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Show I A Courteous Rival. This is ii ulo of a courteous an impetuous low-- aud a flrkls maid. Tbe s.tue is in i la Kay Crew-en- t City, twenty yearn or more before the war, when New Orleans promised to b the largest on the continent, when ita shipping waa enormoua and when duellnK waa the gentlemanly and approved method of nettling disputes. The amice at the large Catholic c athedral had concluded, and, just been , out into the pubthrough the entram-elic aqua re, aauiitrred a middle-age- d man with a young woman, a fair aa my den I red to look upon, at hla aide. d Her cheek had the hue of the and her glance aparkllng peach showed that she waa by no meana a demure madonna, although ahe bad Just come from the church. Her companion waa tall and dUtlngulahed-look-iug- , dreaacd In the height of fatiblon and carrying himself with a military admired Mr. erectnma. Everyone Maraden. the clcaiuent lawyer, the orator and the brilliant Kindly, but Impetuous; with generous Inatlncta, but a fiery temper, he waa the ldrul type of a gallant, chlvalrnua southerner. The tender regard he exhibited for the young girl with the aparkliug glance waa In keeping with the attention b had bestowed upon her for twelve montba paat, giving rise to much apeculallon aa to whether or not he would carry off the prize. Many disappointed suitors for Helen Manvillo's hand felt extremely vengeful toward the gallant tateainan, none more so than Jark Culvert, a rich, talented and extremely reck lees young man. For several months he had sighed before the shrine of the divinity without making marked progress, and then the statesman had appeared and seemed to be rurrylng her off, despite the young lover's moat strenuous efforts. So it happened that Jack, no better than he should have been, resorted to the consolation of mint Juleps and similar beverages, becoming a constant frequenter of the St. Charles cafe. In that great subterranean resort, where were found men of all nations. It might lie said, be mjule the vain attempt to drown bis sorrow and hla chagrin by meana of the beverage he ao persistently drew through two straws. He even plunged into greater dlwlpntlons. Helen once saw hint driving to the races (there were two great tracks in operation then) with the prima donna of the French opera, whereupon the society belle deliberately looked the other way. And many were the evenings passed at the cafea, where hock, burgundyand the more aparkllng beveragea flowed In Abundance. Out the sorrow wouldn't drown and the chugrlu always floated on the surface. ' Aa the n nnd Helen crossed the square whom should they encounter hut Jack himself, who looked She pomewhat pale and fatigued. bowed to him very coldly, and then Ignored bis presence, smiling her Jack sweetest upon her companion. ground his teeth, gaxeii vindictively after them and then strode toward the 8t. Charles, where he drank three mint Juleps one after another. At a fash' guutle-ina- n, sun-klaae- eu-pa- rb soldier-etateama- soldier-statesma- 1 IX)VK YOU. JACK." lonable ball hat night he again met his divinity, who looked simply indescribable. Jack forgot his resentment in a sudden spell of admiration, and, approaching, begged tbe privilege of a polka. She responded that aha was engaged. "You are always engaged when I happen around," said Jack, savagely. "You; too, have certain engagements. I believe," she retorted, with biting sarcasm. Jack thought of the prims donna and was silent. Aa lie turned away Mr. Maraden carried off the young lady. Feeling the most profound aversion to witnessing his rival's happiness. Jack plunged into the smoking room and Immediately ordered a bottle of champagne. Then he lighted a cigar and cogitated bitterly, trying to shut out the rhythmical melody of the orchestra. The more he drank and the more he smoked the more enraged he became. Interval, When, after a considerable his rival entered. Jack arose and deliberately Jostled against him in moving toward the door. A flush of anger crossed the other's face, while the lover stood there with an insolent smile. Yon Jostled me, sir?" said the rival. Oh. did I? said the lover. "You have been drinking too much." Sternly. "Not at all." You shall "You Imply Intention. apologise. "Beneath the Oaks, at your convenience." Very well; I will send a friend to you." "1 will be glad to receive him. The sooner we meet the better. There isn't room for both of us in New Orleans. The rivsl bowed and left the room. Twice more he danced with the belle, while Jack resumed his stten lions to the fine wlnea of his host. Late that night, or rather early next morning, when the Frenrh maid was disrobing her mistress, the girl appeared anxious to Impart certain Information. "Mademoiselle, the butler at Ike ball told me something." "What a It? Indifferently. "He served Monsieur Jark with much wine and many cigars. Monsieur Meriden entered; Monsieur Jack Jostled him; Monsieur Maraden responded with anger; they ((changed words and are to meet early this morning at the Oaks." "At the Onus' exclaimed Mademoiselle. "Oh. this cannot be. Are you sure V "The butler aaw it all.'' "It is terrible; it la terrible!" "Well, mademoiselle,'' said the girl, consolingly. "Monsieur Maraden Is one of tbe best swordsmen in New Orleans. It is not he, tint Monsieur Jack who will be killed." "Silence!" commanded the mistress. Bright and early the next morning Jack found himself beneath the Oaks, with his second. His head felt a little heavy and hla hand shook, but not with fear. Wa are ejyly." he said to his second. Here they come," waa the response. Mr. Maraden was soon on the spot and the awords were brought out. Afar waa another group and they knew that another dispute was being settled In this popular and gentlemanly fashion. The eluerly c inleatant drew tbe lover aside. Sir, must this matter go on? An apology-- - "I ham no apology." "Very well. "To him who survives she shall A MKJNLEY CHURCH WHERE KELIC. HIS ANCES- TORS ATTENDED. In th llrarl of Helm of H,i Donegal V'nllay by tbe HuMiuelmnue a of tbo Frasldcut-blw- l Horn. I lie (Reallng, Pa.. Letter.) HE church whore tbe of the President - elect, William McKinley, attended, and tha o,d . . TV'TJV jw,ug 4 peo- - are still atand- ,n Lancaster iu County. The pity is however, that pie, nJ tha original bouse in which she was born la no longer to be seen; excepting for a few atones which mark tha outlines of the foundation of tbe old place, there is not a trace of Its eighteenth century architecture. In the beautiful Donegal Valley, -mong the rolling hills of Lancaster county, and looking down upon th rapid waters of tha Susquehanna, Ilea the village of Donegal, where the built their long, low house, in which the ancestor of a President was born. The valley la one of the prettiest in the State, and that la saying a great deal, for the State la filled with places lying among verdant hllla, on the aides of which cling tenaciously the moat attractive of well-kefarms and whitest of white-walle- d farm houses. Donegal lies about eighteen mllea northwest of the town of Lancaster, and to get to it ono bad better leave the train at Marietta, where a conveyance can be obtained to make the five mile Journey alill to be accomplished. Strictly speaking, Donegal la not a village nor a town, and it is doubtful If It can claim to be a borough, for there is merely a sprinkling of farm bouses upon the hills, too far apart to form a community. In the midst of this fertile spot lies embedded In the trees, which hide it, the old Donegal Presbyterian Church, which has been standing since early in the eighteenth century. It has been remodeled, of course, in order to preserve it., but it stands practically the same as It did In the days of George II. A tablet of marble, attached to the wall of Lhe church, gives about all the history that Is known of the old structure. From this it seems the church waa founded by Arthur Patterson, in the year 1733. and in the year 1740 the church received a patent from John Thomas and Richard lenn. During the Revolution the pastor of the little church was a Royalist, but one day his congregation took him out and made him swear his alb glance to the colonies, uuder a white oak In front of the church, and the tree, now a mighty king of the forest, known as the "witness oak," on account of this circumstance, is loved almost as much as the little white plastered church itself. Iu the early part of the last century, at the time when George I. was King, there was a large number of immigrants from the North of Ireland. that time the Ulster men were having an irreconcilable controversy the rates for land rente, and aa a result they decided to leave the old country and seek refuge in the New World. The majority of these settled west of the Dlue Ridge, and a large number of them became the pioneers of the Western part of Pennsylvania. Among those who came over at this time waa a certain James Stevenson, who had also spelt his name aa Stephenson, and who had it spelled for him, In the patent from the proprietor of the colony, Stinson. The prarlae date of his arrival is unknown, but it was undoubtedly, from appearances, while tbe first George was n the year 1740, the till reigning, same year the church obtained a patent, he received a patent for land aggregating 334 acre In Donegal. He waa consequently one of the pioneers In the 8tate, and he must have been one of the earliest in Donegal, for his property la choicely located, being aa described in his will, "north and adjoining the Donegal Church." James Stevenson had two sons and four daughters. Of these the eldest on, Nathaniel, who died a bachelor, inherited the property, and at his defSLb Stev-enao- be- long. The rival smiled rather pensively. Are you ready, gentlemen?" We are They were about to throw themselves Into position when a carriage waa heard In tbe road near by and tbe next moment a figure rushed forward. It was the young woman herself. Impetuously she threw herself, not upon Ihe breast of the rival, but Into tha arms of the bewildered young man, then confronting with commanding gesture the "Stop," ahe said. You shall not kill him. it is all my fault. 1 have coquetted with him. Do you rorgive me. Jack? I'romlse you will not fight. "I cannot honorably do otherwise," replied the eonfiised lover, who Imagined hlmaelf In the seventh heaven with her arm upon his shoulder. You must, for my sake. she pleadI love you, Jack. 1 have always ed. loved you. I have been cruel, but lay It to waywardness, npt to my real self. Hereafter, I will lie different. Ami now, come." "I eaniiol. I am at the service or this gem bin an." Tbe rival regarded them with a melancholy smile. He had pussed that period of volcnnlc youth, hut now lis felt suddenly as If the hand of age had grasped him ami made him twenty years uldcr. How fair she was with the dew of early morn upon her hair! How linpnssl'iiied she was when she told her love to another! Those words she had led him to lielicve, were to have bedn addressed to himself one day. Rut they were a handsome couple! And he had Imagined her all hla? Then be spoke to her gravely. 1 am at your command, he said. "This duel shall not go on. Hut," began Jack. Sir, I was in your way last night and naturally you jostled me. You bad the right to feel offended, I presume. I am convinced now that I should have apologized. Having neglected to do so. this lady has made me feel the error of my position and I now do apologize for having been In your with a way. M.v apology, I trust melancholy smile will In accepted.' Yes, do accept It, Jack," pleaded the young lady. The lover was about to make a shame-face- d response when the rival saluted them courteously and turned away. Jack returned in triumph, in his divinity's carriage, while the rival drove back slowly, telling himself that one Is never too old to learn. soldier-statesma- Illrkens' Rummy lltMiks. " Gad's Hill' was a merry house," writes Stephen Fisks In fondly recalling incidents of his visits to Charles Dickens, in an article telling of tbe Dickpersonal side of the novelist. ens was a wellspring of mirth and his humor affected the whole party. Often, when I came down from London. he would walk out and lean against the doorpost, while I was at the gate, and we would shout with laughter over the fun that we bad had and were going to have. When everything else failed, the library waa an unending amusement. The room was lined with books from floor to celling, avea th backs of the doors being bookcases, bift the books on the doors and along the flour were bogus. Dummy bocks had been lettered with titles and pasted on the glues, and the titles tmd been selected by such wits as Dickens. Ysles, the Collins brothers. Albert Smith and Mark lamou of Punch. We used to sit on the floor to study this mock library and roll over with delight at some clever satire. I remember The Virtues of Our Ancestors, a volume so thin that the title had to be printed lengthwise; 'Five Minutes In India, by a Rrttlsh Tourist, In two volumes aa large as an unabridged dictionary; Lives of tbe roets,' a mere pamphlet; Eggs on to match 'Coke on Littleton : Statues Erected to the Duke of Wellington.' fifteen portly volumes, and there were doxens of other quips and cranks. A catalogue of them bogus books should have been preserved, but nobody thought of writing it out; nobody realised that Dickens would ever die." Ladles' Home Journal. ns pt QUEEN OP PORTUGAL. Daughter of (he Late Paris. (Special Letter.) Queen Marie Amelie of Portugal to the moat capable and well endowed, mentally, of all tbe children of the late Comte de Paris. She married when quite a girl, and baa lived away from Franca for many yeara, but has ever remal'd a true Orleanist, and bopea that h. brother may yet become king of the French. The queen makes over her own hata and bonnets. She has a workroom in the palace at Lisbon, and she can copy a Paris model to perfection. She is a very handsome woman. Her fair hair and clear skin make her look still quite young in a country where women age with painful rapidity. She is passionately devoted to her two sons, and, if only for their sake, she will exert all her knowledge of the world and Inborn ability to save Tha Bralnlaat Cellule of to-d- ay ut Anne, whose until Simon o Cameron. The Stevenson were a people, and at one time had a number of slaves. The second eldest daughter, Hannah, married John Gray, who lived near the Susquehanna, at Halnbrtdge, and afterwards In Westmoreland county. Their daughter, Sarah Gray, married David McKinley on December 10, 1780, David McKinley waa In the bloom of manhood at this time, having returned Tom the war. In which ha bad served well-to-d- per-zon- al Le.-tgs,- QUEEN MARIE. Portugal from the progressive changes which promise to make Its people free and leave monarchy without a foothold In its sunny clime. Dorn Carlos, her husband, has great faith In the wisdom of the queen, and it ia by her advice that one or the other of the heads of the royal family Is ever in the country. ThiH resolution imposes many privations on the queen, who would, were It not for her fear of revolution, visit her mother. The Duke and Duchess of Orleans will spend part of their honeymoon in Portugal. THEIR INFLUENCE FELT. Women Employe In Dermany All Condition. list ed The growth of the textile Industry In the German empire Is shown la the result of last year's census of mechanics reported to the state department by Consul Sawter at Glaucb&u, says the Washington Times. In this industry over 1,000,000 persons are employed and the interesting fact Is noted that there has been a yearly decrease of and corresponding Increase of pint female employes. The exact number of employes was 1,017,112, against 932,592 In 1882. Since 1883 the males decreased from 582,070 to 552,230, a change of 29,840. Their places have been filled by females whose number grew from 350,522 to 464,316 in the same period. One curious result of these changes is the Improved sanitary surroundings and comfort provided for the employes. Their every Interest in this way Is being considered to encourage good and satisfactory labor. Washrooms and apparel are inkers for where cofprovided and dining-room- s fee and potatoes the latter one of the chief components of the luncheon are roasted or boiled in a special ware receptacle. There are also separate lunch rooms for whole famillee employed In the factories where they can distribute food from the family basket and enjoy together the recreation afforded by the noonday meal. Some of the larger factories have a buffet where can be purchased at a mere nominal price beer, sausages, rolls, coffee cake or any little luxury In the form of pastry. non-worki- It went to the eldest daughter, who married John Wataon, In family the property remained 1172, when It waa sold to General azine bis wife, Mr. E. W. Morten, has included a portion of Dr. John H. Drlnton's valedictory address to a CAMP-FIR- E SKETCHES FOR OUR gradual lug class of Jefferson Medical The extract college of lhil:iiiclihia. OLD SOLDIER READERS. relates io ile lirM meeting ot General Grant wiili In-- . .Morton, ami the anecT'ii 1.imV In I iirni'i dote is tfivi-from Dr. Hrinibii's .r V. ,ir I In s idi 'in friend l.iii in tin- - Naij In the early summer of lrC(. during "l'li Hie tierce con lest In tbe Virginia willfi'lil;i- - llliiu.l I ." derness. I was present officially at tha Lieutenant-Generof E speaks not well headqurters 1 had staff on whose previously who doth his Grant, served. While I was In conversation time deplore. him an aide approached, aud anNaming it new and with ill It and ob- nounced thut a straiiger. a civilian doctor, wished to see him for the purpose scure. of obtaining an ambulance for bis perIgnoble, and unfit for lofty deeds. sons! use In visiting the field hospiAll times were tals. The answer of tbe general waa modern in the prompt and decided: Tbe ambulances re Intended only for the sick and time of them And this no more wounded, and under no circumstance! than others. Do can be taken for private use." This response was carried to Ihe waiting aptby part man in brown-la- h Here In the living day, as did the great plicant. a travel-staine- d clothes, whom at some distance 1 Who made old days immortal! So shall thought I recognized. I went to him, meu. back to this receding hour aud found that he was Dr. W. T. G. Morton. I aaked him to wait a minute, 8y, Then the time when men were and returned to tbe general. On retruly men: Though wars grew lesa, their aplrlts peating the doctor's request. I received the same answer. "But. general," I met the test Of new conditional conquering civic ventured to nay, if you knew who that man Is, I think you would give him wrong; Saving the state anew by virtuous lives what be asks for. No. I will not divert an ambulance Defying leagued loos, and daring to be pure. today for anyone; they are all required When error through the land raged elsewhere. like a peat. General, I replied, I am sure you They calmed the madness caught from will give him the wagon, he haa done mlnrf to mind. o much for mankind, ao much for the By wisdom drawn from eld, and counoldier more than any soldier or cisel sane; vilian haa done befofe; and you will And aa the martyrs of the ancient ay ao when you know his name. world The general took his cigar from his Gave Death for man, so nobly gave mouth, looked curiously at the applithey Life; cant, and asked, Who is he?" Those the great days, and that the He is Doctor Morton, the discoverer heroic age. of ether, 1 answered. The general paused a moment; then An Enemy's Nervier. he said, "You are right, doctor: he has One of the stories of tbe Crimean done more for the soldier or civilian, War told by the novelist Turgenieff, for he him taught you all to banish him have the ambulance, and well authenticated by existing letpain. ters. is peculiarly touching. Sergius and anything else he wants." Ivanovltch. a young Russian lieutenAfterward, during Doctor Morton's ant. was one of an attacking party stay, by order of the general comwhich was ordered out on a cold night manding. he waa tendered the hospitalto drive a body of French from a posi- ities of the headquarters, ambulance, tion in front of the Russian llnus. In tent, mess and servant. order to be as free as possible in his movements, the young lieutenant left his military clouk behind. The French IliKXmt Man In Ihe Maty. were found well posted in the edge of In addition to many other dls'inc-tion- s a wood. A desperate fight followed, nt the fust armored cruiser New t lie end of which the Russians were York hits in her rn-the highest man compelled to withdraw, leaving their In the naval service and the smallest mail and wounded behind them. apprentice. The one is Thomas Moran, Among the grievously wounded was master-a- i -- arms of the ship. A musicr-iit-nrm- s Srrglus Ivanov itch, and all about him Is the chief petty officer of a were French wounded. Sergius suf- navul vessel and Is chief of police on fered worse even front the cold than the to which he Is attached. EiPry ship he diii from hla wound; and though a master-at-aris familiarly known to bullet had penetrated his leg, he was his ns "Jimmy and " shipmates urn that the exposure of the night, tradition says not why. rather than the wound, would be the of the New The end of hint. Groaning and shivering, York is Jimmy a New Yorker by birth. He he was about to examine as best he has been years In the naval could tbe wound in his leg, when some service andthirty bears an excellent record. one said in French: He stands 6 foot 4 in his stocking "You had best let your wound alone. feet and weighs 173 pounds. Suffer, and disturb it aa little as posJohn Edward Heston, apprentice of sible." the first class, claims the honor of 1 he Russian found that the man who the smallest wearer of navy blue hud spoken was a veteran French cap- being In the service. tain, who, even worse wounded than He has been in it eighteen months. liimaelf, lay close by. He weighs seventy-eigh- t pounds and "No doubt you are right," said Ser- waa 4 feet 9 inches in height at tbe but 1 gius. lint shall perish of cold before time of enlistment. Tluit was nxnuing, anyway. of an inch short of the required Then the Frenchman reproved him But Heston had come all the height. for rominx out in the snow without hla his Missouri home to add from way cloak. Experience has taught me, he his tiny strength to the new navy, and canever to out without my said, go officer thought it too had the pote. But this time it is not likely to to recruiting him. So the navy dedisappoint save me. I am mortally wounded. partment waa told about the matter Oh, they will come and get you. and an order was given to waive the No. my dear enemy. It is all up In his case and he was enwith me. The shot baa gone deep I regulation York Herald.New listed. hall not last till Alp cornea Here, take my cloak and wrap yourself in it This Itrldg Is Itlov--n I'p. and sleep. At your age one can sleep anywhere. During the army manoeuvres near Despite hla protests, the young Rus- Settln a comical incident occurred, says sian .felt the Frenchman's cloak laid the Berlin Boersen-ZeitunA young upon him. Exhausted, he fell asleep lieutenant of the cavalry guards, who under Its warming influence. Waking has considerable property, was sent, In the morning, he found the French with six men. to recommit er in the dicaptain dead at hla aide. rection in which bis regiment was to advance. Arriving at a bridge crossing the Settln highroad he fastened a War. ef Uwi across, writing on it with chalk, board The laws of war. aa at present forThis bridge hi blown up, words: the mulated by tbe civilized nations, forbid with hla name. After this it signing use of poison against the enemy; the he retired a little ways murder by treachery, aa, for example, heroic exploit and treated hla command and himself or uniform the the displaying assuming to an excellent breakfast, in which sevflag of the foe; the murder of those who eral bottles of liquor played an Imporhave surrendered, whether upon condifrom the ride on the tions or at discretion; declare! Iona that tant part. Tired little the command, after that hot day. no quarter will be given to an enemy; wall of a tbe use of such arms or projectile repast, took a rtst along thethe horses aa will cause unneccessary pain or suf- cemetery near by, allowing to graze. fering to an enemy; the abuse of a flag In the meantime, however, an Inof truce to gain information concernunnecesall regiment of the enemy had aran fantry enemy's positions; ing sary destruction of property, whether rived at the bridge and ita commander public or private. They also declare wrote another algo, which read: This that only fortified places ahall be be- bridge is built up again. The cavalry sieged. open cities or villages not to be patrolmen were discovered and were subject to siege or bombardment; that asleep. The colonel of the regiment public buildings of whatever character, ordered the horses and arms taken whether belonging to church or state, away, allowing them to continue in ahall be spared; that plundering by their slumber. Of course, when they private soldiers or their officers ahall awoke, a few houra afterward, and be considered inadmissible; that pris- made their way back to their own oners shall be treated with common command, without being able to give humanity; that the personal effects and an account of what had become of their private property of prisoners, excepting horses, sabers and guns, there was their arme and ammunition, ahall be great consternation among them. 8ince respected; that the population of an the lieutenant in charge of the expeenemy's country ahall be considered ex- dition intended to retire into private empt from participation in the war, un- life at an early date to devote himself less by hostile acts they provoke the to hla agricultural Interests, the colonel Personal and of hla regiment gave him the advice of of the enemy. family honor and the religious convic- executing the contemplated change at aa early a date aa possible. tions of an invaded people must be by the Invaders, and all pillage by regular troops or tbelr followers Feeding Humanity. strictly forbidden. It is estimated that twenty-tw- o acres of land are necessary to sustain ona I man on fresh meat. The same space Th Soldier" Friend. O. W. Dr. war T. ef land, if devotsl to wheat culture, Civil the During Morton had many opportunities to would feed forty .wo people; If to potatoes, India demonstrate on the battlefield 'Jae r sl- oats, eighty-eigh- t; ut 0f hla discovery of anaesthesia. Ia corn and rice, 176; end if to the pis. aa tatereallng paper in McClure's Mag tain ur bread tree, ever 6.000 peopfe. VETEKAYS COR NEB. Far-gazi- al-m- oet Da-eo- n.' Reserved All II (lot. The police at Pittsburg Identified n pie thief by fitting his teeth into a large bite which had been taken out or a pumpkin pie. A thief who will leave enough pie of any kind to at ford a clue to his guilt ought to be arIX else, rested for nothing a months, having enlisted no less than eight times in aa many different companies. 1 heir second son, James Stevenson McKinley, was born September IS, 1783. He subsequently settled in Mercer county, where ho married Mary Rose, ami their son, William McKinley, bwnuie the father of Major William McKinley, who has juat been elected President of the United States. Tbe old brick house, with Its numerous wings and spacious porches, which overlooks the church, waa built by Dr. John Watson, between tbe yeara 1805 and 1808, the old structure, in of which a Major William McKinley waa horn, having been torn down in 1808. This fine old residence was called by Dr. Watson The Seat of Beauty," and there seems to be no reason why that name should be changed now. For the past twenty yeara or more it has been the Cameron homestead. Here General Cameron breathed his last a few years ago. and here hla son. Senator Don Cameron, spends a portion of hla summers. twenty-on- e llrrn of Knrk' Drift. The Hero of Rorke's Drift" was the description popularly accorded In England seventeen yeara ago to a younr subaltern of royal engineers by whose coolness and resource tffs Zulu warriors were kept at bay by a mere handful of men after the disaster of Iaandhl-wan- a. Time rune to fast that most people have forgotten the name of the officer whose gallantry waa then the subject of general approbation. Ona J. R. M. reads now of a LieuL-Co- l. Chard, V. C., transferred from Cardiff to Perth as commanding royal engineers. ThU U the Hero of Itorke'a Drift," who, since he established his reputation as a soldier In South Africa In 18T9, baa had no opportunity to attain further distinction. Exchange one-eigh- th g. Ill-w- ill ! I |