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Show THE BLADE. BRAY'S GOLDEN HOLE. Shares Sold for a Son That Are Worth Published Every Saturday at - - NEPHI, - UTAH. s the Directory. u s. i i JFrank J. Cannon. Arthur Brown, Senators t C. E. Alien. Delegate to Congress,..'. STATE OFFICERS. .Heber hi. Wells. Governor. James T. Hammond- Secretary of State JflIH6S Ctilpnifl.il- TrPflSlirGF 3t Morgan Richards, Auditor A. G. Bishop. Attorney General Supfc of Public Instruction. ..John R. Park. C. S. Zane. G. W. Barch. of Court.... Supreme Judges' J. A. Miner, Judicial District. .E. V. Higgins. Judge Fifth Senator, Seventh District....James P. Driscoll. .Adelbert Cazier. Member Lower House.. Office.. Land Bryon Groo. Registrar Frank Harris, Receiver .Land Office.... JUAB COUNTY DIRECTORY. Fred W. Chappell Probate Judge. . . Charles Foote Hugo Deprezin Selectmen.... A. L. Jackman '. J. T. Sullivan Sheriff Assessor and Collector ...D.fW. Cazier Clerk and Recorder Wihn .........William Burton, Thomas .Edward Pike Attorney T. C. Hanford Surveyor. .William Ockey Treasurer 'Eustice Coroner T. Miller Superintendent Schools ! ............. ( : Thousands Some fifteen Natalians formed a syndicate to "exploit this country on their own account,, says Chambers Journal. Some were storekeepers in the colony, some wagon traders and some merely To-Da- y. ! MILLARD COUNTY DIRECTORY. Joshua Greenwood Frobat Judges. Andreas Peterson. John Styler. . Selectmen.. James Gardner!, O. Holbrook. Sheriff, . .. JLlma Green w ood. Assessor .-A. Hinckley Coliector .Thos. O. Calllster Clerk and Recorder . J no. M. Hanson. Attorney...... . .Willard Rogers. Surveyor - m Treasurer ospli D S nil to Sidney Teeplea Coroner, D. C. Calllster Superintendent Schools.. j -- The Board of Education of Traverse CRy, Mich., has forbidden its school-maam- s. to dance. Naturally, these worthy young women are making a kick. waiters on fortune. Only, eleven of them had any money and they supplied the wherewithal for the other four, who were sent up to prospect and dig. After six months of fruitless toil the money was all gone, and word was sent to the four that no more aid could her sent to them.f They were "down on their' luck, when, as they returned to camp on what was intended to he their last evening there, one1 Edwin Bray savagely dug his pick into the rock as they walked gloomily along. But with the one swing he made came a turn in in the fortunes of the band and of the land, for he knocked off a bit of quartz so richly veined with gold; as to betoken the existence of something superexcel-len- t All now In the way of a "reef. turned on the rock with passionate eagerness and in a very short time pegged out what was destined to be known as "Brays golden hole. But the syndicate was by this time pretty well! cleaned out, and capital was needed to work the reef and pro- -, vide machinery, etc. So a small company was formed in Natal under the name' of the Sheba Reef Gold Mining company, divided into 15,000 shares of 1 pound each, the capital of 15,000 pounds being equitably allotted among the fifteen members of the syndicate. . Upon these shares they raised money e enough money on loan to pay for the crushing of 200 tons of quartz, which yielded eight ounces of gold to the ton and at once provided them with working capital. Within a very few months the mine yielded 10,000 ounces of gold and the original shares of 1 pound each ran up by leaps and hounds until they were eagerly competed for at 100 pounds each. Within a year the 'A gold star was stolen at a meeting of small share-capit(15,0.00 pounds) of the Chicago city council the other night the original syndicate was worth i.n the and suspicion naturally points to so market a million and half sterling. many men that the chances of recovery This wonderful success led to the floatare smalL ing of a number of hopeless or bogus enterprises and worthless properties Some of the medical journals are were landed on the shoulders of the strenuously contending that what we British public at fabulous prices. Yet, now call malaria should be called surrounded as it was by a crowd of malague because it is produced by bad fraudulent imitators, the great Sheba Water and not by atmospheric condimine has continued as one of the most tions. We presume that quinine will wonderfully productive mines in South continue the favored specific whatever Africa. Millions have been lost in the doctors may decide about the swindling and impossible undertakname. J ings in De Kaap, but the Sheba mountain; in which was Brays golden hole, Thrift, said the youth with tike has really proved a mountain of gold. downy lip, who thought himself can aphorist, "is contagious by examples The Heart of Gotham Even so, said the corn-fe-d philosoThe real heart of Gotham, the brains pher. "Turn loose tw or three right and genius of the metropolis, are to be thrifty persons in a community, and found in a very small section of this big pretty soon the others have to be thrif- city, writes a New York .correspondent ty to keep from starving. Indianapoof the Pittsburg Dispatch. Between lis Journal. L4th and 40th streets are found the men who write our dramas, who make our The great Siberian G1 way is maksongs, who compose the music for our. ing good progress. Lastjear 863 miles operas, whose pens are responsible for of track werelaid.bringmg the terminus many of those bright little bits of to Krasnoyarsk, a distance of 3,074 humor thatj lighten our lives, .whose miles east from St. Petersburg, , and brains invent of the ideas that thus completing a continuous mail men utilize.! Itmany no is exaggeration to f route from the to the bank of capital that this section is responsible for r the Yenisei river. Of the 4,572 miles say bit of the new or original from Chelyabinsk, the starting point nearly every matter that is produced in this literary near the Europe-Asi- a border, to Yladi-vostonot actually composed in on the Pacific, 1,658 miles of city. If it is world the little designated it is there track have been laid, besides the branch critically examined, revised, amended of 150 miles from Chelyabinsk to Ekaor corrected and put into the shape in terinburg, which is also completed. which it is finally given- - to the public. On Broadway, between the streets The following dispatch comes from named, one is bumping Pender, Neb.: "Three Indians on the against men, and constantly women who are reWinnebago reservation secured a jug a of whisky and, after imbibing, stripped sponsible for good deal of the music and of laughter the whole country. for an war dance. When they had exhausted themselves they A View of Heaven. sunk into a drunken stupor and wejre I doubt whether there is any popular fouDd dead this morning. This is Idea of heaven now prevalent among the proof positive that the War dance is not suited to the modern Indian. It people. I know scarcely two persons' might have, done very well for his an- - that have the same conception of heav- cestors and the romantic braves that en. Rev. B. Fay Mills. frisk about the pages of Coopers novels, red man is not buflt but the NOTES OF THE DAY. on the same plan and should attempt nothing more complicated than a polka Queensland, in Australia, had a rainor a two-stefall of twenty-si- x inches from one storm lately. The aggregate of the public debt of The Lewiston Sun hears of a man who has made $80,000 from, the liquor the United States on Jan. 31 was, according to the treasury statement, business in Maine during the last $1,687,180,788. This total includes certwelve years. Edison prophesies that in ten years tificates and treasury notes offset by an amount of cash horseless in the treasury, equal carriages will be the rule and vehicles 'the exception. amounting to $562,542,773. The aggreinterest-bearin- g The of horses and are used on the which gate debt amounted to 5, Kennebeck ice field are so accustomed which represents a net decrease to dropping through the ice that they ;for the month amounting to $687,446;-- i dont seem to mind it. 50. The certificates and treasury notes Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, whose show a decrease of $5,480,900, and by eightieth birthday was publicly celeclassing these as debt a net decrease is brated a few months ago, has decided The gold holdings of the to take music lessons. shown. A woman in South Kingston, R. I.,, treasury amounted on Jan. 31 to and the silver holdings to who is just 20 years old, is the mother $505,421,818.68. The gold reserve had of six children. Two pairs of twins fallen on that date to $49,845,507 and the were born to her before she was 16. net cash balance amounted to Portugal will celebrate next year the an cash aggregate leaving four hundredth anniversary of Vasco de balance In the treasury at the end of Gamas setting out on his voyage the month amounting to $171,591,778,27. around the Cape of Good Hope to India. The mammoth steamship on the This represents a decrease of $6,435,-423.6- 5 for the month. The government stocks in Harland & Wolffs yard at receipts for the month of January Belfast is to be called the Pennsylvania, In point of size It will eclipse anyamounted to $29,237,670.21, which rep$3,000,-000 not from far resents an increase thing now afloat. as compared with the, preceding Italians believe that to avert the evil comas over $1,400,000 and eye It is sufficient to hang anything red month, month colored over the bed or to wear a red pared with the corresponding rerevenue The internal coral, but white colors do not exercise of last year. cusfrom a similar spell. those exceeded ceipts, which them below fell From the time of the deatlof the late toms in December last, . in and archbishJanuary by more than $5,300,000, Irish Protestanttillprimate his burial is of the bells of them between Armagh op the hut disproportion Catholic Roman the of cathedral at of last year. leas than it was in January were tolled. The expenditures for the month Armagh ts The otter Is becoming more rare each amounted to $32,529,340.65, which as an increase of over $6,700,000 year. Anthony Dokey caught one in a compared with December last, tut a trap a few days ago in Black river, at decrease of nearly $2,020,000 as comIt weighed tweny-flv- e Lee, Mich. 1S05. pared with January, pounds, and the pelt is valued r,t $15. . al . , t , , ck t old-fashi- on I up-to-da- te p. j j horse-propell- ed non-interest-bear- ing $1,124,-638,01- 1 , $99,-93,356.- $121,-746,271.- 57 27, , rep-rer-m- j The dude detective is a much more Important personage in swelldom than formerly. Since the theft of $G0,000 worth of gems belonging to Mrs. I. Townsend Burden, and a score or more scarcely less important robberies, the smart women who wear $100,-00- 0 worth of jewels at the various society. functions have felt more than nervous, But the dude detective isSnot of a recent creation. He-ha- s always been a more or less important part of the gaieties of fashionable life, but just now he is treated with consideration, as fine As if he were an English duke All this is pleasing to on a wife-hun- t. the dude detective. He of the vanity feels that he is the.eq'nal of the millionaire, or of. the most expert cotillion leader of the season. Beautiful belles smile on him, ravishing matrons look kindly on him, and the heads of solid families treat him with courtly civility. It must not be inferred, from this, that the dude detective is an amateur in his. business. On the other hand, he is the best of his kind. Usually be Is the cleverest man in the central office of the regular police force. At times men belonging to agencies are hired to do the work, but as a central office man can be had for the asking, the outside men are rarely called upon. The men detailed ' by Acting Capt. OBrien, the present head of the detective force, to do society work, are always selected because of their broad knowledge of criminals.' They are the men who have been long enough In the service to know ail the great frauds of the past generation and with a memory retentive enough to recognize one of the gentry in less than no time. They must always possess another qualification, and that is, the art of wearing an evening suit gracefully and to appear thoroughly at home amid the splendors of society. There are some very able men attached to the central office, but they would be of no earthly use at a Patriarchs ball or at an. Assembly dance. In the first place, it is Impossible for many of the detectives to discard the "sleuth look, an earmark which would frighten an experienced crook into a hiding place in a jiffy. , Then there are a number who would be painfully ill at ease in a dress suit and surrounded by a bevy of gorgeous-ly-gbwne- d women and fashionable men. They would be so overpowered that , their .professional usefulness would amount to nothing. Fqj; these reasons! the dude detective is quite a superior person compared with- the . ordinary sleuth. In the old days of the central office, when Byrnes was at the wheel, two men, McCIoskey and Crowley, were known as the society men. They were always fashionably dressed, and looked like Wall street men rolling on the high wave of prosperity more than had both made anything else. They thief-takerenviable records as and had been sent to all parts of the world to brin& back criminals apprehended In foreign countries. But the advent of Rooseveltism in the police department shoved them into the back- and keep moving about, clad in an ir- PHASES OP ' DIVORCE. reproachable evening suit. . It is trying to any mans1 equanimity to move about a crowded ball room LAWS IN ALL COUNTRIES FOR floor, filled with the chosen of the fashionable world, and concentrate the UNDOING THE MARRIAGE. mind upon thugs and criminals. But the work lias its compensations, for it is a well known fact at headquarters Queer Burmese and Chinese Customs that the detectives who are throjvn in Distinguished Itomans Who Cast Off with the rich men of the metropolis Their Wires Spouses of Julios Caesar have benefited by it in many ways. aid Mark Antony. t. Byrnes freely acknowledged that much of his wealth was gained by speculating in Wall street on inHE QUESTION formation furnished by wealthy men seoms to of divorce whom he had benefited . be agitating pretIt is at the large public balls where those ty nearly every civthe fashionable wld mixes with the ilized country in outside the charmed circle that lies. By the world just now, V greatest danger of theft jQl U $10 or $15 on a ticket, any one says the can gain admittance, and if it were not The French World. for the horde of detectives stationed statisticians have at the doors and throughout the bouse tackled the subject many criminals would doubtless take and show the exadvantage of the opportunity and reap tent to which dia rich harvest. There are many prew ho sexes sentable crooks of both vorce has grown in France. From 1884 could pass by the unsophisticated as ;to 1894 applications for divorce in genuine swells. But it is another mathave exceeded 45,000, of which ter for them to run the gauntlet of half Francehave been granted. 40,000 M. ?lNaquet, in1 urging the passage of the divorce law in France, optimistically predicted that it would prevent many ruptures and that married couples would remain more firmly united from the;fdct that theird tie would not be compulsory. Unfortunately exactly the contrary was the result, The first year after the law was passed showed 1,700 divorces; last year there were over 8,000. When separations alone were permitted they only reached 3,000. While in 1882 the proportion was only 1 to 1,000, today It is 25 in 1,000. From the history of divorce it appears that the proportion of unhappy marriages increases from the day diEx-Su- p en-pendi- ng New-Yor- j j , vorce is legalized in a country. It appears among people of the highest civilization at the period of their decadence: from that time can be dated a retrograde movement In morals. The Bible says that If a1 man, after marrying a woman and living with her, conceives a disgust of her from some shameful fault he shall draw out a decree of divorce, and, putting it into the womans hands, shall send her out of the house. This was not always easily accomplished, because the majority ,of people did not know how to write, and the Levlte or priest whom they consulted could refuse to grant their application if !he saw fit. In Egypt the law authorized' no divorce except in certain cases. Infidelity was punished severely; the man received 1,000 stripes and the womans nose was cut. In Babylon a public auction of all the girls of a marriageable age was held once a year. The untying of these knots was even more simple. Confucius, writing on Chinese laws, established seven causes of repudiation, among which it appears that the wife could be put aside for excessive gossip or for not getting along with her father or mother in law. But there was this proviso: "The husband is advised to retain her if she will wear mourning for her mother in law for three years. As a matter of fact, the Chinese resort to the divorce courts very little and they hold a widow marrying a second time in the utmost contempt. This custom is somewhat similar to that oL the Hindoos in former years, when the widows flung themselves on the burning woodpiles upon which their husbands bodies' were be! ing consumed. . India recognizes certain causes for divorce. Up to the commencement of this century a childless Hindoo was permitted to lend his wife to a brother or other male relative in order to have children.' In Burmah the women when r , , ' s, ground.! k Enjoying Life. a dozen men whose Iligli lives have been devoted to the work of thief taking. How Thugs Are Warned, Several of them try it, but they have no desire to go further when one of the detectives steps up and whispers In the crooks ears, "You had better not. go In there; you might get into trouble, you know. It is pretty well understood In thugdom that they are not wanted in fashionable circles, and few of them try it. Once in a while a crook thinks that he or she has been forgotten by the police, but the mistake is soon made apparent. Two years ago the notorious Sophie Lyons, gorgeously dressed, and wearing $50,000 worth of diamonds, drove up to the Metropolitan opera house in a faultless equippage. She was smothered up In furs and passed the guardians at the door. She had an expensive seat in the orchestra and enjoyed of the opera, when one about of the detectives roaming through the house discovered her. He lost no time in making his way to her chair and informing her that she would have to -- I i i one-ha- lf rules of virtue which h'.l ror centuries. Civil raarric; Ti ligious marriages were cut into by divorce, which such an extent as to alrno.t r- marriage. Nearly every cauc3 Jit mitted infidelity, sicknK, drunkenness, poison (which Ve ' prevalent), going into the church ' army and, lastly, mutual con?cnTV husband bad the right to vorce if the wife obtained fahT (' to' the cellar, or if she went pi m5 to the theater or circus to the of her household duties. All these!' reasons were but prt after all. The virtuous Cato (i; ; a divorce in order to marry v ? Scilla remarried with a woman 'V-h- e met at the circus; Cicero re;ar his wife to take Pubilla, whose ri7j would enable him to pay off all t creditors; Caesar and Antony contra ed four successive marriages; went as far as five. Juvenal fet j 7 tified in saying that faithful4 f;oj were as rare as white crows Cr as we say , y. So-and-S- ct to fl 1 1 to-da- y, 240,000 POUNDS OF CRACKER Immenge Dally Output of the New vork Bakeries. The great Industry which is carried on by the manufacturing bakers cl New York city is very extensive, sa j the Mail and Express. An expert ll this business, in talking with er, maide the estimate that no a report less than $20,500,000 would represent the amount of capital invested in this business There .are two great baking firms alor in New York, each of which i3 capita;. Ized at $10,000,000, and there are an number of smaller firms, including tlis small bakeries,.! with a capital of , 000 to $100,000, which turn out a limits quantity of goods, mostly of a spec.a' $5t,-- kind. The manufacture of biscuit and crackers is practically a new Industrj in this country, but in the past ten or fifteen years the manufacturer's of Ke York have made the discovery th they can turn out just as good cracWs and biscuit as are produced in England, which is a great biscuit-eatin- g country and thfe home of the cracker and bis manufacturers. The reasons given by the manufacturing ki-ers for their great success in New Tort are that the city is the easiest place ii this country to get supplies and alsr It Is, the distributing point for a larg amefunt of busipess. Newf York cit; alone calls for so many goods each yea. work that one of the $10, 000, ing night and day would be quite ue able to supply the home market. 0nt plant of very large proportions in Net York is able to convert 1,200 barrels t flour Into crackers in one day. ThJ means 240,000 pounds of crackers. Th capacity of another large plant is 1SV 000 pounds of fancy goods, like ging" snaps and wafers, In one day. (to large bread bakery has been known cuit-produci- i j ng 1 f j ! , 000-plan- ts i ti , take 600 barrels of flour in a day a: turn it into breaa. Travel by Dog; Power. F. D. Kennedy of Grand Forks, I N. D, around th Jj j f ! f b: b( 4 I;' o. . to-da- cr ( , , jewel-bedecke- IN J ' is getting ready for a trip world, and expects to start within thin; days. On the trip he will be accom panied by a friend, W. H. Whitnall The journey will be made in a neatani! serviceable bicycle wagon drawn four pairs of big Newfoundland dog' each weighing from 60 to 200 poundu The stafcr wiH be made from Grac Forks in1 a light sleigh, which will used as far as possible, and after tha j the bicycle wagon, with its aluminiui box, will be brought into service. Tber the route will be direct to New. Tod where steamer will, be taken for Liver j and the principal points in tt marrying do not take their husbands pool, th names, but retain their own, with the British isles visited. From therecitif addendum of "wife of This trip will be made to the principal one makes it convenient for them to assume of the continent, then on to the i'z their previous status in public knowl- And the shores of the Pacific. edge when they come to be divorced, Falsehood. as they are very likely to be, for diLiars are the gpths and vandals of se vorce is easy in that Country. If a Burmese wife and husband quar- fciety; they take delifht in distort . . Now the work is divided among a leave the indignant fashionSophie played variety! of men, some of them not so able to woman perfection, but the dewell chosen as in the former days. tective was confident of his poaitlon, During, the sason, this class of work and after a few minutes of excited requires considerable attention on the versation the Lyons woman gathered part of the central office, for if a clevher furs and left She might haye er crook were allowed to smuggle him-es- lf up no wrong, but it was safer Intended d into ah assembly of honor the police department the for women and deftly gather up a not to allowof her to mingle with pocketful of the gems, the scandal wealthy people. Too many temptawould be great, and some official heads tions would be placed In her-wawould surely be decapitated. The society detective is called upon TOOK IIIS TIP FROM A DREAM. to officiate at fashionable weddings, at large banquets, at dances and receptions. He is always the first to ar- The Odds and the Jockey Were Correct, Bat the Horse Lost. rive,, and while the guests are troopa He and the other man were talking, ing in he takes up comfortable position near the door, where he can scru- and he was telling the other man how tinize the faces of all those who enter. to bet on race horses. I was eating an Nearly all the Four Hundred are known !by sight to the experienced oyster, drinking a glass of cider, and dude detective, both the men and the noticing that they had big and little women. When the strange face ap- "dogs on the slot machine. pears he makes a mental note of it, "How much was ye afther winnin rel and, determine to separate the wife, and later asks some one he (knows who asked the other man, as he who always does all the marketing, the lady or gentleman Is. shoved the remnant of a fried oyster goes out and buys two little candies of Keeps Up With, the Fashions. He always follows the fashions care- dotvn his throat and reached for anequal length, which are made especially fully, so as to appear exactly like the other cracker. for this use. She brings them home. men in the smart set. If duty calls nota was "I da win, the reply. Sheand her husband sit down on the him to an afternoon wedding he wears "Funa I da da bed, floor, place the candles. between them ina sleepa ting. a long frock coat, gray trousers, pat- an ina da dream I seesa de board, an and - light them simultaneously. One namea wasa of de horsea, by candle de dare stands for him. and the other for gar. Ilea forty da onea.: I , seea de her. The one whose candle burns out namea of de jock. He rida de horsea, an he sayea to me to pla'ya de horsea first riseg and goes out of the house straighta, de placea, an da show. I forever, with nothing but what he or tella him yes, an I goa out an I playa she may have on. The other takes all de horsea straighta, de placea an de the property. . show. I winna de mona in de dream, looks fair enough on the facu an wakes up, an am sorry de dream, of This but it often happens that the It, an he wasa forty de one. I seea de on wife her way home with the candles namea of de jock, an it wasa de sama a takes an I I asa de dream. tiny scraping from the bottom got sixteen dol, on an of one de of de straighta, them. A very little' will be put eighta gita on de place enough. If the husband and the house forty de one; Den I puta four dol at a twent de one, an de four are empty of pretty much everything moreaata six to one toa show. I heara but children she takes the shortened de man saya day off a, but I pay no de candle and walks out free and conattent. I hold ontoa de ticks an I tent. If But the house is well furnished wait fora de cash. Thlnka gota de cinch. Nota gota. De mana he calla and the husbands possessions are conde out data horsea whata de won. siderable he gets the short candle and DeD he calla out de oneea de placea, does the walking, i an he calla de out de onea data de In Greece the main idea In marryshow, an I nota gota. De horsea data ing was to bring children into the I de dream he cornea ina de fourth. I world males especially for the good saya de hell, an I cornea de way. ef the hence the great facility country; Then the other man ordered another offered for e race-horsthe of breaking of the marriage glass beer, and when th case in oracle had drawn it tie of on iced It sterility. The legislathe counter, he said, 'bCTsstpurnful tors recognized their right of divorce. tone : 'At Athens divorce could be obtained On Duty in 41e Hallway. "Wanta ge oyst? ent leather shoes, a sprig of by demand of one Cf the parties or by "Oi blave Oi will, was the in his buttonhole, the. finest mutual consent. The case was argued Commercial. linen, a silk hat of the correct block, a tribunal. before The parties on beand spotless gloves. He always refreed were ing expressly forbidden to ceives plenty of attention, for many of Now. Methuselah Its marry with a person younger than the young bloods know him and think "Dont you think, ventured the new themselves. it real devilish to talk to a detective Grecian wives convicted and be on terms of intimacy with him. woman, as considerately as possible, of breaking the seventh commandment But it is at a Patriarchs ball or an that ycu are pretty old to be still serv- were put to death, after, having their Assembly dance that the dude detec- ing as the subject of jokes? hair cut off and their heads covered tive is at his best, both professionally little lamb with his hot ashes. Marys shrugged and otherwise. These functions are alThis barbarous custom was also ways attended by many distinguished shoulders. he I do, answered, with warmth. adopted in Rome after the conquest of foreigners, who may be visiting the city, and naturally there are more "Why, every time Im dragged into Carthage and Corinth.- - The Romans, strange faces than usual. The detee-,U- t one of these things I feel positively being masters of the world, only must be on the alert all the time sheepish. Detrot Tribune. thought of reveling in their riches, and cut themselves adrift from the austere JN -- y? -- J . lilies-of-the-vall- ey reply.-Louisvi- lle i I i: name of trud ; of A1 .they are hateful in the sight mighty God, and they are to be ; and debasing the fair spised by all truth-lovin- g James McLeod. men.-E- f? PEN AND INK A paper is to be published in Madrid wbi La Tela Cordata, printed linen; after1 it has been read the serve can put it in his pocket, where it the purpose of a handkerchief.' under Judge Albion W. Tourgee has w on taken a crusade against books with cut leaves, which he pronounce senseless and snobbish fad. Dr. Caesar Lombroso, the gret elasbe; ; jCrearn nd be t To nt cr; 1 3 has been it of lfier r cording to report, convicted thority on criminology, 2,500 francs T. Elys v Richard Some of Prof. on sociological questions bave piracy and fined f translated Into Japanese 'and 8in economics has been printed characters for the blind. Realm, an EngUrtl" started a few months ago witn flourish, by .Lady Colin Camp tna suspended. ' It is expected be revived by other Pares; jut Prof. John Fiske reiterates s in the truthfulness of the Pocahontas and John y0t the story cannot be doubted by who honestly Investigates it. There Is no other workreia Pr of which so many copies pi . almana Chinese as the nually a nionoPe!j, printed at Peklr and Is P the emperor. It not only t weather but notes the days. ertaklE un lucky for beginning any for marrying, and for of James Annand, 'late editor Newcastle Leader, rose smiths forge to the he leax Ik;i pf While shoeing horses a rrtf and higher mathematics, riences in London journal the foundation of Barrie The ' L . T I t! o - i f I M v Mans Single.1 tt r I . y j |