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Show THE EAGLE. ILLS UTAH. KATSY1LLE, W. K. SMITH, Publisher. t to be applied with smokeless powder. Many of the soldier boys have already had experience with it In warm parlor engagements. Ratibhi1. The U attod State army oriental It Is sate to say inthatthetheCalifornia Jewelry counter Midway will not be extensively patronized by the same persons who Invested that way In Chicago. Tiia English parliament complains ol being overworked. If the English parliament should work day and the sleep nights, like the rest of The world, it would not get so tired. English parliament is the only body of men that work nights, unless so compelled by the necessity of the The charge against the Boston psychological Institute of stealing a corpse will not find many believers If the institute had an opportunity to teal a real, genuine ghost it might It is not paryield to temptation. tial to soulless bodies; but it would doubtless pay well for a disembodied ouL Thb ortminal idiocy of parents who lock helpless children into the house while they go visiting Is one of the things that the law seams powerless to reach. If the children were ocalways burned alive, Instead of casionally escaping as they now da the practice might eventually become unpopular. Tbs Metropolitan traction company of Now York offer 150,000 to any one who will Invent n now motive power for street cars. Emerson advised people, a long time ago, to hitch their wagons to a star. Perhaps this motivo power would work as well on a street ear as on a wagon. The 150,000 chock can now be forwarded at once. Being arrested for having caused the deeth of a child a Brooklyn man put forth the defense that ho was a This plea was not acphysician. cepted, the fact developing that the claim set up was falsa However, the episode would seam to indicate that the prlrilago of tho healer to become killor Is too generally for publio safety. recog-nlzo- d Our of those coincidences that are ns mysterious ns they arc Interesting occurred in connection with the death of John Nolan, an officer of the suLast perior court of New York. Saturday hu took a notion" to make his will, end, as he was in exoellent health, was chaffod by friends whom ho asked to wiinoss it it was signed and sealed that afternoon and the nextday he died of heart disease. anecA pleasing llttlo vice-vers- a dote emergos from the classic shade of Phillips academy at Exeter, N. 1L ts Tho principal wouldnt let the go to a burlesque performance atu-den- and thereupon they plastered his room among others full of the pleasing poster whore with the attractions of the show were set forth. If Mohammed wouldn't go to the mountain, why, they just fetchod the mountain to him. D at the Orthopedic UCTOlt Walker sat alone in bis office hospital one dark storm y night Outside, the wind and rain were gale having it all their own way. The with around the huge building wept A fiends let of score shrieks, like a loose to riot snd rejoice In the misery The ram of roiferluf human aoula came down in wild gnats, dashing itself impudently into the faces of the few chance pedestrian, and forcing those obliged to be abroad to torn resolute face homeward. Ah! Heaven lie merciful to the wretch who had no home that night! Within the hospital dead silence rapnosed reigned. The patients were end lights to be disposed for the night, were out, only in the wards where the sufferers were so dangerously ill that the watchers by their bedsides sat waiting with patient outward composure for the approaching end. Doctor Walker he was familiarly known throughout the institution as Doctor Will sat poring over a huge volume upon the table before him,and striving to concentrate hi thoughts out upon its contents. But he seemed be seemed restless of sorts and uneasy. A noble, manly face, with handsome features and kindly blue eyes. His upper lip was shaded by a drooping mustache, whieh it was bis habit, when perplexed or annoyed, to Idle furiously. Altogether, Doctor Will Walker was a man to attract, to invite confidence; an ideal character for a physician. For all physiclana, especially where nervous diseases are a specialty, should possess this attraction to the patients. I wonder what ails me he exclaimed half aloud, closing the book at last,and pushing it aside with Somehow 1 cannot a weary gesture. study, or find interest in my work. Now, if 1 were like some of my interwould say esting nervous patients, I was that I feel as if something going to happen? llahl what folly in to afnerves his to allow strong man fect ins whole life. Une must exert and Ah! what is it? Did you speak to me. Kate? For there at the half open door of the office, Doctor Wills quick glance had detected one of the night nurses a pleasant faced, kindly-lookinwoman who had been long attached to the hospital. She stepped to the threshold, and threw the door open. Yes, doctor, I wanted to tell yon that there 1s a new patient in the reception room. A young man who has been brought here in a cab. His arm is broken, 1 think. The driver said the young man hailed the cab about an hour ago, on Green street, and said he had broken his arm, and wished to be taken to friends at the other end of the city. The driver drove the young man to the street and number designated, but there was no one there. The house was quite empty, and a policeman, near, said that the family had gone to Europe. At that the young man uttered a cry of disapsaid pointment which the made bis own heart ache; and then he reeled unsteadily and nearly fell to the ground. But the driver and policeman together placed him in the cab, and lie was taken here, so it hap--! pened to be only a few blocks away. I lly this time Doctor Will had followed Kate into the reception-room- , where a slight form in a neat gray suit lay upon a sofa, quite uncon-sriou- a will-pow- er "What a splrltnelle face for a manI or a boy rather?1' he exclaimed. declare I was never so interested in a patient before In my life! The next day Parke llalton was much better, and as the dsys went by be grew rapidly stronger. Dr, Will spent more time in the room of his interesting pstient than he bad ever been known to do before. There seemed some subtle attraction between the two; and as time passed it grew and strengthened. At lest Parke was fully recovered, and in a few days would be discharged from the hospital. One night Kate, the night nurse, was startled by the sound of faint sobbing and stilled weeping which seemed to come from the end of the long corridor near the sleeping room of Dr. WilL She hastened softlv to the spot, determined to know whst wss the matter. This is what she saw; Parke llalton on bis knees at the door of the doctors room, weeping bitterly. Directly, the young man arose to hie feet, and entered the room, for the physicians' room was never locked, but always ready for a hasty summons in the night In speechless amazement Kate noticed the young patient steal softly to the bedside, and stooping, press a kiss upon the brow of the sleeping physician; then, weeping bitterly, steal away once more. Out In the corridor the nurse suddenly confronted the young man. Halton fell back with a stiffed cry. Explain yourself, sir," begun the nurse. "Your conduct is rather un- usual." A sudden resolution seemed to come into the young man's mind. Come to my room, he said, in n hurried whisper, and I will tell yon all 1 have a confession to make! II The next morning when Doctor Will awoke from his slumbers he fonnd upon his bed a small locket containing the pictured face of a glrL It waa the exact counterpart of Parke Halton. When he left his room he was met by Kate, who announced that the young man waa gone She had fonnd his bed empty that morning, and a sum of money sufficient to more than cover his expenses at the hospital lying upon the table. But whatever the secret confided to Kate she kept it inviolate. Doctor Willa face clouded, and a troubled look crept into his eyea After that, he became very qniet and taciturn, and altogether a changed man. Une day he received a summons to an mansion; its owner lay dying stricken down by a swift and up-tow- g cab-driv- The doctor dispatched the nurse for his surgical instruments and soon had Yoi'xa Jewell Flint of Sncrnmonto, removed the stranger's coat and rolled the sleeves of the snowy under Cal., who shot a girl In the back up soft and fine. The face garments, hud because she projierly estimated upon the sofa pillow was delicate and him, and refused him her hand, has re lined; a face with perfect features; been allowed to pleud guilty to ' the long, dsrlc eyelashes sweeping the It white checks, the soft, dark hair curlmurder in tho second degree. would be interesting; to know what ing slightly, brushed nwav from n o murder up broad, low brow, Tho interesting is considered could not have bren more that way. Young Mr. Flint la to he patient seventeen. No trace of beard or if hanged he would bo than . felicitated, moustache darkened the soft, fair unable to kill any more girls, but in akin, lie looked as helpless as a child prison he may live in hopes. lying there before the keen, searching eyes of the young physician. It is said that the great thing a strange sensation which gun will carry a shot sixteen miles. ! Doctor Will did not stop to analyze The best English steel rilles earry moved his heart as he touched the arm, and prepared to thirteen miles, and we have several round white tile injuries. terrors l.i tho United States Compound fracture!" he mattered that will carry ton miles. And yet concisely. Come here Kate! Yon it is a fact that several valuable will have to assist iiie! live have boon lost within the past lnnr met" ejaculated the nurse, two months because the best guns bending over the slim, graceful form, g used at stations are not he's si delicate as a girl. Look! See more than 600 the blue veins in h:s arm. Poor able to carry a life-lin- e to suffer yet, or 700 yards Perhaps if as much young chap, lie has that arm will 1st well" attention were paid to perfecting before A little later, hi injuriee attended g mortars and guns as to to, the strange patient was placed in ones, the bed. He perfecting death-dealin- g had recovered consciousness, world's civilization would not suffer. and opened a pair of great, dark, beautiful eyes to meet Dr. Wills symPetrk Neaky, of Newark, N. J.. pathetic gaze. Where am 1? faltered the patient. ar bad a billy gout and a ton-do- ll "In the Orthopedio hospital, sir. greenback, lii'.ly and the bill had a meeting, and, following the fashion You have broken your arm and were of the iwrio.l, effected a consolida- brought here by a cab driver. Yon perfectly safe here. Tell me your tion; that 1s to say, tho goat chewed are name and where shall I send for your and swallowed the banknote. This friends?" arrangement was made without Mr. is My nsme." a slight hesitation, Neary's consent, and he movod in- Hsltnn Parke llalton. My friends? stantly for a dissolution of partner- Ah! 1 have none! 1 I went to the ship by killing the goat and recover-in- g house of old friends they have gone the fragment of the bilL 1 hose to Europe. 1 have not been herelqng! ! I have no place to go. lint 1 have were sent to tho treasury, and seems that there was enough loft to ! money." trouble yourself, Mr. Halton. identify the note, and so a few days YouDont are all right here. Tho wards ago Mr. Neary received a brand new are and 1 have had you placed in 10 note In return, and Is only out to Vroom.' tho extent of n goat Thank you! I am able to pay for well m soon as it Yon will got ine" with a klight in Akothkk man with n broken neck possible doctor 1 living in Providence, K. L Many terrogation. 1 1 William Walker of accidents, like many diseases. which this am lectorI shall do nil in my hospital. were ouce considered fatal, are now power for you. It is nothing danger- known to be not necessarily so. out. iuv dear sir: only yon must have Many cuses of men with broken rest Now 1 will give yon a sleeping backs and broken nocks living are potion, and hope to rind yon better iu now on record. morping." Furke llalton drank the sleeping r JT. .a Test of modern rifles are being t draught, and almost immediately fell made by using human corpses for Doctor Will ant watching the pale, targets. Thi sound brutal, but it beautiful face upon the pillow before is loss brutal than making the him with an odd sensation struggling really tests on bodies thut are not corpse uuder hi- - left vest pocket la the beginning. ! lirst-dogre- 12-in- life-savin- HE HATED MR, DESPISED ME." sudden disease. Arrived at his bed side. Doctor Will saw at once that it was too late to save him; his hours were numbered. I have something to tell you." the See that no dying man said, feebly. one U near. Wait, I wish to send for my ward, Leolinc Lea. A message was dispatched, and in a few moments a young girl entered the room. At sight of her, the blood receded from Doctor Will's heart, and he felt as though he wss going to For it was the face in the faint locket, which Doctor Will even then e wore over his heart, and the of Iarke llalton. Stifling an exclamation, the girl sank into a seat The dying man began: I was guardian over Leoline Leas proiwrty. She was very rich; but have squandered her estate; I am dying now. 1 ioved her and 1 determined to make her my wife; this I need never render an account of the wasted fortune. I persecuted her for a year to gain her consent She would soon be 21 and out of my power, and then I would be forced to give an iccount of her squandered fortune. I waa half wild lest 1 be discovered and punished. 1 did all in my power to form her into marriage with me. She luted me, despised mu, scorned me. At last tired of her defiance, I locked her in her own room up stairs in this house, anil decided to starve her into obedience hi my withes. "To my consternation th girl esShi knotted caped from her proton. the blankets together and raids a rope by which she managed to (fleet her fae-aiinil- escape. "She was gone several veeka. I wss half distracted over her absence, for she was as ignorant of the world as a little child. Had she sot been, she would have known that the law gives no guardian the right to deprive his ward of liberty. life-savin- . . "On her twenty-firs- t birth-fa- how- y, ever, she reappeared and demanded the restitution of her fnrtuie. But she would give no account of her whereabouts daring her sbMnce from my bouse until heduy, whel she declared that she had found refuge in the Orthopedic hospital. I lave sent for you to corroborate her sUry. Doctor Walker have you ever t met my ward before?1 Doctor Will's blue eyes 'met the frightened gaze of Leolim'a dark How fould he onea; they ilrou. ed. ' answer that question? She arose to her feet. Y os. Doctor Walker has! met me 1 am I'arke llaltch." Her before. face was ghastly white nowj and she trembled perceptible. "I Vas very ignorant of the world's wayi as my guardian acknowledges a friendless orphan or ( would long ago lave appealed to the law for protection from j fils lions, In the waflrobe of the room where I waa impr.soned 1 found a suit of men's clothing I man-th- c aged to alter them so thatll could j wesr them; and. knotting Blanket and sheets together, flnnllwf escaped from the window, bresklniLay arm jin my flight 1 had how to And refuge until ur twenty-fl'irthdawith so ue acquaintances iJF If farther cud of the city, but whij,ovf' reached ! i j I I liil the house It was elosed and the family NEARLY TEN CENTURIES OLD, gone to Europe. "I was in terrible pain with my Great AioaoT a Whale the reelRa broken arm, and that, with the disapThe largest whale which ever enpointment, overcame me, and 1 fainted, and was taken to the hospital. Yon tered this harbor, and one of the know the rest doctor. Can you ever largest ever seen cm this const, forgive my unwomanly conduct? washed ashore at Tokelund lately, Doctor Will took both little hands South Bend Herald. The in his own, and led her from the says the news was immediately brought back room. of the morning steamers, and I know this, he said, In n low, by one tender tone, that I love yon as man the afternoon passenger boats were never loved woman before. Will yon crowded to their greatest capacity be my wife, Leoline?" by tho throngs who were anxious to llcr eyes drooped before his passion- see the monster. ate gaze. The fish came in on the high tide, "I have loved yot ever since my and lies just a little below Charles It was alive eyes first opened from that swoon in Fishers bath house. the hospital, she faltered, and it and kicking and did not finally surnearly drove me distracted to reflect render its lease on existence for two upon my false position. Yon surely dayn County Attorney M. IX Egbert cannot love or respect me? Hut there was no doubt of the love bad taken along a tape line, and which filled his heart, and with true carefully measured the monster. The line showed an extreme length of love respect conies always. And that w the way in which my 174 feet and 8 inches, with a waist friend Walker found his wife Willa Strange Patient! Doctor measure of 161 feet and 6 Inches. County Surveyor L C. Vickery figured on the weight of the anlmile" THE AGENT SYMPATHIZED. and pronounced this member of the bolaenmdea family to weigh 47) tons Why lie Coaid feel for the Maa and the blubbor and whalebone to be Had Hlandared, When Brakeman Thompson opened worth, at current prices, oil 9.7115; a switch at Kingsbury, Ind., and sent bone, I1.U00; making a net total of 10L97& Wabash passenger train headlong line of loaded solid a Attorney L. E Grlnn attempted to freight against cars, the indignant public suggested compute the age of the subject unnil sorts of punishment for him. der consideration, and concluded, Mon who had worked on train crews from the traverse lines on the baleen, were not so bitter. Uno of the promi- that the fish bad existed for 986 nent railway officials ot Chicago n years, lacking fourteen year of havgeneral passenger agent took the ing lived the longest term of whale trouble to look into Thompson's life. The pectoral fins are two feet record and learned that he had been long and seven feet broad; the mouth feet long, the blow one of the most Intelligent, compe- is twenty-fou- r tent and caroful men in the employ holes eighteen inches long, and the of the company, says the Chicago fifty bathers in the water at the time it came ashore say the noise was Record. He has suffered his full penalty deafening and the spray ejected at least fifty feet in the air. already, said the jiassonger agent I know what it is to live n year In The thrashing of the tail upon the two seconds. When I was n mere water in the struggle to regain the boy, crazy for railroading, 1 went channel was heard at McGowans canout ns n freight brakeinan. One day nery at the mouth of North river, our train was on a siding waiting for four miles away. County School aa express to go by, 1 went ahead to Superintendent ll W. Fanschor furnthe switch. Now, I wasn't thinking ished some historical foots in regard of switches, trains or anything else to the whale. Alfred the Great had tho world except n certain person boon dead but six years when his whom 1 was expecting to meet at the whaleship first began to navigate the other end of the run. I went to that waters of the earth. The old boy witch whistling and thinking of was 120 years old when William the something elsa I unlocked the Conqueror waa born, and may have switch; threw it open, turned my been playing off English shores when back to it and watched the express he was crowned king. He was on train grow larger as it swung down earth at the time of making the great the long grade toward me, but I charter at Kunnymede, he was midwasnt thinking of it until, when it dle aged when the pilgrims landed was almost upon me, 1 noticed the at Plymouth Bock, and probably engineer jump from his place in th e looked upon tho wars of Napoleon, window. The whistle for brakes the American revolution and civil helped to arouse me. I turned to war with many a sad sigh and shako the switch, and then it dawned upon of the head for the ruthless slaughter me that the switch wss open and that of humanity. the express was headed for the sidThffi Mlomttar ing. I jumped against the upright and During the time of the periodical the train went by on the main track. inundation of the valley of the N ' j, The engineer's face was white a queer recording instrument known through the coal dust I had no as the nilometer, is hourly and time to lock the switch. I simply daily consulted by a sluggish Egyplay against it until the last car had tian officer, who, to judge from his passed, and then I dropped in n motions and actions, cares but very faint little if the river keeps its bed or That engineer overflows the whole northern half of never reported it But ns it is the African continent wouldn't have been the only labor he is forced to perbusiness form, and his bread and cheese usuSince then I have some pity and ally depend upon proper execution sympathy for men who make what of the duties assigned, the record is seem to bo criminal blunder. You taken with scrupulous accuracy. cant tell why they do certain thing This queer and ancient thermomeat the wrong timea They cant tell ter of tho Nile" (it dates back te 815 themselves. A. IX), is situated at the end if the island of Klioda. It is simply an ImFrugal. mense upright octagonal pillar standI am sorry to tell you," said the woll-lik- e chamber, surthat we cannot use your ing in a editor, rounded on four sidos with strong poem." walls provided with arched openings Indeed!" To be candid with you, it is which allow the rising waters free access to the nilometer. The reclumsy In sentiment and faulty in The rhymes are all cording pillar is covered throughout construction. and on all of its eight sides its wrong, aad altogether it is not even withlength cubits and digits nicely divided, Here the editor decent doggerel. with great precision, much paused for breath and the poet said painted sections of a glgantio resembling meekly: checkerboard. There is a huge Give it back to me, please. I don't think you can do anything staircase leading from aliove down to the bottom of the cistern in which with it. nilometer stands, the well-wor- n the can. to I'll have it set Oh, yes I stops attesting to the immense nummusic and muko a popular song of ber of times the instrument has been IL consulted. From IMflbrnt Ktaadpoint. And this Is the state penitentiary. A Simple llsrameterw Is it?" inquired the stranger who A piece of string mukes n simple' was strolling about tho environs oi barometer. Take a piece of strin g Joliet It's a pretty fine piece of about fifteeii inches long, saturate it architecture. in a strong solution of salt and It depends a good deal on how water, let it dry and then tie a light you are looking at it, replied the weight on one end and hang it up man spoken to, winking slyly at the against a wall and mark where the bystanders. weight reaches to. The weight rises Ah, yes, I suppose it doer." re- for wet weather and falls for fine. llow does it The joined the stranger, string should be placod where look on tho Inside?" Chicago Inter the outside air can freely get to it Ocean. An Electric Omalbos. Kueouraalng sa Aath.r. An omnibus driven, by electrio Reader Here it Manuscript cells Is now frequently manuscript from somo writer I never storage seen steering its way successfully heard ol Great Magazine Editor Well, no through the heavy traffic streets of use discouraging the poor follow. Lo. don, and a C'hincso company have Kiok it around the Ooor, so it will placed upon tho market an elcctrie look a- - if It had been carefully read, carriage to carry four people at the rate of sevon miles an hour. . and send it back. to-da- y. ' Wanted Kips UbtUn. TamptatUm MollrltRiL Have you any lobsters asked Mra Honeymoon. Yes, maam," said the Ashman, here is a fresh lot Oh, dear mo, I don't want them; they are green. Havent you any riper ones than these?" Truth. Willie, who has eaten his apple MaboL lot's play Adam and Eve. You bo Eve and I'll be Adam. Mabel Ail right Well? Willie Now you tempt' me to eat your apple and 111 succumb. Judge. Ths Sams Old Kicium. man, Well, young Magistrate what excuse have you for taklug tho picture whan you were forbidden to do it? Young Man Judgo. I didn't know my camera was loaded. Judge. OF MEN. DESCRIPTION bI Almost Always Totally laadaqaata to Soeoro IdoatMoallaa. Io was n young man and fairly good looking; smooth faee and with- out glasses; wore a dark suit: wai about five feet in height and looked like a married man; anybody would Such was the descrip- know him. tion turned in by a young woman who slipped quietly into the city editors office and wanted to advertise for Chalmers, says the Boston Her- It appeared that Chalmers had ald. left home, snd nobody knew why, and this young woman bad faith that her recital of his personal trait would bring him back. It was a good example of the average person's power of description of a fellow being. It Is totally Inadequate! Though man be fearfully and wonderfully made, there seems to be an unaccountable inability in nine person out of every ten to give a creditable word picture of anyone whom they have seen. Because we understand the looks of a person when we meet him it never occurs to the mind that other people do not grasp a thorough idea of his appearance with a few passing phrases of description. Your friend comes In, and you expound to him that such and sueh man has just called for him, but almost invariably your exposition is a jumbled lot of used phrase whieh apply to the human race in general. The other day when I rushed into my office room with n column story on the end of my tongue or at the tip of my pen. to be more accurate 1 was given this greeting: Hello! A man has just been in to see you. What did he look like? g follow; Oh, he was n not very tall, rather Heavy, but not too much sa" Was he old or young?" About 2.) or 25, I should say. What color of hair? 1 dont remember now. However, I dont think he had a mustache. " How dressed?" Oh, just an ordinary busmen good-lookin- suit. Have you ever heard such a description? If not watch yourself next time you tell of some ones calL You will be surprised to find that your description would fit almost any member of the human race. Why Is it? 1 don't know. We read in booki that its because we don't cultivate the habit of intelligent observation. There was once a boy who learned to describe what he saw. Every morning he was sent by his father to walk rapidly by an elegantly arranged window, and then afterward to repeat to him all the things be saw at this one glance at the panorama and to describe them. At first the lad could remember but few things that his eye may have caught in the passing glance, but in time he could remember almost everything in a show window by merely glancing at it onca Th Indian Hunting Ground. Not all the Indians are yet deprived of thoir natural moans of livelihood, the hunt Many of the tribe inhabiting reservation in the far North western stntes live almost entirely on tho spoils and profits oi hunting and fishing. The coast Indians employ themselves busily durseason, lb ing the salmon-runnin- g supplying fish to tho canneries, and pioce out their livelihood at other seasons by the proceeds of furs and flesh obtained by hunting and trapping. In the interior of Oregon and Washington big game is yet plentiful enough for the hunting season to afford to the Indians n pretty good source of support for most ot ' the year. Ths Oljwt Iartljr Att.ln.il. Klljordan, giving it n vigorous kick Boy, this is the third morning I've seen that old rubber boot lying on tho sidewalk at this corner. What is your idea In koeping it there, anyway? Bootblack I ain't gotnuttin to do with it, The feller that runs this grocry store is keepin tab on that boot Ho says hes goin to find out how many dura fool kicks it in one week. Fropncntlpx SpnncM. Sponges arc being propagated in n cheap way just now. About three years ago a cute German divided a few healthy specimens of live sponges into a goodly number ol parts and placod them in deep water, with the result that he now has a crop of 4,01)0 at an Initial expenditure of 2a A Victim of Fsts. Hungry Higgins Madam. I use tor have as good a home as anybody till misfortuno overtook me. Mrs. Potts Indeed! And what was the nature of the troublo? Hungry Higgins Mo father-in-lalost his job. A Premonition of (Imtnnt A flood Pater, to son, who had been Jilt to Do you mean to say that' you in- take an prango whilo his fathnr left' tend to live in this miserable, lone- the room Why didn't you take the some place? largest orange. Johnny? "Yes, and Im always thanking Fils Boeauso I could toll by feelUnd that there are no show windows ing them all that the largest one had hero which would tempt my wife to no juice in it squander my money." The Vnnncmt Pullrfimmi. Ths ratal IlsahUh." Probably tho youngest pollccmi Fifty-thre- e Louis (' por cent of the lunatics the country Is in the asylums of Bengal are there ing. who i the mascot of the I 'hi sntiroly a the result of using street station in Now York. Tin "hashish. a poisonous drug, in wears a complete uniform, an Egypt Greece and Turkey the use' the roll caii auil turns out witl of the drug is forbidden by a strin- night platoon. gent law. IU. ton. A gr Itrrnni or th. Hut or Vulem Every nation on the globe has hod The Bank of Venice conducted its Its stone age nt some period of its leallngs for on years with such history. Even us lute u iho time of Kmor that in all that time no hostile Moses anu Aaron tho rile f cin was ieiToi'in'd with u stui:-.- ' ritlcisin or condemnation of Its knife. has been found. n |