SW ONDER WHY, 1 wonder why the world's good things Should fall in such unequal shares— Why some should taste of all the joys And others only feel the cares? I wonder why the sunshine bright Should fallin paths some people tread, While others shiver in the shade Of clouds that gather overhead | I wonder why the trees that hang So full of luscious fruit should grow Only where seme may reach and eat While others faint and thirsty go! Why should sweet flowers bloom for some, For others omly thorns be found? Aud some grow rich on fruitful earth, While others till but barren ground? I wonder why the hearts of some O'ertlow with joy and happiness, While others go their lonely way Unblessed with.aught of tenderness ! 1 wonder why the eyes of some Should ne'er be moistened with a tear, While others weep from worn till night, Their hearts so crushed with sorrow here! Al! well; we may not know indeed The whys, the wherafores of each life ! But this we know there's one who sees And watches us through joy or strife; Each lite its mission here fulfills, And only He may kaow the end, Aud, loving Him, we may be strong, place for a while anyway, thongh to | tell the touth, I did't like tue route, | ‘twas so awial gloomy-like. No big towns to go throngh, only now aud then a littie village, and they would be as dark and quiet ns a grave yard, when we struck "em at night. Summers it wasn't so bad, but winters it was aw- ful, Well, one night in Jenuary, when it was my turn to stay in Portland, the superintendent sent for me, and * ‘Bob, theré’s a party ef directors as wants to get through the mountains to. night, and theyre goieg 10 start about 10 o’elock. I'll bave to send a special but haven't an engineer that 1 can trust, Now, it's your night off, I know, but & you'll pull the throttle for them fellows I'll make at all right with you.’ * ‘Well,’ sags 1, ‘I'll go, ef course; but it's goin’ te be a bad night on the mountains,’ | * ‘That's so, Bob, says the super- intendent, ‘but I know I can rely on you, and them directors says they must go through, anyhow.’ “So I went baek to onr little cottage and told Nell as how 1'd got to go. Though storm or sauskine He may sond. TRL SRS SE SRR WTO % : THE ENGINEERS STORY, i i i i § it had been snowing steadily all day ea, not in a boisterous, tempestuous | way, but quietly and persistently, as if the feathery flakes which were rapidly pilag themselves one upon the other on the frozen ground had come for a long stay. Towards night the wind begaa to rise, und when darkness set- | tled down a moderate winter's storm was raging. We were waiting in the little station at L for the down train, telegraphed an hour and a half | behind time, and were erdeavoring to | | | | | | | She took on very queer like, and seemed distressed to have me away, theugh she never acted like that before, *“ ‘It’s an awfal night, Bob,' saysshe, | can’t they send some one clse? I doen't ike to have you go’ ‘‘ ‘Nonsense,’ says I, ‘the storm won't | 1 mn . : i The super.’s promised to do the | I'll come out all | i row, square thing, and right,’ *‘She seemed a little reasured, and I got out my great coat and muller, and in ‘em I prepared to start out, ‘“*Well, Bob,’ says my wife, ‘if i you ad- the | ‘be | i ded thoughtfully, and there was queerest ook passed over her face, mA giants that have boen turned into stone standing guard over the va'ley, The silence amd desolation sorter awes one, and it didn't seem right to go shrieking and screaming slong their sides in the dead o’ night. This time it was worse than ever. "The storm had let loose all the evil spirits in the air, Ihe wind swept down the valley with a roar that eould be heard above the rush of the train, It whistled and yelled at the cab windows, and blew the rain and sleet so hard agin the winder frame I could scarcely see the short distance lit by the headlight. The great trees rocked to and fyo, and seemed to hold out their arms in warning, It was a solemu place for any one, and I felt it particularly, as 1 had this awful weight of anxiety on my mind that had been a growin’ stronger and stronger each minute “Well, we had passed Bartlett's, goin’ through there at a pretty good jog, when, like a flash of lightning, tho parting words of my wife came back to me: ‘Be careful of that Frankenstein trestle!’ “That set me to thinkin’, Could this be a presentiment of some disaster, Was there anything the matter with the bridge? **“Nounsense,’ eays I, ‘I'm a natural. born fool. If anything was wrong the train two hours ahead would have found | it out and signaled me at Bartlett's, I'll think of it no more, but tend ) ‘But in spite of me, ‘Be careful of ihe Frankenstein trestle,’ kept comin’ into my head even the wind seemed to shriek 1t. I picturad to myself a broken rail and the yawning gulf on each side. What an accident 1t would make! What a feartul chasm in which to plunge! Then I remembered Nell, and the queer look that came over her face wnen she gave me that singular caution, yarn, and I've heard a number of em, I don’t turn up my nosse and say, ‘Non- sense!’ There's more in one’s feelings than most people thinks for, leastwise, minding my feelings saved my meek that night at the Frankenstein trestle, There comes tho express; good-night,” Long Calls It is not always wise to make a rule that no one is to be admitted during the evening : on the contraiy, a guest nay be heartily welcomed if it is known at the outset he has come in for a short time ; that he is cheerful, and frienddy, and amusing, and in short, worth iis- tening to and entertaining, But the illy concealed gloom that settles down Upon one tired face after another, while the clock strikes the succeeding half hours, and each member of the family in turn comes despaliringly to the res- cue of the faltering conversation, is a deplorable thing. We are responsible for the state of our consciences, and if we have allowed them: to become so dull that they do not give us the un- mistakable warning to gO away, then We must not fret if we are warded off, dreaded, and called bores, I was des long #go that she did not think that she had any right to spend two hours at a Lime with any friend without a special invi- it could not fall to be an interruption; and it gave joy to my heart that one person so respected the rights of others, Picture some one, who has assured bimself that he is not likely to find amusement under his owp roof, set- iis { ts forth in 1 ing search of a more agreeable vace in which pend the evening, Ie hunts from door to door ; finding hat one family has honestly pd its noney and to a play, another is dining out, the third enjoying its invited guests, while at the fourth he met at sight with the information that the la- lO S83 t I $ I t tL Ue is Au Execution in Cubs, "oe SE . Those who have sailed bv daylight into the beautiful harbor of Havana, will, perhaps, recall a dark and low stone building upon the right shore, almost directly opposite Moro Castle. which is perched on the other side of | the bay, This building is the prison in | which eriminals are confined who ha ve | been sentenced to death. Attached to it is a chapel, where many a poor wretch has received the last consolations of religion, and the worn stone sill of the door bears witness to the many feet that have passed out to return on earth never more, In the month of May, 1860, General Dulce being Captain-General of the | Island of Cuba, one Ramon Torres, a | private in a Spamsh infantry regiment | stationed at Havana, for some cause or | other, in a moment of passion, drove a | knife to the hilt in the bosom of his su. perior officer, killing him on the spot, | The culprit was, ot course, immediately | arrested and sent to prison, where he | was at once tried and condemued to die | by the garrote. Spanish Jaw sometimes | renders swift justice, and in this case but a few days intervened between the murder and its expiati : When the death sentence upon a criminal J ii, J UZ Mi. 15 passed 1, OF court of and, eall- cell, the ade Justice, proceed to the prison, ing the eriminal of hi Judge reads the sentence to hi doing so, he address, the a him irons until There can hi rea evervibing the, out generally exhorting him to prepare f oA } ¥ iii up taken in | remains | exert ere wil change that pris The ' iii One ti io the he 334 1011, yest rest, Du $4 nabie ring { contribute urnished: [eV readily —————————— ¥00D ¥OR THOUGHT, Praise undeserved is guise, He repents on thorus that sleeps on beds of roses, Tears are sometimes smiles of love, The greatest of faults is to be con- scious of none, Without proper application even tul- ent is unavailable, Cheerful assistance provides happy rest for the invalid, A cowardly nature never exercise forgiveness, No money is wasted that purchase tranquility, Some people take pride in dis patire in dis- he t happiest hurries Lo Belect your carefully thus avoid much trouble, Who i words ’ a1ls his competitor w Hjures wn business, Huraility is the most excellent ral cure for anger in the world We cannot right every Prosperity makes triends, | they be real adv ! Great hearts y glory thers mucl Ver ; they ever go up or 1G Uv iO = ourage #4 4 ety to fus bya py Al ave thie C nro iis S enough, excep Mn the Me Veit gaged 1 $.8..4 SRF AEERLEL impossible emembers i men’ 4 i 1 } . MILs OF LF 1 ‘ | careful of that Frankenstein trestle.’ { ‘Be careful of the Frankenstein trestie,’ stove which served as the only heating | « scarcely heard what she said, but | We was a nearin’ the bridge, sure medinm in the low-studded apartment. | bidding her good-bye was soon on my | €oough, Or the up grade *49' was | Bains au entrance, One person rises L—— is a place of little importance ex- | way to the round-house, It was a wild | making about twenty miles sn hour, | hurriedly from the sofa ; another puts cept as a railroad center, for here two | night, and no mistake: seems to me I | 80d in less than ten minutes we would | down * b with a sigh; another trunk lines cross each other, and it is yp 8 kar Gg I caught my | Comes Felustantis from a Gok, where some notes and letters must be : . have never seen it blow harder or snow | Pe over the bridge, or— also the point where locomotives were faster. Once or twice I had to turn my | Preath, for at that moment those warn- ri A : changed on the different trains, Witi y al some time during the ev keep warm around the small air-tight | : : On the day of the execution of th subject of this sketch, about five fand troops were paraded outs prison walls, almost as many people of | " ' the city and surrounding c try were | “1€ Clliereal, also the ground. Suddenly there | W came a chorus of voices from the i d- | allow, does ing, =i ; | dies are enoaoe y f { dies are engaged. Perhaps at the fifth { and divine, he g thou- re od ‘A y e ihe | We should seek more of ali $ alities o { 1 Sia ; 3 3 ) I everv-das Hel WIR on ho does the { well, acts ing words flashed 3 ¥ | ¥ g unison a funeral dirge, | could no more, into my mind once | the exception of the bustle and excite- ment incident to a junetion station, there was but little to attract a tourist, and the few natural charms the place possessed at this time were hidden be- back to the blast to keep from blowin’ over. Well I was soon on board my machine, and, backing ints the station, hitched on to two cars which were to make up the train. As 10 o'clock ap- proached the directors began to arrive, | | “If I'm ever to be cured of such myself, ‘now is my What could Nell know about I'll put her across at full | i i the bridge? the stricken grou resigns It was f § 14 of friend re- | sently to his avocation, with a brave ex- | It may be eight o'clock when the A comes : IL may be nine, and he CUsSe, ’ of the doomed man’s | remony never | 3 The sun was gleam- | tly over the still, smooth water | n foliage scarcely stir fellow a 136 ing brig! the dark gre ' V 4 i tie 3 Char: grea well Be acter 18 high $ wryind “411 + BOUL Wiil as to think, OVINE, and wove. t le , and amid beauty of the 1. neath the soft covering of snow. So the weary waiters were forced by bearth of amusement, as well as the storm, to while away the time as best they could in the dingy depot. The different time- tables were perused, the flaming adver- tisements scrutinized, all to no purpose, for the hands of tnemonotonous-ticking clock crept around the dial with that tardy pace peculiar to railaoad time- pieces when one 1s waiting for a belated | train. The conductor who was to take charge of the express came in to warm his hands by the little stove, and soon the party was increased by the engineer, whose machine could be dimly seen far down the track waiting for its expected charge, “Bad ductor. up. She won't be yet” The engineer made some reply and joined the cirole around the stove, He was a man of slight build, drooping shoulders, and perhaps not up to the average height iather effeminate at | first sight, until one noticed the square, firm chiv, the quick, steady eyes, and the limes about the mouth, which shows ed that beneath that calm face and quiet manner lay the will to both do and dare. He has beeu selected especially fo run this night express on account of the danger oi the position, for the down train was frequently late, and the lost time must be made up before reaching the end of the road in order to meet connections, ime apd again nothing but the coolness and judgement of the engiueer had brought this train to its destination ia safety, and Bob Jennings, a8 he was called, had been remarkably fortunate, and has never met with a serious accident. The running of the two trains up to L—— and back to the city constituted his day's work, The position was a respousible one, and re. muneration good, and the “job,” as the boys termed it, was looked upon with envy by Bob's fellow engineers. After some minutes passed in con. versation between the engineer and conductor, the Iatter suddenly re. marked: “How was 1t, Bob, you happened to get this express? The superintendent of the Portland & Ogdensburg helped you to it, didn’t he, on account of that affair up in the mountains? Tell us about it?” ‘Yes, yes,” spoke upseveral who had overheard the conversation. ‘‘Let ns hear the story by all means.” “Well, boys,” said Bob, as he bit off a generous chew, and deposited the quid lovingly in his cheek, “it ain't much of a yarn, and it'll make you laugh, for you'll think me spooky like, Howsomever, it's true as gospel, and if Dan was here he'd sav so. too. “Twas when I was running 49 on toe P. & O, road, which hadn't been agoin’ more'a a couple of years, You may perhaps be acquainted with the line, She runs through the White Moun- tain Notch, and is built right on the side of the hills. How they ever had the spunk to start such a road beats me, for at firsi sight it seems next to hope- less to get around some of them short carves, to say nothing of the big up. grades, Near Crawford's is that spider- ilke ¥rankenstein trestle you've heard so much sbout, where the track spans a chasm eighty feet wide and one hun- deep, Strong hb, Isup- t it makes a man feel skittish for the first time, Well, | owing to that tres- Portland then, Nell wife, wo were as The only draw. in { ger Le I quietness pompous-looking men with plenty of | Speed.’ 1 breeze money and teeling all their import-| ‘A tall white birch that stood on a auce, | spur of the mountain was the Jaud- “Them fellers,” says I to myself, | mark which showed me that we was ‘feel their steam pretty well. I don’t | a comin’ to the straight piece which led means to snd inwar suppose they'd look at an engineer.’ | across the bridge. I put my hand on presence For half an h "Dan Smith, my fireman, was ou the | the throttle to throw open the valve |}. » felt sure of weleome : in that time watch for the conductor's signal and | when— xinly could have 3d and done when the clock struck 10 we got the | *‘Well, gentlemen, I don't suppose 10inz. and hate bean swing of the lantern and off we started, | you'll believe me, but as true as i'm OF In. aoDAy ATE “I've seen some pretty bad nights, | standing here my wife's voice whis- | but this one was the worst I ever re- pered in my ear, ‘not that one, Bob, th | member, The storm to-night is hard | brake! enough, but it don’t begin to blow as it | *‘It gave me such a start that before | did then. Why, every now and then | I knew what | did I had opened the we would get a blast that would make | Westinghouse for all she was worth, the whole machine tremble, and as the | and the train came to a standstill in less | country around Portland is pretty level, | than two lengths, Not waitin’ to an we took the full force of the wind. As | swer any questions from Dan I grabbed we got further inland it wasn't a0 bad, | my lantern and rushed up the track to and by the time we were forty mules | the bridge, and walked along the mid- oat it had turned to summer's gale | dle plank until J reached the other side, and was pouring torrents, | and then back again, Not a thing was ‘And now comes the singular part of | out of piace, every rail secure, and the the story. We had the right of way, | bridge was as sound as when first put and our dispatcher was to keep the | Up! whole up to Fabyan's open for ns, my | “‘Idiot] eried I, ‘so much for your instructions being to stop only at North | foolish nonsense. This freak will cost Conway for water, So I gave her the | You your job.’ throttle, and we bowled along ata good rate of speed, making pethaps thirty or thirty-five miles an hour As we went whirling through Sebago Lake may be kind-hearted and unobject he may even be profitable and tertaining ; he ten | everybody think: Wp stil ie | I= tly Vida £ after i 1 iii truly great i ¢hat i 3 that maketh height of honor. His heart $ 43 { but there was no 1 qi . | memory of wall awoke sad as % ¢ LP dying day 3 > ts fever to He ! rN } 4 } regress is never oy : Was as great an hour he could : n Ol in L TREES he certainly co a ail that was wo 1 7 (rive to a wounded ither consolation | effected anything in s The lazy and never live happily tog tt dl iw FE asked to stop longer, or t soon, when he took leave, greater compliment and trit nitegrity than fo be fairly entreated to down for ten long Of course we trea civilly in an evening vis deal 1 ter to come away too s an stay late, In bu } CONG again bere is no 4 . } {to one's the s \ i ie ; fhige +o (doy ik YET MEO Tag vl ¥ por i GATE dless, | il e- | despise x § y Hesse ein git Bai $4335 utes er. having upon each broidered ladder. ol his i Cab od Wie : tl to a ¥, worked and overhurried city life, nothing is s #8 4 quiet evening to one's self, or even apart of one. We all wish, or 0 wish, to make life pleasant for our- selves and other people, and are ready to be generous even with our time, | ny» one likes to be red fmuded. It underlying 1 pe of our neighbor's action dect towards us which makes ful or resentful when Lin i » Dice Bob,” said the oon- in and warm for an hour | night, “Better come here ror dad URHL a 14 Ak 112 vil i i un 51 FrauinGe Ala Ge. ‘3 Lie ie cries : world « thank. a x tacard LEAVE BO Warped » Visit § us he comes t ‘ Ns Appear like “1 could see the lights of the con- | us | ductor and brakeman, who had with i number of the passengers come out to {see what was the matter. How thse station, 1 had a kind of feeling come | boys would laugh, I thought. I should over me that there was something | never hear the last of it. I was sneak- wrong. Idiudn’t notice it a first, but | ing back to the eab when I came to the every now and then it wonld come back | switch of a short siding that had been to me that all was not as it should be, | laid on which to run gravel cars, It yet I couldn't think of anything that | wasn't a very long track, not more than wasn't right. 1 aliers examine my ma- | a hundred odd feet feet, and ended chine before I start, give her a good | within a couple of yords of the preci. oilin’, look well to the bolts and parallel | pice. Noticin’ somethin’ peculiar, 1 rods, try the levers and such; and so I | held up my lantern and found a large knew when we left Portland old *49' | tree that had just blown down and was in perfect workin’ trim. Yet the | fallen against the switch-rod, breakin’ feelin’ grew on me until it was a steady | the fastening and throwin’ the rails of thing. 1 tried to shake it off, but it | the main line into the siding! was no use, I reit it in my bones that “I tell you, boys, it made my hair somethin’ was up, stand on end. In two minutes that “Now you gentiemen will laugh at | whole train and hem directors would a me for being a fool, and I don’t blame | gone off that cliff, and no one would you, for we was a-goin’ along all right, | have lived to tell about it! everything from the water-gauge to the “‘What's the row, Bob? cylinders was a-workin' in good time, | conductor. and I knew that it was only imagina- “Row enough!’ says I. ‘Look at that tion, but to tell the truth, I began to | switch. I reckon I pulled her up just feel uneasy, I had been an engineer | in time,’ for ten years, and had heen through “Great heavens!" exclaimed a fat some pretty tough scrapes without | director who was standing by, ‘Where blowin’ for brakes, and the boys all | does that track lead to? aaid as how I had a good deal of pluck, ““To the other world,’ says 1, ‘and Now I began to loose all confidence, | we came almighty near making the * *‘Bob.’ says I to myself, ‘this won't | trip!’ do. You're getting nervous, and all for “Well, you never see a more grateful nothin’. You've no business to be |set of men. They made up a purse of superstitions a. your time of life. Brace | 857% on the spot, and when we got to up!’ Fabyao's they telegraphed the super. ““Twas no use, bowever. I could |as how I was to stay with them during have stood up in court and sworn that | the excurtion, and I went fo all the there was a kink somewhere. Well, | sights in Montreal with ‘em just as meanwhile we was shding along, and | though I had been one of the regular pretty soon reached North Conway, | party. Not content with that, they where we was to give the engine a [gave me an elegant gold witch and drink. ‘Dan,’ says I to my firoman, | chain, the President of the road, who ‘there's something out of the way with | happened to be among "em, making a this machine, and J don’t know what | neat speech, I teil you a peep into the it is.’ jaws of death will put rich and poor “What makes you thick so? men on the same leyel; nothing like it Dan. to take the bigness out of them, “‘I can’t tell,’ 1 replind; ‘she works “Well, the boys ali made a lun out ail t, but I feel it in my bones, of me when I got back to Portland, and ha you're thinking of your wife,’ | Nell never seemed so glad to see me, returned Dan, with a laugh,’ That night's work was the making of ‘But while we were gettin’ in the | me, for the superintendent gave me a Water Fig a iatefn and went all | good shay, ad Amally I this jon. 1 rou 0 engine, at ev never to © boys w stopped the part of her, ra the oars, oy train, for 1 knew thoy would augh ab the wheels, tried her at every point, | me, and I den’t know as I told my wife and couldn ¢ find nothin,’ for a long time. One day, however, “And I tried to think no more about she came to me and says: it, but the feeling was there, all the | ‘“sob, I had a queer dream abont same, and do the best I could I wasn't | you the ht of that affair at the aplo to throw 1t A. wp } droninad 1 was on the . y Wo got a pretty good | engine with you somewhere, and we distance in the mountains, and with | was agoing at a fearful rate. Way in Shin hight Loud ‘49’ didn’t make nothing he a ol aw hat Sdcined tobe a © up grades, 3 you thought by getting a “Perhaps, gentlemen, you have never os headway you could jump it, I been through the hills in winter. It's | knew, of course you coulda’, so I said, some different from summer, I can teil | Not that one, the brake!’ then I woke yer. The mountains loom up bark aud | up!’ solemn, and with their suow.covervd “1 then told her the whole story, and, sides they seem kinder lke vig, ghost y | cud wi, wheneyor § bear a similar . s J 3 4 tu Hard words i Wiic a -- Origin of the Funeral Array. i ner, The array of funerals common ly made | ley by undertakers 1a London and in many |, large towns, is strictly the neraldis | army of a baronial funerai: the two mea who stand at the doors being sup- posed to be the two porters of the cast le, with staves in black; the man who heads the procession wearing a scarf, being a representative of a herald-at- arns; the manu who carries a plume nf feathers on his head Leing an esquire with his plume of feathers; the pail beaters, with batons, being representa- tives of knights-companions-at-arms; the men walking with their wards be. ing supposed to represent gentlemen ushers with their wands, Laterally all “the pomp and circumstance” with which the baron of high birth, ancient lineage, numerous heraldic quarterings, and large estates, was conveyed in the olden time to the house appointed unto all living, have been copied without the slightest significance or utility the mere dry form transplanted into another grade and ciass to whieh il is singularly inappropriate and oppres- sively expensive-—fa the funeral of the middle class of sociewy, in those of the curate, tradesman, swall shopkeeper, and even the first-class artisan, and in this way the cost of funerals is swelled 10 an enermons amount. The Carver, not lazy who are they who are 100 Rh. Of too proud to be poor; 3 2 ¥ 3 Lo what they earn ¢ 41 ay fore { they pay for, Have corresponding ily ea ing w what pris to the people, Lue aed § h il He rere 3 it Py. © courage to face a difficy ever thougat it should kick you har cated, nis legs { than bargained for, Difficulties, the hands | thieves, often disappear at a glance. collar | The law of harvest is reap more | than you sow. Sow an act, and you ne | reap a habit and you read a character from person a bright knife, | BOW a character. and you reap a des. and handed it to the police who were | tiny. . 1 wesentl. A black cap was then drawn | 4, : . ; = r the prisoner’s Py and the priests | , It is impossible ie make beople un- began to recite the credo. When they | Sorswand their ignorance, for it requires aly “IT4 . vs 33. | knowledge to perceive it; and, there- come to the words “Ilis only son,” the | ¢ » he 1 at p yerceive it. hath it verdogo, verdago, by a swift and dex- | fe, 1g Yom oan peresive ana terous turn of the lever, launched the TL ' soul of the poor wretch into eternity. Never hold an) There was but a momentary quiver of | oF the hand, in order 1 3 the limbs and a straightening of the | for if people are unwilling form, then all was still; for the man | You had better hold your was stone dead. The mode of punish. | hem. ment is far more merciful than the| There is no preacher listened to but hideous and bungling performances | time which gives us the same train and frequently gone threugh with at our | turn of thought witich older people gibbets, have tried in vain to put into our hea ls The troops then wheeled into column | before and marched away to the beat of drums Many persons fancy themselves and now came the strange sequel to this | friendly when they are only officious. They counsel not so much that you dismal spectacle. As soon as the ground was cleared | should become wise as they should be recognized as teachers of wisdom. one of the police went forward and seized the verdago, arrested him for | Greater love hath no man than this, murder, hwirying him to the prison, | that a man lay down his life for friends. where the juzgado were still assembled, yet that was only one of the things Placing him in their midst, he accused which He suffered, only the full stop him of having killed a man, and de- | 41 the close of the great charter of nounced him as a murderer. The judge suffering love, y Weakness works more ill than wick- asked him what he had to sayin answer edness; it is easier, between the hand to he charge. od wpndl i8 true,” replied the verdago, | which strikes and the reed which gives put 1 Kill the PHSoHes: ut : Suny way, to defend oneself against the as- Spin Part : saults of the former than to guard mitted the act charged--displaying his | ocuinet the untrustworthiness of the arms with he bdges-] did it in the latter. cause I justice, and in presence of the The savage who never knew the blessings of combination, and he who law, all of which I am compelled to do t vi 3 by virtue of my office, quits sociely from apathy or misan- thropic spleen, are like the separated “The accused is innocent, and is dis- charged,’ answered the court, and thus embers, dark, dead, useless; they neither give nor receive heat, neither love nor the formula of Spanish law was satis. fied are beloved, True art is not the caprice of this or that individual, it is a solemn page either of history or prophecy; and when, as always in Dante and occasionally in Byron, it combines and harmonizes this double mission, it reaches the highest summit of power, Spare the feelings of your friends, Don’t flatter yowrselt that friendship authorizes you 10 say disagreeable things to your mmaies, On the con- trary, the nearer you come into relation with a person the more necessary do tact and courtesy become. 54% alt) de lik iad anvihing to merely shook his head by way of and at and his arms pinioned, with his breast and Atl this point of iy 1 @ Was Once {ied 1 crossed the fixed about his neck, the proceedings, ti verdago pulled H 4 on WO 1 & ils Ong { says the one LY the bution, to be heard out: lo hear you, tongue than A good carver will remember that the following are esteemed delicacies, The wounds of codiish. The fat of salmon. The fat of venison, Kidneys of lamb and veal, The long cuts and the gravy from the “‘alderman’s walls” of a haunch of venison. The pope's eye in a leg of mutton, “The oyster cut of a shoulder of mut- ton. : The ribs and neck of a pig, Breast and thighs (without drum- stick) of turkey and goose, The legs and breast of a duck. The wings, back and breast of game. says It was reported a short time ago that been driven by dynamite in (German experiments, a AIA in the relations of deaths and births mong Sholios, Protestants and Jews, the are found to be in bat slow the but births I infantile wortality is lower; and increase is often much grea- ter. ‘The Jews have fewer births than either of the other classes, but their Suuturute 4 so, low for all ages that they increase in numbers more rapinly than either Catholios or Protestants, es 2 TEET fe rena, ot was L] was good, so I'd better 1 Pradamovie, chief euginoer
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