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Show stove and had pnt the stuff out to harden. Turning his spyglass to the window I ledges of other houses on the block he noted these exhibits: j A milk jar partly filled. A large pot of some face preparation j with French label, the words of which were not easily discernible. 1 Two baskets of oranges, apples and grapes. A wooden bntter tray, the paper covet i being turned np by a breeze, and dust i sprinkling itself on the butter, i A German seltzer jug. Two bowls, each covered with a plate, i Another bottle of wine. A cardboard box, such as ia used for j ice cream. Besides all these things which lodgers 1 had pnt on their window ledges, the sweep of the spyglass up and down the row of houses showed seven tin pails and eight pitchers. New York Sun, j Tho Whitlows of the Block. j A tired young man stood at the window win-dow of his room in his house on one of the uptown cross streets on Christmas afternoon, and looked at the windows in i the big, long brown Btone block on the ' other side of the street. He saw on the : ledge of a third story window of the house directly opposite a bottle of champagne. cham-pagne. It had evidently been placed there to get cool. On the lodge of a second sec-ond story window of the same house he ; sawn photographic frame with a glass , exposed to the light. Another ledge was the rstin plaoi of a pan filled with something which he could see was smoking smok-ing hot. The yenng man owns a spyglass, spy-glass, and looking through it at tli smoking pun he innebided Unit the girls ' in ht room across the way must have 1 hee'il making molasses cagdy on a gas |