OLD TIMES. There arc no dnyi like the good old dny The dnyswhen we were youthfull When hilmnnkiud were pure of mini! And speech nnd deeds were truthful; Before a love for sordid gold Because man's ruling nnsslnn. ,And before ench dnmc mid mnld became Slaves to the tyrant fashion. There are no girls like the good old girls Against the world I d stake 'em: As buxom and smart and elean of heart As the Lord knew how to make 'em! 'Jluejr were rich In spirit and common sense, A plc.y nll-supnortln'; They could bake and brew, and hnd taught school, too, , And thejr made the likeliest courtln'I There are no boys like the good old boys When we were boys together! When the grass was sweet to the brown bare feet That dimpled the laughing heather: When (he pewee sung to the summer dawn Of the bee in the willowy clover, Or down by the mill the whip-poor-will Echoed his night song over. There Is no love like the good old lore ihe lore that mother gave us! We arc old, old men, yet we pine Again For that precious grace God guve us! Bo we dream and dream of the good old times. And our hearts grow tenderer, fonder. As those dear old dreams bring soothing glecms Of heaven away off yonder. u .Eugene Field. f t MYSTERY CLEARED UP DY A TEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL. nothing, but she hnd not told him thai JJR "SECOND SIGHT." sho hnd forgotten nenrly nil of It since lsnvlug school. She rushed for the dic tionary nnd rend uudorstandlngly for tho (Irst time tlio neglected message, the gist, ns It proved, of the whole: "O lovo of mine; my bleeding heart lies nt thy feet; deign to accept tliottf ferine of thy slave." T Shu hnd not been mistaken; he hnd loved her, nfter nil, lint why did he how cou!tl he trust a living story to n dead tongue? And why hnd she, how ever hurried, left a word of thnt lettet unread ? . The lotto. wns clutched convulsively, the lexicon dropped to tho lloor, nnd her hend went down on her nrm In n passion of futllo tears. Philadelphia Item. M. QALLIFET AND HIS FISH. s A LATIN LESSON. Ml rjT wns a year since he had left Chi llcngo, nnd In all that time she had w heard nothing from him. It seemed etrange! tney hud been such friends Indeed, more than friends, for he had seemed to like her much, nnd had nought her society on every possible oc casion. The day before he was to leave he had come by nppolutment to see her. She had noticed with concern that his manner was chill nnd con strained, but had had no opportunity to dissipate that chill by her own cor diality. Although It was not their reg ular reception day, the drawing-room was full of people, and her sister, who was apt upon occasion to monopolize his attention, never left them cloue for SUE HAD NOT BEES MISTAKEN; HE HAD l.OVKIJ HKB AKTKIt ALL. a moment, although he prolonged his 6tay until nfter the last visitor hnd left "Surely he will write," she had snld to herself, nnd for weeks the postman's ring had caused a quick fluttering of the heart which subsided Into the dull nche of disappointment when the long ed-for letter never came. She hnd heard of him often from common friends, of his success socially and financially In the distant city which he bad made his linma ntirl Tinri elntvlv nn.1 iinri'lllfnfrfir " 'J " resigned herself to the conviction that their friendship had been but an epl eode. And now slio held In her baud the announcement of his marriage to another woman. She felt glnd that tha family had regarded him a her Bister's Admirer. Slowly she went upstairs to her room nnd unlocked her desk, tnking from nu 'Inner drawer a small stock of treasures -a dozen notes, some dried violets, candy box, ribbons, and other eouvenlrc equal ly-trifling. She must destroy them now, eho was too old-fashioned to preserve such memorials of another woman's husband. Violets nnd ribbons were Boon In ashes on the hearth, but each (note In the packet was opened and read before being sacrificed. She was naturally methodical and they came In correct order. Sho smiled bitterly to llierself to boo how llttlo there was real ly In them. Even Mrs. BardelPs law (yer would have been puzzled to And on those pages anything tender or com iinlttal. What a fool sho had bcenl Sho finished the holocnust and turned to re place the empty drawer. It stuck nnd 'had to be pulled out again. Looking for tho obstruction, sho found another note the Inst one which sho had jmourued ns lost. Now sho remembered ,thnt she bad put It away, nfter reading lit hastily, for thero were people waiting -below. H announced that ho wns com- ilng to seo her that afternoon and re quested that sho would not fall to be (In. Just above the signature wns a scn tenco In Latin, rapidly and Illegibly Iwrltten his handwriting at Its best was difficult to decipher. She started as iBho remembered that in tho hurry of that loug-ngo afternoon she bad put off translating Latin. Ho know that sho had studied the language, for ho had once usked her, seemingly apropos of J lie Caught It In the Vreocncc of Napo leon III. and It Muile Trouble. In the ctats de service of Gen. Galll- fot, tho present War Minister of France, there Is n curious uoto which should endear him to the hearts of nil fishermen. After paying n Just tribute to his abilities, the note reads: "Hut, unfortunntely, ho selects cx- trnoidlunry companions." Thereby bungs n fish story. Long ago, In the days of tho second empire, Gnlllfet was the nld-de-cnmp of Napo leon III. At St. Cloud his qunrters were Just over the Imperial bedroom. Everything nrouua him was very grand nud very gloomy. The window of his room looked upon the pond that wash ed the walls of the chateau. The water was clear, nnd the surrounding scen ery was beautiful; but tho young lleu- tennnt felt like n prisoner. Early ouo morning while seated nt his window trying to drive nway the blues with n ' cigar he espied below In the crystal water an etiorinous carp. The Instincts ' of the angler, strong In Gnlllfet, made the young man's eyes snap and set his heart a-throbblng. The big flsh wns tho prlvnte property of the Emperor. Consequently, for Gnlllfet It wns forbidden fish. But It was such a fine fellow! The resist ance of the so.dler's conscience wni useless. It surrendered uncondition ally. The remnlnlng part of the cam paign against the carp was simple uough. Cnlllfet went to his trunk. brought out his trusty line, to which e fastened n hook and an nrtlllclal bait With his nccustouied skill he cast the line. The cam wus hocked nd hauled In through the window. Here the lieutenant's tun ended aud is trouble began. The flsh lauded pou n table, overturned n large globe filled ilth water, and caromed from that to a magnificent vase, which It also upset and smashed to pieces upon the floor. Then It began to execute a cenu- no pas de carpe among the smither eens. The Emperor, hearing tho strange racket overhead and seeing the water trickling through the celling, was aston ished. He rushed upstairs to find out what was the matter. Gnlllfet heard him coming and endeavored to grab the carp and throw It out of the win (low, nnd thus destroy the evidence of his poaching In the Imperial pond. But the slippery thing was hard to bold; so lie tossed it Into the bed and covered It up with the bed clothes. When the Emperor entered the room he noticed immediately the quivering bed clothes. He pulled them down and uncovered the floundering flsh. His majesty's face nssumed an almost Jlm-Jnmlc ex pression, which gradually faded Into a faint smile. He took In the entire situ ntion, saluted, and left the future War Minister to medltnte upon the myBterles of u fisherman's luck. Bhe T.ocntcs a Head llo.ly In the Hot torn of the HIIiioIh Hlvcr-Chili"" thnt, In a Vl.lon, Sho Biiw the Woman Drown. When the sullen waters of tho Illi nois Hlvcr gnvo vp their dead lu the person of Mrs. Lucy Sommers somo time ago there was not only clenred up one of the deepest mysteries that has ever occurred In rcorln. but nt tho snmo time thero was evidence estab lished corroboratory of a most extra ordinary case of second sight One night early In January Mrs. Luey Sotnmcis, who was visiting her sister, Mrs. H. II. Craig nt RE! Fayette street lu Teorln. suddenly disappeared. Sho had been 111 nnd suffering nt times from i.... ....I I .... An nilll.1 M I I v coming downstairs in ",or" . I KTOJt I UU J ill- U JjUUJJ hi w Hyn mil u,;: wns long l,rro sho could ,Ksslbly hnvo hnd mi earning tho facts lu t ujciiw nu. n source whatsoever. The child questioned closely, but she stuck (o her story with n persistence that ""K"" disarm suspicion. Kho described th garments worn by Mrs. .Som.nors . tho time of her departure, nnd to tho surprise of her listeners her descrip tion proved to be entirely correct. At length In response to her earnest solicitations she wns allowed to K out nnd point out the resting place f ii... wnimin she Insisted wns In tho river. She stnrted from the house oo ronipnnled by her father and others and followed the streets she claimed to have seen Mrs. Summers follow until she came to the foot of Spring street. From there she pointed out the ox net spot nt which Mrs. Soinmers hnd gone down. She snlrt thnt she walked calmly Into the water and went down, down. down, until finally sho disap peared altogether. The next night sho saw tho body ngnln. It rose slowly from tho bottom of tho river, being caught In nu eddy, nnd nfter whirling nroiiud several times moved away slowly down the stream, sometimes floating niul eomotlmo rolling along the river bed. Once, according to her story, It stood erect In the water, but did not rise to the surface. COMPLETE CONFIRMATION OF THE MOSAIC AOnourtr. ITnuniriit Discovered lX Heliell i. tlxloitlnii Vvrtlon of ttln li..fiiur. Which Antrdiitr. Mnin J ully Hevcn Hundred Veins. The niiiiouneomonl of l'ttro Holirll, tho French AssyrlologlHl. who Ims given no much tlmo to study or mo coiiccuoiih m th.. museum til Coiislnnniioplo, Hint ho had discovered it llubylonluii account of tho dolugo much older Hum Moses, . .... Interesting to tho biblical stu dent thin wu united tho discoverer for .in account of It. Ho kindly eousm.m.. ..,! i.Im m-cnunl. tho first tuns far pub llshed In America, nnd. wo think, In Kurope. w III be of no llttlo Interest. Hvory biblical scholar knows Hint tho Hebrew n.-einiut of tho dolugo, found In GeiieHls. lias been paralleled by two Hub) Ionian ni-counls. ouo Hint of Hero huh, n liabylonlnii historian, whoso iinr rntivo has been handed down to us by early Greek Christian writers, nnd the other that found on Assyrian tnbletH Hiitli rcsoumie. nun bv Georgo Smith. iu.it. .lirfer. from tho Genesis story. At her request she wns then tnkon to . .. . imv differed as to tho n point at ino iooi 01 i-ujvuu n.i.v.., ()f U(, ,,u,n,.n titry. tho uioro con By this time the news of tho child , Uvi, lHI,llK that Mug written by attempt hnd became noised abroad nnd , , m.t ,, the river bank was lined with t ion- Mo It wk sands of spectators eager and anxious un 1 , )w r ,., r to see what tho outcomo would be. or . m sis. w u . ., ...i J critics wns. until the discolor or mo a hurried gesture pointed to a spot n llovo that the s ory wns ..rr. fr. few hundred feet from Ihe shore, ex- Mnoveu or nawjion . ... as she did m; "She lies -.aptlvlfy. or not long neioru n. ni ...c. claiming as there." The multitude broke up nnd n drag ging party was nt once put to work OIIACK HOLMES. Shaved Without Arms. American men think It a very mertti rlous and remarkable accomplishment to be nble to shave themselves. Yel Charles Francis Felu, the armless Bel gian artist, who has Just died In bis seventieth year, performed this ardu ous onlce every morning for himself, and did not consider that ho was do ing anything unusual. When a baby Felu related how he used to sit in the garden with his mother during tho long summer days while she taught him to pluck with bis little toes the bright colored flowers with which their garden nbounded. For tified by this practice his baby feet be came daily more flexible and useful to their little master, and when ho bad reached the age of 0 ho could do almost as much with them ns his llttlo com panions and playmates could do with their hands. slight attacks of dementia, though It was not supposed that they were of n serious nature. But on the night men tioned she arose from her bed, and an nouncing to her mother, who wns watching with her, thnt she wns going to get a drink she left the room nud was nevei after seen alive. When she did not return her mother gave tho nlnrm and the Inmntes of the house turned out to hunt for her, supposing, of course, that in n fit of temporary aberration she had wandered to the house of one of the nelghliors. But tho most diligent Inquiry failed to reveal her whereabouts nnd then the fnmlly became genuinely nlnrmed. A search- tlmo tho Hook of Genesis wns written Tho dln-ovory by George .Smith of n full poetical account of the deluge, on senrchlng the hidden depths to wrest (ablets lu King Assurlmnipni s nnrnry from them their secret. Tho hourut Nlpeveh. wns of Immense Interest, passed, the afternoon and tho dny. but ,ui u did pot assure us of tho age of nothing wns brought from the lake. ' t, deluge story umoiig the Inhabitants In strict Justice It must bo said thatjf ,. Euphrates Valley, for It wits oil the dragging process wns not carried lnt,0tH written lu AsNurtmiilpal'N rolgu. on according to her direction. She1.,.... llt (s) y.tirs lieforw ChrUt. now declares that the net never touch er the Iwdy reposing on the bottom of tho lake. When It was known thnt the drag ging hnd been unproductive those who had based their faith on the child's t Julgmeut began to waver nnd she wns denounced ns n fraud of the most pro-1 nnunccd type. Then a severe cold To bo sure, these were said to Im copied from tablets In llnbyloiiliin libraries, but we did not know how old those orlglunl tablet were. Besides, tho del uge story wns on the eleventh tablet in n long imh'iii, complied In twelve books, one for onch mouth, III it quit" iirtillelnl way, nud might In-long to n the cnptaln and solemnly asserted that tho body was fast to a snng In the Iwt tom of the river. The cnptaln paid no nttention to the child, regarding the B's''ft'l'''f"' A ' SHOWING WHEItE THE BODY WOULD BE FOUND, Ing party was organized nnd they set oui io una tier, mo ground was not frozen and they soon came unon foot- prints In the mud nnd going from tho uousc. These were followed as far as they could be In the darkness, when the party returned home to await tho com ing or nay beroro renewing the search. When the morning broke, however, tho earth was frozen hard and the trail abandoned the night before was hard to ronow. New parties were added. I nnd a reward offered for tho dlsenv In latar years, when ho commenced ' ?f 0,6 woman dead or nlve. Tho coun- the study and pursuit of his favorite art, painting, It was a wonderfully in teresting sight to watch tho gifted boy at work. ne always held his palette with the great too of his left foot and manipu lated the different brushes, crayons nnd pencils with the toes of his right foot Always when nt table ho skillfully managed uis unire ana fork. Held Keformer to Ilia Word. When a beggar asked a Philadelphia stationer tho other day for help the latter offered him two lead pencils, saying: "With half the effort required in begging you can easily sell these for 5 cents apiece." The beggar gazed at tho pencils scornfully. "Who'd glvo mo 5 cents for them?' ho demanded. Why, anybody," said tho stationer. "Go out ana try it." nsked was the uiiyuouy, buiu mo Stationer i.i .. .7 v"' ut and try it." "Would I you r fS Z 7" ld rTncU CBpcclal tho beggar. "Why cer Jnlv 8f ?r,ll0r aF' "er "arcn8 rnivg a -.1 , iI'VE ..J u c"cnted people nnd not in the be .w B..iu ui IIUIIUIMI or elrllnanns.na . .. spread over the grimy features of the whii ,?' , mi tl,nt mendicant "Here you are, then," ho than n m In from tlm Prniw i 0 mo.ro try was scoured for miles In either ill rectlon, but always without result Bometimes they fancied they had discovered the broken trail, but these rrngmentnry discoveries led to nothing tangible. At last, In despnlr, tho rela tives Invoked tho aid of bloodhounds. The trail they followed was a devious nnd winding one, running from the wrnig nome. on Fayetto street, north by northeast to Glen Oak Park, thenco in a westerly direction to Bradley Park, ouisiue me city's limits nnd on Its western border. Hero tho trail grow mini ami u was only with difficulty thnt It was continued to the Enston farm, wheie It was lost, nnd tho dogs muppeu nnu never nrter did they get any further. At this JlinctUrO llttlo Grneo TTnlmna appeared on the scene. Sho Is a child about ten years old aud esnecinllv ro Itoal L-ircuinsiances, go back on your own word." It took tho stationer several minutes to ro- cover his breath, but ho finally entered Into tho deal, and hereafter ho will adopt other tactics. Hartford Times. It's unwlso to Judge a 'man by tho umbrella bo carries until you find our who owns It 'Olnnn nrttnn out of tho house, climb over tho fenco nud make her way stealthily to tho nver, wncro sno nnd plunged Into nn opening left by tho Icemen tho day be fore. This statement was borno out by the parents, who assorted that sho had told tho story Identically ns repeated on spell set lu and the lake wns locked In comparatively Into ihtIi! of religious Ice nnd the matter began to fade from n'"1 literary syncretism. The original the public mind. Not so the little girl. Babylonian tnlilols. rrom wiucii tno ah It was useless to tell her that she must syrltm copies were luado, were iiiucn be mistaken. desired. She declared that tho body wns still j Now l'erc Kclicll has limde the dN In the wnter, that she could see It nnd covery. To ln sure the record on tho persisted In going to Ihe river nt In-! tablet does not amount to much, It Is tervnls. During these visits she mnilo such n fragmentary bit, but It Is largi me ncquninmncc or unptnm liereie. enough to make It sure Hint tho tablet of the steamer Gazelle. She went to ' cotitnlnwl tho sturv of the ileluci' ami most fortuuntoly, thu most Important part of nil Is preserved, the colophon with the date. It Is dated lu the rolg of Amuil-zndugn, King of Babylon, nud wu know thnt he reigned nbout iM 10 II C. That Is, we hnve here a precious bit , of clay on which was written n poetical story of Hie deluge, seven centuries be 'foro Moses and nbout tho time of lunar or Jacob. That Is enough to make tin discovery memorable. Wu lenrn posi tively that tho story of tho deluge wa familiar to the common people of Baby lonia, nnd therefore of all the oust from Syria to Persia. Prof. Hnyce hns lately stnted, mlsnp prehendlng Pero ScIicII'h oral nn nouiicemeiit, that the new text verbally agrees with thnt discovered by George Smith, showing the cure and accuracy wiin winch the document wns pro nerved from generation to generation with "no chnugo even In the form, of a single word." Tills Is not tho fact, rero Hchcll suggests that different cities would hnvo their different poeti cal editions of the story. This frag ment belongs to the story current at Slppara, where tho fragment wiih found; and we may suppose that the account given ny Berosus wns also from tho Slppara edition, for Borosus tells us that Xlsuthriis (Noah), lioforo mo uood, burled In Klppnra the records or thu world's antediluvian history. mo ciineirorm account discovered by ucorgo Hinilli seems to hnvo nrlirltuiti.il In tho city of Surlppak; at any rate, tho onu or unit story enme from the Stir Ippnlc. Thero are In that account nn sucn pnssiigos as we have In thin m.w fragment, which shows, that wo have io no wmi another version, we do not hiiow now old. :ov U Is Itself a copy from n partly elfaced original. I his text is lu poetry. It proves thnt tho poetic construction was fixed more tlmn two thousand years before Christ Kneh lino is divided Into two hem- isiicus, ns in Hebrew noetrv. r.H, form wns no unfamiliar thing In tho time of Abraham. fc Wo lenrn nothing moro from this fragment than wo knew before ns to uiikiii oi ino ueiugo story. Tho his tory neither of Egypt nor of Babylon ....... ,,mL. (ur,,,, Historical deluge, n i '"r"1"1 ,H "K0 enough to show that It Is a poem full of nnu-ii.-.i...... nnd mythical details, of which ihe Gon osls version has been thorou-l,lv purged, KVI1; ,IH ,, pn)y Inoii( theistlc, absolutely eth lenl fini in ... Blvo religious Instruction Io an unsclen c people In tho Infancy of clvlll-tlon.-Now York Independent. nni llenrt nt kr.i will. "'"W. 1. ..... . . ""I M.. 'I i-egiilllllig wl tr"ttH -" '"I II III ...... "Tl ' l'eH grow,, luTH 'mi iviw Zeni,,,,.. ..--"iii l cut III. ... '""TBI.. ' .11 M rnn, north ami .... w of Ilk I'loinieiM as n, '.' lu dlos ai iii, "'Mli Ho.lth Amerl,,, iiiioius, ii,., ,.., hm toeirs milk ,... " l baliud m...i... .. ,Kl11'" ....... . "Hi con,,.,- 11 lYI'N II1IM.I.. . ""i'lMMa Kor that t.it.inK ii-'nf, i 1 -'""II hoy ,,,! " "JE 1 1 1 1 r i rr. i . ' , H "' the x,inl,,0 ;h, io. llpoi. uiuei, "J Hiiiimtra. up im 1;, 'ti IIIOHII U II... .... - """Hta m.pply of MrZr.'W whorowl.h .ri.a,,,,,,, n....n aci, (ir i,im. . - a of carpets -'WM KllStwiir.l fr ""III I I1A ri. . . Of till. .,. '.'"till hrend fruit. l.iel,,iL?J6 !""(.. t.. s,. mmt:A thof uhimu :.:""t? nose, who fr,i, Umflu, S been Ininders, mtlH. t tho long, sin,,, Mml, . t inor, one ..f u. ... .. . 'WE III I'holeu i. ' im-. oh.ii,k romunu, l r,"!.,,L'"!,l,,,,,:fu','H IllllOtlf ,11 eriililn. fl lit I If I.. ll the dolli-ulo birds- n.-.i tJfl darlus ami flnnm-lal tZ2 .Mongolian ktiig.lumim.ijry; that their -.H.k ,iM, rmm II 'ri ' ."'!? ....... ... , nr. I 'inlrwnU n iti Hi whole thing as one of her halluclnn Hons. Again and ngnln she went to ilm, begging him to go nnd release the body. Nothing-would put her off. Sho declared that sho could see the body find would not rest until It wns re leased At length there came n dny when tho waters of tho staid Illinois were fni above tl.elt banks. Tho wind was hlOW'Ini? n lmrrlnnn . .... " - -"""'io mm wnen tno oc cupants of a cabin boat well side of tho stream looked out of ... Ki'iuuw nicy saw what looked llko a bag of some kind llonting In tho . .. u-i umoiig uio willows In which the r boat was fnslened. A hasty ex amlnntlon convinced them n.m u a human body, nnd upon rowing t0 Its sldo It proved to bo tho body of tho ong-Iost Mrs. Bommers. When tho uuujr wns lOKCn from fl.n tvntn, n. condition of tho dress gnrments con firmed even to tho smallest detnll tho statements of the child. """r1" Future Quito Apparent. "Autrli u'iiii(-lii' ' It was tho babv. -Tio i,n.t ,.,.. 1.IM - . ...... ft wiri-uitui this remark slxtv tlmea in i.. hour. u '"ol Mr. Newiclgh's hair. stood on end. " "uo' "GWOW nhmb WOWhllcrniv nltVn..ni.i.i added thu baby, while people across the street got up and closed their win-dows. Mr. Newlelgh ground lil inn Hi think," ho groaned, burvlni? i.t. i.. his pillow, "that I should becomo tho father of a rallwnv -London Tit-Bits. " Thero are somo women .i dressing for an evening party at 2 in tho afternoon, and who do not look par tlcularly well, either. i Kvcry young mnn overetimn- i.i popularity in tho community u wuicll ho lives. ". iidepondent. RICH YIELD OF THE PACIFIC. KverythlnK, from Wheat to lci1Cr 1'oillld III tlln Orl,...f t . -i'I'cr, Considered from tho point of vfow of What grows In them wi.iAi, i ... nil, the point of view of most people of to-day-snys a writer In Alusloo's Magazine, tho Islands of m. J ,i present everything from tho wheat of o host of things found neither In tho oplcs of south America, uor In tho timber ri'simr. is plotted tliiui Ukihu u ,hJ Iiioni are p.-ssihinu,., m Jn culilvatloii. wiii.i,nnrewJE od sile In ll,.- .oiilliem I.U.PJ3 John Bull hns put )) abarttlH urn sunn iooi iimi rMHumJH form tho semi tniiilc rnU.ll likeness of his tioitio ruumrf Tti Is growing rl. Iilj in tnott Utju Islands, ami .-..u.iii imu-.fll such sui-i-ess iimi tlifKwiuiflj proilurt Is a i.i.iili-rWfilS otion inrirki-; iir'.-e .'2 glllfio prophets look toilliKtJrf rntlini i-rup of i In- 1'ndfV rj'" oils i t)iiiiM-ili.,r Hill. iu . .Slates. A uiiitprful In. I John Curzon. n l'uliih ajo was presenii-.l u nil a ruU iif ills llivelilloiis, x-rfurtDtili ordinary ihlug nlirn ItiJL1 nintiiifni'turliig a .tm.lrttK space of eight hours, mix txi litis ou whirl, m.ottitr Hjj would hnve I.H.ki I wltbraisl It nppenrs thut (lie CufiW. honriiiK oi the nmrirksH fjj genius of ('tiizuii, deicrs hliu to tho tesi. nnd fomijaj Imjx contnltilng n f.-w coftfiii wood ctllpplugs. a piece of Imp; nn old cracked iiin.i conSL1 i rson lu tho worm man p loror. Kspeclnlly Is tliHfc uti of the tropics. It works for Amerlcnui rt'-j ... ... .... .aBX and a few rrlbbngo lonlfJ? request that he slmul.1 1 Into n timepiece. .Nothing ilniiiiieil. nnd p golden (piHrt unity of wist the court, Ciirzon M-t iM with eniliiiHlnhin, nail Inth credibly short splice of elfttl despatched a w uink-rf ull; w watch to the f'znr, who prised and itellghti-d at tbtr lie sent for flu. mnker. flo 111 lit several distinction, lit in a pension. Tho caso of the wntrn man china, while thu worki "10 composed of thu odds d1 panylug the old cup. w"li keep good time, out oiilrfi lug once every three orfwt'jjlj reiiiarkablo watch Is IxllnMW Ifi the possession of tliellojfj, Work Onlr Whoa ThtI Observerj of Industrial cajjjjj Mexico nsKerl that, asfariit.- noted. thero Is no more a, person lu tho world ilianfj; Inliore peon lie w i. .... ii. u i.i .ii.i-.ilnii morta ter of accommodation tliaoItj slty. Ho demands it kDujs-ss vtinco, too, on which to " tlmo at the fiestas liffo M down to suvernl inontlis w .......... I...C Ia trfin mi uaiivu iiiiiiiiii nun pj; men lu tho tropics In oriW'or livelihood. Ills wants bltlnn Is limited to a deslrf '& tt nut n i linti'lieil cloth. Tho hut ho can I self. Thero are fish m game In the forest. TliereWr. unoccupied land hikjii t' rniso a fow cereals to tra tilings ho cannot lrol 'Ml. ...... . n .vlt.lnr fO lrOl" ami, though tho iiilny lu summer, they only raJgi Htrlotly i'jorr"'""' A characteristic itoP't rounds at tho expense or ............... .......i .,t..anir0UB r T .. ..rt ... ....... ...irii U h" ..... . Ills fellow townsmen " p, . ...... ,1... ...-In hdJU" r,.li I... ,11.. Inilx'll. I"' ...III ll.I.lf Ll.l.L U1VIJ - IJI . . . , n w .i;.ii.iti ...... .,.- .. l. I.I III,, nil III. with nu1. lllllllll Ifc O .... ! . ...ntl , ... ..... i.Nonw" . .. . ... 'ruu" siired turn young i ' . ninny years yet." i w ... i i ii... . iimi ruav" Hint," sam mo i"'" tli II... I II... nfrnl.l fn ll C. U"1 - iii the iieiiiK I'M i- ' -- ,t i c UVI, , u v ng. wrapped up ami mm - tag on mo It wounm . - hlladelphla liecoru.