{NEWS OF THE WEEK. —The work of clearing the wieck on the Norfolk and Western Railroad which occurred on the morning of the 22d, eight miles above Lyncéhburg, Virginia, was begun on the 23d, and sight bodies were recovered, The names of the killed, so far as known, are: Walter Iarris, William Henry, James Donnelly, Edward Walker, George Wililams, Grant Jackson and S. Smith, The four last-named were colored. Two more bodies are known to be under the wreck, but the names could not be ascertained. A freight train on the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- road jumped the track near Belmont, Ohlo, on the 23d. A brakeman and three tramps were injured and 16 cars demolished. Mrs, Charles Scboon- maker and her grandson James Berrian, colored. were struck and killed by a train just below Sing Sing, New York on the 23d, while crossing the track. Thomas Hennessy, living near Fairview, Luzerne couoty, I'enna., went to that village on the 23d, to get some medicine for his wife," who is dangerously ill, He jmmped from a railroad car in front of an engine on another track and was fatally injured, —During a fight in Luzerne, borough two miles from Wilkesbarre, Pa., on the 22d, James Quinn shot Thomas Grif- in and Thomas Dougherty, the latter fatally. During a drunken row at the house of John Meyer, in Nebraska City, Nebraska, on the evening of the 22d. Charles Hoffmeister had his skull crushed, and **Jack’’ Young and John tally. Isaac Lambert, being drunk, ghot and killed T. D. Hestle and two colored men at Mount Pleasant, Ala- bawa, on the 21st, At Clear Lake, Iowa, on the evening of the 22d, Mrs. Jessie McKinney shot and fatally wounded J. ¥, Sullivan, a resident of Forest City. Sullivan and two other and refused to leave, on a schooner at Chicago, on the John Mangan fatally wounded Edward Kennedy with a cutlass, Richard J. Ca- pron, a capitalist, on the 23d, entered the oflice of John King, a real Oa wail y some business. They quarrelled and pair of shears from a desk and stabbed King three times. Capron. who asserts that one of King's clerks struck him before he did stabbing, has been released on awalt the result of King's injuries, —R. W. Henry, a brilliant young lawyer, shot and killed himself In Hop- the 22d. He was 30 years old, The cause of the suicide 13 unknown, shot and fatally wounded while in her home in New York, on the evening of the 23d, by Callie Massese, Jealousy is assigned as the cause that prompted she shonting. — Two men were arrested in burg on the 23d while attempting to swindle an old man, cently been flooding the country with counterfeit monsy, The men to reveal their identity, but admitted {rom Brooklyn and the other from Phil. aged 18, The father had drawn the of starting his son in business, tion of a sidetrack in the Fitchburg saliroad yard, in Boston. used for storage purposes, collapsed as a traln was being shifted upon it, owing to the giving way of the piling upon which it rested. Two cars fell into and are nearly 20 feet uader water at high tide. Charles Morris, a brake- man, residing in Troy, New York, who was on the platform between the cars, was thrown into the water and drowned. Dollie Van Horn, aged 16 years, was burned to death at Carding ton, Uhto, on the 23d, by the explosion of a gasoline stove, ~A severe storm struck Sandusky, Jhio, on the afternoon of the 23d. The wind blew a gale and hail fell in tor- repte, Crops were badly damaged, while fruit was stripped from the trees, The damage in Huron county is esti- mated at $100,000, A heavy rain anda hail storm visited Yiywmouth, Wiscon- sin, on the 22d. *‘The extent of the hail fall may be judged from the fact that it covered the ground to the depth of several inches for hours after the storm.”’ Fruit and crops were greatly lamaged. The storm is thought to have been quite general and to involve s large area of country. ~George Hildebrand, a farmer, was topped by three masked men while iriving through the woods between Newark and Bloomfield, New Jersey, on the morning of the 24th, Hilde- brand fought the highwaymen with his whip until the approach of two other wagons frightened them away, ~James Kane, 25 years of age, was paid on the 2181 for work done in June su the new Lehigh Valley Railroad branch, four miles from Wilkesbarre, Un the afiernoon of the 23d his lifeless body, covered with marks of violence, was found on the Central Rallroad irack, near Penobscot, It is supposed 26 was murdered and robbed, ~A bite from a pet dog caused the feath of Mrs, John 8. Martin, whose funeral took place in Chicago on the 24th. From the 10th to midnight of the 224 Mrs. Martin suffered the horrors of bydrophobia. She was 28 vears oid, —In Wilmington, Delaware, on the th, Theodore W. Deats, a railread ymploye, got eaught between two cars, James 8, Wrightiugton, a car builder, at work near by, ran to Deat’s assist. ance, and rescued him, but in so doing ae received injuries which caused his feath in a short time. . ==The Comptroller of the Currency has declared the first dividend of 25 per sent. in favor of the creditors of the First National Bank of Auburn, New RI HR mE j amounting to $762,454, This bank | failed January 28, 1888, his brother and four others leit San Pedro, California, in an open boat for a trip around the Catalina Island, On the 23d the boat was found bottom up, and it is thought that the whole party was drowned — At Morley’s station, twenty miles from Redding, California, James Mason, an old stage driver, committed suicide on the 23d. He bought a fifty- pound box of giant powder, sat on it and touched the explosive off with a match, The Coroner gathered up twenty pounds of the body in a basket, Wil- liam Steinbecker, employed in a book- bindery, committed suicide in Chicago on the morning of the 24th, by shoot- ing himself in the head. He had been turned out of his boarding house after a spree, -Benjamin Dutton, a farm hand, went to the house of John Lamont, near Dryden, New York, on the even- ing of the 24th, and shot Mr, Lamont and Miss Roat, a young woman employ- ed in the Lamont family, the latter fa- tally. Dutton then escaped to the woods and committed suicide. Dutton bad been paying attention to the Roat girl, but Lamont considered him unworthy of her, and upon his advice she re- jected his suit, Michael Flaherty was arraigned In Jersey City, New Jersey, on the 25th, Ie beat his mother in a brutal manper about ten days ago and she died on the 25th from the re- at Quincy, lllinois, on the evening of the 21st. The skiff was capsized and Steel's body has been re- It is now thought that be was murdered and the boat upset to Miss has not yet been recovered, of the —in view loss of fruit but the insects have birds, The of small fruits will be almost a total fallure, - A gunsmith namnéd Rudolph was arrested in Chlecago, on the 24th, on the charge of being the person who i who intended ted Donfleld, Seviec acknowledged that mite, and was placed under $7000 bail, four ted by the Grand acd Chilebonn, he Anarchists, were | Jury for conspiracs -- While John P’. Anderson I, at Johus- “He Las or water, and deriving his fresh from that part of the well below, him speak,” An old at Elm | by the city, as been used for scene of a fatal disaster on the 25th. Part of the gallery on one side of the building collapsed weight of two heavy folding machine, the Lowell : ing company of printers, and the chines broke trough to the ground floor, Six giris went down with the wreck, but the Another one was bruised in one eye, and the rest escaped injury, W. Ingersoll, of Pleasantville, New and Atlantic City Railroad on the 25th as he was crossing the track, Charles from a freight train, near Bremen, Ohio, on the 24th and was killed. Six of his brothers were killed on raliroads, Sarah Kelley died on the 25th at Belle. ville, New Jersey, after having fasted for 42 days, She was 53 years of age. When she began to refuse food she welghed 152 pounds, and at the time of her death she weighed only 80 pounds, ~John Bolton and Frank Mercuzle were overcoma by fire-damp In the Neilson shaft, at Shamokin, Penna,, on the 25th, and it is not believed that they could recover, ~(ireat damage was done in Tama and Grundy counties, Iowa by a hail and wind storm on the evening of the 224, All the crops were destroyed in a strip from two to four miles wide and eighteen In length. Many farm build- ings were levelled, a school house was demolished, and many cattle were kill- ed. A house near Rough Woods, in Grundy county, was destroyed by lightning, and two children perished in it. On the 24th hail fell to a depth of five inches iu portions of South Riche ford, East Berkshire and Montgomery, Vermont. In some places drifts one foot deep were firmly frozen together, and on the morning of the 256th hail still lay to the depth of five inches on the highway bridge at South Richford. The growing crops were destroyed in several places, ~ William Stanhope, a Justice of the Peace at Syracuse, Nebraska, was as- saulted by a gang of young roughs while going home on the evening of the 24th. He was terriby beaten and cut with rawhides, and may lose the sight of ous eye, The assault is supposed to be a consequence of some decisions by Stanhope, His assailants had white capes drawn over their faces, but they are known, snd warrants will be issued for their arrest, =A burglar entered the residence of ex-Secretary of the Interior Delano, at Mt. Vernon, Ohlo, on the evening of the 24th. The venerable Secretary, now in his 80th year, procured a revolver, confronted the burglar and drove him from the premises, ~'*White Caps’® visited Carnes Mills, Crawford county, Indiana, on out of bed, tied them to trees sand whipped them unmercifully with They charged the women with being unchaste. Their shrieks were unheeded. The ‘White Caps’’ then decided to ride to the house of a reputable citizen, tell him of what they had done, and order him to spread the news, as was their custom. Their consultation was overheard by three men, who procured guns and lay in am- bush, When the **White Caps’ ap- peared the men fired upon them, Three of the gang were shot, two of them, John Saunders and Pryer Gregory, it is thought fatally. Gregory 18 a well- known country merchant and has a family of grown children, Saunders is asaloon keeper,and issald to bea worth- leas fellow. The eldest woman, it 18 re- ported, will die from the whipping she received, District Attorney Fellows has recommended Governor Hill to commute the death senteuce of Mrs, Cignarale to imprisonment for life. Jacob Lucey was shot and killed by George Jones, In St, Paul, Minnesota, on the 27th, They had trouble about money matters, John Sommers, a sa- loon keeper in Chicago, was shot and fatally wounded on the evening of the 25th by John Jones, his nephew, Som- mers and his wife had a disagreement and Jones sided with the woman. Rod- erick sLowry, 8 nephew of Governor Lowry of Mississippi, on the 23d, in Jackson, beat and kicked his wife and broke a pitcher over her head, He left ber for dead and fled to the swamps, A party of forty men has been making an unsuccessful search for him since. Mrs. Lowry is imuroving. ~The Chicago police on the 20ih found in Sevic's shop, the gunsmith arrested on the 25th, for alleged com- phieity in the plot to kill Judges Gray and Grinoell and Inspector Bonfield, a market basket containing ten pounds What 1s supposed to be long, was found in a barrel of apples on a train in Chicago, on the 26th. The apples had been shipped from New Albany, Indiana, —A box car loaded with shelled on the Union Paelfic Railroad, Nebraska, on the evening of and stood on end, Six stealing a ride, were smoth- y death. Valley, doth, —Gieorge Howell, assistant cashier of the Patchogue Bank, in Patchogue, defauniter to the amount of $3163, which, bowever, is secured to the bank by a bond of $5000, which is signed by of the bank. package containing $10,000 was steamer en route from Portland to Astoria, in Oregon, on the evening of the 24th. The Pacllic Ex- press Company has paid the money and detectives to find out the thief. Eight freight car thieves, seven of were arrested In Bur Five of them of bat, Texas, on the 26th. were caught in the act from Texas Pacilic cars, stealing ~The household of Daniel MeCarty, in Wichita, Kansas, consisting of his wife, four daughters and adaughter-in- law, Mrs. Henshaw, were poisoned on 25th from drinking buttermilk. It that Mr. MeCarty, Mrs. Henshaw and daughter will die, It is thought that the milk had Leen kept in a copper vessel, Near Dento- the daugh- thought one brothers, Two the third brother and the father are not expected to recover, "ihe mother was at church thus missed her portion of the poison. her father and three ~ While prayer meeting was in pro- gress in the Meridian Street Methodist Church, in Indianapolis, Eugene Zinzis swallowed a dose of died before he could the church, It is steamer Adam ty, Penna. , the evening of the 26th. Miss Catherine Greenhalgh threw her three weeks' old baby into the river. She was arrested, The child's body was not recovered. The bodies of two children, a boy and a eirl, were found floating 1n a creek in East St, Louis on the 27th. It is thought they were both murdered. ' Fremont Emmons stabbed and killed Bertha Schultz, in Pawnee City, Nebraska, on the evening of the 26th, because she would not marry him. Deputy Sheriff I.. 8. Elmer shot and killed Miss Mattie Kerbell, at Wahpe- ton, Dakota, on the evening of the 256th. No eause 1s known for his act, He was taken from jail by a mob on the evening of tha 26.h, and lynched, In Halifax county, near Meadsville, Virginia, on the 26th, Bruce Younger, colored, committed an assult upon Mrs. Robert Dodge, who was in a de licate condition. He was arrested, and on the evening of the 20th, was taken from jail by a party of men and hanged to a tree, ~Thomas Reilly, who confessed to having knocked down and robbed Mr. Wakely, in New York, was on the 27th sent to the State Prison for 15 years and 7 months. Joseph Welsh, a young ruffian who had assaulted and robbed ladies In broad daylight, in Pittsburg, was sentenced, on the 27th, to 25 years’ imprisonment at hard labor in the penitentiary. One of his vie- lms, Mrs, B, L. Wood, died on the 23d, it is belleved, from the nervous shock sustained at the time she was as- saulted and robbed. J. I. Johnson Howard, a negro, whose reputed wealth gained for him the title of the “Black Prince,” and who bas (or many years past been active in polities in Brooklyn, New York, was on the 27th sentenced to reven years’ impris- onment. He was convicted of perjury in swearing falsely that he owned cer- tain property in Kings county, when examined in the Supreme Court as to his qualification as a bondsman, ~The bodies of Mr, and Mrs. Went- worth, of Newton, Massachusetts, who were drowned in the lake at Sunapee, New Hampshire, two weeks ago, wo afternoon of the 27th by a ~Just before the Cdward Btewart, aged 27 the Old Dominion diver, years, fireman of steamer Wyanoke, stepping from a gang-plank at ish. mond, Virginia, on the morning of the 27th, Oswin Backs, who was injured by the explosion at the Adelaide Silk Mill, in Allentown, Penna,, on the 9th inst., died on the morning of the 27th. The 16-year-old-son of ©, L. Pruden, Assistant Secretary to the President, was killed on the morning of the 27th on a farm in Virginia, where he was spending his vacation. in trying to climb upon a loaded wagon he fell under the wheels and was crushed to death, ~—A steer got fast in the frame work of an iron bridge near Emaus, Penpa., on the 27th, and was struck by the engine of an ore freight train. Eigh- teen cars were thrown off the track and wrecked, The bridge was badly damaged, and the track torn up for 150 yards, The loss will reach fully 5000, No trains can pass that point for several days, and passengers will be transferred there. John Moore, a carpenter, aged 062 vears, who boarded with his brother's family, in Detroit, Michigan, shot and killed his sister-in- law on the 27th. He had not been paying for Lis board for elghieen months past, and when asked by Mrs, Moore to pay he became enraged and shot her in the head, She died 20 minutes later, He then shot at Alice, the 16-year-old daughter of Mrs, Iroore, but missed her, and then shot himself in tne side, His wound is not serious. - A despatch from Brighton, miles east of Buffalo, New York, says a serious break bas occured in the Three Mile Level of the Erie Canal. Several boats were broken in two and ail the East boats are delayed, The break was caused by rats, which had made a large bole near the bed the canal, through which the wat r found an exit, Locking was suspended west of the break and the water was drawn through the eastern locks, preveuting the flelds from being overflowed, The pier of the Times Lumber Company, at Baltimore, gave way on the morning of the 27th, under the weight of 2,000,- 000 feet of lgmber piled upon {5 walter around was soon filled Boating boards and scantlings, damage is about $1000, -The engine of the limited express, coming east, jumped the tracks near Canton, Ohio, on the morning of the and upset. Engineer Morgan and Fireman Butler were slightly hurt. None of the passengers were injured Tne damage sustained Ly the Pitis- burg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Rail- road Company Is estimated at between $15,000 and $20,000, While a car cone taining five men was ascending the plane at the Montreal Ore Company’s mine, in Lehigh county, Penna., on the even. ing of the 20th, a break In the engine caused the car to fall down the bank. Daniel Pordenberger and Jolin Nuss had legs broken, and Owen Griess, Joseph Wetzel and Samuel Heimback were also badly injured. 06 of op ie ify wiih The yn ny =ilh, SENATE, d Slates Senate on the 25d, a bill for the relief of parties who paid §2.50 per acre for United States Government lands which have been reduced in price to $1.25, was reported and placed on the calendar, The conference report on the River and Harbor bill was agreed to. The Fisheries trealy was taken up, and Mr, Dawes spoke in opposition to it. Mr. Stewart also argued against the ratifie cation of the treaty. Mr. Wilson, from the Judiciary Committee, made a re port in regard to the election in Jack. sou, Mississippl, A message was pres sented from the President on the sub. ject of lhe civil service, and referred. Adjourned. In the United States Senate on the 24th, the resolution to print 5000 addi tional copies of the report of the Sen. ats Committee on Pensions on thes sub ject of vetoed pension bills was taken up, the question being on zn amsand. ment of Mr, Cockrell to print 100,000 copies of Presidential vetoes in the last and present Congress. After a discus. sion, In which the case of Mary Ann Dobtierty was pretty thoroughly venti lated by Mr. Cockrell, the resolution went over, An amendment to the Sundry Civil bill was reported, to in- corporate in ita provision for the re- funding of the direct tax. The Naval Appropriation bill was considered. Mr, Hoar offered a resolution, which was referred, for the appointment of a committees of seven, to inquire junto and report npon the relations of basi. ness and commerce between the United States and Canada, the effect on the commerce of the United States of the Canadian system of railways and canals, the number and amount of claims against Great Britain for viola tion of treaty obligations. Adjourned, In the U. 8, Senate on the 25th, a bill was passed appropriating $75,000 for a public building at Statesville, North Carolina, The House bill for an appraisers’ warehouse in New York city was discussed and went over. The Naval Appropriation bill was passed, and goes back to the House for concur- rence in amendments. Senate bill ap. propriating $75,000 for a public build. ing at Allentown, Penn, was passed, After passing all the ivale pension bills on the calendar, 127 in number, & feat which was accomplished in fifty minutes, the Senate adjourned. In the U. N, Senate on the 20th, the House bill for the allotment of lands in severally to the United Peorias aud Miamis in the Indian Territory was re- ported and placed on the calendar. e Army Appropriation bill was passed, with amendments, The Fish. eries Trealy was discussed. The Presi dential vetoes were read and referred, Adjourned, In the U, 8, Senate on the 27th, the Fisheries Sréuty as considered in open session, afd Mr, Saulsbury spoke in favor of its ratification. The Sundry Civil bill was considered, pending which the Ezaats adjourned. HOoUsR, In tho House on the 23d, the Senate bill to protect the quarantine system of the United States was passed. District in the Unite since > A of Columbia bills were considered, A | the Pacific railroads to contract and | operate separate telegraph lines was | agreed to, Adjourned, | In the House, on the 24th, Senate | bills were passed appropriating $200,- | 000 for the erection of an appraisers’ warehouse in Chicago, aud prohibiting | the transmission through the mails in transparent envelopes of matler which would be prohibited If printed or! writtten on the outside of the envelope, | Senate bili relative to detail of army | and navy officers to educational insti. | tutions was considered. The bill to | forfeit lands in Minnesoto, granted to | the Hasting and Dakota Railroad Com- | pany, was reported and passed. The | Senate bill to extend the laws of the | United States over **No Man’s Land” | was reported by Mr, Holman, who | asked its Immediate consideration, | Mr. Springer antagonized the measure with the Oklahoma bill, and the latter bill was considered in Commitee of | the Whole. Pending debate the com- mittee rose and a racess was taken, The evening sessson was for the con- sideration of bills reported from the | Committee on Public Lands, Ad- | journed, | In the House on the 25th, a bill was passed establishing a United States Land Court for the Territories of Ari. rons and New Mexico and the State of Colorado, The House then went into Committee of the Whole on the Okla- bowma bill, but, as nobody was prepared to speak on the bill, the committee rose, | and a recess was taken, The evening session was devoted to bills reported | from the Committee on War Claims. In the House on the 26th, resolution was passed providi porarily, until September 1st, support of the Army. A bill vide for the erection of post-office | buildings In places where gross i i ov tag ! ng Lem- the receipts amount to $3000 annually tor | Lwo successive was considered, An evening was held for consideration of bills from the Judiciary Commitlee, In the House on the 27th, { { Years BERKSON the Mr, Mat- | son asked that the ing session as consideration of general pension legis- lation, but objection was made, The | Army Appropriation bill was reparted back with the Senate amendments and referred to the Committee of 1 Whole. After passing some priv: bills, the House {ook a recess unti evening, when private were considered, Adlourned. —— A A——s A ——— ON FACE READING. be modified so t h LH ii ’ ¥ ¢ 3 3 ! pension bills The Countenance is Not the Reflex of the Soa!, but Too Often Only a Mask. “Physiognomy the tmagination AR prominent stu the other day, continued, “I deny Ui of a man’s face is rea person's soul, as it 1s ded be, and as the obje uage is sald to be the concealment of thought, so the expression one's | countenance is bul the mask 10 conceal one’s inner self, “There is a in the days of nothing there was usage among men, but that each other's wanis and wishes Od a8 Lhe world Was pure nd urity appeared in the expres- human face. men sought to keep | e evil that was in| us preventl becoming the i8 raliier a vagan than a science,” lens “and, there! al the expression ¥ an index of spe I “ EeDerally conce- t Rie to t of lang- ¥ in thet n the 3 wh 1 and from their faces Lb their hearts, th tenance {rom the soul, “No,” the speaker went on, ‘‘i have no faith whatever in phsiognomy a8 a science, for as a science it is fanci- ful and wild, Take, for instance, the portraits of men who have become fa- wous in the world of statesmanship, | philosophy, science, art or search and scan their faces for traces | to mark their fame, and how often you | will be disappointed. The same is the | case with men adepts In vice, cunniog | and crite. Little can be told from the | external appearance of individuals as to | their appearance of individuals as to their peculiar traits and characteristics by which they ate known to their fel low men. “That certain habits of life aflix their stamp to face or form is, no doubt, true, but the solution of that condition is not in the retlex action of the mind and soul, bul for the reason that a certain setlof muscles are brought habitually into play and cause a special development. 1s the man necessarily all smiles and laughter that has wrinkles at the outer corners of the eyes and vpward curving lines around his mouth? Yet those are the mechan- ical lines which would indicate a merry- hearted man, if the science of physiog- pomy 18 true. Those lines are only muscular, simply the result of habit, and may be dictated by the rankest hypocrisy. **Naturally the brutal and ignorant classes will lave coarser features and will possess brutal and animal faces, generally resulting from inberited qual- ities, and theiefore they will do coarse and brutal things, It would be an easy matler to trace a resemblance belween the faces and the crimes of such peo- ple, in whom brutality and coarseness predominate, but where will you find the lines and ear marks of brutality in the face of the handsome Wilkes Booth or the cultured and elegant Eugene Aram? Look upon the canvasses | ‘ar- ing the portraits of the beautiful and aielic flends that ruled the Emperors of Rome and you will see only patri- clan faces, but they brought the Em. pire to destruction, “Instances of this character might be given indefinitely, but every one who has made a careful study of the subject will agree that the connection between the expression and the inner spiritual nature 1s a very dificult one to trace. a Youxo Pogron fo jout)-urhat prescription night, was a mistake. It was intended for another patient. Did you have it filled? Patient—Yes, doctor. Doctor Well, how are you feeling this index of | til QUEEN NATALIE'S TROUBLES, A Short History of the Servian Queen's Quarrel With King Milan. The marital troubles between King Milan and his wife, Queen Natalie, and complications arising therefrom, threaten to involve several European unpleasant dispute, the fact that the Queen promptly fled to German territory, Prince Bismarck finds himself already involved, and there 18 a possibility that the Czar will be drawn in also, Aus trina, too, by virtue of her geographical interests and position, may have to take a hand in the game, which, it is easy to see, is merely a bit of political strategy, having for its object the strengthening of the various lines, Thus the love affairs of an unhappily-mated couple calculated to disturb ultimately the peace of Europe, the Queen’s notice that she will resist all efforts to take her son from her having been followed by an order tu her household to resist by force any such action by the German or Bervian oflicials, The sadness of the nt present situation Lie mar- riage was affair, King Milan was only Prince of Ser } via wl in the early part of Fag urely a love rn, a oved the while on daught- ihe and “ A ( Oo a divorcee, and if ily he cannot law of Servia decrees of only be pronounc- ed by ecclesiastical authorities. When a divorce has been petitioned for, the two contending parties must in the first place be confronted with one an. other, in order that an effort may be made to bring about a reconciliation. Should these efforts prove fruitless, the petitioner alleges the grounds of accus- ation, to which the respondent replies, Many attempts were made to patch up a truce between the couple after the Queen left Servia by her own free will, but really on compulsion; but the King bad become gradually estranged from Russian influence and a year age be formally became an obedient vassal of the Austrian Empire. His Russian wife is devoted to the Czar, to whom, it is expected, she will make her final appeal, Yinvery oraing Cause ace divorce can — ——— i... Two Meals a Day. In spite of what our Elizabethan forefathers sald and did to the con trary, and notwithstanding the opin. tons of some eminent physicians of re- cent times, evening is the only ra tional time to dine, There should only be two really substantial meals a day, and these should be breakfast and din. ner. A solid and highly nutritious meal ought to begin the day’s work, an equally solid and ually nutritions meal should end it. hat is taken in the course of the working hours may be such as merely to satisfy the urgent cravings of the appetite, and to main. tain In a condition of steady movement the ascencing or descending course of the nerve energy. AAI MII A Concluded Not to Wait, An obliging lady castomer in a oer tain store in Philadelphia insisted that she always traded with the proprietor CP IOE a ron the cp he un," sal “Oh, well" was the « “I'l sit right down and wait for him.” She waited, and as the half hours sped she “When will he be ?" she said, loftily. *‘In about four weeks, madam,” was the o “He 1s now on a business trip to Mon. morning? Patient—Mpo» ‘better, tana.’ She traded with the clerks,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers