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Show 1 ISABEL ,'i t LORNES PlMSHJIENT. MB1 OB( I BT lavishly endowed her, never doubting that they would prove irresistible. But her success was far from flattering. After the first few words, dictated b touiuiou cuuncsv, Mr. Dudley seemed scarcely aware of Tier pres- t f H 1UIXI, B ence. bo accustomed was Isabel to homage fv ' 'uixuTJiruTJxnjTxirixuxruTTLr SOAK HOWARD stood ta be- Isabel Lorue, pleading with hi r for a word of hope, as the londeinned might plead for life at the tool ol iue galloHs. Accustomed us she was to such Things, eien she was startled by the fierce eloipieme of the impassioned words taut fell fiorn his lips. 1 cannot gno jou what 1 do not she said, cohUy, withdrawing her baud from his too ardent clasp. "I bate mi heart.- - Don't mistake me," she added, as she noted the fieri e jealousy aroused by these words. "It Is not that I hate bestowed It on an) one. I hae no heart to gap. I don t think I eer had any. Men have come to me, asking of me what you ask, nd telling me the same story. They poke, as you bate spoken, of feelings nd emotions which are ntteily incomprehensible to me, and in which I could not share if I would Young Howard turned his eyes stead-fl- y upon the face of the speaker; so rarely beautiful in outline and coloring, but as calm and passionless as summer lake. He raised bis hand to heaven, as If Invoking upon her head a voiceless curse. "Your time will come! The door closed upon the speaker, but there was something in that haggard face, In those despairing eyes, that haunted Isabel for some months pos-aes- after. I wonder If I shall ever love? she murmured, as, drawing down the sofa cushion under her head, she settled herself for tb'e afternoon nap with which she usually refreshed herself for the evening. I hope not, tf It Is going to affeet me aa It does most people." :TST How very shocking! The sun had disappeared behind the Western hills, and refreshed by the quiet sleep she had, Isabel stepped out upon the veranda when this exclamation fell upon her ear, uttered by one of the excited group that had gathered In one corner of It "What Is It? Young Howard has shot himself! Fortunately, the gathering shades of twilight concealed the face that suddenly blanched at these words, and those present were too much absorbed In their own feelings of astonishment and horror to notice the unsteadiness In Isabels voice, as she said. "What could have induced him to do that?" aud adulation that she inwardly re seated this as a personal wrong, and she redoubled the arts and allure meats that had uever been exerciser vainly until now. Not that their object seemed altogether insensible to them: they were times when he even sought her society, causing her heart to acknowledge the woudroua fascination, not only m his conversation, but in every look and tone. But sbe noticed with a tierce jealousy at her heart of which she had not supposed herself capable how easily he could turn from her to any other, forgetting. apparently, her very ewstence, fehe could uot but know that he took a strong interest in her, but of what nature this interest was she tortured herself vainly to determine. She often eu light his eyes fixed Intently upon her, a strange, inscrutable look in them, which made her heart flutter with the vague and delightful hopea to w liich It gave rise. Mr. Dudleys moods were very variable, to say the least Sometimes he saw her almost dally, and then absented himself for da) a at a time; sometimes he came into the room where she was without speaking to or even looking at her, and then he was almost lov er like In his looks and manner. In this way Isabel was kept for some weeks in a state of alternate hope and fear, thus experiencing the torments she had herself Inflicted so often and so remorselessly. "I thought that you did not believe In love? The two Isabel and Mr. Dudley were alone together, which seldom occurred. Isabel's heart beat fast; there was something in the look and tone of the speaker that strengthened her hopes almost to certainty. She determined to bring matters to a crisis. ' That was before the eyes lifted to those that were regarding her so intently, were wondrously bright before I met you, Maurice. And so you do love me, Isabel?" A swift, burning flush swept up over neck aud bosom, even to the temples. More than life better than my own soul! The silence that followed fell coldly on the heart that gave utterance to this passionate outburst, and the look which met the questioning glance that Isabel lifted to that dark, stern face, struck more colder still. But She had go fid Too far to retreat now. Kvcn as I believe as I must believe you love me." Did I ever say that I loved you?" Isabel was silent for some moments. He never had, as sbe was humbled and sick at heart to remember. "Not In words, perhaps, but there are ways, there are looks, far more He was, without question. Insane, grave, pompous loooking man among the group. "Insanity is hereditary In his family; his mother died InBane." eloquent" Isabel drew a long sigh of relief. "True. But did you never look a "Oh, that accounts for it. then." love that you did not feel? filling the cup of hope and Joy to the very brim, and dashing it to earth as it was raised "Who is he? Again Isabels eyes wandered across to the eager lip? the room to where a plainly dressed, She had done this many, many times, man was standing, rather distinguished as she well knew. But she had no looking, and yet not sufficiently so to thought for this now. You do love me. Maurice? warrant the attention and interest he Not many men could have reaisted seemed to excite. There was an unmistakable air of that appealing look. Taking a locket from his breast, Mautrinmph in Mrs. Fanes manner, as she rice Dudley touched the spring, rereplied: "La! my dear, dont you know? Its vealing a fair young face, almost InMaurice Dudley, the new arrival. So fantine in its innocence and beauty. This is all that remains to me of charming, and yet such an oddity! Half the women are craxy after him, the only woman I have ever loved though its easily seen that he doesnt that I ever shall love. If there are such care for them. And he doesnt mind things ns angels, she is one now. their knowing it, either. What do yon The fierce Jealousy that had taken think he said to Mrs. Hinds, the other possession of Isabels heart was folevening, when she offered to Intro- lowed by a sense of relief at the conduce him to you the reigning belle, cluding sentence. She made no effort to disgnise the joy that flashed from as she called you? Isabel saw and felt the malice that the suddenly lifted eyes. "Dead? lurked beneath those smooth, dulcet "Murdered! And by hands as soft, (words, now should I know? she said, and white, and beautiful as yours, with an air of indifference that was lady," Isabel shrank, she scarcely knew feigned, as Mrs. Fane well knew. "Tve no especial liking for reigning why, from that burning gaxe. IIow bow terrible! she faltered. belles, he said, as grand as the Grand s you will Mogul himself. Ay, it was terr'ble, Wasn't that an odd Uoman, it was you that mur-dep- d find, speech, my dear? her I suppose he meant it to be odd," iV retorted Isabel, unable wholly to conYou! Do you remember Oscar Howceal the wound her vanity had received from the malicious eyes that were ard, be whom your vile arts drove to watching her. Its the height of despair, to madness, to death? He was ome peoples ambition to be odd. I her brother, her only brother, and dont see anything very alarming about w hen the terrible tidings reached her, him. I can point you to half a doxen her gentle heart broke. Now, farewell. men in our own set better looking at this time, I shall be than he." many miles from here. "Ah! but you should hear him talk! The despair, the agony in Isabel Hes been everywhere, I should say. Lome's face was something terrible And then he has such a musical voice, to look upon. find such expressive eyes! Take him But you will return? Oh, Maurice, altogether, he is the most fascinating I repent I repent! Do not utterly man I ever met, though you might find forsake me! score that are handsomer I shall never return! My work With these words Mrs. Fane walked here is done. In your victims letter away, taking with her the pleasant to his sister he related your words1 the- last time he saw you. assurance' that she bad left her "dear friend" as uncomfortable as she could came to revenge his death and hers, desire, " Not that she had any espe- who rell by your hand as well; to cial cause or ill will, except Isabel's tench you that you have a heart that superior personal attractions, -- though can feel, and love, and suffer aa other hearts do. May this knowledge make perhaps our feminine readers will that to be cause enough. you a better. If not a happier, woman. York Weekly. After this, Isabel met Mr. Dudley Farewell forever."-N- ew often or. rather, saw bim; for, much For Working Girl. to her chagrin and mortification, he People in Paris who are Interested till continued to decline, at least tacitly, her acquaintance, which most men In giving working girls a bit of pleaswho were thrown within the sphere of ure now and then have devised a fcer influence were so eager to obtain. scheme where worthy girl receive two Stimulated by this unwonted oppo- tickets to a gbod theatre once In a sition, Isabel determined to bring about , bile. The scheme calls for an elaV an introduction, nor doubting that then orate system of registration, but It Is the way would be clear to her for working to perfection. The Kaiser IS idea into avenging the alight that had been of- thinking of introducing the a tha royal theatres In Germany. fered her. This being effected, she lost no time A woman's stationery doesnt always in calling Into play the seductive Charms .with which nature had so Indicate her station. .aid -- to-bi- m con-ald- -- THc HOUSE FLY SHOWN UP. GdMttae to an end as the centre of ARTIFICIAL PEARLS! OntuulutM FrerjrHitog It Teaches t't Pf2ag interests of Newport with With Its Feet A proper houses Ife hates a fly as the devil bates holy water. The comparison is really unjust to the housewife. Instinctively she knows more about the common fly than Mr. William Lyman Underwood lecturerln the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who lias written a pamphlet on the Insect which is a horrible warning Any good woman who has cooked, and baked and set tbs table wfll find the bouae fly guilty u auy count in Mr. Underwoods indictment without the evidence. which, howeier. we shall set forth for the information of the sterner sex, which Is sufficiently impressed with the iniquity of the mosquito, but makes light of flies. Too long has the burden of every wasting and deadly fever been laid on the narrow shoulders of the mosquito, and the female variety at that It is time the fly. rather weakly called the bonse fly, for he la as much at home outdoors as in the house, got his deserts. The bouse fly (Musca domestics), says Mr. Underwood, is particularly filthy. Our domestic animals, the dog and cat, though far from clean in all their habits, we like to have about us, but ws keep them In their proper places. The house fly, on the other hand, is generally tolerated everywhere. It crawls over hands and faces, its gets into milk, it walks over sugar and salt, over bread and cake, often soiling and contaminating everything that it touches with its filthy feet" An unbidden guest that is treated like the prodigal son, to the fatted calf or to anything else the table groans under. The house fly has only six feet and one tongue, but Mr. Underwood has proved that on feet and tongue it may harbor thousands of microbes. A photograph of the footprints of a fly on a loaf of jelly Illustrates his text Its hunger satisfied," says the author, it flew away, leaving no visible sign to show that it had ever been tnere; the Jelly looked as dean and pure a ever. Countless numbers of germs, too small to be seen save by the aid of a microscope, had, however, been planted there by the flye feet and tongue. Twelve hours later, when tms photograph was taken, the dish of jelly having Deen kept in the meantime in a warm place, the groups of bacteria could easily be seen with the naked eye, just as the camera hae here reproduced them. During this time the germs bad multiplied many thousand times. Each mass now represented a living colony, or, as it were, a city of germs, the smallest spot which can be seen on the plate containing many millions of them. The tracks of the fly as he walked along can be plainly made out, 'and midway in several between thefly's track places will be seen a number of small, rounded spots or colonies. These came from the germs carried and planted by the flys tongue, and they show the different places where the insect paused to feed as It walked along. The population of one of these colomillnies was counted, and forty-si- x ion (46,000,000) germs were found to be present in a single spot They had, of course, multiplied many times after they were planted on the Jelly by the flys tongue. It is hardly necessary for Mr. Underwood to add that it Is most that flies should be kept sway from all food supplies." A perusal of his pamphlet will make the Insect so odious that no one will want to eat without some form of fly Insurance. It is a comfort, however, to be told by the author that It must not be inferred that flies always carry the germs of dysentery and tropical fever If they did, how upon their feet long could the hnman race bold its own against flies that propagate microbes apiece? Why, Dr. L. O. Howard, the Government entomologist, once experimented with 23,087 flies to see how microblc they were. There is solace in such figures. - Sun. Baadling Hot klntt Gracefully- Untried grace in motion Is a thing which seldom falls of applause and apIf you doubt this Just preciation. watch the crowds which daily line the subway cuts at those places Where men are setting up the steel work. The deftness with which the man at the forge passes red hot rivets to riveters on the framework far above bim Is what holds the crowds. Seeing the thing done once creates a desire to see it done again and again, and yon watch In vain for a slip or a mishap. Taking the glowing rivet from the d fire with a pair of tongs, the forgeman walks over toward the riveters helper. With a preliminary swing, which Is in the nature of taking aim, the forgeman tosses it np to the helper, who catch 'It dexterously In an old nail keg. Bometiuirs the man at the forge' win throw th rivet fort feet, but he never misses his aim, nor did any one of the crowds who watch the performance ever see the helper muBT one. New York Brest, long-handle- UU to Cm DIimh, The bactericidal effects of the arc light are much superior to those of sunlight, says M. K. Walsbam. In Boentgen Bay Archives; the very rapid Is absorbed by tbe atmosphere. A rapid oscillation arc, particularly between Iron points, gives off an abundance of rays of extremely small wave length, with a fair proportion of lower to' these rays quarts is transparent, transmitting sixty per cent through 4.4 mm, gelatine Is quite opaque, ice Is transparent as air, and a film of iron oxide quite opaque. For use, as blood Is opaque to tbe rays, they are passed through Ice made to press lijpon the region affected, so aa to makff it ultra-viol- et high-tensio- n nltra-viol- ultra-viol- et GOOD M lnt4urtkm ottlw automobile. Just jtbehrtor car w ill have had Its day a!in tfractical airship arrives. TVs . CklicH Haro For Ontario Sd.pt at Hklng Imitation. M The Chinese were tbe first to make artificial pearls. They were at it centuries ago. Some of tbe Chinese artificial pearls used to be very deceiving. Nw Cknada raUes objection to Haw to R.palr Hoads. Charles Williams, a contractor In The French caught the Idea from th of tbe orders driven and nowadays they make a Counersrllle, lniL, gives a few points Chinese, at of France. There are fine Imitation of the genuplenty of on road wonderfully in a paiwr before a breed ktds jn ine article. Fearl making In China la Suited States to be farmers repair which will be of confined to two villages In tbe northern id 4nply and where they will be interest: institute, In of tbe province of Telco. w e can much better afford Now, some points on how to keep part the months of May and lane large t!A tbs of Immigrants than some roads in good condition and bow to of mussels are brought is repair them. A road must have con quantities at an jetting a lake thirty miles dte baskets from stant attention if it is to be of any use taut, and the biggest of them art or value. Brotna Howard, a dramatist, aud lected for the operation that la to be Whenever a rut forms it should be performed. Into tbe shell of each moL thereto by profession a trained repaired at once. Tbe road should be lusk are Introduced small objects which Bmes and customs, is the lat- graded in the spring and graveled in la intended the bivalve shall coat it be bard then will The road the fail. est ""uplugly to co demn tbe aocial and smooth, and tbe gravel will be with the pearly substance It secretes. Sometimes little balls of earth art Cii?u4irlgively dubbed the Four Hunpacked "down, but uot worn out, before used. Such dred, Ihf swagger set." he says, are bad weather sets in. It pellets are mad of mod on depends bottom from of water coarse, tbe eltresty fast. They drink much wlue, wbat shape the crown of the road is dried and with tbe Juice of The far Hundred doe not," he adds, I in what the condition of the road will the Seed! ofpowdered tree. the camphor If the winter; Toflucge the manners or customs of be for travel through To these of th nuclei Inside place the crown is In good shape it will shed is a process of no lltt!a dlfflcul oortyio any jart of the country to the water to the side ditches, and tf mussels ty. The shell is opened with a smafl tbe to degree. It is looked upon they are in good shape the road will Instrument of mother-of-pearl, the Store U curiosity than a body of peo- remain dry and solid. la gently lifted w aya to spoil a mantle of tbe animal a tell will few I Now antics or manner of living ple and tha peliete ara laid beneath tha good road: ibeuUto imitated. Tbe shell U then permitted ta The surest way is to use the road mantle. close. the mollusks ara da Finally and sod all mud. tbe and pile grader A drQixation advances human teeth or pools They are canals in posited into ditches weeds from the sides and five or inches apart, at six placed art Arterioratlng. There appears to the centre of the road. This makee the depths of from two to five feet. In lota be nofeabt about that The statement I road soft end muddy, and it will be lm to of from 5000 to SO, 000. U anjy confirmed by dentists and possible for the next coat of gravel In November they art lifted and with the old roadbed. The reunite physical . Dentistry has reached the sult Is the road will be spongy. The opened. The animals are removed from the shells and the peliete are dedignity of a scientific trade, end yet it best plan Is to scrape It up Into piles tached with a sharp knife. By this does kt seem to have Induced the and haul it to some gnlly, of which all time they are fastened tightly to tha there present tion or the formation of bet- roads have a few. and dump it inner surface of the shells and hava road Th road grader is a good ter lad. One would think that tbe covered with a coating of nacre. builder In the hands of a man that dentin would be tbe last ones to knows bow to use it, bnt otherwise he Next a little bole is cut in each pearl at the point w here it has been attached n worry tbout the deterioration of will do a great deal of damage, to the shell of the mussel. Through to la road a to decadno Another spoil way teth, if there were this opening tbe earth whieh composed all the so crown steep that ent or defective teeth the dental chairs make the nucleus la removed. The hollow th rewill take to the centre. The would k vacant is theu filled with melted yellow Bat whether the travel pearl In tbe out worn Is road la the sult fice the-oriis ertfutly covapprehension which the dentists pro- centre, and no use has been made of Mainland roother-oa ered of with peart. piece fess W feel over the decline of the the remainder of the road. The centre The pearls thus formed are flat en tha bold which Three la cut up by gullys. Ametkaa molar is merely a manifestatroad to be soft bottom and In shape are somewhat cause ion f professional tea! or not the water and when the than hemispheres. They have it otherwise would more and muddy much of the instre and beauty of tha fact ttot they agree upon the point la be In good shape. real gems, and are sold so cheaply aa tstentfng and significant to be procurable by all who care to posAa OM Foil tlent Inh Hortr. sess them. They are employed to his; Ths crinoline, In the early days of our national hlch is threatening considerable extent by jewelers, wbe tie vrsrld from Paris again, bad its tory whether ths General Government set them In Uaraa and ornaments for should take a band In making Internal women. in a woven fabric composed of arigla T Improvements became one of tbe great Wir isd linen (flax) warp, hence the The matter waa fought WORDS OF WISDOM. nun This fabric was first used tot out In Congress and in political camPopularity proves nothing. shoes, then for bonnets, tbe word bepaigns, and finally settled In tha affir Is a wonderful purgative from the Improvements mative. Among Frayer Aa coined article this in 1830, ing of roads was prob-- pride. the bnikling mi costly, and did not extend tbe ably the most Important Ilans were! Cultivating crosses never enrich dress to the desired bulk, light ateel made for connecting the different parts character. . . . hoops were fitted with tape, upon the of the country by national highways. E A Mna lYe, D0 lndicattoa was built Yrorn 01 birdcage principle." So popular waa Th National Dike Md to tbe Ohio Blver, . tbs crinoline Ih 1862 that the rolling Cumberland, Introspection uocs not promote spte and then on westward. The plan was ojl the steel developed a great trade in to build to EL Louis, but before that Itual digestion, hefileld, and one firm alone averaged loint was reached the building of J The affluence of a Ufe may be know railroads bad bpgun, and the by It Influence. steam to ten tons from fifteen jcgtput of lost Interest In th road quesSpiritual indifference Is often only people Several deaths aaeek, occurring by indolence. mental tion. fie' through the use of crinoline killed In these days when river and harbor No need to eat tbe brambles In ordet tie fashion, but Dr, Bichardaon, in his bills are looked upon as a matter of to get the berriea. Held of JpUenses, gives an instance J course, and national aid to road itn A mans judgment on other is We o t a lady escaping from the effects of provement Is considered a novel propo-- 1 verdict on himself. it is Interesting to recall that If blog struck by lightning by tbe hoops sition, you are a live lighthouse you de of road building by the th question not need a whistle. adng as Conductors. nation s a great and burning issue Paying the debt of nature doe not long before river and harbor bills were if. Albert flans, who has written ever heard of. It Is also worth noting pay the debt of sin. were vetoing river and A childs finger can point ae straight history of the French expedition to that Presidents unconstitutional long to heaven aa a mans. as bills harbor Urxico and who is a Frenchman In after national aid to road improvement Sin In Itself la to bo dreaded more sjste of bis name, complains that the bad become a settled policy. than its consequences tilted States was to blame for the It does not seem probablq that th Only the featherweights are draw defeat of France by Germany and is question of constitutionality will ever after every passing fad. raised against such legisresponsible for the capitulations of be seriously onr desires were granted our all If Brown-lolation as that proposed In the Mcts and Sedan. He argnee it out bill for national aid In the building delights would be gone. is this way: If the United States had of roads. It can be defended as strongHair of wisdom is in being silent to say. sent troops Into Mexico immediately ly as river and harbor legislation under when yon have nothing which Constitution more the of needs religion In pol clauses world The those upon the close of the Civil War she, . ROADS. 0 te Chlh-Klan- ig be-co- hu-int- f d 1 w-a- W French troops there. - Had the French troop ben whipped then Franc would have realised her military defects and have reformed her system, y at that when war came with she would have been able to lId her own, or sbe would have been chagrined that sbe would not have Tbe sought war writh that power. United States neglected to whip Fiance in Mexico, merefore she is re-- J sensible for her defeats in Europe. Ns reasoning could be more simple, pte 'Srt i;llu.e.n la a commerce between the Bnt in addition to these it states. finds Its strongest warrant In th authority conferred upon Congress to establish post foads, a provision that is growing in practical importance every year with the extension of the rural free delivery system. Ger-nun- Head Kepnlrln, The work of repairing the road is All culverts and gutters in Jp-de- should be cleaned out, and all almul- dere on th roads should be pared J dowD tha tlley traveled portion of the highway. This will permit of the water running off into tbe gutter. Gravel roads should Dr. Louis Haupt, Commissioner ot Lav a little gravel placed on the toe the New York Board of Education, la marks In the centre of the road and at this quoted in the New York Tribune as in the ruta. If this Is not done All loose result will no season good foUows: basis on we caculate tbe if stones should be removed from ma- tint there is a baby born every fifteen I a biok of a rake, not mlautea within the territory of Greater jhe teeth. Loose stones Injure the road New York, In this year of our Lord las much as any one thing, because they re driven into the surface and break 1903, we are at the root of the number 1 It ! l"1 1. "IL!: dark day for tbs race wbea Insatiable greed becomes the mark of greatness. Barns Horn. ' Why tbe oM Didnt Hto.ff 3, p, Morgan, Jr., was describing 3 visit be made to Ireland last year. In Dublin," he said, my valet feU ill and I was obliged to send him bom to London. Thenceforth I relied upon hotel valets, and queer fish, truly, some of them were. There was a Derry hotel valet who amused me. I sat In tlie pa.or 0j mJ BUite one morning bedroom fdr a jlllM to pair of boots. "Two pairs of boots, I said, tore In the marquetry closet. Bring me on pair, and be sure that they are mate. 'The Derry Falet bustled off and brought back a pair of boots that were not mates after alL Tatrlck, I said, this pair of boots are not mates. 'Sure, then, sir, h said, T dont know what's to be done at all, at all, for the other pair In th cabinet are not mates either . Th World' Creod. Herr ZeUer, head of the Bures n el Hinted la the year 1909, When these ch!pi of toDe gbould b applied to International Statistics at Stuttgart tobies reach school age. That rate form cushion. This cushion should . has published an Interesting table M of aa j newbabies- - every j not be more thanof the .world. He piece represents ninety-siI Inch thick, J the aggregate number of boman tote twenty-fou- r 672 babies or hours, I necessary. A ton of splinters wlll uf-- l th earths surface at lA44,516,0k wk. After allowing for immigration flc or 634 250 t0 300 square feet of whom onIy ftbout from of I ana emigration, which. It is claimed, An ordinary farm roller weighted gooo, pVofess any forms of Chria- will balance each other, at least twen down and run over the road after loose j tl.nl);r The adherents of Confucius "tones are removed will Improve It It I number 300,000,000, of Braham 13 will the babies cent' of per Deeemr t0 ne, B7een'"s 200.000 and of Bnddha 121.000.000. Tha nor reach the age of six. The ninetydust numbCT of they only gtone roa(J jewl in the world ia given slf would then mean about two full lQ LflO.SGO.OOO. dry weather. If the road la watched be necessary, as j dae a of children daily, fourteen a anew surface will notchance to get in I Fmrv r th cobwlthe ciore week cr more than 700 for the year, fit will no have the A South Sea Islander, at condition. He congratulates the Aiwmg firty classes to a schooL we eIectmen on tbe fact that the roads 0f a religious meeting, offered the fob stall need fourteen new school build- O God, we are about weI1 Iooked after by them lowing prayer; haT be(n I Inf In 1909 for the babies of 1903; I accordance with the mean at their to go to onr respective homes. Let heard be Uk tilt Is something under 40,000 children j disposal, and This fact will greatly aid not the words wewebare soon to be wcar aid toe clothes towns State fine to the the ! In securing of years, who will need 700 new I I taken off and folded up In box tin teachers for that year. Tbe birth rate toey at present enjoy. I another Sabbath comes round. Bather, I on onr U Increasing. - Children grow up like I yabburn, a deaf mute, let Thy truth be like tbe tattoo Carle-- o g!f weeds while we sleep, and this Foef is the only Lolilcr of an hereditary title j bodies, ineffaceable till death. ton Magaxln- e,1a England so afflicted. night and day. J - three-fourt- h x rejg-toti- one-thir- 1 I a I I |