Sn " NEWS OF THE WEEK. — Dr. Wilham E. Thornton, a promis nent druggist in Baltimore, died on the 11th from the effects of a fall on the evening of the 10th, In pulling the doorbell of a houte for admission hig hand slipped off and he fell back- ward into the area, a distance of nine feet, —ITeavy snow in the mountains has caused a freight blockade on the Penn- sylvania Railroad, and, for the first time since the riots of 1877, the coms pany has been compelled to refuse to accept freight cars for points east of Altoona. The blockake is shutting out Eastern coke shipments and seriously affecting the coke trade. No shipments have been made since the 10th, —W. T. Everett, a prominent far. mer of Nansemond county, Virginia, committed suicide on the morning of the 11th, Loss of sleep from nu.sing sick children is assigned as the cause, — Among the localities that suffered from the forest fires last full was the neighborhood of Sigler’s Landing, a hamlet in Tipton county, Tennessee, The deep mould in the forest composed of decayed earth was ignited and burned down a distance of ten to tweuty inches. The fire at this place has continued to burn below the sur- face of the earth, and at a dozen pointe a blaze issues from crevices in the soil. It is believed that there is a bed of coal not very far underground which caught fire from the burning mould on the surface. —Seven persous, all colored, namely Tlorace Carter and two of his aaugh- ters, 'ierre and Frisbie Allen, Priscilla Smith and Cecilia Lewis, were drowned by the upsetting of a boat, near Fair- view, Louisiana, on the 11th, The boat was capsized by swells from a steamer. - A despatch from Toronto says A. A. Allan, the absconding cashier of the defunct Central Bank of Toronto, is now in Minneapolis looking for a situat!on. Allan writes that he was forced by the Directors fo do what he did In connection with the affairs of the bank, — Near Philadelphia, county, New York, on the 11th, 78 packages, containing 750 pounds of prepared opinm, of the highest quality, were found in the barn of Ephraim Gardner, who was arrested at Redwood on the evening of the 7th, and from whom 1000 pounds of opium were taken by custom officials at that time. It is belleved that Gardner was one of the chiefs in the ring of smugglers en- gaged in the opium trade. ~—Two engines on the Erie and Wyo- ming Railroad were demolished bya collision, near Pittston, Penna., on the afternoon of the 11th, and an engi- neer named Slegel was killed, —T1he house of William Hull, at Minden, Ontario, was borned on the evening of the llth, and his aged mother perished in the flames, —A party of Hungarians went to the house of a man named Manlick, at Silver Brook, eight miles south of Hazelton, Pa., on the evening of the 12th, and indulged freely In whisky and beer, They thén engaged in a flerce fight, during which a lighted lamp exploded, setting fire’ to the room and the clothes of those present, They all rushed for the door, which was locked and the key could not be found. John Ellas, aged 20; John Seddo, aged 23, John Kobinko, aged 35; Michael Yan- govitech, ageed 30, and Mary Manlick, aged 16, were burnsd to death, and ‘our others were so badly burned that t 1s thought they will die. Mrs, Man- Jck threw her baby out of one of the windows, but in falling it was fatally injured. Half a dozen others, whose names are pot known, were badly burned or injured by jumping out of the windows. It was a frame house, It Is stated that the story of the tum. ing over of the lamp is not believed. It is the opinion of many that there was a murder committed in the house, and it was fired to hide the crime, -The bucket shops which were raided in New York on the 11th were all open on the 13th, conducting busi- pess as usual, ~The roof of the ordinance building at the Washington Navy Yard fell on the 13th, being unable to support in the beavy weight of snow upon it. ~Stephen N. Wilson shot and mor- tally wounded Archie Irwin in St, Louis on the evening of the 13th, They are both colored, and they quar- reled over an assertion made by Wil- son that the female teachers in the colored schools were the wives of pro- .prietors of negro gambling houses and disreputable saloons. Brack Cornett, a noted outlaw and leader of the noto- rious train robbers, was shot and killed on the 13th while resisting ar- rest by Sheriff Allee, of Frio county, Texas. J. W. Hacker shot and killed Mabel Sterke in Berlin, Wisconsin, on the evening of the 13th, and then com- mitted suicide. Hacker was 19 years old and his victim a year younger. They met some time ago at the Girl's Home in Belle Plaine, Io and fell in love with one another, he mar. riage was opposed by the girl's par ents, and she was sent to visit rela. tives in Berlin, Hacker learned of her whereabouts and followed. Mes Irene Parker, wife of a house painter in Washington, D.C. attem to kill “her two children early on the morning of the 14th, The younger child, aged 7 years, received seven cuts across her head, which were made by a hatchet, The woman then attempted to cut the throat of her eldest daughter, aged 12, in Jefferson Chester Every, 40 years old, shot and killed his daughter, aged 17, in Al- toona, Penna, , on the 14th, aud then committed suicide, The bonds which Frank MeNeally stole from the Saco and Biddeford Sav- ings Institution, in Saco, Maine, have been recovered by his brother Harry, and are on their way to this country from Europe. —An explosion occurred on the 14th, in the yoming colliery, at Park Bowkley, near Wilkesbarre, injuring five men, two eof them,Jacob Monohan, aged 35 years, and John Boyle, aged 40, fatally. other explosion of pow der occurred on the morning of the 14th, on the Pittston branch of the Lehigh Valley Rallroad, by whieh three men were badly injured, ons of whom, John Reed, fireman, will lose his eyesight. Men had drilled a foot hole in the rock and fired several small charges of dynamite to enlarge it for the reception of powder. Eight kegs of powder were opened on the spot,and two of them were emptied in the hole, where they were exploded by sparks which were still shive. The explosion ignited the powder in the other kegs, and a second explosion occurred. — Mrs. Isabella Fopless: 32 years old, cied in Baltimore, on the 14th, from the result of burns received on the evening of the 13th. she had just given ber sick husband some medicine and going down stairs tripped, causing the lamp to explode. The burning fluid was thrown over her person. ~—R, 8. Porter, a wealthy farmer, and his wife had an encounter with burglars at their home, in Lawrence- ville, Illinois, ¢n the evening of the 12th. Early in the evening Mr. Porter responded to a knock at the door, when a man entered and placed a revoiver at his head, Ile threw his assailant to the floor, and while struggling with him a second man entered and held Murs, Porter at bay with a revolver. She went at this one with a poker, while her husband struggled with the first, Two more. of the gang came in to the assistagce of their coufederates and a terrific fight ensued, Some of the neighbors became alarmed by this time and the burglars made a hurried de- parture, Mr. and Mrs. Porter were badly, and perpaps fatally, injured. — A section of one of the elevated railroads in course of construction in onthe morn. ing of the 14tl, and crushed in the fore part of a street car, which was passing under it at the time. Four persons were killed and one Injured, ~—A farmer named Bean, living nesr Concordia, Kansas. had a feed grin ler run by a wind mill. While elimi ing over the grinder his clothes were caught in the shaft, and he was squeezed to death. Mary Ward, aged 14, while athering wheat in the lower art of the Barker & Co, mill, in Wi ester, Virginia, on the 156th, was ¢u. ht in the machinery and Killed, nall frame grocery in Danville, Vion a, was burned early on the morning of the 15th, and a colored man asleep in the building was burned to death. Hiram Moore, an old man, who lived alone in Camplell county, Virgioia, perished by the burning of his house on the evening of the 14th, Beven stores, two hotels, a machine shop and a residence in Dell Rapids, Dakota, were burned on the evening of the 14th, The fire was started by the ex- plosion of a lamp. —On the arrival at Norfolk, Vir- ginia, on the morning of the 156th, of the New York, Philadelphia and Nor- folk Railroad Ferry steamer, three men, giving their names as Edward Best, of Pailadelphia; James Parker, of Indiana, and William Andrews, of Richmond, were arrested for robbing the Post Office at Salisbury, Maryland, on the evening of the 14th, Best bad on his person about $200 in money, a tin funnel for using powder to blow open a safe, and a bull dog pistol. Andrews had one hundred dollars and a spool of thread for use as a signal cord, Tarker had a hundred and fifty dollars in stamps and a bull-dog pistol. The ex- tent of the robbery is stated at about fifteen hundred dollars, —Collector Magone, of New York, promises some startling disclosures shortly respecting the opium smug- ging along the Canada border. It is thought that the country from Ogdens- burg to Watertown, on the line of the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad is literally lined with smug- gled opium. The opium 15 brought from Asia by way of Vancouver and the Canadian facific Railroad to the St. Lawrence river. - In Baltimore, on the afternoon of the 14th, Mra. Mary Vickman, while riding in a street car, swallowed nearly an ounce of landanum, with suicidal intent. She was saved by prompt medi- cal treatment. On the morning of the 158k her home, she cut her thromt, Her husband, who was present, took the knife from her, but she is said to be in a-cntical condition. ~Oliver P. Truett, shot his wife and himself in York, Pennsylvania, on the 15th. Mrs, Truett may er; but the husband is thought to be fatally wounded. The shooting was the resuit Jarrett Brooks was (J, C. Beale, a prominent trader at Clinton, Maine, took some whisky out of a bottle on the 14th, and died at pight. His son, god 1S, arauk Joie ant Ag dict des RA, receiver at the Hudson Iron Hudson, 2 Ni s I a a Th It stood of Pagel and in every direction. BStoekhouses, elevators and air columns were blown to atoms and sent in every direction, Patrick Duckley was fatally inlured. The loss is estimated at $50,000, ~ Frank Hunter, Harry Brock and William Schumaker, all about 12 years of age, were drowned at South St, Louls on the 15th, by breaking through the ice, ~—John M. Underwood, a wealthy and prominent citizen of Idanvers, Massachusetts, 70 years of age, was found frozen to death some distance from his house on the morning of the 16th, He was a somnambulist, and probably walked out of the house dur- ing the night while asleep. ~It i8 stated that near Akron,Ohlo, on the morning of the 15th, ‘‘people were thrown out of bed and windows und ceilings crumbled, while the earth rocked, the convulsions being preceded by terrific reports of an explosion. A great fissure in the earth 1s the only sign of the strange occurrence. Ieo- ple fled from their houses, and the greatest excitement prevailed,” —(harles Snyder, an employe in the rail department of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company, In Scranton, Penna., was killed on the 16th, He and a companion were jostling one an- other, when Snyder fell beneath a 25 foot fly-wheel going at the rate of 80 revolutions per minute, — An express train and freight train on the Rome, Watertown and Ogdens- burg Railroad collided on the 16th, at Canton, New York. Doth engines were wrecked, the baggage car was shot over the top of the engine and down a fifty foot embankment, and two or three of the freight cars were smashed, having been dashed over the embankment, The express car was telescoped, Robert Archibald, fire- man, and Thomas Peden, baggageman, were killed, Two other train men were injured, but not fatally, A pas. sopger and freight train on the Grand Trunk Rallroad colhded near Toronto, Ontario, on the 16th, Four trainmen were killed, None of the passengers were seriously hurt, Mrs, Albert Traffert and her 12 year-old son were crossing the Ohio and Mississippi track near Shattuck, Diipois, on the 15th, when they were struck by a train and killed, larry Hires, a brakeman on the North Penn Railroad, was killed on the 16th, by being struck by an overiead bridge. Richard Morgan, a miner, was struck and killed by a train on the Central Railroad at Warrier Run, Pa., on the 16th, He Is supposed io have been intoxicated, as It was pay day, and an empty bottle was found in one of his pockets, —Captain Robert 8S, Hart committed suicide by shooting himself, in Coving- ton, Kentucky, on the 16th, He was de- spondent on account of iliness and being out of employment. Albert 1. Kebler, brother of Charles Kebler, who recently committed suicide in Cincinnati, when the knowledge of his forgeries was about to become known, on the 16th killed himself. He used two revolvers, holding one in each hand and directing one to his brain and the other to his heart, and fired simn- ultaneously, No cause is known for the deed except the disgrace of his brother. ~The Commissioner of Agriculture has just received from Europe a con- signment of choice silkworm eags, which he will distribute gratuitously to all persons who desire to raise silk worms, and who are so situated that they can do so satisfactorily. He will also be able to furnish books of instruc- tion in silk culture before the sericuil- ural season comiuences, — Four men entered the Cisco Bank, in Cisco, Texas, on the allernoon of the 15th, marched the three men who were in the bullding into one corner, where three of the robbers guarded them, while the other went through the bank and took every dollar in it, a gold watch and other valuables de posited there for safe keeping, The robbers got from $4000 to $6000. After getting about 200 yards away from the bank the robbers fired their pistols, which alarmed the town, and in ten minutes the Marshall and several citi- zens were in pursuit, In Bald Knob, Missouri, on the evening of the 16th; Thomas Walt. ham, suddenly returning home, found James Blakeny with his wife, Blakeny tried to get out, and shot Waltham three times and one of Waltham's children once. The injured husband ghot and killed Blakeny, and then feil mortally wounded. The child may re- cover. James Taylor. 13 years old, was placed in jail in Covington, Ken- tucky, on the evening of the 16th, with his mother, charged with the murder of the boy's father at Independence, on the 13th. It appears that Lansing Taylor, the dead man, and his wife were fighting in the presence of James and two elder sons. The woman says she called on her son for assistance, but James was the only one to respond. He seized a gon and struck his father th it, The gun was disc! and ng Taylor was Killed, The boy says he did not know the gun was Jnaded. Deputy Sheriff William Thompson was shot and killed at Bos. ton, Colorado, an the 16th, by “Jack” White, **a horse thief,” whom he was ing bo arrest. «The special Treasury agent sent to Watertown to Jnveiitigats She oplum smuggling cases ‘have secured evidence that the smugglers bave con- federates In New York. It is also said “one or more Covernment officials Andrews, charged with robbing the Post-office in Salicbury, Maryland, were on the 17th, committed by the United States Commissioner in Balti- timore in default of $5000 ball each, ~~An explosion of natural gas wrecked the house of Joseph Franklin, on the outskirts of Meadville, Penna, on the morning of the 17th, Mrs, Franklin was severely Injured, Some weeks ago Mr. Franklin disconnected the gas pipe, and had the meter re- moved, but for some reason the pipe was not plugged and the gas escaped into the cellar. On the 17th, Mrs, Franklin went into thee cellar with a lighted lamp, when the explosion oc- curred, —A boller on a plantation at Bas- trop, Loulsiana, exploded on the 17th, killing four men and injuring four others so badly that they are not ex- pected to recover. ~—Joseph I. Fitzpatrick, a New York politician, shot himself in a Bowery saloon on the evening of the 16th, and died on the 17th. 50th CONGRESS.— First Session. EENATE. In the U. 8. Senate on the 13th bills were reported to provide for the erection of public buildings by con- tract with the lowest bidder, and lor a commission on the alcoholle liquor traflic. A bill was reported and passed for the erection of a building in Washington for the safe-keeping of Government records not required for constant reference, Bills were passed appropriating $350,000 for the exten- sion of the public building at Newark, New Jersey; appropriating $500,000 for a public building in Yortland, Oregon, and in relation to certain In- dian lands In Colorado. Adjourned, In the U, 8, Senate on the 14th, the bill to authorize the sale to aliens of certain mineral lands was reported and placed on the calendar. The Blair Education bill was considered, and Mr. Hawley spoke In opposition to it Pending consideration of the bill to provide for the compulsory education of Indian children, the Senale went into executive session and afterwards adjourned, In the United States Senate on the 15th, the Blair Educational bill was passed yeas, 39; nays, 20. The cre- dentials of John 8. Barbour, Senator elect from Virginia, were filed. The House bill for the appointment of eleven division superintendents of railway mail service was passed with an amendment making the number two, in addition to those heretofore au- thorized.” After an executive session the Senate adjourned. In the U. 8 Senate on the 16th, the bill appropriating $500,000 for the erection of a lighthouse at or near Diamond Shoal off Cape Hatteras, was passed, A resolution, offered by Mr. Plumb some days ago, requiring the Secretary of War to furnish Senators, on their request, lists of perscu3 to whom copies of the Rebellion Record are to be issued, was passed. One hun- dred and eight private pension bills were passed, Afiler an execuliye ses- sion the Senate adjourned, inthe U., 8 House of Representa- tives on the 17th, the Blair Educa- tional bill was received from the Sen. ate and referred to the Committee on Education. The Urgent Defliciency bill was passed, with an amendment offered in Commitlee of the Whole, directing the Public Printer to enforce rigidly the provisions of the eight-hour law. Mr. Bayne, of Pennsylvania, from the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, reported a joint resolution, which was adopted, authorizing the Secretary of War to appoint a board of three engineers of the army whose duty it shall be to examine in all their rela- tions to commerce the lands known as Smith's Island, Windmill Island and Petty Island, in the Delaware river, between Philadelphia and Camden, The Board shall report to the Secretary of War whether those islands consti- tute an obstruction to commerce, and, if so, they shall report a plan for the removal of those islands in whole or in part, and for the improvement of the harbor of the port o: Philadelphia. Adjourned, HOUSE In the House on the 13th, a bill to punish the advertising of lottery tick. ets in the District of Columbia, after discussion, was referred to the Judici- ary Committees, by a vole of 117 to 115. The resolution asking the Treas. ury Department for information in re. gard to the refusal of the Canadian authorities to allow American wreck. ing vessels to assist American vessels when in distress in Canadian canals or waters was reported and agreed to. Adjourned. In the House on the 14th, Mr. Mills, from the Ways and Mesns Committee, reported a bill to provide for the pur- chase of United States bonds ly the Secretary of the Treasury, and it was referred to the Committee of the Whole. Bills were also reported and similarly referred for the rehef of im- porters of amimals for breeding pure and for the erection of public uildings in Allentown and Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The bill for the li- on the 15th, bills were establishment of a Bu. i i CURED BY A MISTAKE. Heroic Treatment Unintentionally Applied saves a Young Woman's Life. It is pot generaily known that the recent recovery of Miss Lydia Jordan Cincinnati, from diphtheria was the re. sult of a fortunate aceldent, Outside of a few, the family and a few friends, the serious condition of the young lady was not generally known, Miss Jordan is one of the most pop. ular young women in Walnut Hills society, and it is sald that she will shortly marry a young Avondale man, About two weeks ago she went to see a friend who was sick with dipth- eria, and, unthinkingly, sat in the room for over an hour. In a few days she began to show symptoms of the dis- ease, and it soon developed that she had it in the most virulent form. The family physician, Dr. Disney, begau to lose hope, so strong a hold bad the disease taken upon her system, Miss Jordan kept getting worse and worse, until finally the doctor found to bis utler consternation, that a false mewbrane was forming in her throat, This is regarded as the worst possible form of the disease, and one which is absolutely incurable, The rapid growth of the membrane was attended with increased difficulty in breathing. It was gradually closing the air passage. The doctor informed Mr, and Mrs, Jordan that the struggle was over, and the disease had won. The unhappy parents were almost wild with grief. The girl had been an especial favorite with them on account of her bandsome face and sunny dispo- sition, It hardly seemed real to them that she could be lving on her death- bed, with her young life slowly fleeing away with each laborious breath, The doctor said that in a few hours all would be over, Already the mem- brane had grown over tie throat so that only a hole the size of a large needle remained, The girl was lying thrown back. head were wit her head The veins in her fore- swollen, and her face was fiery red, In every curve of her form, in the clulching of her lingers, one could read the agony she was endur- ng. Dr, y bad leen very Miss Lyd, and seeing that more could be medicine ‘to be used when the breath. ing bad about stopped.” and started away. He folly expected never to see the girl again until she lay in the coflin with the whiteness of death in her features, The medicine was some sim- pie restorative that might compel the soul to fret a little longer in the body, but could not do any good, The medicine was placed on a small table near the bed among a lot a pivals of similar size and shape. The father and mother sat close by the bedside of their dying child. Soon the sound of the breathing grew louder and harsher, The writhing of the frame showed Lhat the end was very near, Mrs, Jordan started up, took from the table what she thought was the last phial the doctor had left, and measuring out a dose poured it quickly down her daughter's throat, The effect was instantaneous and horrible. The girl writhed and quiv- ered as she had not before, Her finger nails tore into her flesh, Her face grew black and her wide, staring eyes fairly started from their sockels, No scream issued from the lips, It was the per- sonification of mute agony. This only lasted for a minute, Suddenly there was a sharp cracking sound. The girl's body lifted itself from the bed, There was a terrible gasp, & groan, and then a fit of racking coughing. The swollen veins began w subside, the black color of the face changed to a dulljred, the eves slowly closed and the girl began to breathe again, While this was happening and the girl was at the very height of her suf. fering, the mother Jooked at the bottle whose contents had produced this ter- rible effect. To her horror she discov. ered] that, by mistake, she had given the girl a large dose of aqua ammonia, a sufficient quantity to have suffocated a well person. The doctor wasimmediately sent for, and when he arrived was told what had been done, To his astonishment he found the girl resting easy and looking far better than she had for a week. Her lips and the lining of her mouth were burned by the ammonia, as her throat must have been also. An ex- amination into Miss Jordan's condi. tion showed that although she was very weak, yet her throat was comparatively clear and there was every indication of certain recovery. On the cover in front of her the doe: tor found the false membrane which had been the cause of all the trouble, and which the girl had ejected in that last paroxysm. A German Legend. Disney nothing noting There was once a poor, but very honest, contented and merry kind of man in the village of Tilleda, who happened lo be giving a christening feast, for about the eighth time, to some of his neighbors, Desirous of showing all respect to the party at the chnstening, he set before them sha a" Sontag ine he possessed, fch, being quickly despatched, his seemed to be looking for a little more. “Go, then,” sald the father to his ki ; : 55 : g i Fie i i i surprised ; “Xen,” replied the timid girl, *‘bul I have got no money.” “Come with me,” said the old housekeeper; “syou shall bave it for nothing; and better wine than your father ever bought in his life” They both then proceeded along ap old, deserted road, the old lady inquir- ing very particularly, by the way, what the appearance of things then was in Tilleda—who was alive, and who was dead, “Once,” sald she, “1 was as young and pretty as thou art, before I was kid- napped and buried under ground by the knights, or, rather, night.niders who stole me away from the very house that now belongs to thy father. Bhortly before this, they had also seized four young ladles of these parts, who were often afterward seen about here on their richly-caparisoned steeds, They were entrapped and carried off in open day by these mountain knights as they were coming from church at Kelba, They made me, as I grew older, into the housekeeper, and en- trusted me witii the keys of the cellar, which, you see, I still wear.” By this time they had reached the cellar door, which the old housekeeper unlocked, It was a five, spacious cellar, and on both sides it was well laid out with rows of vats and butts, Most of them were either quite, or more than balf full, and broaching one of them with great dexterity, she took the little firkin and filled it up to the brim, “There,” she sald, *'take that 10 your father; and whenever he may happen to be giving a treat, you may cone again; only see that you tell no one, besides your father, where jou have it from. And moreover, lake heed that you sell none of It, nor give it away, for in neither case will it be worth anything at all. If any one ven- tures hither too btain wine for sale, jet him be warned; his last bread has been baked —now go!” Unluckily, just opposite to them lived the landlord of the village lm who dealt as largely as he could In adulterated spirits. He, among othe had also a taste of the knights’ wine, “My friend, you might mix this with wine still. Where ean you He resolved to watch; and be fol- for the fourteenth time, with hes ittie Orkin, toward the Kyflbause: nills,. He hid himself, and saw her come the exact way from the oid cellar, with ber firkin quite full shortly afterward, Accordingly, next evening he set out himself, having first rolied into a little cart one of the largest empty barrels he could find, intending to ill it with the same precious kind He thought it would be easy to convey it down hill and be made a vow to return every night until the cellar became empty. As he ap proached the spot where he had marked the path the day before, the sky suddenly began to grow dark and lowering. The wind rose and whistled portentuousiy of the gathering rain, which soon fell in torrents. The tempest carrfed him and bis barre trom one side of the road to the other, At last, down the hill be went, and continued to fall deeper and deeper until he finally found himself lodged i a burial vault, Here appeared an awful procession before his eyes—a regular funeral, with a bler hung with black, and his wife and four neighbors, whom he rec- ognized easily enough by their gail and garments, followed in ils wake. Al this sight he very naturally fainted away; and on recovering, some hours afterward, he still found himself in the dimly lighted vault, and beard the old familiar steeple-bells of Tilleda striking twelve, Now he knew that it was the witching hour and that be was the: lying under the church and the burial ground of the village, in a gloomy vault, He was certainly more dead than alive, and scarcely ventured to breathe. But, seel a monk now ap- proaches him slowly down the narrow steps, opens the door, and in perfect silence puts some money into his hand, and then, taking him up in his arms, he laid him down at the foot of the mountain. It was a cold, frosty night. By degrees the good host came a little to himself, and crepi, without either wine or wine casks, as far as home. It struck one just as he reached it; and he felt himself so un- well that he must take to his bed. In the course of three days he died, and the money which he had brought home, given ham by the ghostly monk, was just sufficient to defray his funeral expenses; his wifeand the four neigh- bors, as he had seen them, following him to the grave. EE —————————————— Children of the Gypsies. Along with unconscious native ethical bealthfulness comes such phys ical care as we advanced people know nothing of. Because the gypsy mother and father are themselves perfect types of good health healthy children are born to them. Because every aypsy woman on earth is loyal to her mate many children are born «wo them De cause the instinct of fatherhood, motherhood, partnerhood is inviolable with busband and wife gypsies Jove a Yacsrst alraus 7