WASHINGTON LETTER. From our Itogulnr Correspondent. Washington, Mar. 12, 1804 Democrats, even those who are per sonally opposed to sonic of the chang es made, are glad that the Senate Fi nance committee has at last got the tariff bill in a shape to make its pass age by the Senate certain. It is really surprising, in view of the radical change made by taking sugar, iron ore, coal and lead ore from the free list and putting a duty upon them, that the democrats of the House arc not louder in their objections. Hut they regard the matter from a common sense point of view, knowing that the Senate Finance committee yielded nothing that it was not absolutely necessary to yield in order to get the votes necessary to pass the bill, and also that they will have anotherchancc at the changes when the bill goes to conference after its passage by the Senate. The republicans of, the Finance committee would like to waste a month or so by keeping the tariff bill in com mittee, but the democrats will not al low any such time. If they will agree to have the bill reported in a week the democrats will allow them that much time ; if not the bill will be reported sooner without their consent. Secretary Herbert's answer to the House resolution asking by what auth ority he ordered Admiral Skerrett to obey Mr. Blount when he went to Hawaii as Special Commissioner, was, in short, that it came from the Com mander in-Chief of the Army and Navy the President of the United States j and he cited seven precedents for the action, dating from i8at to 18S1. Senator Blanchard assumed his du ties to day and Justice White, his pre decessor, was sworn in as a member of the Supreme Court. If Mr. B'anch ard makes as good a reputation in the Senate as he leaves behind him in the Housj the people of Louisiana will doubtless rati.y the selection of the governor by keeping him there. Representative Kilgore, of Texas, was not altogether wrong, although rather tcogeneial, wren he siid in tie course of the debate on the District of Columbia appropriation bill, con cerning the newspapers of Washing ton : "The newspapers of Washing ton have never failed to advocate any scheme, I don't care how infamous it was, that looked to the expenditure ot the public money in the interest of speculators in and around the city. never knew of an instance in which they did not advocate such schemes." In leply to a protest from Represen talive Blair of M. II , Mr. Kilgore con tinued : "Well, I make the distinct charge that the newspapers are cor rupt and that they advocate every cor rupt scheme that has been introduced into Congress to plunder the Treasury in the interest of private interests." Democrats in Congress are in thor ough sympathy with the Departmen tal Congressional Commission which has been engaged for many months in looking into the business methods of the Government Departments, with 1 view to recommending changes look ing to a reduction of unnecessary red tape and of unnecessary officials. Every recommendation of the Com mission has been prompt'y acted upon by Congress, the last one for abolish ing the Bureau of Customs of the Treasury Department having been passed ty the House without an hour's discussion. Slowly but surely the leaven of reform is working. The re sults of thirty years of extravagance and favoritism cannot be overthrown in a day, or a year, but they will be overthrown in the end. This the democrats are determined upon. Senator McPherson has this to say about the charge that the sugar clause of the revised tariff bill gives the sugar trust an undue advantage ; "As I drew the sugar schedule, I ought to know what it means, and I certainly know what it was intended to mean. The entiie discriminating duty, accor ding to my calculations, that refined sugar is accorded by the bill is six teen hundredths of one cent. Now, ' when you take into account the boun ty paid by Germany for its exported sugar, and the fact that German sugar is shipped in bags which are not dutia ble, and which can be used over and overagain.it will be seen that the American refiner is given no advan tage over his German competitors. In truth, the German exporter has one hundredth of a cent per pound advan tage over the American icfiner after he has paid our import duty. Now, if any one disputes these figures of mine, and can show me wnere me American refiner receives any greater protection than I have stated, I will see that the bill is changed." The Senate will vote upon the bill for the coinage of the seigniorage next Thursday. It will certainly pass. Pub lic opinion is divided as to whether it will be vetoed, the majority inclining to the belief that it will be. "March to search" is the old adage. It searches out any weakness of the system, resulting from impure blood. Those who use Ayet's Sarsaparilla find March no more searching or even disa greeable than any other month. This medicine is a wonderful invigorator. Children Cryfor Pitcher's Castorla. The Old New York Debtors' Prison. When , the war was ended the Pro vost reverted to more legitimate uses again, but under regulations which sent al the common criminals to the Bridewell, an I made tlu New Jail merely a place of genteel detention for j prisoners for debt ; those thriftless (or, I possibly, over-thrifty) persons who were for dancing through the world at the charges of anybody whom they could induce to pay their piper, anil whose simple concept of economical finance was never to pay a piper, or anybody else, for themselves. That this class were represented over liber ally in the New York of a hundred years ago might be inferred from the fact that between January d and De cember 3d of the year 1788 no less than 1162 debtors were sent to j nson; in otner words me population then being about 25,000 one citizen in every twenty, or thereabouts, went to jail for debt. Fortunately for the rep utation of the New Yorkers of this last century, however, these figures which I find in a petition addressed by the Association for the Relief of Distressed Debtors to the General Assembly are misleading when taken without their qualifying context. The purport of the petition was to exhibit the injury done to the community by "the confinement of debtors for small sums," and its major premise was the lact that ot the 116a commitments specified no less than 716 were "for sums recoverable before a justice of the peace, and many of these under twenty shillings" Very reasonably, therefore, the memorialists urge that the confinement of debtors for such slight cause inures greatly to the injury of the community : "as thereby the certain proht which would arise to society from the labour of the debtor is sacrificed, for an indefinite time, to the precarious prospect of recovering a cieDt which the creditor, in most in stances, has improvidently suffered to be contracted, and which very often does not amount to one-fourth of the value the public would derive from the labour of the debtor during, trie time of his confinement" all of which, save the delightful and also astute saddling of the responsibility for the debt upon the "improvident" creditor, is very much what Solon had to say upon the same subject rather more than two thousand years earlier in the history of the world. Harper's Weekly. State of Ohio, City of Toledo) Lucas County, )' Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK. J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of De cember, A. D., 1886. A. W. GLEASON, seal Notary 1'ublio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 8ySold by Druggists, 75c. im. LAMP WIOZS OF ULAY. they cive a much brighter light than those ok cotton. A lamp wick has been invented which is made entirely of clay, and claimed to give 25 per cent, more light than the cotton wick, says the House Furnishing Review. It is made capillary by incorporating with the clay, while in a plastic state, filaments of unspun vegetable fiber which are burned out in the process of baking. The object is to provide an indestruct ible wick, which shall possess all the advantageous qualities of an ordinary cotton or fiber wick and which shall, in addition, last an indefinite time without renewal or necessity of trim ming or care. When the clay is baked the vegetable fiber is burned out leav ing capillary tubes running longitudi nally through the wick, through which the oil from the lamp will be raised to the flame by capillary attraction. Ow ing to the perfect combustion of the wick, the flame is perfectly white in character, devoid of odor and smoke less. It is found, through a practical test, that oil is volatilized by the use of this wick and the vapor is consum ed, thus giving the above results. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. "Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon.the system is remarkable and mysterious. It re moves at once the cause and the di sease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits, 75 cts. Sold by C. A. Kleim, Druggist, Blooms burg. ii-10-Sni. A lot of new notes of the sharpest kind have just been printed and are for sale at this office. Also common receipts, estate receipts, and collec tors' receipts, neatly bound in books of 25, 50 and 100. tf. Children Cryfor Pitcher's Castorla. Tho Senate Tariff Bill. The Democratic majority in the Senate is such a narrow one. ai d it contains so many weak kneed gintle men, that horn the beginning ol the tariff discussion the chief r. ticern of the friends of revenue reform hris been to discover how much the fair expecta tion of the party would have to be modified in order to secure a full vote. In the effort to steer a safe course be tween what ought to be done and what can be done in the way of tariff revision the Wilson bill a9 amended and presented to the full Senate Fi nance Committee was yesterday given to the public and its salient features are printed in the llecord this morning. In one important particular the amendments to the bill have improved it. The tax laid upon sunar will brine a sufficient addition to the revenue to make the income of the Government sufficient for all purposes of fixed or probable expenditure. Th? imposi tion of the sugar tax paves the way for dropping the income tax feature which is still a part of the bill. The amendments which take iron ore and coal from the free list and im pose a duty of 40 cents a ton upon both are of small consequence as pro ducers of revenue and are a vicious and mischievous departure from the lines on which the battle of 1892 was fought and won. On the whole, however, the work of the Senate Committee is better than was expected. Less mischief was hatched in a month of incubation than long opportunity and importunity usually bring forth. There is a well founded belief that the bill practically in its present shape will be passed af ter due discussion and that in the final arrangement of differences between the two Houses a bill more acceptable than either the original Wilson bill or the Senate substitute may be adopted. The delay of action in the Senate Committee, when action was so impera tively necessary to put an end to btisi nesi derangement, has so irritated the country that there is now less care for details than for movement. The ap plication to the Tariff bill of a little of ihe celerity of movement that has been effected in handling the Bland Seig niorage bill would do wonders in re storing confidence in Democratic ad ministrative capacity and in improving the hesitanc and discouraging features of the industrial situation. Record. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is just what you want for a spring medicine superior to all. A New View of t!io Handy Man. HE IS A HELP RATHER THAN A HIN DERANCE TO" THE MECHANIC. The ' handy man" is a, godsend to the plumber, the carpenter the build er, the paper-hanger and several others. With a view to saving expenses he buys a tool chest and proceeds to tink er with everything that is out of shape. When a door hangs badly he takes it off the hinges and tries to plane or saw a piece off the bottom. He is certain to spoil the wood work and very frequently breaks the hinges in putting them back. It is not at all an easy thing for one man to hang a door any how, and it i: practically impossible for an amateur to do it at all. When the handy man finds some of his wall paper knocked off he hunts up one of the fragments that were left and pastes it over, producing a result so hideous that his wife generally sends for a paper hanger and has the whole room done over again. The same man commences to build a shed or back fence, and find ing that he has got everything out of plumb and that the corners won't come right he sends for a carpenter and has to pay him for tearing everything down besides doing the work. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Breath of a chronic catarrh patient is often so offensive that he becomes an object of disgust. After a time ulceration sets in, the spongy bones are attacked, and frequently destroyed. A constant source of dis comfort is the dripping o;' the purul ent secretions into the throat, some times producing inveterate bronchitis, which is usually the exciting cause of pulmonary disease The brilliant results by its use for years past properly des ignate Ely's Cream Balm as by far the best and only cure. Call upon your druggist for it. The Gorman3 as Wood Engravers. The Germans are the best wood en gravers. Not that they have any special skill or dexterity that cannot be acquired by a man of any other nationality, but they have an infinite amount of patience, and in wood en graving patience is demanded quite as much as dexterity. It is no small matter to sit down before a block of wood knowing that weeks must pass before you can finish a picture begun on it, but the Germans have this pa tience, and this is one reason of their success. St. Louis Globe Demo crat. Knox County, III., is probably the divorce centre of the United States. In the last five years the number of divorces have averaged one to every seven marriages. Children Cryfor Pitcher's Castorla. economical Spring Gowns for Ladies. A somewhat rapid glance over the coming f.ishions shows that they are practically the same as last year's. This fact, however, will prove a bless ing in disguise, a it will enabie many to exercise a well timed economy and take advantage of this lameness of style for icmodelling old dresses. Every part of a gown can thus be made over, and especially the over- skirt which will be so largely worn. By using an old skirt as an overdress above a sham skirt ol a different material, the transformation will be at once both complete and effective. If the lower part of an old dress be worn or soiled, it may easily be re moved, as the drapery in some styles is drawn up as far as the knee on the side, and half way between the foot and the knee in front. As a matter of course the draperies are varied in form and sometimes quite com plicated. The McDowell Fashion Journals contain all the novelties of the season, and moreover, in order to furnish further assistance to their read ers, they offer a supplement of patterns of the latest styles. These may be secured by means of coupons at an exceedingly moderate price. "La Mode de Paris" and "Paris Album of Fashion" cost only $3 50 a year or 35 cents each per copy. "The French Dressmaker " is $3-ooper annum or 30 cents a copy. "La Mode," which is the best family fashion magazine in existence is offered at the exceedingly low price of $1.50 a year or 15 cents a copy. It you are unable to procure any of these publications from your newsdealer do not take any substitute from him but apply by mail to Messrs. A. McDowell & Co., 4 West 14th. Street, New York. A Queenly Head can never rest on a body frail from disease any more than the lovely lily c.n grow in the sterile soil. When Consumption fastens its hold upon a victim, the whole physical structure commences its decay. At such a period, before the disease is too far advanced. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medic al Discovery will arrest and cure it. So certain is this, that an offer is made to refund the money paid for it when a failure can be found under the con dition of a fair trial. New Use For The Telephone. From llariier's Young reoiile. Here's a story of the telephone as it is used, or abused, in Russia. The use of the instrument to intimidate prisoner is the invention of a police inspector at Odessa. A man was one day brought into the police station, charged with having committed a serious robbery. The inspector had some difficulty in proving the case, and had recourse to an ingenious stratagem. He went to the telephone in an adjoid ing room, and asked the clerk at the. central office to speak into the instru ment the following words, in a solemn tone, " Istno Smelianski, you must con fess the robbery; if you don't you are to be sentenced, and your punish ment will be all the more severe." He then sent for the prisoner and questioned him again, threatening to appeal to the "machine" to get at the truth. The thief burst into a laugh, but the inspector held the telephone to his ear and gave the preconcerted signi-.l. The result was as expected. The rogue, terrified by the warning uttered by the uncanny J'machine," at once made a clean breast of it. 160 World's Fair Photos for $1. These beautiful pictures are now ready for delivery in ten complete parts 16 pictures comprising each part and the whole set can be secur ed by the payment of One Dollar, sent to Geo. H. Heaftord, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, Chicago, III., and the portfolios of pictures will be sent, free of expense, by mail to subscribers. Remittances should be made by draft, money order, or registered let ter. 3 2-3 A number of athletic young ladies of Portland, Me., have formed a walking club. Its members devote two afternoons a week to pedestrian ism. Ira Krum, of Snyder Hollow, in the Catskill Mountains, died a few days since, the result of fasting to make himself light enough to walk on water. Now She is Wtll. "My wife was troubled with stomach, liver and kidney disease and nothing would help her but Hood's Sarsapa rilla. She took two bottles and now she is well and has a good appetite. My boy was troubled with headaches and stomach difficulty and he has taken Hood's Vegetable Pills, which we think are the best." Nathaniel Bensing, Cross Kill Mill Pa. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. 25c. The story is told on Dean Stanley that he wrote such illegible copy that the printers charged half a crown a sheet extra for setting it up. A copy of the original edition of Izaak Walton's "Angler," printed in 1653, was recently sold for nearly $1,500 by a Cleveland book firm. A MOUNTAIN RIDE. frcullar Trait of the Moonnlilnori of U'or(tl and TmiiwuMi "It was (i good many years ago," Wild tin; Judge. "I Wild lu Ten Hansen then, practicing law. I had a ease In which 1 wanted very badly n moun taineer. I wrote to lii 111, but he would not come. Finally lie sent word that I might come up and see him. I to specified particularly tbo day 1 was to arrive and the exact time I was to begin the nseiut of tho mountains. On the afternoon named my horse was tugging bravely up the rough road along the. mountain side, when n hoy not over seventeen year old slouched down into the road. A ride was slung over his shoulder in such a way that It could be swung Into Instant use. lie made no utteinpt to get out of my way. mid I was obliged to pull up my horse. "'Are you Judge N.?' he drawled. " Tin the man,' I said. "'All right, 111 go along with you,' he replied. " "I'hnnk you,' I answered, 'but who are you?' " 'I'm Bill Johnson's boy.' " "Did he send you down to meet me? " 'Yes.' " 'Why?' " '80 you'd get there alive,' ho said sentcntlously. 'You're a stranger.' " 'Won't you get In'' I asked. " 'No,' he said dryly, 'I'll walk. It'a safer for you.' "A mile or so further on another D an about twenty-one dropped suddenly In to the road. He, too, had a rifle slung on his shoulder. "Hello, Jim,' he said, 'Is this tho Judge?" " 'Yes,' said Jim. " 'AH right,' said the other, and he swung nloug on the other side of my wagon. " 'Who Is that?' I asked Jim when I got 11 clianee. "'My brother,' said Jim; 'you're a stranger, you know; he's come to help take cure of you. "Soon nnother young man appeared In the same mysterious way and joined my bodyguard. He was another ot Bill Johnson's boys. "At 11 later turn In the road an old man. stoop shouldered, gray haired, wrinkled and bent, but keen eyed and alert, stepped silently before us. He, like the rest, was armed. " 'Is this the Judge?' he asked his boys. "It was the Judge, and ho climbed Into my wagon. Protected in this way, I drove to his home. My business lln lshed, I drove back In the same way, my guard melting away, until I finally snld good -by to tho youngest boy. Strangers in the moonshine regions of Tennessee go tli.'vt way, or they go lu a roflin." "Strangely enough," said tho railroad man, "I, too, have 11 story to tell about moonshiners and strangers. I was building a railroad down In Georgia In my younger days. I am a Georgian, you know. (Mice following our sur veys I saw a chance to ride across the mountains, and thence to my home to visit my father. It was early in the afternoon when I started on my long ride. The moon was shining high. In the heavens when I began to climb. I was Jogging peacefully up the Incline, when from 11 shadow a horse and rider came out from the side of the road and fell In at my side. "'Good-evening, stranger,' said tho man politely. " 'tiood-evenlng, sir, I said, glad of even unknown company. " 'Which way you going?' asked my new companion, " 'Over the mountains,' I answered. " 'Heckon I'm going that way, too,' he said, nud then I had an opportunity to look at my friend's face. It was a strange face. Smooth shaven, young aud yet old. It was calm and placid, as expressionless ns stone, and yet there was u certain set about the Jaws that kept ine uneasy. And no matter how often I looked at him, how quick ly I turned my glance on his face, his deepest eyes were always watching me. I felt, even when I did not look at him, that he was watching me like a eat. We rode for hours, talking as one does with that class of people, until at near ly daylight we had crossed tho moun tains nud were making our way along a comparatively level road. When we came to a river, which we had to ford, my friend reined up. " 'This is as far a-I go,' ho said. " "I'm sorry to lose you,' I replied civilly. " 'Stranger,' he said, when my horse's forelegs were In tho river, 'where are you from?' "'Georgia,' I answered; 'this is my State.' " 'Who's boy are you?' "'Judge S.'s.' " "Is that so?' he said In a calm voice. 'Why, do you know what I took you for? Heveuue! Yes, sir, and I eaino near shooting you, sir. Half a dozen times on that ride I made up my mind you were revenue, sir, and each time I was just ready to do It. But I hated to do it, sir, you looked so square. I'm glad I didn't.' " 'So am I,' I answered, with a false, Jerky laugh, for that emotionless man gave 1110 the chills, aud I sent my horse across the ford. " 'Good-by, I cried from the other Bide. " 'Good-by, sir,' he replied. Then his horse carried him off in the gray light, and I felt a sudden sense of relief." Exchange. A Guy Lotlimlo. Johnnie Masher I have only known you for half an hour and yet I love you more than words can tell. There Is nothing I wouldn't do to gain your love. "Yes; but how do you know that I am not a married woman?" asked tho lady. "Is that so? Then perhaps you have an unmarried sister to whom you might utroduce me." Texas Slftlngs. One on the Gun Man. The gas mau called on the dentist to have a tooth extracted. "Do you want to take gas?" asked tho D. I. S. "How much will It require?" "Oh, don't worry abor that; I'm not going to measure with the meter you use on me." Detroit Free I'ress. llld Slio Say Xo? Wings She Is tho most uninteresting girl 1 have ever met, eveu though sho Is rich. She can't say anything but "yes" and "no." Stings Which did she say to you? Truth. FORCE OF CHARACTER. Tlint Wm What the Man With the Ja Nhoweil to the (inductor. A tall, thin man, with n faded brown overcoat, nn ornate Jag 0111I 11 tattooed star on his left hand, got on n 1 o'clock car 011 Sunday morning, says the Buf falo Express. Ho wavered around In the nlsle until somebody made room for him, and thereafter ho spent most of his time In stroking his pointed chin mid smiling nlTably nt tho other passen gers. The conductor came along and held out his hand. The man with the Jag fumbled around lu bis vest pocket and produced a dime. The conductor gave him 11 Canadian five-cent silver piece for change. Tho man with the Jag held It between a thumb mid linger and eved It suspiciously. "Here," he said, thickly, "I don't wan' thosh." "Neither do I," said the conductor, unit with this he passed along. The man with the Jag stroked his chin a couple of times and beamed around tho ear. "WaJt'U he go's back," he said; "I'll flx'lni." The conductor come back. The man with the Jag stopped him and held out tlM objectionable coin. "Here," he said again, "I don't wan' thash." "What's the matter with it?" Inquired the conductor. "I don't wan' thash," repeated the man with the Jag, doggedly. Tho conductor took the coin and counted out five pennies to tho man. "How will that tlx you out?" he In quired. The man with a Jag stroked his chin ngaiu nnd continued his smiling. He fairly beamed on everybody. Then ha said loudly: "Thafih way t' fix it. Thash only way. Forsh charact'r. I jush say suing an' stlcksh t' it, and' It comsh my way. 'F Aheresh more mm like me in thish country wouldn' be so much monkey blshnesh. Forsh char act'r, thash wha' vltorish." And, with his five pennies clasped tightly lu his hand, he went contentedly to sleep. Kut her Kmbarasing. i l.lH!tC:,iv..'.S.v. Rosalind Well, Edgar, what did you wish to say to me? Edgar Oh. I wished to tell you that Miss De Sniythe Is engaged to be mar ried. Itosalind (coloring) What! that insipid-looking, doll-faced creature en gaged! For mercy's sake, who is going to marry her? Edgar Well er that Is I am. The Killing l'axulon. Ho loved the winsome lass with a love none tho less ardent because she was a clerk lu a dry-goods store, and he had met her them behind the coun ter when he had come in to make pur chases. - But she was no ordinary girl, and ho knew Hint if he won her as his own It would bo no easy conquest. For weeks aud weeks he had been to see her, nhd for weeks ho had hesitated on the brink of a proposal, which in volved all his happiness. Yet. the girl did not seem to realize how near she was to him, nor that any moment might precipitate tho final question. However, these things cannot con tinue Jorevcr, and one Sunday after noon as they were walking his voice became low and tremulous, and she looked up shyly Into his face. "Christine," ho whispered, "may 1 ask you a question?" "Certainly, George," she assented frankly. "What Is it?" "Will you be my wife?" She turned as if a shelf were behind her. "I'm very soiry," sho said softly. "Is there anything else to-day ?" Detroit Free I'ress. Highland Fishing Inns. Misfortune, aud Highland Inns, bring ft man acquainted with strange bed fellows and other melancholy matters, Bays the London Saturday Hevlew. The Highland inn is of all sorts and many sizes, perhaps the bigger the worse, or the smaller tho better. There are huge caravansaries, wherein you seem to be In a dingier anil less exhil arating Switzerland. They are plant ed beside railways, as near lochs ns possible, and contain some hundreds of guests, from Glasgow maluly, if we may Judge by aeeeut. Tho bigger the hotel the worse the sport, as a general rule. The talk Is chiefly of trout: "Ser les mocurs do la tnilte on n'est pas flxe," says a French authority. If there is 110 certainty on the matter It Is not for want of discussion. Tho great problem of the Highland hotel Is, "Why don't they take?" for they uever do take; "that you may lay to." Either there has been uo rain, or "they are cxpeetin' malr rain," or there Is no breeze, or there Is a mighty rushing wind. A spirit of discontent broods over the angling Inmates of the High land hotel; their lives are full of seri ousness because they cannot catch Usli enough, or, for that matter, lish at all. Fnrca of Habit. j At the hotel counter. Clerk (stepping to the speaking tuba as it whistles) Well, what Is It? The agonizing tones of Uncle Joshua (room E, front) -Send me up a bellows. I've blown ou this 'ere 'leetrle light till I'm winded, an' It's burnlu' yet. Chi cago Kecord. An Infant Phenomenon. Fond Mother Big? Do you think so? Why, we think he is rather small for his age. Talk? Oh, yes, he talks; but he hasu't said anything remark able yet. v Visitors (together) What a wonder ful child, Judge. I .t, ,.. fi'i . ' 'h.' '. lut 11 it iVIfu'W