 550 walk under-th- e tree nnd birds roosit fellow better walking on Broadway. in pounds nnd was 11 feet long, brunches. its his Durwin.m Loves IIo is an man, and his ac- bf the The largest seen here before this has Hants, perpetuated curate knowledge on all sorts of (1 about BOO pounds. The toersehs fable when he says; Is aim ply phenomenal. Talk On thf blunted honth of it displayed on the sidesight Felt Fpns situ, the hpdra tree of death. M with him on yaehting, hunting, sport walk at Third nnd Morrison streets, is It probable that the fable of the attracted a great crowd, among of any kind, tho theater, current literablighting influence of the upas tree whom were several good single ture or art, and ho is thoroughly has been derived from tho fact that posted. Homo and foreign polities he .here is in Java n small tract of land handed fisli liars. One told about lias at ills fingers ends, and ho Knows bn which nothing can live. This is seeing a sturgeon at the Cascades which was 14 feet long and weighed what is going on all over tho world, mused, not by the fell but IKK) pounds. But, as usual, the upas, man lie would make an ideal editor, lies by emanations of carbonic acid gas who told his story first stood no an indefatigable worker, he'd bo a which are constantly going on. At show, for another fellow came to the the same time it is quite true that front nnd told about a wholo staff in himself. sturgeon he the juica of the upas is a deadly saw up in the Snake river which was An eccentric old gentleman who re- boison. 18 feet long nnd weighed 1,500 cently died in Tyler. Texas, left a sum pounds. And then another fellow of money to be divided among persons The Dreaded Man with flic Lantern. started in to tell about a sturgeon now living in tho South whoso One of the greatest terrors in the he saw in Alaska, but the crowcf got coincident birth was senred for fear that his bil with would regions, says an old time oper-ito- r, strike them nnd all lightning own May 9, 18;5. If every person walked away, is the man with the lantern. a nd the Alaska liar got left. Ora'ron-ian- . who is entitled to a share puts in a claim there will not ho much for each Ho has been the cause ot more need-es- s one. There are in tho Unit d State? conflagrations among oil wells A First Class Risk. at least 400.000 persons who were born than any other thing, and has cost In tho United States in the year 18:5, the region millions of dollars. He is The town officers building in Mon-so- n and of tho.-- o tho number in tho South- jsuallyanemployeubout thewells.nnd is called by The cases out of ten one of experience line Piscataquis Obern States would bo about 1.50,01)0. As- ind server a monument of God's sparing will but he in intelligence, persist suming that the 9th of May of that takingtheclmncosinpnyinga visitnow mercy. When, a yearor two before year was nn averngj one for births, md then tosomegasenveloped tank, the first made a clean sweep the war, there are now living in the United a rrving his lighted lantern with him. States l.lOO persons who were born L'he result isnt always disastrous, on both sides of the main street, this on that day, and 400 of thorn are resi- mt that isnt the fault of the nmn building was skipped by the fiery elevitli the lantern. Usually an explo-tio- n ment, Afterwards a building, which dents of tho Sooth. results. If n destructive firedoes was so near it that the two might be Thf. other day, says a Melborne lot follow tho explosion the tact w ill culled one, was burned, and still it paper, a South Australian magnate ie without precedent. Sometimes escaped. Last winter several called at the government house the die cause of a tire of this kind will ings tiers burned just across the mansion of tho governor of New South lot be quite certain at first, but it street. Whether this not very pre- needs a roll call of the employes tentious looking structure is spared Wales, He sent his card in and, bnl.v bl that particular property and the for the good it lias done, or that waving tho footman aside, said ha of nn account of" the tool which it is yet to do, The Observer Unking lord-hiwould go up and givo his p a louse stock to ascertain the cause. does not undertake to sav. It must surprise. At tho top of the stairs ha There will he one employe short, and have a reputation ns a first class met a young woman and. die number of lanterns will lie less by risk among underwriters. Lewiston In a fine, old gentlemanly, gallant bne. Then it is known that the man Journal. way, chucked her under the chin and with the lantern hns been walking. A Twin to pressed half a crown into her hand, He always disappears on occasions Keelj's Motar, this kind, nnd instances ore rare saying at tho same time: Show me bf An claims to have inEnglishman wiien even a piece of his ear is ever Into tho presence of his lordship, ray vented a combination locomotive ho bund. is But The dead. man little dear. The little dear, with nn with the lantern never dies in the oil bicycle arrangement by which he will enigmatical smile, opened the door of egions. He will le sure to walk move four cars, each Lord Carringtons study and said: eighty igain not long after he has disnp persons, at the rate ofcarrying one hundred to see a Bob, heres you beared, nnd will continue to walk miles an hour. gentleman This will probably and, opening her hand, he's give tna it disastrous intervals ns long as eomeint o market simultaneous! vu ith where bil him show to wells last, half a crown you Philadelphia Press. Keelys motor. Scranton Truth, Are.1 pt gen-rosit- d non-absorbe- de-dar- es sul-jee- nice-looki- ts Cost of bcttlnsr tlie News. From tb Boston Herald. The cable announced recently that Eugene M. Camp, who has collected ,Mr. Deane, one of the agents of the n-i- 0. The Gentlemen of America. There are no class and caste and rank distinctions and no to entitle a man to the name of gentleman n America. Mr. Jones, or Mr. Smith, or Mr. Dinkinspeil, or Mr. Flaherty, it successful in business, can put on their carriage doors and table service, and there is nothing to prevent them. s The means nothing in this country hut snobbery. It does not add to ones standing as a gentlemen; it rather detracts. As there are no noblemen by birth in this land, so there are no gentlemen by right of lineage, except as one does credit in his own person nnd character and conduct to his ancestry. In humble homes can be found men entitled to the name gentleman in the best and truest significance of the word, ns it enters into the life of the republic; nnd in the most sumptuous mansions can be found cads who claim the name because their fathers grew rich in peddling pelts. To be called a gentleman is the proudest triumph a man can win, and to deserve it is to act well your part, there all the honor lies. Cincinnati Commercial. coat-of-arm- s eonts-of-arm- s coat-of-arm- Work. The one sovereign remedy for the ills of life is work work from necessity, or work from choice. The man or woman compelled to work every day, either with hands or head, escapes many of the morbid worries and anxieties that beset the man or woman left free to follow out morbid inusings on the vanity of human affairs, or melancholy analysis of physical ailments which are often the result of lack of constant or definite occupation. No greater misfortune can befall either man or woman than to be born into this world without the pressing force of work, pushing him on to steady endeavor. Detroit Free lress. Lightning Took His Shoes Off. miraculous escape from death was reported this morning. A young man named George Beatz, living in the extreme southern portion of this city, was struck by lightning last night, but nlthoughtha bolt tore the shoes from his feet, the burning and breaking of the 6kin. and the shock he sustained, were the worst result. Only the toe of one shoe with the torn upper was left on one foot. Richmond (Ind.) Cor. Indianapolis A Journal. Either Melts or Shrinks. that gold melts at 2,485 degs. We have known it to run away like frost in the summer sun, if you ever saw such a thing, Science tells us out of doors, when the mercury was the cellar, and the racing on the ice better than at any other time during the whole winter. Doesnt require much weather of either kind to melt gold. In fact the colder the day is tor you, the luster it melts. Burdette in Brooklyn Eagle. down in It is to be presumed that a London paper has made itscomputation with accuracy when it says that all the people now living in the world, or about 1,400, 000, 000, could find standing room within the limits of a field ten miles square, nnd, by the aid ot a telephone, could be addressed by a single speaker. been killed in Congo Free State, had w bile out hunting. nn elephant charge This gentleman was in command of Falls station when it was the Stanley attacked two years ago next month from by the Arabs. On his retreat most of the one had he station that befell thrilling experiences that ever a white man in Africa. Defore the station fell his ammunition had been almost entirely exhausted, and the greater part of his force had skurried down the river, him to his fate. In leaving the night of darkness the Deane and his comrade, Dubois, with three or four Ilaussa soldiers, a wav from Stanley Falls and noiselessly made their w ay westward along the river hunk. It was not long before Dubois, slipping upon a stone at the water's edge, fell into the rapid current and was drowned. Deane was left alone with his few black comrades, and the prospect that they would escape was very slight. They pushed on all night, but in the intense darkness they were able to make their way only a few miles through the thick undergrowth. Thoroughly tired out they stopped nt daylight for a short rest. The rain which had been falling all night ceased, nnd Deane took off his drenched garments to partially dry them. While his clothes were hanging on the bushes, shouts were suddenly hpard n few hundred feet behind the little parti'. The Arabs had their retreat nnd were in hot pursuit. They were so near that Deane could hear the grass rattle as the enemy sprang through it. rapidly following the muddy tracks of the fugitives. Deane had over just time to throw his clothes his arm, nnd start nt full speed through the bush, followed by his Ilaussa attendants. They could hear the shouts of the Arabs who were on their trail for hours, and every nerve was strained to distance the pursuers. At last the noises behind them grew fainter nnd fainter, nnd by noon it was evident that the enemy had grown weary of the chase. Then the hunted little party stopped for a breathing spell. It was a woebegone and almost hopeless band of fugntives. In the mad race for life every Ilaussa had lost his gun, nnd not a weapon of any sort was left in the party. One by one Deane had dropped liis garments. and he had nothing loft except a small military cape, which he threw over his shoulders. In the midst of an African jungle he had not the slightest protection for his bleeding feet, and even if he had saved his boots he would not have dared to put them on, for the tracks would have instantly revealed to any prowling Arab or hostile native that a white man was in the neighborhood. A cannibal tribe, with whom Deane himself had had a sprious fight, lined the river and below, he dared not to appeal them for succor. He was about 300 miles from the nearest white station at Bangala. All that could be done was to struggle down the river, through the dense bush nnd forests, several miles inland, avoiding all the tribes, except one or two that were known to be friendly, and living on whatever they couid pick up that would nfford nutriment. fugntives. A few miles deserted hut the rescuers inv, SJ ' white man. It Dean was absolutely His face was badly swollen, p cr were sunken, and he coul, crawl. lie had no disi ae, i,u. ine had nearly used him up This bitter experience Gid not Ileane from his love of Afri. aa ture. lie remained in The si rv the Congo Free state, and he, of the very few white men who ever perished in B charge of elephants, though linker anj w.writers have given vivid of this danger which hunters times encounter. Si id: tit: i Si ruli y lor w 1 -- , E t ttl F.. nn) Tic ont , '! ec The Man New M ho Lost the Race 1 York Sun. sei I was hoofing it along a higW-iArkansas, my horse having r0"' dead lame und Lein left ii it h afar- er, when a man drivin. horses: n II buggy overtook me and invited g' to ride. I was only too than; ful for the offer, nnd when I gut side him I liked his looks. IIe me a cigar. AYe exchanged name He was informed on politics andeni rent events. It was a span kinghorst lie had, and he kept n steady gait for mile after mile. Tlieonly thiugabo the man that puzzled me was tliewav lie had of looking behind every fei minutes, and I finally inquired; Are you expecting some friend overtake you? Well, no not a friend, he n. ni BU OT loi wi toy t th rn tc Pa plied. Enemies. It maybe that the Sheriff t: m Ei an) his posse will be fools enough to by and overtake me. My friend, I said, after swallowing the lump which suddenly gat!, ered in my throat, is there any good reason why the Sheriff should want to overtake you? Thisis rat er blunt, Ill admit, but if I hurt your feelings I am ready to beg pardon.'' Oh, no harm done, he laughed. I borrowed this horse and rig about two hours ago without the formality of asking, and the owner may hop? to recover it. Don't give yourself te at bf Cl ta I) rh to th any uneasiness, however. I run to horses, and notto highway robbery. Three miles further on, as we rose a hill, he looked back und then pulled up and said: We must part here. The Sheriff and half a dozen others are in pursuit, and every pound of weight will now tell. I am very much obliged for your kindness. Oh, not nt nil. Your society has been reward enough. I would suggest that you enter that thicket and lie close until the party gets by. When an Arkansas Sheriff gets after a stolen horse he means to hurt somebody, nnd his crowd isnt particular who it shoots at. And, say, yon neednt make any report that you Snvey? I won Then 1 t. good-by- . He put the horse on a dead run. L and was out of sightin tivo minutes., I secreted myself as directed, nnd in a few minutes the posse thundered by in a cloud of dust. I followed at a leisurely gait, nnd at the end of two hours came upon them, grouped around a tree. Hanging from a limb was thelifeless body of iny friend of the road, nnd they w ere now waiting for the blown and exhausted For four weeks this white castaway horses to recuperate. in Central Africa, almost naked, and weak with hunger and fatigue wanCapturing A Burglar dered through the solitudes of the From the New York Mail and Express. country. The nights were cold, but the only covering the fugitives had There is a butcher store at the cowere dried leaves, which they heaped rner of One Hundred and Eighth over themselves as they lay down on street and Lexington avenue. About the bare earth under the trees. They found many wild grapes and some 8:30 o'clock last evening, shortly other fruits of the forest, but these after the shop had been closed, a alone would not give them strength of children who stood outside-tolto keep up the hard march. An oc- group the policeman on the beat that casional monkey or a bird would there wers have been a delightful addition to burglars within. The offtheir food supplies, but without icer tried the outer door and found it guns they could not obtain game of locked. Then he placed an ear te any sort. They did what any one the keyhole. Sure enough, there else would do when fighting was a noise inside audit sounded as starvation. Many African against tribes if somebody was trying hard steel esteem fried ants as a great on the safe. The patrolman soon delicacy. Whenever our fugitives had four brave word detectives on came to a prosperous colony of ants the scene. Long. before the liluecoat they laid in a supply. Thenmanvcater-piliar- s and his assistants had made up crossed their path, and these their minds what to do the crowd on treasures were carefully stowed the street numbered a thousand imin a cartridge box. At dinner away time patient men, women and children. the party would build a fire, roast Break in the door, shouted one. their ants and cnterpillers, and disventured Climb over the fanlight, guise these solid viands as much as another. Blaze away with your possible with mouthfuls of grapes pistols, suggested a and other fruit. It was anything bu t spectator. palatable food, but it kept life in their Finally one of the detectives went bodies, though the poor fellows be- through climbed over came so weak that they could travel the fence the next house, entrance to an and gained only three or four miles a da the shop from the rear. His comAt last they came to the Bakumu followed cautiously. At hen tribe, who live along the river, and panions all four got inside the noise seemed the fugitives thought they might safe-I- v to have settled behind the big ice box reveal themselves to these people. of the establishment. AA'ith (Irani I heir confidence was not botraved, their brave hearts and the fugitives were supplied with revolversatand Maud 8. pace, the offa beating provisions which very agreeably icers approached the refrigerator-Yevaried diet. Meanthere was a white figure behind while the Bangala who On this two of the officers fell deserted it. Deane at Stanley Falls had reached ceremony. hornein canoes, and informed Capt. without It was the cat. I oquilhat of the unhappy plight of his brother officer. The Captain at The Fish Tried to Fly Away. once started to the rescue on a little II. P. Braziel brought into our steamer. He found Stanley Falls sta-f- , 1? b!rne(? t0 week a genuine flying fish, caught ns and he ground, by him in Sterretts creek, near any ?L??pLimpn.ts wi'h the Arabs m a point. This was unlike m r,att:lin? flrei,f musketry. It was evi- - flying fish read, we have which dent that Deane had either been that it hadoftwo formed perfectly streeam.rWaSmakinS hi Way down wings in addition to ns,.a fr four legs resembling those of a jarf Then began a search along the spider. The .wings were beautifully man1" t.heunfrtimate tinted like the prisms of a rainboff, but no trace was found white until and when- drawn out of the wat.c Coqmlhat reached the Bakumu, who with nn line v ordinary hook and told him that two days before s some bird-fisof flew a to height they relieved the necessities of the or eight ieet. Fernand ina Mirror. blood-thirst- y s, then-caterpill- office-thi- rs biro-li- - h ke |