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Show from LESSORS conclusions from fight. DRAWs aHAN I - BIQ FISH, SMALL ROD. Extraordinary Catch Made by a Sportive Resident of Santa Cruz. Al Cumming had an encounter with a huge shark at Santa Cruz Sunday, says the San Francisco Examiner. Cumhad a. boat and was out engaged Better than Defense and ming for salmon. Offers there was a Suddenly ,"port,"t i at his line almost that Ep,w A r,r jerk capsized Th,m cruer, the boat. The' fish came to the surface loniSe andt his fins showed that he was a big shark. Cumming toyed with him for a hb c.u while, and as the shark felt the sharp devotes Century prong of the hooks forced into his considerable atten- mouth he made a plunge, going down tion to the battle of fully one hundred feet, and reeling out the Yalu. This en- about five hundred feet of line. gagement is im-- x had only one hundred feet more portant not only for on the reel, and if the shark had accomits decisive hearing plished that distance he would have " B" rrent Cum-min- g . the' contest between China and Japan, but because it was the first one modern ironclads The Centary arms upon ht , model the V nf S first .authoritative the battle that has ac-- pr yet Philo published,1 .written by American brave rHcGiffin, the commanded the Chinese Who illus-te- d Se-shicjhen'Yuen. This is with photographs taken during as. by actual engagement, as well to the Jose showink the damage done A. Capt. A second paper, by Vowels on tiie greatest authority t Mahan, the. Lessons discusses tacticst Vfival The following Yalb Cn the Fight." article: an extract from his f It anpear3 from Commander McGif-narratithat both Chinese and or acci-Tajanese were led, by design and to accumulate projectiles immon deck in advance of ediate demands a practice greatly fcut is the deprecation imprecated, Offense is better, than sound? wholly Rapid fire with some risk is defense. with no risk ytter than slower fire p f u 3 ve w escaped. fBut he was exhausted and came to the surface again. Then, with the skill of an experienced angler, Cumming played the line carefully, and, after great effort, got the shark alongside of his boat. Both the shark and his captor were winded. The boatman killed the shark with one blow of his boathook. Mr. Cumming caught the shark with a twelve-ounc- e salmon rod and a linen salmon line. The fish was more than five feet in length and weighed fully one hundred and fifty pounds. It Is the largest shark ever landed there with a hook and line, and its capture was due to the perfect knowledge of fishing that Mr. CumThe contest lasted ming possesses. one and hour, just exciting as it was for Mr. Cumming;, in was also as much so for the onlookers. Fujily twenty boats were in the vicinity. am-muniti- on that is from this particular J,rcebecautee the slower fire yields j English News for Wheclwomcn. You may remember that a lady bicyclist was stopped by !a policeman in Holloway who wanted to take her name . ; and address. That lady cyclist has lit a candle in England that will take a -- lot of putting out, says the New Budget, for she has brought an action against the constable and won it. The Highgate bench have decided that the action of the constable in stopping the lady was an arrest, and that an arrest Is an assault,, and that, therefore, the constable must be fined a shilling and sn advantage greater than On board a foreign not long ago, the Captain fi to me that in providing for action a certain number of Ley accumulated l! "oinds ten, think near each rapid costs, which seems to! mean that it, is a gun. - Dint you consider that illegal for constables to arrest people. 7 risk? I asked. Undoubtedly, This is strange news. , replied; qut not so great a risk as Lit the enemy should fire faster than Tae enemy risk-avoide- e ?. Collingwood crew that if they could broadsides in as three no enemy could resist Any minutes, Farragut noted with emphatic in 1839, when the enmendation ted the castle of San "nch attac at Vera Cruz, that .in de Ulufc. habitual ;y y kept a great think I he Was right. i to tell his well-aim- i--e Se-T- , ed -- -a. lco: s, an ner 3 ar THEATRICAL NOTES. Marie Stuart, an opera by Levallo, i , num-accumula- ted will be produced at Rouen. Thais , Sibyl Sanderson will sing in at the Paris Opera in October. Patti has been on the concert and years. operatic stage for forty-fiv- e Silvet1 The King is being played in the Deutsches Volks Theater in f Berlin. racks in shot Arthur Nikisch has been appointed deck a practice many naval conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic bst. or r Vers still The in- concerts for the next season. remember. duction of shells explosive projec-- s Buenos Ayres has thirteen theaters gave pause to this habit, for dire-- J where music has a prominent part. CO experiences had' taught that a shot, They are all in active operation. or hollow, striking one would ex- Minnie Palmer will arrive in this fie many near by. Nevertheless, the country in October, beginning her n T:ulty of insuring rapid supply at Thanksgiving week in Phila; time, even the quietest, and the delphia. adfal liability to severance of the William Farron accompanies Ofga of Nethersole to America next fall. His . .a cf supply by the casualties . suggest jthe imperative necessity paternal was in accumulation. This should be so David Garricks company. rued and to the so proportioned Louis Harrisons first appearance on "e of fire possible to the gun as to In'the stage was made in tragedy. In s the mininjtum of risk that must be 1875 he was a call boy at the Walnut n if the full efficiency of the battery Street Theater in Philadelphia. to maintained. Mme. Calve Is to sing in La Navar-rais- e Especially is this at the Paris Opera Comique after "aw for the beginning of an at least as regards the all; the performance will be In October, :e skip, tfie most pregnant of the .ai just before she sails for America.. result. As regards systems, the It cf this episode is a drawn battle, NOTES OF THE DAY. ch may bej summed up broadly as Salt water is slightly heavier than successful resistance of two ships, vered, with-joint displacement of fresh wster. .A copperhead snake four feet long tons, tq five ships, partly pro-v- i, cf 19,000 tons. This, as far as was killed in Brooklyn the other day. r 3, favors the view that a given In China, if a man loses his temper v:t of tonnage in one. or in a few in public he is liable to five days imIS. t imps possesses decided advantage prisonment. r the In Peru and Bolivia wheat is cultisame, or even a greater divided among several. This vated 11,000 feet above the sea; in the T is also in strict accord with the Alps, 3,600 feet. ril teachings of man in Georgia There is a warfare, that force rated under one command is who can plow, jerk and goad a mule, efficient than that disseminated swear. and smoke a pipe all at once. v several. This conclusion must Immigration to this country for the course, he pressed to absurdity, fiscal year, ending with June, was only : mpered,! as all practical conelu-- J 276,136, or less by 35,476 than last year. It fe, ty moderation and discretion, a London has decided to convert into it 'a may consider one 10,000-to- n bo' ship parks and playgrounds for children the ? taaa two of 6,000 without want-c- f 173 disused graveyards in that city. 20,000 tons at all, for The estimated age of the dragon tree Our forerunners found authentic; like the reship absolutely superior to of Oratava (not Y of the Soma tree) i3 5,009 vat:n-rf- or the latter to attack corded age r of 3 j d sea-wo- Ve, f great-grandfath- er 3a , a ac-i-usna- lly, 1 -" one-arm- t- - ed -- 8 " 9 S c -- f -- suffi-f3'on- Tt " c s. years. A hotel Is to be built on High Knob, the and only a mountain in Virginia. From its baluvdy wras exceeded in size. thcr hand, this episode was conies guests will be able to see into because 45 (more or less) five states. gu&s got the better of Ohio has the greatest number of penguns unsupported hy any sioners 99,837; New York is second, buns at all. They did so, with 89,642, and Pennsylvania third, 'd, because they destroyed with 89.387. -yl cf the ship, either direct-- . The amount paid in the form cf incomits power of terest to shareholders in public somehowever brave, panies in England annually is M up against fire of a eer-'1-- thing like $1,100,000,000. and .when such a cbndi-- In the famous cellars of the Hotel da and sustained, they are a dozen Ville, at Bremen, there were fr the time being. been have which cases of holy wine, preserved for 250 years. MUter of the Fore. corn crop for this, year is Indianas u i amusing incidents bushels, which t our first examination of estimated at 150;000,000 15,000,000 bushels greater than Cel. John W. Ela, the is about vd civil service reform. I the highest previous year. n giraffe, For the hide of a ifient which str mo Africa in after sought .hich is greatly 'ularly fanny. We were for native the sandal making, whip and ,7, ow patrolmen through, hunter to $25. gets from $15 fumed and fretted Lowa if he were An Armenian recently died at actually H. At las t I r,le d him ell Mas 3., and his friends, having mo J a corner Is a Many? photograph, stood him pdn F),v loohc-, for and had his picture taken in that way. t o, but in ilj r there Tho longest game of chess cn record fin-n of returning r, non took between five and six years to i in a triumphant tjr .h. One player was in England ' wta king on lh- - i mhk crie in Australia, and the gams piayel ly mail. usiiered folly yet the 74 was battle-shi- i p, effi-Me- n, 7; ..v1 - 11 full-grow- . , 1 l . 1 1 NEW WOMAN IN EAST. I Such Thing: Will Be Possible by Aid of a New Invention. CLERK DETECTED BROCKWAYS MONEY. rp! AnoAt? The Indy bird, so quaintly r?zf I that it is hard to find two cf them jmt alike, is one of the gardeners Urt a Frize Beauty friends, yet hundreds of them ara kill' I ATas the Dip because people in their ignorance dcp.t The Only Flaw Found of a Crosstree In the Picture of a know what a helper they have in tilt buxom little insect. A few days ago l Ship. the writer visited a friend who hts & full of all sorts of flowers, arj NCE A COUNTER-feite- r, garden hack of these there Is the kitchea fir-de- n, RIOO Bill III A Vais always a counterfeiter, i3 an axiom of the United States Secret Service. Never w&a this more thoroughly illustrated than in the case of Yil-liaE. Brockway, head conspirator in the recent counterfeiting schemes detected. His entire life has been spent in the attempt to amass a million dollars at the governments expense.; Now, at seventy-thre- e, with a long penitentiary term staring him in the face, he has not given up hope. Should he live and get out, he will likely return to his nefarious occupation. No counterfeiter was ever known to reform. Punishment in prison doe3 not make them good, por can- they break away from the temptation to invest a few thousand dollars and float a million dollars In queer vras an ' accident It money, which prevented Brockway from becoming a millionaire In 1880. He had got out a counterfeit bill on the Pittsfield (Mass.) National Bank. In the language of the Secret and it Service, it was a beauty, dewithout hands passed through many was tection. This before the days of silk fibre paper, and fine engraving only was required. The scheme came to grief through a woman. This time the woman was a treasury clerk. A woman detects a counterfeit quicker than a man. She looks at it and declares, That Is a counterfeit! Very often she cant pick out the flaws which proclaim it to be bad, but a sense of touch call it instinct if you will leads her to believe( the bill is bogus, and she is right. In 1880 the Brockway $100 bill came to the treasury from a New York bank for redemption. The woman clerk caught it, investigation followed, and the only imperfection found was a slight dip in the angle of a crosstree in the picturq of a ship. Otherwise the bill was as perfect as any turned out by Uncle Sam. New York city was found to be the headquarters' of the gang that was placing the Pittsfield counterfeit, and the large denomination of the bill caused suspicion to fall on Brockway, who has always delighted in putting out big bills. Brockway was found to be in close acquaintance with Charles H. Smith, an engraver for the American Bank Note compahy. James B. Doyle was also spotted as a confederate. All were watched. One day Doyle bought a ticket to Chicago. Secret Service men went with him. They arrested him In Chicago, opened his valise, and found therein, not the Pittsfield notes, but $300,000 in United States bonds, counterfeited almost beyond detection. This was a new and unexpected disclosure, which resulted In the arrest and conviction of the three. So good were the bonds that a microscopical test was necessary to distinguish them from the genuine.. In another week the gang would have been worth a million dollars in good money, and, in fact, several big banks in the country had been taken in on the bogus securities. When an old counterfeiter like Brock-wa- y comes out of prison he is continually watched by Secret, Service men. Such rogues may! change their names, and appear to be lost forever, buttpy are not. There is not a day that some Secret Service man cannot trace them to their hiding place, or unmask their identity. So long as they do right they are not 'molested, but the fascination of the profession is too much for a counterfeiter at any age. A man who has given the service more trouble and expense than any other one offender is Nelson Driggs. He is now about eighty-fiv- e years old, and near a . roadhouse keeps Dayton, O, When he Vas eighty he kept a score of secret Service men busy, and only for lack of witnesses would now be, where he has been before, in the penitentiary. Driggs was not an engraver; but with his young wife was an expert handler and shover of the queer. Jim Guyon, the chief confederate of Driggs, has been the only great counterfeiting criminal the government has so far failed to catch; He is supposed to have been mixed up in this latest conspiracy, and is described as the most dangerous man of his class, because he ts remarkably shrewd in covering up his tracks. Old Driggs has been under constant surveillahce for years, despite his age, mainly because some day the Secret Service men expect to find Guyon through his old confederate. t the-Igncranc- - , i - y, j - ' , 4 with rows of currants and rrp-ber- ry buihes. The leaves of both these shrubs were covered with blight or lico that were as green as the leaves on which they lived and thrived. Hosting about the bushes were a number cl lady birds. The woman in her iterance was killing there right and lift, thinking they v;ere doing all the damage, and wffien told they were her best friends wa3 incredulous. A few minutes careful however, watching, showed tho small bug busy eating tho smaller green pest. Small yellow pyramids showed where she had laid her eggs, which in a day or two would hatch. The woman saw and believed, and in future the lady bird has a sure refuge and a welcome in her patch cf flowers and fruit. Another insect that is forever being killed, owing to cf the general public. Is tho dragon fly, also known as the needlo case. He is one of the most useful insects of this climate. In his larval state he subsists almost entirely on those small squirming threads which can be seen darting about in any still water, and which hatch out Into the sweet singing mosquito. As soon as the dragon fly leaves his watery nursing ground, and, climbing some friendly reed, throws away the old shell and flies away, he is helping man again. His quarry is now the house fly. Not long ago the writer saw one of these insects knocked down in a veranda, where he had been doing yeoman's service,-, and the children and womeii seemed delighted, although they shrank back from the poor wounded dragon fly. jThey all thought he had an awful sting at the end of bis long body, a cruel injustice. When the writer took the Insect up there was general wonderment!, which was increased when a captured fly was offered him, and he at it greedily. The boys of that household will never harm a dragon fly again. . m y. to-da- Blight Dalli to A TREASURY ' to-da- One Destroys he LAWS AND CUSTOMS Heretofore it has seemed xvonderful TO BE DISCARDED. enough that we should be able to almost instantaneously transmit mes- tho Sultan Een Disobeyed Turkish sages over unlimited distances by the Husbands, Too, Not Averse to a Re- - use of wires; but in England a method lease from the Burden df Too Many has been successfully employed which makes it possible to dispense with the Dependent Wives. transmitting wire. Messages are now sent daily over a lake between two OMANS EMANCI-patio- n points which have no. wire connection is a new with one another, and which are sevissue, even In the eral miles apart. The process is atmost secret depths tracting widespread attention, and the of the ..harems of English operators of the line are reC o n s t a n tinople. ceiving much credit for their ingenuity The Turkish wom- in devising it. It is not, however, an en are in revolt. English idea, but one which was born in The agitation for the brain of an American scientist and e nfra nchisement inventor. Professor John. Trowbridge of and independence Harvard. Some years ago he stated which has taken that, theoretically, It would be possible such firm root in the United States and to send telegraphic messages across the Europe has caused not simply a ripple Atlantic without a cable. His plan was but a turbulent whirlvrind in the to have powerful dynamos placed at Turks hitherto submissiye household. some point in Nova Scotia for the genIt is even said that the men are siding eration of the electricity. One end of with the women, and enfranchisement the wire receiving the fluid thus generseems to be as anxiously demanded by ated would be grounded near the dythem as it is by their wives. namos, and the other end would be In this connection, Richard Davey, grounded in Florida, the earth completin an article on the Present Condition the circuit. The wire would be of of Women in Turkey, presents some ing great conductibility and carefully inTurkof on the life interesting phases sulated from the earth except at the ish women of A Turkish lady, two points of contact. ' After grounding who speaks English perfectly and who the ends of the wire, the next step is, besides, an excellent musician, re- would be to find on the coast of France, cently said that her condition and that or some other convenient place, two of other women of her race was daily points of land of a different potentiality becoming more. intolerable. Is it not' from this country, that is, not charged terrible to think, she said, that I, who with the same amount of electricity. am so passionately fond Of music and The electric fluid sent into the earth whom my husband would only be too from the wire on this side of the ocean happy to please in everything, should under the laws of electrical acbe forbiddeat the risk of my life to would, manifest 'itself at the points jn tivity, go to a theater or concert; that I am France, and telegraph signals could be forever forbidden to go outside of the transferred to means of a Ottoman Empire, and that any , inter- low resistance the ear by whose wires change of ideas is an impossibility to would be run telephone into the earth at the me with the women among whom I am there. By this method the earth condemned to pass my life? The more points the part of the wire used in oreducation a Mussulman! woman ac- plays telegraphing. The plan is alquires the more unendurable her fate dinary most identical with that employed in becomes, and it will grow England. Its advantage is, of course, until the day upon which that it obviates the necessity of laying tain our complete emancipation. of water. But believe me when say that the cables under great bodies day is not far distant whn my dream . A Looker-O- n In Gotham. will be realized, Turkisli women are Mrs. Meadow I dont wonder there very intelligent in fact, more so than is so much the city. I seen poverty their husbands and a spirit is growing the cause of It all thein other day when I up, among us which is get was there. daily. Only a short time Neighbor What did you notice? tan ordered us to wear a veil which is Mrs. Meadow Idleness. Never saw out of fashion the yashmak, such idleness. Bout half the during Ramadan. We obeyed him for was loafin on the corners lookin people at the three days, but on the fourth day all wsa other half and the the women of Constantinople without thermometers, around for standin huntin a single exception refused to wear the rushin some room near other thermometer. yashmak, and since then-- His Majesty has desisted in interfering in any deA Chance for Argument. tails of our toilets. Pastor Dont you thifik Toogood It Is noteworthy that since the the of Sunday fatalnumber that great Turkish men have mingled so freely on a the American with Europeans the desire for a new ities is judgment Sabbath of the lor people abandoning regime has grown steadily. It touches the Puritans? their vanity that they are forbidden to ' Deacon Hardhead Well, I dont show off their wives, who, it is are possessed of the most know. The Puritans had a good many beautiful eyes and are owners of more Sunday fatalities themselves whenever precious jewelry than any of the most the Indians got up an excursion. fashionable women of the diplomatic corps. One of the ridiculous laws of Fatally Injured In a Queer Accident While Martin ODay and his wife the land is that which forbids a husband to go into a shop with his wife on! were walking by the side of the Boston his arm, but obliges him toj walk twelve and Maine railroad tracks at Lynn, Mass., the womans dress was caught steps behind her. . There is a law which for'bids a Turkby the steps of a car on ish woman to divorce herself without train. Her husband tried to save her, her husbands consent. But the authori- but both were thrown under the train. ties affirm that this law does not pre- ODay died from his injuries and his vent divorces from being: even more wife is in a precarious condition. frequent in Turkey than in the United States. coNnubialities. reason the men the of Perhaps why is simple. If the. husMarried Turkey are not relucant that their band will life his wifes dress, and praise wives should complain of the matrimonial rule laid down forlthem by tha she feeds him well, there will be no Adams Freeman. Prophet i3 . asily explained by the fact bother. An Alabama judge has decided that that no matter how agreeable the pos- if a man puts his arm around the session of four legitimate wives may of a marriageable woman it is be, they impose cares and expenses on waist the husband which are often beyond his prima tofacie evidence that he has proher. means of gratification. The Koran ex- -, posed In Corea an unmarried man is treatacts that the husband shkll treat his old he is. A four wives with absolute equality; and ed as a boy, no matter how 20 is man of married by Corean the Turkish husband is obliged to offer young to custom entitled be treated as a suto all his wives the presems which one perior by old bachelors of 60. among them has demanded. Seven cases are reported in England Again, he cannot obtain a divorce where the without giving back to the repudiated during the present century to best man has the been married wife her dot to the last piastre, and is bride not at liberty to deduct the money by mistake. The paper giving the inwhich the maintenance of the harem formation does not state how matters and an enormous number of slaves and were remedied. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Manuel, of servants has cost him. So that it is Kennebunkport, Me., celebrated their quite apparent why the Mahometan diamond wedding on Tuesday, having husbands themselves are willing to he married sev'enty-fiv- e been years, as the deposed of their rights of polygamy and will do all they can to secure the eman- town records show. Mr. Manuel is 98 years of age, and his wife is two years cipation of their women. his junior. A writer in Parks says with startling Up to Date. I cannot conceive why frankness; A Scottish paper says the natives one should get married; divorce Skye now use 1 ives to spread their any has matrimonial tie so made here the butter, but that one old lady fieclines lax. And we thought that sort of to go to parties where she is not alwas confined to Chicago! lowed, according to the old habit, to thing And you said Dodkins is married? spread her butter with her thumb. AnYes. Why, I thought he hadnt a other inhabitant of the Island was cent He hadnt. But hes heard declaring to a friend the other all of money. now. The young lady has any right day that having sold hi3 horse he must quantity of he xvill have to All now get a wife to do the spring til- do now Is tocash. the coupons off the clip lage. bonds of matrimony. Washington Star. Birds That Dike Wine. The Rev. Robert Collyer, formerly of the John Burroughs, essayist and Chicago, officiated the other day at a the golden orioles wedding ceremony in New York, from naturalist, says that bother him a great deal. These birds which the word obey was omitted by are regular topers in their love for common consent. He explained aftergrape juice. They stick their beaks ward by saying women never did obey, The very into the grapes, suck up the juice, aqd despite their promises. are able birds to four or woman In world ruin the three best promised to several tons of grapes in a short time. obey me, he said, but she never has. As seventeen of Mr. Burroughs' twenty Heres a story going the rounds of the to devoted grape culture, this Broadway (New York) hotels: A bashacres are is a serious matter. ful benedict told the clerk before regman istering be was a newly-marrie- d Business a Barometer. and One Kind of stranger, and didnt know how announce of the fact of his arrival in to passengers between The bookings at his bride. The clerk told with London and town the New York present to 50 of down as man and wife. an it increase put per cent him time show did no, and registered as Man and compared with those cf the same period Ha Yife. B saver Falls, Pa. a y;ar ago. HAREM INSECTS FRIENDLY TO MAIL SPOTTED BY A WOMAN. TELEGRAPHING WITHOUT WIRES , OHREDS AND PATCHES. The people Holmes did not kill will please stand up and be counted. Pittsburg Chronicle-TelegrapA woman may not be absent-mindebut she looks It when talking to an infant.- Adams Freeman. You are tried alone; alone you pass Into the desert; alone .you are sifted by the world.- Robertson. h. d, - Evidently if Chicago exceeds New York in population It wasnt Holmes's fault. Philadelphia Times. Most of us only believe in a Just God when we see him punish the other fellow. Florida Times-Unio- n. Of course, the farmers will have a large crop of oats, with nothing to feed them to but bicycles. Omaha Bee. If all tho stories concerning his victims are true, Mr. Holmes must havt been a veritable fool killer. Washington Post. Pepple glory in all sorts of bravery except the bravery they might show on behalf of their nearest neighbor. George Eliot. , y hullabaloc Between the and the HJ H. Holmes horror, it has been a great summer for the hs. Philadelphia Record. It Is better to be threatened by hideous sea serpents in the east than to br deluged by cloudbursts in the west -New York Evening Sun. - Horr-Harve- NOTES OF THE DAY. ' The Rhine river carries 145,980 cubic-fee- t of solicf matter to the sea each day. A Cape Elizabeth (Me.) man was fined $2 the other day for swearing on the street. The weather bureau is to have a par- ticularly fine exhibit at the Atlant exposition. Th waters of the ocean contain every element that can be distilled from th human body. A translation Into French Is in preparation of the historical and critical essays bf John Morley. The bottom of a 2,927 foot coal bore-a- t Cremorne, Australia, has a temperature! of 107 degrees. There are J0.000 bee keepers In the United States, and they own 2,900,005. stands or hives of bees. Thd female of the common mosqulte lays 350 eggs, which hatch in a period f5 of from seven to nine days. Mulhall Is authority for the statement that there are 6,003 pieces in the locomotive. modern high-grad- e The dome of the capitol building al Washington is the largest iron dome in the world. It weighs 8,000,000 pounds Sappy, the great physiologist, say that the hitman stomach contains 5, 000,000 glands which are used in s Beaten by Moonshiners. It i3 reported at Richmond, Va., that creting gastric juice. In the high schools of Japan tht John Dern, a German, who recently settled in Lunenberg county, came to English language is placed on the same Richmond the other day and made a footing as the Japanese, and its study formal complaint to the German and is compulsory. A proposition to hold a great exposl ls Austrian that he and his wife had been badly beaten by moon- tion of the northwest at Seattle, ash. shiners and $2,000 worth of his proper- In 1897, is being discussed in the Puget ty destroyed. He brought a certificated Sound region, from a Lunenberg magistrate certifyReindeer, as a rule, are not ver" carry only forty ing to the facts as stated. The revenue strong. Theyoncan backs and draw their pounds department has sent officers there to 200 pounds. inyestigate, and the state authorities from 250 to It is hardly likely that the project o) will 3.0 ok into the matter. raising $100,000 to build a monument to the author of America. in lie Might Steal One. amount to anything. A. There i3 one good thin, in not India rubber tips on lead pencils dat having' money. from the year 1752. They were firet VvThat is that? B. ' suggested by Carlo3 Magellan, a. das a. You are not compelled to buy a ecssdant cf the great navigator. pcckctbook. j " vice-consu- el-fift- y j Bo-to- n 1 ! I e , |