DAYBREAK. diversion, and feeling an unaccountable interest in this » fellow, I got up and followed him into the street, He thrust his hand into the pockets of Not yet the sable curtain of the night Hath from the shrouded landscape away; t now tis lined w gold That tell of coming daybreak. rolled Bu ith threads of rose and | senturie > to-day. And the breeee, eenuries Ag than y Uprising softly, ripples through the leaves With low-toned murmurs; in the still cool | air There is a subtle fragrance of the soll, A rameless essence of the teeming fields, Clover and vetches, wheat and tasseled oats, Millet and barley-beards. of pictures for sale in the shops, and | short pause, “I don’t like my rooms | anyway; they're too small, and the | light's not good.” Springs | g g Anon the light Wit growing power sheds a halo soft Of radiance o'er the corn-lands, he lark the sanfoin, pouring as he nd higher, a flood ot melody, har he wayfarer, and fill the air th strains of natural music. ascended flight after flight of steps | until we reach the rooms, a studio and bed- room, in the top story. Upli BOATS Ww | on easels and against the walls in the | studio, | most heterogeneous description. A | rickety, plebeian-looking chair stood : | before a delicately-carved writing desk pon Endymion’s lips, | that might once have graced a palace er silver $hivhe lof the Medici. On the floor was a | Tarkish rug, much worn and liberally | bestrewed with bits of rag and cigarette | stumps, On the mantel stood an iron | figure of the crucifixion, flanked by | cigars, a blacking brush, books, letters, | I had barely noted this things when the | landlord, a short, fat, ball of a man | entered; grew very munch exciled when informed there was no money for him, inflating himself, until he looked like a | toy baloon, at the beginuing of each of I'his shrill sentences, and then gradually Gone is night! It is the early morning, fresh and sweet, With crystal beadlets of life-giving balm, W hose sparkling diamonds on the flowers fall, Like the soft dew u By Dian left, when {rot i Ske stooped to earth, and w aked him wit a Kiss, p— it was odd, the way I first met Hobbs, 1 had been in Forence a year, ostensibly finishing my education, a phrase always vague enough when applied to young wen who perform that important opera- tiou abroad, but especially vague in my case. Insepsible absorption doubtless did something for me, but as 1 locked back over the year I could see no very definite acquisitions and was not at all pleased with the retrospect. My well- | planned assault on the Italian language had speedily dwindled into a desultory skirmish on the borderiands that gave me nothing but subsistence; for I had barely learned encugh to order adioner, while as for art—well, I began at the wrong end of that, and had been ever sineo in inextricable confusion. To be sure, 1 could talk learnedly enough about it—with those who knew less of it than 1 did—but 1 did not, and could not, understand it. I could not bring my mind to books, a not unnatural re- sotion, they had been somewhat forcibly brought to it during my college days. My [nends were uninteresting, and music had few charms for me, so 1 found myself spending many hours in | my rooms, asking myself a great many times what I was good for, without ever getting anything like a satisfactory an- swer, and had about made up my mind to go home and do something when I met Hobbs. 1 was sitting one morning over my breakfast in the cafe where 1 took that meal, feeling more than usually dissatis- fied with the world in general and my- self in particular, and gazing idly out of the open window at the passers-by, when my attention was attracted toa little child that had strayed out into the middle of the street and was in immi- nent danger of being run over by a rapidly-spproachiog carriage, the driver of which was engaged in conversation with 1s occupants. I started to my feet with an involuntary cry, and as I did so saw a young man dart from the opposite sidewalk, snatch the child from under the horse's feet and deposit it at the cafe door, where it was claimed by an agitated young woman, who began a voluble thankoffering. The young man smiled, nodded, and, entering the cafe, took a seat at the table next mine. 1 have always found a peculiar pleasure in trying to assign nationality, charac- | Juseed so much, for he was barely five- ter, and occupation to people thus fnd-twenty, and rarely read anything, thrown in my way, and turned eagerly | were equally inexplicable 0 me, from a coutemplation of the street to 8 | became much attached to him; indeed, scrutiny of the new-comer. The subject of my speculations this time was in no way remarksble, It was a young man of medium height and slender figure, with dark, almost sallow complexion and tolerably regular features, Nothing in his dress served to distinguish him from the other occupants of the cafe, unless it was a certain negligence that is seldom found in the young men of Florence. His clothes fitted him well, yet he seemed not to know it, for he sprawled out in bis chair as if clothes were furthest from his thoughts; his vest was half unbuttoned, his coat dusty. Altogether he was totally un- interesting, and I would probably never have noticed him had it not been for the incident in the street. I wasdeliberating whether to class him as Austrian or Greek, for I felt sure he was no Italian, when he looked up, caught my eye, smiled slightly, snd said “(ood morn- ing.” Then I saw that his eyes were blue, snd under the influence of that smile —the pleasantest, frankest smile I have ever seen—I responded, ‘Good | purse, morning,” and wondered where I had | Another trait that displeased me in met him, Trying to decide this ques- | Hobbs was his inconsistency. He was tion 1 tarned again to the window, and | very clear and positive in his opinions, only observed from the corners of my | an eye that he drank his coffze as if he | Christianity, aod of thoroughly enjoyed it, and when he had | rality, yet he uever went to church, finished it took = cigarette from his although always intending to, ocoasion- pocket, lighted it, aud settled back in is ohsir as if he meant tu enjoy that | for him, and, I regret to add, swore also. After smoking a few moments he | with great yigor aud fluency when his got up, and, coming to my table, stood | pictures were rejected. He was very looking out of the window for a long | irregular in his work, and would pass time in silence. At length he turned | weeks without touching brush to can- to me and said, ‘Bored?’ vas, and then for a week paint almost “What does the fellow mean?” I| incessantly. He always seemed per- thought, and was about to repiy curtly, | fectly satisfied with his finished produc- when, looking up, I saw hie was smiling | tions and never saw the loast justice ia at me. | any eriticisms that nuy one ventured to “Bored? Why, no. Why do you ask? | make, and yet he was a shrewd eritio 1 asked feebly. of others’ work. He was always Isment- “Because you look 80,” he answered | ing that he was not famous, A famous promptly. { painter, he said, could paint as he “Well,” I said, “I don’t know bat | chose, I suggested that famous painters that T am a little at a loss for something | chose to paint woll, and that fame was to do thus morning.” He looked at me for a moment in gilence, with a half-wondering, Lialf. guigsienl look in his eyes, and then about half his original size, only to re- have been required. { that time well accustomed can (who grew visibly deliberately tilled a large meerschaum, trunk from the unceremonionsly pitching it. The landlord was by this time com- pletely |exhausted, avd leaned sgaiost the wall panting for breath, his little red eyes the only sigus of the fires within. I inquired of my new acquaint- ance if he had engaged rooms else- | where, and being answered in the nega- tive, asked where he was going. “That's | more than I know,’ he said; whereupon I remarked that I had more rooms than [ needed, aud would be pleased if he would occupy one of mine until he succeeded in finding some to suit him, “All right; much obliged,” he said, and went on packing as he called it, And thus it happened that night found Hobbs sitting luxuriously in my easy chair, and looked as happy and contented as if I were his best-beloved brother, He made severm: ineffectual attempts to get rooms during the fol- dowing week, being considerably ham. pered by his inability to comply with certain conditions as to pre-payment, By the time he had been with me a week I had decided to remain in Flor- ence six months lounger. Oae of the | windows of my sitting-room furnished just the hight he needed for his work, so | in it he placed his easel. My evenings, dull and profitiess, were now spent in | pleasant converse with Hobbs, whom I bed-room, and began things into had traveled much, and seemed to know when he had traveled or how he had | flahness, and his bright, eyer-ready wit | were all-conquering, and yet as I learned | to know him better 1 saw that he had | many faults. | utter thriftlessness, | whole weeks of almost complete impe- auy assistance, finishing his dinuer of a crust and a glass of water with a merry | dissertation upon the folly of high-liv- ng, and then, a picture being sold, would insist upon a supper at the most | such occasions no game was 100 rare, | no wines too costly, and no cigars too | good for us. I always protested against such extravagance, but argument and supplication were alike in vain, for he brushed them both aside with a wave of | his hand, and would take no refusal Aod what a treat were those suppers to | me! Hobbs, always entertaining, be- | came fairly magical under the triple methods of great masters, vehemently declare that the great mas- ters might be hanged, that no man was worthy the name of artist unless he had something to say, and was brave enough to say it in his own way. [ found ita pleasant pastime to sit and watch Hobbs at his work, ile was neyer so absorbed but that he conld listez sod talk, and it was on these occasions that I began to derive my fimt correct ideas on art for whatever Hobbs was iu practios, i can see him now prusiog to turn brandish his brush at me as he lays down his ideas, One day, upon returning from my engaged walk, I found J hs t of a young wo- man, while an one sat In a window “I am likely to have excitement euough béfore noon, “How's that?” I asked. “Well, my landlord has intimated somewhat pointedly that if my rent is g my rooms myst 1 am a painter, working u some embroidery. I recognized the latter as a Mrs, Anstein, the wife of an old American resident, and the former was introduced as her niece, Miss Vernon, just out from America, Miss Vernon was very beaut ful, with dark complexion, fair | and dark blue eyes, It was evident that Hobbs and she had already become good [riends, and I was not long in nagar as he worked, transferred to something other than | Bhe sat apparently all unconscious that there was any other | business aspeot to the sitting. talked a great deal, and made himeelf more so that excellent listener, | the least pretense; frankly contessed | her ignorance of subjects with which many young women would have feigned be put in an eye or a lock of hair as if she had no doubt of his sincerity, but was a little afraid his judgment was not good. Before the portrait was finished Miss Vernon. prised, and congratulated him warmly, bappen to him. He smd it was Bliss Vernon's wish that the engagement should not be made public for a time. port yourself?” I asked. “Oh! that'll be all right,” sala he, ‘1 suppose you know she is poor? observed, “Yes,” said Hobbs, 1 “What of that? the arm of his chair, he surveyed the | room as if to see how it would do for { Mrs, Hobbes, After this he worked steadily and with good success, and might have laid by some money had he been endowed with the least prudence, but he saved nothing. 1 did not despair, for I knew that Miss Vernon had never been rich, and I heard her described as a young One evening, about a month after his | engagement, Hobbs came In than usual, and I saw at once | something had happened to disturb him. He was pale and haggard, and his eye avoided mine, He dropped mito a chair and seemed plunged in deep thought. 1 thought him ill and asked what was the matter, ‘‘Nothing,” he sald, When I went to bed I left him siting there, with his legs stretched out before him and his head on his the morning he was there still looking as if he had not moved. He arose, said “Good morning,” and, going to the mantel, filled aud lighted his pipe. After pacing up and down a few mo- ments in silence, he took the pipe from his lips, and still walking to and fro, he began: “I have a story to tell you. It is aboat myself, and will explain my con- wondered some about my past history. | It has been uneventful, a city of one of the southern states, | where my fathe rwas a portrait painter, his best er than and myself to the oare of friend, a man some years youn himself, who had been RE ang to him by his love for art. To this man I owe everything I have and am. All that is example, When I was 21 I told him by my life hus great goodness to me. I meant it, aud have honestly tried to keep my word. He told me earnestly that he had no fears for my future if I only did my duty as [ saw it. I have always seen my duty clearly and rightly enough, but I don’t remember ever having done it thoroughly. engagement known, older than herself, who had loved her from a ohild, who was in every way not met me, informed of our engagement before he | album from the table she opened it and i | said, “This is he; do you not think him man whose kindness to me I have told | you of. I was too much overcome to | say anything, and came away at onoce, | pleading » sudden indisposition. | spent last night in | my duty in this mat |it. I see it clearly. | Vernon for the last time to-nigh | leave Florence to-morrow.” All the arguments that my ingenuity nld suggest were vain, | eo | Mrs, | alone, | or how he explained his conduct, are things I do not know. I only know | that he left Florence for London the Anstein’s he found Miss Vernon next morning, and that Miss Vernon was ill for several weeks, Fifteen yoars had passed before I | saw Hobbs again last summer. He lives ina pleasant villa in a London suburb, with a white-hared lady, who h wholly devoted hod her son. Hobbs is AMOous now, ts as he pleases, He has not chauged much; his dark hair is well streaked with gray, and he Liss wrinkles about his and fore- head that forty years ought not to have put there, but Su pletaunt ways and lappy smiles are still hia, only tempered all Tne Btraightest Road, gn few weeks T'as really happy. I have thought mw of Jue circumstances sine under which left Florence. 1 have, I $ wa Y : \ . Although “Old Hickory” was a blunt | i Shink, HO Of Op Ls | man it mn matters of ysintng and | thonght thei that I was simply doing | Feached is purpo-cs by the straigitest nv dntv. Ad yet had Tit all to do | road, still hewas courteous in an em nent y (dnty. | ’ or the «oad : U9 1 degree, and had a high respect | n would let duty go. The | going of social intercourse. While is re- consciousne of having done my duty | president of the United States h | has not baught me one moment's | ceptions of foreign ministers and emi- happihess, perhaps our standard 8 |,..¢ citizens were distingmshed by a wrong, or heir's somethiog higher |. rij etiquette and bearing, | | than duty.” > | On one occasion s foreign minister, I said nofng. What conld I say? 11 ¢yuet arrived,” had a day and hour ap- was uncerta whether he knew what 1 | pointed by Mr. M’Lean Then OC ralary dig—that B friend had been long de- | ,¢ State tobe presented to the Presis layed in géing vo Florence, and that | g0.¢ and misunderstanding the Pre- | Miss Verm had rejected him and | iors French, and perfectly a married antalian gentleman, : : ’ Sei OVE noble i t the apparent simplicity of republican manners, the minister the stated | time proceeded to the White | alone and rang the bell. “The camon conception of Indian | *4¢ suis yet voir ? A | dent,” said the plemipolientiary to the character wholly at fanlt with its ’ true natur They must be treated as “What the—d children, fr they are such in 1gno- | puttered Pat, and continued, ‘He says | rance, tnggh by no means as inno- | President though, and I s’pose he wish. cent. Bop years ago I placed 6,000 | og to gee the old Gineral.” | Indians ¢ the Ban Carlos Reserva-| «Oyj oui,” {1 tion, and hey are all there yez, and | ing, there is # a more peaceable com Without further ceremony the gentie- munity ithe country. As soOn &8 | man was ushered into the green-room, the India is tanght how to work, he | where the General sat composedly smok- immediat¢ becomes conservative. | ine his corn-cob pipe, and on the mstant Get thermo work for a year or two, | he commenced a ceremonious harange { until they got accustomed to it aud | {yy French, of (11d Hickory did gee the renefits the derive from | not understand a word. : their lab¢, and they will no longer “What does the man want, Jemmy?’ be hostili After they have secured & ssked the General, without c« ceall little fam and some stock, they ape | his surprise at what he witnessed. preciate ie advantages of labor, and “It's the Freach that he's spaking in | enjoy th fruits of their industry. | and, with your Jave, 1%] sind for the | There isto truth whatever in all this | cook to find out what the gintleman bosh abut the irrepressible savage | wants” | nature o the Indian and bis ineorri- In due time the presiding | gible laness, When he finds taat the kitchen arrived, the | he becomes more important by reason | explained, and, to the astonishment of whathe has scsumulated it stirs | the cook, the servant, and the old Gen- | hus ambion, and he is jealons of his | eral, an accredited minister from a for | propertynd remains with it, instead | eign government was devel i For- of marading around the country fo tunately, at that instant the Secretary | satisly ny roaming instinets, The | came In, and a ceremonious introduc- only troble with them ther fond- | tion took place, and all parties were | ness fortizwin, If it were uot for that | soon atease; but the matter never could | there wuld be very few hrawls and | few mufsers on the reservadons, Tiz- {ing the Old General into a towering win, yo know, is made by fermenting | passion. corn an barley when ii is sprouting. | | The drk isn’t as strong a8 whiskey, | - rt A ——— A—— General ook’s Opinion of indinns, £3 Irish servant, i ws that mean?” Bait Lan iol which ¥ W ng i f Li Was f offic yELeTY er i i 44 iB A —— The t Bit. | but the starve themselves for two or he Tyrant Habit | three dye in order to make the liguer | | take hal and make the drunk come, | From 375, when I left there, to last 2 The Emperor William is man of a excesdingly economical habits, and | fall, who I returned to the reservation, | gtydy-lamp on his work-table isa simple no lest than fifty Indians whom I|oil lamp of a pattern such as since knew preonally have been killed m | inrroduction of the petroleum lamps can these donks. i . hardly be met with on the table of the “Wht induces you to believe, Geu- | humblest citizen of Berlin. t it was eral, tht Indian outbreaks are perpetu- | not economy that accounts for the fact, ally ened? . so much as the difficulty which an old “Myxnowledge of the Indian char- | pan has in changing a habit. The ex- acter. Years ago when the frontier was | planation is given in this manner. only spreely settled, they thought that The emperor has for years been ac- | they ould whip the whole country; customed to screw down the wick when- | that there was not force enough to | ever he ceases writing or reading or | overpover them. Than when 1,000 or | leaves the room, When the petroleum | 10,000men were sent against them, and | lamps finally came nto general use, the they wre again Vistetiom, tila belief | emperor’s valet, Krause, brought one was srengihened. Even after a few | and put it on the work-table of than began visiting Washington, True to his habit, his imperial master | and rearned with stories of the number | screwed down the wick on leaving off of pecple they bad seen, they were not | writing; and. as a matler of course, the believed, and Were considered as in | room was soon filled with insupportable lesgue vith their enemies, W henever | smoke, which greatly affected the nose | a peace was made, they believed that | and eyes of the monarch, and necessita- | the whites sought or consented to it | ted the opening of doors and windows. through fear, and there was nething to| Krause finally volunteered the re- | deter thim from renewing Hoge as | mark: ‘‘No, your majesty that sort of lgoon = they feit inciin Now, | lamp will not suit.” however they recognize their power- | “But what are we to do, Krause? jessnessto hold out, They know that | Had we better gel our oil lamp back | they are outnumbered and can be easily | again? You know my eyes are weaker, | extermitated, and have no desire to go | and require a brighter light.” | into whit they know beforehand will be “Well, your majesty, we can have a losing fight. Satisfied of this, they | a new lamp made with an extra large want toto the beat ihey ean, and are | Buel 80 a8 to do away wil willing 0 work. These last prisoners | a together.” all askd to be taken where they could | “Quite right, Krause; let us try it.” | get taras, and said they did not want to And Krause got a lamp of the old be put along the San Carlos River, | pattern, had the burner enlarged to an where he land was not fit to be culti- | almost collossal size, a green glass shade vated aid where they would die of mal- | added to it, and to this day the new aria. “hey know now that it would be | nonsendeal for them to revoit again, place of honor on the work-tabie of as theyhave discovered that they oan | most diligent of all monarchs. be beden at their own game. The | | Indian, you know, relies mainly for | sncoest in a fight on being able to sur- | prise the enemy. I took them by sur prise sid it has settled them. " | R “Hor did you succeed so admirably?” engaged iD Soave OA A II “Ol very simply, I balas good same in 18 5 that they wale Ahab and askharp Indians as they were, and | and may be summed up under the two 1 wr a Pots eons] a we wep upon them before they knew words—surprise and ambuscade, we wel in the country.” . | Indians never await a charge, and | never attempt, whatever their supers | ority in numbers, to meet one by di- | rect resistance in front. When charged, the portion of the Indian array im- mediately in front of the attacking force melts away into bands or knots, the 3 wile 4 ss FIERA EY the i ——— indian Fighting. The tactics of the Red Indians when AI A A ‘Kitehen Garden’ Cooking Class. moni Forsome time there has been in econ- miniatire utensils, the children have been nstructed in table-setting and dish-washing, bed-making and sweep- | ing, lsundry work and scrubbing, all done = the accompaniment of music and sthgs. Owing to the impetus given | to all tinds of industrial training by the | broken and favorable for the purpose. | Should the attacking force become scattered and lose eohesion, by pursn. ing individuals who are visible in front, its defeat and destruction are foregone conclusions. The magnificent riding of the Indian brave gives him an im- mense advantage in this form of war- fare. Avoiding by quick turns of his small and active pony, the direct pur- suit of his more bulky foe, and circling round him like a bird of prey, with his body masked behind the ribs of the animal he bestrides, he watches his op- portunity to fall, in company with his comardes, upon the: flank and rear of the disciplined soldiers, whom he lays low with a well-directed musket bullet, or an arrow sent home with fatal ac- curacy. advamred course in domestic economy has deen established during the past gratifying results. Fran the use of these miniature uten- the ‘Lessons in Do- a text book prepared ren as being trained In practical house. work, A bedroom with all the neces sary hecessories has been fitted up, whers chamberwork, bed making, sweeping, and dusting are actually per- formed by the children. A dining table and srvice is arranged and served by the children, thus practically teaching them the necessities of skillfal Sette @ linens, china and silver. Real dish washing and the care and éleanliness of Kitchin utensils also form a part of the Professor Walls, of the Lewisburg University, received the prize of a thou- offered by the American i ) 8 E E 2 i iL The Decadence of Coral, oo” : The Pritish Consul at Leghorn, his report for the past year, makes some interesting observations on in the Mediterranean, Some centuries back the Mediterranean coral fisheries carried on exclusively by the Spaniards, snd the principal establish- ments engaged in the munufacture of coral ornaments were in the hands of Jews residing in Bpsia. Toward the ciose of the sixtecuih century, 10 es- cape the persecutions to which they were exposed, a large number of these merchants removed to Leghorn, in order to enjoy the secure asylum af- by the liberal enactments of Ferdinando di M Crews were Neapolitan coast, from the principally from Terre del Greco; hence this place at an early period became most of the boats engaged in it are still fitted out at that port, although These ornaments are the world, and in many countries, even in horn and Genoa, in Asia and Af- largely used for the adorument of | empses when prepared for cremation. But the present situation of the coral | trade is dissetrons, In 1880, a coral bank several kilometres in length was discovered nesr the island of Beiscca, on the coset of Sicily, and consequently the yield of raw material bas been far in excess of the demand, and the reef is still very far from being exhausted... A great depreciation in value bas ensued, and ss a coosequence an extensive trade has spr up in coral with Af- risa, where the natives now purchase coral ornaments in place of glass beads of Venitian and Gorman manufacture, The raw coral comes from Naples, and is worked at Leghorn by women nio beads, British india and Egypt being the chief customers for them, mies AH Es — ed Girls 1a the Far West, In the far West girls have wonderful yergy snd good hard sense, Oat in Nebraska and Dakota they take up homesteads and timber claims from the | government lands, and in a few years own & fine farm of 320 acres, II they plant trees upon a 160.acre clasm and tend it for a certain length of time it becomes theirs. A bomestead claim is also 160 acres, They must build a “shanty” and cultivate the land, and it becomes theirs at the end of five years, Some of the smart Nebraska girls have built their shanties with their own hands, Farmers’ daughters out there often begin Iry teaching for small wages, They save their money very carefully, and thus often pay their own way through college, Then they teach | again, and, having a higher education, | can get better wages, Dat they save | thelr money in any case, take up land claims and improve them with their earnings, Thus in a few years they have both a fine education and a farm. They are excellent scholars, {excellent | teachers and firstclass farmers, for | they work faithfully and do their best | at everything they undertake. That is the way to succeed. There is ne suc- cess without it, Any girl can take up | a homestead and timber claim who is 21 | years old, But they become teachers | before that time, so as to have some | money and be ready. These brave | girls are not all teachers, however, | Sometimes when they have finished the | distriot schools their father let them have a little money, and they buy cows and calves and go to stock-raising. They can begin this very young-—not | more than 12 or 14 years old, With | ordinary tuck, by the time they are 21, | they can really have considerable pro- | perty of their own, These sre the girls who are worth something, They are not weak and idle drones, One unmarried woman in | Nebraska, not yet old, is half owner of | a creamery, has her farm of 320 acres, is postmistress and has a small siore | besides, connected with the office, She | wears a gold watch and drives a fine | horse and carriage, and is “somebody” | in that country, Sue has earned it all | herself, 100. smim——— > Henry Clay as a Whis Viayer. Tuarockmorton was one of Mr, Clay's most intimate Kentucky friends. In their latter days the two were almost | inseparable and they often joined hands | over the whist table. Turockmorton | was 8 fine whist player, and nothing | rritated him more than to have his | game interrupted or spoiled by talking, | Throckmorton generally beat Clay, bat | Ciay got ahead of him at a whist party | in Louisville, when be and Throckmor- | ton were partners. The stakes were | nominal dollar a game, and as soon | a8 the party sat down at the table Clay began to tell stories. The resuli wae that he paid no attention to his hand, | and througk his blunders trick after trick was Jost. Throckmorton pro- tested from time to time, finally saying “Really, Mr, Clay, for a man of your ability, education and reputation, you are the poorest whist player I have ever known,” The play continued in the same way, and Throckmorton grew more and more angry. At last Clay said, “Yon are making more fuss by eur objecting than 1 am by my stories, Now,” and he here pulled outa 810 gold piece, “we will table, 3 i g Bibi 2 & fit E 3b