Sepulchre Pelee HThe Ahited X The VV Tale of By Will Levington Comfort Copyright. jo., br Will Lerlnirton' Comfort CorrrUht, ttJ7. by J. B. I.irrmcoTr Compact. All rlehts referred ag. CHAPTER VIII. (Continued.) Hero was another Issue of Nemesis, the curso o another illfe through bis coming back from the edpo of the water. Itl the crush of KelMiatc, he atnllod at the wom an. Until a moment ago the wrecking work of the morning had put thoughts of Soronia from his iniuil. He had come to the shop partly to marshal his final resources In an out-of-the-way spot nnd arrange the last line of action, and partly to avoid the possibility of ar rest for the moment in caso the Panther had brought an emissary of the law. Ills end was a matter of hours nt best; his cruising and his friendship with Consta ble were over. Saint Pierre, of the lesser islands, was the- last station of his trav eling. During three days he had passed many hours In the shop. What those "hours had accomplished was dramatically revealed now in the anguish of the maid en as she waited for the answer to her question. "I have been thinking a great deal fdnce yesterday. 1 found that I couldn't do what 1 tried at least, without seeing you Again, Sonoria." Breen spoke vague ly, lie had sufficient honesty not to be deft with the forces he was now employ ing. "The future, I cannot tell yet. I may have to leave Saint Pierre for awhile, but I shall leave my heart here, and if I live I will come back ! To-day I must see my friend and tell him that I cannot cruise farther south with hira." She would have fallen had he not held her,but her eyes were shining. The old man ran for restoratives. Breen would have put the girl into a chair, but she clung to him. ' "I have waited for you so long, my maker of pictures," she whispered. Pere Rabeant, stood beside them with medicines. The veneer of shop servitude was gone from the gray old face. The sharp black eyes were directed steadily upon the stranger, who saw that they were ready to soften or burst into flame Breen saw, too, that he was less in the presence of the father of a creole girl of Martinique than the father of an old world household, "I am waiting for you to speak, mon sieur," said Pere llabeaut. "You have not waited long, sir," Breen answered. "It wns just an instant ago that I had the honor of hearing from your daughter's lips that she would wait for me until I could come back perma nently to Saint Pierre' "I know you will forgive an old sol dier of France. So many people do not understand don't try to understand that I deemed it a privilege to marry the mother of the maid in your arms not because a governor general of Martinique was her father but because she was wor thy the worship of an old soldier of France. The girl is like her mother, monsieur." "It ia an honor I do not deserve, sir the daughter of a country woman of Jo sephine and a soldier of France," said Breen, grateful that one of his utter ances contained or covered no lie. The bow from the veteran was a gra cious thing, fie held a glass to the Hps of his daughter. "1 do not need it now, father," Soronia feaid softly. There was a knock at ihe door. The maid hastened to her room, and Pere Itabeaur. once more the master of the shop, greeted a gasping patron. Breen was left to his thoughts. That which he had done was unchangeable. "Nicholas Steinbridge, rejoice 1 this is your wedding day I" he muttered. "What a time you've had down the years I You have lived Jong and freely, taxing what you saw a'nd daring consequences and prattling like a defective to keep up your epiriu! Nick, do you recall the prime sentence of your philosophy 'There is nothing which Doctor Death cannot cure'2 Isn't it a wonderful paying? So wonderful that it has exceptions! No, Death will not put Peter and his lady out to sea! - 1'he police are after you : your lips are hot with lies ; you sit In the gloom. Nick Steinbridge, you are whipped, cornered. You go out a coward and a liar. Where is your laugh of yes terday?" And yet he smiled at the perfection of the pride-humbling trap the Fates had laid for him this day ; smiled at the words he had uttered to Soronia and her father, who bad bristled into a soldier of France. And yet there had been no other way. After what he. had done to Constable, it was not in him to deprive Soronia of what she seemed to need not under her .pitiful eyes! His own part did not enter. He conjured no golden haze as the mate of this creature of ardor, fragrance, and gentleness. Nor, on the other extreme, did he reflect that to spend one's days in a torrid shop with a woman of black blood was a fitting end for a brutalized life. He put the woman out of b!s mind, and turned to the sorry business of the wounded friend. lie must find Consta ble and say the last words; then take the blame from his friend in the presence of the women. If he were takeri Into cus tody on the way there was no help for that. All remnants of justice and wblte, manshlp demanded that he set out at once. Ue hurried to the court. "Soronia," he called, "I'll have to go now. Mr. Constable expects to leave with his ship to-day, and I must talk with him before he goes.'V She appeared In the dress in which he had first seen her. There were tender remonstrances which ho scarcely heard, .but he answered gently. His raJpd was 'with th- man. "And you will be back this afternoon? In the hollow of the universe there seemed no reason that ho could utter why he should not be back that afternoon. "Yes, little fairy," he answered. 'And I shall watch from the .upper window. If the sinoko clears, for your Trlend'H h!p to pail. Ah, don't etay long from me J" The sun could uot shine through the Mh-fog which shut out the harbor dla- tances and shrouded tho great, cone, but volumes of dreadful heat found the earth. Tnough tho .Madame lay well in the har bor, sho was Invisible now, even from the terraces. There yas no line dividing tho shore from the sea, nor the sea from the sky. It wns all an illimitable mask, whose fabric was the dust which had lain for centuries upo.n Pcleo'a dynamos. There was no carriage for hire. The day had driven the public drivers to cover. Urecn walked to tho plantation house. Tho servant was long In answering his Ting. Mr. Wall was in the hallway. The fall from guest to an cm?my of the house pulled hard upon Brecn's philosophy. "Come in, sir," said Uncle Joey. Ills tone was repressed as he added: "Had 1 known your address, I should have sent your effects to you." "I wasn't thinking about that, but look ing for Mr. Constable," Breen declared. "You aro Nicholas Steinbridge?" "Yes." The elder man stared at him savagely. "Don't you think you have done enough damage?" "More than enough, Mr. Wall; but there remains, from my point of view, an unfinished sentence." "He is not here." "Then I need trouble you no further." Breen had not the heart that-Jnstnnt to ask to sec the ladies. At the pier he learned from Krnfit, who had charge of the launch, that Mr. Constable was not aboard tho ship, and hnd given up the idea of sailing for the day, apparently. At the Roxelnne, Breen found that Con stable had made his way beyond toward the Itiver Blanch, which had flowed black and boiling yesterday. At tho Hotel de"s Palms there was definite word of M. Con-, stable, American. Tho proprietor bore witness that the gentleman had stopped at the establishment long enough to pro cure food, mules nnd guides the last at great cost, since the natives were in dead ly fear for a trip to the craters of Pe lee. CHAPTER IX. The morning which broke through the defenses of Breen, and crumpled the dear est purpose of Constable, also drew Miss Stansbury into the vortex of intense emo tions. Whatever dominant traits and im pulses she had Inherited from her mother, it had been her self-training to repress. Ample opportunity had been afforded her to note in her mother the career of an In domitable mistress of affairs. The result of her observations was a positive distaste for stiffness, of views in any sphere, and a conviction that the display of master fulness in woman did not make for wom an's happiness. As a girl, it had not occurred to Lara to exert an authority counter to her mother's. When she became a young wom an she carefully avoided any extremity which might lead to the breaking of either her own or the more visible will of the house. Now, in the midst of painful develop ments, it was borne home to Lara that she had progressed too far in the way of amiability; that she hud unconsciously outstripped her intention, and passed into the boundaries of self-effacement. In tho crisis of the newspaper revelations, she had followed her mother's initiative with out question. The creature of indecisions that she had become grew more and more odious to her as the forenoon passed, and in her contrition she realized that the man whose first wish was to spare her from harm had been repaid with a lack of courtesy and a greater lack of courage. Nothing that she had said or done, it seemed to her now, carried the stamina of decision. She had implored him not to speak; she had run from him, like a frightened child to her mother, when he had told bis love and begged her to seek safety aboard his ship. In none of her dealings had she shown the strong wom anhood which marked her ideals; and in singular contrast stood out his gracious nesl and patience. The thousand little things in which she had subserved her own inclinations to the maternal will had dulled the delicate point of personality, without which a man cannot stand val iantly through the crux of harsh days. It was all plain now, so hideously plain. The chief of the acts she regretted had to do with the morning Itself. What manner of "friendship" was this which accepted as authoritative the testimony of a newspaper's suspicions? She had dono more than this, in handing Constable the document that witnessed against him, and shutting the door Upon his possible defense. There was an added poignnncy in the knowledge that her mother would not have thus used one of her favorites. Her distaste for the American caused Mrs. StansbHry so readily to accept news paper evidence as a triumph of her judg ment. As if such thoughts of wretched ness were not sufficient to start tears of vexation, IiraB mind finally added to the inventory of its miseries by reverting to her conversation with Constable in the carriage on the day of his arrival. How she had berated the essayist for declar ing that the stuff of friendship stirred not womankind! How rigorously he had agreed with her! Sho sought her own room when the tu mult mounted to the point of tears. Pres ently she went to the door and locked it, for the inevitable thought had come. What did tho name of Peter Constable mean to her? She had felt his strength. Ixmg ago she hud dreamed of such atrengtlr and put the dream away. Whether or not he was to be tho conqueror,' she kuew that mastery like his could rouse her heart. She was "evading the substance of the qWsMon. Before the mirror she frowned severely fit the Lara there. "Tell me this," said the woman, "do I want him to go away?" "No, no I" said the image. "No," repeated the woman? "not Jf he be innocent." . .. The Image scowled at her conservatism. "You deserve tov suffer. You sept him away without a tithe of your trust, with out a morsel of your mercy, Standing In the upper hallway, she J hoard what passed" between Breen and tho planter at the front door. Why did not Uncle Joey demand extenuating cir cumstances? Sho was s'uro that Breen would have dropped somo hint, at least, of Constable's part in tho mysterious al liance, had It not , been for tho barbed iron of tho other's words. Lara's palms ached from the pressuro of her nails. Sho did not go downstairs to luncheon but often crossed tho hall, entering Con stable's room to look at the mountain and cityward along tho smoky highway. In ono of these watches sho saw the llttlo black carriage of Father Damlcn-np-proachiug. Ho would have driven by, but sho ran below and called to him from the vecanda ; "Como in and rest a minute, father. Is there any good to toll?" "Very little, Lara. Tho gray curse Is on Saint Pierre, indeed. I have grown afraid for my people, and am warning them to seek refuge In Fort do France. Your guest suggested this step, and has helped nobly with money to caro for the people fleeing to the capital." Sho drew from him nn account of hi., meeting with Constnble on tho highway In tho morning. He told her, too, how the young man had sent sick native mothers and their children out to tho ship for refuge from tho heat and sulphur fumes, nnd of the largo sums of money he had volunteered for tho care of the favored few who fled to Fort do France. Lara bent her head forward toward the priest. "And what do you think of tills man, father?" she questioned suddenly. Tho old man's mild gaze fell beforo the glowing eyes of tho girl. "I did not think when I first met him that he was gifted with such zeal.", he answered weakly. "Where Is ho now, Father Da mien?" "That I cannot tell, dear. We have not seen him since morning. Some say that he has gone to Morno Rouge ; others that he has ascended to the craters of Pelee." She sprang up, but repressed the ex clamation upon her lips. Her mother had entered. "Good morning, Fnther Damlen," Mrs. Stansbury said pleasantly. "Is Lara re hearsing private theatricals for you?" The priest made haste to depart, sayln? that he was on the way to Fort de Franco with the money Constable had given, to make the refugees there as comfortable as possible. The ladles followed him to the door. It happened that the qld man faced Lara as he said: "I hope It may be n false rumor Ilia your friend has sought the craters of Pelee. Such services as his we. cannot nfford to do without. There iu power In the man " "I think. 1 have felt It, father," tho girl answered quietly. "What docs this mean, this talk ot 'friend' in connection with the confrere of a thief?" Mrs. Stansbury asked. "I did not quibble in the use of the word " "Do you count as a friend one who wpuld try to put you aboard a ship which bears the reputation of the Madame de Stacl? one who would bring to our house the notorious Nicholas Stembrldge?" "You were also Invited to go, remem ber." "My dear child, yon arc overwrought. I cannot believe that you are appealed to by this sudden interest of his In your wel fare; nor that you dreamed of accepting terms that would have frightened our Domrcmy saint who braved wars." "I do not like your talk of terms, moth er. There were no terms. Mr. Constable asked me to board bis ship, that I might be safe. His care for my welfare is not important in this talk." "Do you think you would be safe to go with him?' "Safe as the sea safe as the black women and their babies now crowded up on the terrible de Stael ! I do not care to talk further. You have followed your inclinations regarding Mr. Constable, and until now I have allowed your Inclinations to be mine. I am guilty as you are of outraging the sensibilities of a man who deserves at least the consideration of a gentlewoman. I shall learn the truth about these reports, and if they aro as false- in substance as I believe, I shall make up for my incivilities." Mrs. Stansbury felt that here was a resistance no less formidable than sudden. It must be crushed, of course, but the present moment was not propitious. She laughed gently. (To be continued.) Spoiled Their Waltzing. In her memoirs Mine, do Bolgne gives some interesting Kllmpsqs of Eng lish Bocinl life. For Instance, sho writes : "In 1810 no young English lady ven turcd to waltz. The Duke of Devon shire returned from n tour In Germany and observed one evening at n large ball that a woman wiib never seen to better ndvantngo than when waltzing. I do not know whether he was anx ious to piny a trick, but he repeated this assertion several times. It was passed from mouth to mouth, nnd at tho next ball all the young ladles were waltzing. The duke admired them greatly, said that it wns delightful nnd gave proper animation to u bull. He then added carelessly that he, at nny rnte, had dofcided never to marry a lady who waltzed. It wns to the Duchess of Richmond nnd at Curlton House that ho w fit tp make this revolution. TliOfoor duchess, the most clumsy of matchmaking mammas, near ly fell off her" chair'Avlth horror. She repented the statement, to her neigh bors, who passed It on, nnd "consterna tion spread from seat to .scat. The young ladles continued to waltz with clear consciences. ' Tho old Indies were furious, but the unfortunate dance was concluded. Before the end of t)io even-. ng tho good Duchess of IUchmond wns able to announce that her daugh ters fejt an objection to waltzing which no perstinslon of hers could ever overcome. Somo few girls of mora In dependence continued to waltz, but tho majority gnvo it tip-" Tho deposit of dew Is grently Influ enced by color. It will bo found thick est on a board painted yellow, but not at all on red and black. CONTESTANTS TOR TIIE THRONE Off MOROCCO. F$Bm!mWr t,. -T ML' LA I HAFID. AHDUIrA,1.. Muhil Ilnlld luts entirely overthrown the troops of his brother, tho reign ing sovereign, and It was rumored ihut ho would shortly bo rocopiUod by the powers. Tho reigning Sultnn wa s horn In 1878. und wns tho son of tho notorious Mulnl Hassan and n Circassian wife. Ho has mndo himself ludic rous to his people by his favor for European toys. For many months past Southern Morocco bus recognized his brother, Mulnl Halhl, ns Sultan. Tho pretender Is a capable person, who administered Southern Morocco with great ability nnd restored order with a firm hnnd. Tlio Diinrcr In Water. So much hns iteen written on tho dan ger of Impure drinking water, nnd so many epidemics of typhoid fever have been traced to this source, that it seems almost needless to utter n warning against the nso of "raw" wnter when there Is tho slight est suspicion that such water may not be absolutely pure. Yet so strong Is tho forco of conserv atism nnd so Impatient arc many with tho seeming overcnutlousness of mod ern sanitary teaching thnt the warn ing, and the reasons for It, cannot be too often repented. If such warning Is heeded by only one family, and n visitation of typhoid fever Is thereby nvcrted, It will hnvc been well' worth Thlle. The wnter supply of every largo city, taken from a river, n lake, or n number of streams, unless there Is a system of sand filtration nt the reservoir, Is never absolutely snfe. A single case of ty phoid fever on the banks of the river, or of nny of the smnll streams which contribute to the supply, may contam inate the water and give rise to other cases lower down on the stream ; and tho aggregate of pollution In tho wnter may jsoon render dangerotiB tho city mpply to which It contributes. The course of the underground wntei flow Is so erratic that tho country dwell er can never be sure that his well, how ever securely situated It mny seem to be, may not become fouled with scop lngs from his own or his neighbor's cesspool. Typhoid fever, not to mention other diseases which may be spread by means of the wnter supply, Is. It should be re membered, n country disease. It seems to be n city disease, but this Is only be cause there aro more people In n city, nnd so the number of cases is larger, and the number attracts attention. In nlmost every case, the exceptions iK'Ing so rnro that they need not be consid ered, the Infection Is brought from the country, either In the water supply or In the bodies of those who got It while staying in tho country by quenching their thirst from "the old oaken bucket" of Bcntlmentnl fnme. There nre, It Is true, other means by which tho Infection Is spread flies, for example, which mny enrry tho germs I'roin tho sick-room to the kitchen or dining-room. TIiIb Is prolmhly the most effective menns for the sprend of ty phoid In military camps. Salnds or veg etables, enten rnw, mny bo contamin ated either from water or "from manure used ns fertilizer; and the gerniB mny sometimes, bo found In oysters fattened nt tho mouths of rlvors or briys Into which sewers discharge. Nevertheless, tho.most common modo of the sprend of typhoid nnd dysentery Is through tho medium of wnter; nnd tho wise man will avoid the dnnger by boiling every drop of water used for drinking nnd for cooking purposes. Youth's Compnnldn NAVAL TBAININO VALUABLE. You nil Men Willi Iloiiornlilu !la clmrjiex I'M ml Deolraldu I'onIIIoiin, One of tho most striking differences in ship Ufo todny contrasted with thnt of thirty years ago, arises from tho .changed character and standards of our enlisted men, says n writer In the Army nnd Navy Life, Then, n great many of tho enlisted men were for eigners. In my first ship wero ninny Scandinavians who could not speak English and a great many of tho Amer icans present wero upward of 40 years old. To-day nil aro Americans nnd a largo majority of tho ship's company Is under 25 years qld. In tho old days a seaman on liberty would frequently roturn , to ship, overtime, drunk and dirty. Many ofllcers did not regard this with disfavor, for such a man would bo deprived of shoro liberty for tho following three months, nnd so would always bo present for ship. work. To-day a man would bo discharged as undesirable who was guilty of such an offense. Our enlisted men nro splendid In chnracter and In ambition; It Is n plensuro to direct the enthusiasm that these young men show In their work. Many do not re-enlist, not so much from n dislike of naval life, but from the good shoro positrons thnt nro of fered to them nfter their discharge from the navy. Aboard ship they aro trained to be expert nnd exact and hnndlo n multitude of machines where skill, steadiness and nervo are re quired. Tho qualities hero developed are valuable In civil life, nnci young men with honorable discharges' from the naval service find many desirable opportunities on shore. For the officers, I am proud to bo or them. I know of no set of men of higher standard of living nnd of a moro devoted enthusiasm In tho worlc they nro cnlled upon to perform. A COMET'S. TAIL. Thn Way TliU I'llmy I)ul Trntit Is Toiir.l Alton! liy llio Sun. No bridal veil wns ever so filmy ns h comet's tall. Hundreds of cubic miles pf thnt wonderful niendnge nro out weighed by a Jnrful of air. By menus of the spectroscope wo hnvc magically trnnsjKirted this fairy plume to our laboratories nnd have discovered that It Is nkln to tho bluo llnme -of our gns stoves; for tho gnu by which we cook nnd the delicate tresses of a comet loth consist of com binations of hydrogen nnd carbon, ap propriately called by chemists "hydro carbons." When It first appears In tho heavens, far removed from the sun, a comet Is a tailless blotch of light. As a comet swims on toward tho Btu, the hydrocarbons of tho tnll split up under tho Increasing heat Into hydrogen gns and hydrocarbons of a higher boil ing point. With a still closer approach to tho sun, these more resistant hydro carbons eventually yield to tho Increas ing heat nnd nro decomposed in th' form of soot. Interplnnctnry space Is nlrless; hence the soot cannot burn. It must purstio the comet In the form of a dust train. Tho particles consfltutlijg thnt trnln nre smnll enough to be toyed with by tho pressure of sunlight. No matter where the comet may bo li, lis orbit, whether It hns Just entered tho solar system or Is speeding nwny, flint plume is Inevitably tossed nwnv from the sun, Just as If n mighty wind wero blowing It from tho central lu minary. The nppendngo of shining dust; Is th symbol of the triumph of light over solnr gravitation. Harper's Magazine. Tim Human Tohcli. "Jnnlo had a doll that would nay 'Papa' and 'Miunma.'" What liccamo of it?" "Jane's mother Is an advanced,, per son, and she said the doll wns an Inex cusably childish reminder of n grossly benighted period." "And what did sha do?" "She threw It In n dnrk closet where Jnnlo didn't dare to go. And then n day or two Inter she hnppcncd to step on It In tho dnrk and It shrieked 'Mam ma I' so naturally thnt she fell over In u fnlut nnd bumped her hend nnd hnd two buckets of wnter poured over hor beforo sho rcovered consciousness." Cleveland Plain Denier. Nt Oltl HlneU. . Prospective Boarder Tho doctor snys I should have plenty of good fresh nlr. Fnnner Fields Yes'm, You'll go) plenty of nlr nt our place. P. B, But Is It good nnd fresh? Do you get It fresh every dny7 Kansas City Times. Vtt I'firHttn lilt fin tffi Wn uint Tho waiter girl kuew a thlhg or two nbout tnltlo etiquette, no sho sniffed scornfully ns sho said, "It's not our custom to servo a knlfo with plo." "No?" remarked tho pntron In Bur ptlse, "Then bring mo nn ax." Wo hnvo noticed thnt you enn ncl dom sny of n girl: "Sho Is protty,' thnt somo girl present doesn't add; "Yes, nnd sho knows It." Every nmn who goes to tho dovll saves others who tho traveling ,tur samo road- tor;r aJ "'T1 conclude. J J . ,ung ot France . -- UlirPllttrle " "HI M 1B80-Ilenry IV. debated th. u I nt Arques. m 1000 Hudson. the. erninM. ... . . I Present site of the cU '0r "H Fort Cnalinir, the Swdl,, ''J mem on tlio De aware, nntl J07ft-J)uehcsniu appointed kmJ Of Now FfnnA mrvo in. . I -vuieu ni rtnieiu for witchcraft, 1 governor of Acndla, die at ,M. 1 : The French aurrendered LtJ 1772 First cliNmemljorinent AlFotni 1 " tMiunii limuc nn lift ..J - -"VULtTOlQI ! laeK on tlio Americana oa UiriJ 1777- American force tmd?r nyne defeated by tho Hrith linn, firnv U'-.u.-..- ... ..1 army crowed the SchuylkfIL deteJ inlncd to give battle to Ota. IIt,J t Trunin 1 17R1 Tim Diinlil tnrtlnn. .ii .t'll lands to the State of New Y 1 1702 Franco declared a republic.. ..TtJ President issued a proclamsiloa erl tiering nil pcrnonn to submit to Uol fYr!nA Inn. I 1800 The Concordat betwwa Rsi pnrto and tho Pope ratified. 180, 1 Thn rlco crop ot South Cirotta rlcnno....Mr. Dearborn, too e? tiJ Secretary of War, left for Ah1 ...III. ,VAan, tfl9 ft V4flA A, llljfl Hill! (Ill . .V. UV IUIK4 VI MHH rvmnfrv. I 18H The IJrltlrfi ahlp Forth dtnjJ ttT 41 Mlil IVHtl MIIK ill UHMIVHinB Ktntes troop defeated tbi EnjliiilJ linHlo tit I'Virt TImvrr. 1 1822 Moaos Itogerx, captain of th Sam . . 1 i - .v. 1 iL.:.l died nt Chornw. 8. 0. BorabXiJ a k J WM ivmiimi. ironn in 11011. 1 Q(1 Win vrv 1833 The boundary line between J York nnd New Jcney Kttlei I ' . .m 181." Americans defeated the links at bnttlf ot Monterey. 1 1802 United filntra troopi imld l Indiana at name or how a 18(13 President Uncoln mipt&M l4 habeas corpus net. I 180J John C. Fremont wUMrw 1 candidate for I'realdenl oim vlctorloua In the battle at Otl Va. . . .A Aici ifiian - T.lndell hotel, St. Iml,btoto? nnrtr of Un on tOVlKf. tono rv..il...( nt thn RnfltlUb v. .... ti . . tn. ni Moore killed In lmttle with hi nr iiin HiMmhllran river. 1871-Hncoln-. Mr . w-flfjl flnnl rcstinir i IBSl-Uody of IW'I"'''"!!! ..... i.. iiiitn at WMWatf I BWUU " l,,v . .J 1892-Arabl PaM,n, the military incurrm. ; r' rendered after hi W " TeH1 f.i.i. I 1881-A mrty of 1,1 In tho Nile expedl o n fo r thgj of Gen. Oor.lon.vKrlbqg woro felt In MlchlM, 0hloil 18875 catenary of the j-gjl of tne nun '" in Pblladelpuia. I 1803-Tho Knrl ot office covernor (en 1 1807-Flve men J W lynrJiedat VmnllK I". ' ISOfStntuo lid Ato unveiled ntOnnbec , 1000- Much cleHtructlon -henvy rains In r. ft 1001- The !)ko Z&m wall and Torkjpb giaiiB, uuu, --- 1.G1...I MOO-Wl race ; riots In AttufJ Hock uianu fik,,hoM iw .... tnr fllllin. . .j 4 KSi"3ro&"-i Paris "How long linn - .liner, fl open?" nsked Jgg "Two J"" tllO gUCiH. . - . i.-.i ,.mn hero tnw'i ..... "l piimw" r . gam by thin tlmolf IM-.,.,. T(Bfc4 and the entente if. 11 1 IIarior