The Early Italn. Down through tho ininty nir, Down from the gloom above, Falling, puttering ovorywhoro, Tho raiu comes quick with love. Boftly iho inuwol-thniali Sings in the golden storm; Tho robin nndor it Inurel biish Waits lor to-morrow morn. Drip, drip, drip from the oaves, I'it, pit, pit on tho pnno, Swish, swish, swish on tho drenched loaves, List! 'tis the song of tho ruin. Grasses tiro bending low, Gieeu is tho corn ami thick; You can almost see tho nettloo grow, They grow so strong and quick. Holt is the wind Irom tho west, Softer tho rain's low sigh; Die sparrow washes his smoky hroast, Ami watches tho gloomy sky. St incd are tho boughs by tho breeze, Scarcely a leal is still, Something- is moving among tho trees, I.iko a restless spirit ol ill. Standing watching tho rain, Do you seem to hear The voice ot Ciod outspeaking again To man's ungmtctiil car? Promising plenty and |>eaco, Garnets with treasure heaped, That seed-time and harvest shall not cease Till the harvest ol earth bo reaped. Tht Anjoty. NOT A SUCCESS. "Dear me," said Mrs. Ik-atherly, "some folks do have all the luck! I thought when my Cousin Speak well was appointed assistant bishop of the Cranberry >wamp diocese, that it was quite a social distinction. Hut here's Helen Jones's uncle been put up for Cninese ambassador! And I suppose ihe'll g-t .til her tea and chessmen for nothing now, besides the credit of the thing!" And Mr-. Ibatherley actually burst into tears. From the very lirst moment of her arriv;d in < berry hill, Mrs. Jones had been her rival. If she decorated her parlors in lotus-leaves and cat-tails, Mrs. Jones immediately ordered an artist from Philadelphia to paint her eeilings in peacock-plumes and half open sunflower buds. If she gave a light tea -Mrs. Jones followed with a full-fledged dinner-party. If she had s fancy mastpierade-party, -Mrs. Jones Issued cards for private theatricals. And now the glories of the assistant bishopric were entirely eclipsed by the ambassador to < hina. Mrs. Jones ordered her white ponies uvi basket-phaeton, and drove in state duough Cherry hill, to invite all her Mentis and acquaintances to an everi cg reception. "To meet my uncle," she said, gra tiously, "before he sails for China!" For Mrs. Jones, albeit she never had teen her Uncle John Jones, was seized, all of a sudden, with the most affec tionate devotion for him, and tele graphed him to come at once to Cherry kill. And the letter which followed was full <if niece-like devotion. "I have always tell," she aa>'i, "that it win a irucl deprivation to see so little of my lias ouml'i ielnti<m. Ami now that we arc MI loon to low) you, 1 must insist on at least one rwit. We have some charming people in Cherry hill, who woubl esteem it a privilege to make your acquaintance. We shall meet yon, without tail, at the six-lortv train from Philadelphia, on tVcdnewilAy next." Mr. Jones, a blunt, bullet-headed man, who was in the drug business, ■cratch*-d his nose when he heard of nis wife's prowess. "It's all a puzzle to me," said he. "Uncle John never had any brains." "Dear me!" said Mrs. Jones, "what Drains are needed to lie a Chinese am bassador? It's all jxditical influence and wire-pulling, don't you see?" "Well," saitl Mr. Jones, "there's something in that. I remember Uncle John being president of a Polk and Dallas club, for years ago, or so, In the village. And he manufactured torch lights for the political processions, and had a very good voice for a hurrah. What puzzles me, however, is what on eartli he will think of our getting so very affectionate all of a sudden, after neglecting him for all these years." "No matter what he thinks," said Mrs. Jones, briskly. "I'll soon bring him around. (Inly think—ambassador to China! What will Mrs. IL atherley say ? You must telegraph at once for plenty of pates de foie gras and cold, potted game. And I'll have the two colored waiters from the hotel. Mary- Ann is very well in her way, but she will need additional help on an occa sion like this. I shall ask ex-Governor Philipstarhaugh and his wife—they are visiting the Whites; and an es pecial card shall be sent to that stupid •Id assistant bishop that Charlotte Ileatherlcy boasts so much about. Mr. Chimefleld, the poet, Is in town also and I shall beg Miss Hulklcy to bring her violin and give us one of those sweet' Scandinavian Dreams'that she improvises so sweetly. Let me see, there will be alio tit sixty people here, unless I receive more regrets than 1 at present anticipate." "Sixty people, eh?" repeated Mr- Jones. "Ain't that considerable of a blow-out. Funny? We haven't settled Spagru-tte's Mil for that lust ten-light, you must remember." "Tea-light! Jllow-oiit!" Mrs. Jones repeated, In infinite disgust. "Peter, I haven't any patience to hear you use those odious, vulgar expressions. How arc Kthcl and Constuntia to get mar ried, I'd like to know, if the dear girls never are to see any society? Are the ponies ready?" "You can't have the ponies to-day," said .Mr. Jones. "The 11 very-stable man says they don't stir out or their stalls until the whole account is settled —three hundred and odd dollars." "How absurd of him!" said Mrs. Jones, with a shrug of her plump shoulders. "And now,of all times in the world! Hut never mind—l shall walk!" And Mrs. Jones, nothing daunted, put on a rose-tmd-t rimmed In in net, a pretty imitation cashmere shawl, and a pair of crt-um-colored kid gloves, and set forth to the florist's, where she ordered a profusion of flowers; and to the pastry-cook's, where she hesitated between water ices, and Neapolitan cream; and Anally went home, wearied, hut triumphant. "I'll show the Chinese ambassador that there is some styleabout his cr in tra- cousins," she declnnsl.to KtheJ and Constuntia, who were remodeling their old dresses, to appear as new as jxs sible. And really Mrs. Jones's parlors did appear exquisitely tasteful and pretty when the eventful evening arrived. The chandeliers—new for the occa sion were draped with smilax; the man tels bankeil with cyclamen and begonia j leaves; the angles of the apartment tilled with tall palms and stately ferns. Miss Hulklcy- was there, with her violin, and a package of music nearly as large as a Saratoga trunk; the ex governor and his lady were on time, j and the assistant bishop of the Cran berry swamp diocese appeared, in a red-nosed and jiompous manner, with his cousin, Mrs. Ileathcrley, leaning on his arm. And, .as the room began to till, Mrs. Jones waxed a little nerv ous. "I do hope nothing has happened to ! the train," she thought. "If he shouldn't In- here, after all, I should feel myself a social fraud." Hut, as the old Antwerp clock In the corner struck ten, there was a little hustle, the sound of retreating car riage-wheels—Uncle Jones had ar rived! And the guests partial right and h'ft, to admit of the entrance of a stout old gentleman in a suit of hom dytsl butternut-brown, a pair of silver spectacles, very r<d hands, entirely in nocent of gloves, and a blue-chocked shirt. "Well, Niece Jones," said this re markable apparation, grasping Mrs- Jones's pretty, little kid-glovisl hands "I'm dreadful glad to make your ac quaintance. And this 'ore's IVter, Is it ? I hain't seen I'eter since he was a Hoy." "Uncle," said Mrs. Jones, with a sort of hysteric gasp, "allow me to present to you—" "Oh, yes, I see," said Uncle Jones. "Company to tea eh? Your servant ladies and gentlemen, your servant," 1 >owing comprehensively around the room. "And seeln' we're all here to gether, so nice and friendly," he added, "I'll jest ask you all to look at a new kind o' salve as I've took the agency of the' Electric Agony Kradicator,' only twenty-five cent - a box. and five'boxes for a dollar. Husincss is business, you know, and as 1 make iny living this way, I'm sure my niece and nephew here won't object to my selling off the stock-in-trade to the best advantage In-fore I leave the country. Perhaps the company don't know that I -ail as skipper of the Lovely Louise m-xt month up to the Ncwfunlan' fishin hanks, and round byway of Nova JScotia?" "Hut," gasped Mrs. Jones, "we thought -that is, we understood we read in the paper, I would say—that you were to he the ambassador to China" "Me!" said Uncle Jones. "Not if I know it! Me go to furrlo parts, to lie eaten up with chopsticks, or burmsl alive by the coolies? 1 guess not! Ur'aps it's John J. Jones you're think ing ainnit He's from the same place as lam a great friend of the adminis tration—and I've heerd as he's got a plump office from the big-hugs at Washington. I'm Johrt J. Jones— Jacob, you know, arter my great* gran'ther, as was in the hlacksmitliy bus'nea'. Oh, I ain't no Chinese am bassador! I'm only a salve-rr.anufac. turer. It'd dreadful good for frosted feet an' ears, the 'Electric Agony Kra dicator' is—and p'r'aps I may have a good ehancc to sell a few gross of boxes on board the Lovely Louise, if it's a mldillln' cold trip." Poor Mrs. Jones stood aghast as the distinguished guest of the evening rir ciliated around amid the perfumed groups, with his "Agony Krudlcator," si lling off the precious panacea with great success. Mrs. llentherley giggled amlihly; tlie assistant bishop elevated Ids Roman nose with an air of superciliousness; the fair violinist laid down her bow, and only the instant announcement of supper would have prevented a general dissolution of this social parliament. I'ncle Jones ate as if tie were a starved wolf, ami then drank as he had been transformed into a iish;and dual ly fell asleep on a sofa in the corner and snored aloud, with his pocket full of "salve-lnixes" and a handkerchief over Ids face. He went home the next day. The Cherry hill Jones's did not urge him to stay longer; and Mrs. Heatherley called to condole willi Mrs. Jones in pe.son. "It must have been so mortifying to the poor thing!" said she, with simu lated sympathy. Rut Mrs. Jones did not see her. She was crying in her own room, and sent down a message of "Not at home." "I don't care how soon we leave Glierry hill," slie sohhixl. "I never can look any one in the face again. I never was so ashamed in all my life! And if ever anyone mentions the name 'China,' ••r 'the Chinese,' in my presence again, I'll commit suicide, that I will!" For Mrs. Jones's party had not been a success. Among the Mongols. The Mongol of to-day is in many re -pei ts a separate man. timid, yet given to long, lonely journeys over pathless deserts; habitually abstemious, yet a drunkard; a controversialist, yet super stitions; a thief by instinct, yet law abiding; rough, brutal, and cruel - yet in one respect gentler than any Kurojiean. Nothing can induce him to hurt an animal, however low in the scale of creation. "Nowhere," says a recent traveller, "will you liiul less cruelty than In Mongolia Not only do their cattle ;ind docks receive ex pressions of sympathy in suffering, and such alleviation of pain as their owner knows how to give, hut even the meanest creatures (insects and reptiles included) are treated with ennsider cration. Crows perch themseivis on the top of loaded eaiuels, and delibcrat lv steal lx-fore the very eyes of the vociferating owners; hawks scoop down in the market-place at ITga, and snatch eatables from the hands of the unwary, who simply accuse the thief of patricide, and pass on. My bald headed camel driver was nearly driven to distraction one evening by a cloud of mosquitoi* which kept hovering over and alighting on his shining pate. During the night there came a touch of frost, and when We rose in the morning not an insist was on the wing. Looking at them as they rlung IM numbed to the sid>-s of the tent, he re marked. 'The ui<Mquit<M'H are fro/en!' and then added, in a tone of sincere sympathy, the Mongol phrase expres sive of pity, 'Hoarhe ! hoarhe !* There was no sarcasm or hypocrisy about it" This tenderness is the more strange IM causc the Mongols in their few cities or standing ramps let lieggars die of cold and exposure, though they never dis ptay the complete callousness of Chinese. The Chinese government in I. uma Miau, the great entre|Kt, pun ishes highway robbery with violence by a sentenceof death from starvation; 4r>d our traveler saw this sentence carried out, the man being plans! in a <age in the street, with his head out side, so that lie might see the eating, shops, an<l die slowly of hunger and thirst. He was four days dying there in public. The Chinese citizens found this interesting, and strolled up every evening, laughing and jesting, to see the unhappy wretch suffer. A ( horse-Making Iterry. A cheese-making berry has recently lM>en discovered in India, which seems to lie a capital sulistitute for rennet. Ptineria, as the natives call it. is the berry of a plant known scientifically las "withania coagulans," a shrub which is common in the Punjab and ; Trans-Indus territory, and wliich lias long been used by the Afghans and i Kelooclies to curdle milk. Experiments conducted officially on a farm belonging to the governor of Kntuhay have demonstrated the effic iency of the iM'rry in the manufacture of cheese, a perfect curd being produc ed and the cheese turning out excel lently; and, with a view to the more extended cultivation of the shrub, an ex|M>rimental plantation is to lie estate linhed at the government iMitanical gardens at Saharanpore. The punerla, so-called from the Per sian name of cheese, is prepared by placing about two ounces of the her. ries in a small quantity of cold water, and allowing it to simmer by the side of a Are for twelve hours. It is said that half a pint of the decoction will suffice to curdle lifty-ffve gallons of milk.— Cataeir* Family Mayasim. IJKN. S< OTT\S NAltltOtV KMCAPK. %il I ifr rill I i|f llrniliilacriM • from flit A ill <thlotfrn|li>of Til MI l< vv IVeerl How llir <inrrir l.'K* Mtctf 11 . From tin; autobiography of Tliurlow Weed,the following interesting account , if an incident preceding the battlo of I'liippowa, in b-l 1, in tukcn: Ono evening after our rubber, F said to t m* general,"'l here is one question I nave often wished tuu.sk you, Fait havi* Oeen restrain•! Iy tin- four tFiat it miglit bo improper." The general lrew lit uiHt'l f up and sail I in liiH em phatic manner: "Sir, you an- incapa. ble of asking an improper question." I aid: "Vou are very kind; but if my xiquiry is imli.ii rcct 1 am Hum you ss ill tllovv it to pass unanswered." "1 hear you, sir," lie replied. "Well, then, general, did anything remarkable happen to you on the morn ing of the battle of the Chippewa*'/" After a brief but hupp ssivc silenee, ne said: "Ves, sir; something did tinpiH'ti to me—something very re markable, arid I will now, for the third lime in my life, repeat the story: Tie- Ith day of July, Ibl t, was one of ex treme heat. Oil that day my brigade ikiriuishcd with a llritish force com manded by General Kiall. from an early oour in the morning till late in tie- af ternoon. We had driven the enemy town the river some twelve miles t.. Street's creek, near Chippewa, where we em arnped for the night, our army jeeupying the west, while that of tic em my was enrumped on the east side it the creek. After our tents had been pitched I okserved a llag ls>rn' by a man in peasant's dress approach ing my marquee. lie brought a letter from a lady who is-cupicd a large mansion on the opposite sid<- of tic reek, informing me that she was the wife of u meiiils-r of Parliament, who was then at tpiebee; that her ehildren, servants and a young lady friend were alone with her In the house; that Gen eral Kiall had placed a sentinel before her ilisir, and that she ventured, with great doubts of the propriety of tin request, to :isk that 1 would place a sentinel upon the bridge to protect her against stragglers froin our camp. I assured tie- nimvnger that the lady'* ropiest should be cornplii'l with. Karly the next morning the name niessengi r, bearing a white flag, ri appeared with a note from the same lady, thanking me for the protection sin- had enjoyed, adding that, in acknowledgment of my civilities, she lagged that 1 would, with such members of my staff as I chose to bring with me, accept the hospitalities of her hou*e at a breakfast which had been prepared with considerable atten tion, and was quite ready. Acting ujHjn an impulse which I have never 1M en able to analyze or comprehend, I called two of my aids. Lieutenants Worth and Watts, and returned to the mansion already indicated. We met our hostess at the door, who ushered us into the dining-riM>m, where break fast awaited us, and where the young lady previously referred to was already • at*l by the coffee urn. Our hostess asking to la- excused for a few ruin ut-s, the young lady immediately served our coffee, llefore w- had hr>e ken our fast. Lieutenant Watts rose from the table to get his bandana (that la-ing Ix-fore the days of napkins), which he had left in his cap <>n a side table by the window, glancing through which he saw Indians approaching the house on one side and red-coats ap proai liing it on the other, with an evi dent purjiose nf surrounding it and us, and instantly exclaimed: "General, we are betrayed!' Springing from the ta- We and clearing the house I saw our danger, and, remembering Lord lerfield had -aid: "Whatever it is projier to do it is proper to do well." and as we had to run, and my legs were longer than my companions', I Vx>n out-tripped thein. As we limb jur eseajH' we were tir'sl at, but got across the 1 ridge in safety. "I felt so nturli shame and mortifica tion at having so nearly fallen into a Irap that I could s< arcely tlx my mind upon the duties which now demanded my undivided attention. 1 knew that I had committed a great indiscretion in accepting toe singular invitation, and that if any disaster result**! from it I richly deserved to lose lwith my mission and character. 1 constantly found myself wondering whether the lady really intended to bet ray us. or had been accidentally olmerved. The ques tion would recur, even amidst the ex citement of battle. Fortunately, how ever, my presence services in the field were not required until Generals l'orter and Ripley had lieen engaged at intervals for several hours, so that when my brigade, with Towson'a artil lery, were ordered to cross Street's creek, my nerves and contldence had Income measurably quieted and re stored. "I need not describe the battle of Chippewa. That Irelnngs to, and is part of, the history of our country. It is sufficient to say that at the close of ...Y t th* ilay we were masters of tlie posl tion, ami that our arum were in no way discredited. The Itritinli ariuy had 1 fallen l>a''k, leaving their wound'-d In our possesdori. The mansion which 1 ' ha'l visited In the morning was the largest house near, and to that the wounded ollicers in both armies were earrieii for Hiirgieal treatment. An soon sis I could leave the field I went over to look after my wounded. ] found the English office™ lying on the first lloor and our own on the floor above. I saw in the lower room the young lady whom I had met in the morning .if the breakfast table, her white dress all sprinkled with blood. die had been attending to the Hritisfi wound ed. On the seeond floor, ju tas I was turning into the room where officers were, I met my hostess. One glance at her was quite sufficient to answer the question which J had been asking myself all day. She h;ul intended to betray me, and nothing but the ac> i dent of my aid rising for bis handker chief saved us from capture. "Years afterward, in reflecting upon this incident, 1 was led to doubt wheth er I had not misconstrued her startled manner as 1 suddenly encountod her. That unexpected meeting would have occasioned embarrassment in either contingency, and it is so difficult to he pew a lady of cultivation and refine ment capable of such an act, that Jain now, nearly half a century after the event, disjiosml to give my hostess the benefit of that doubt. And now, sir,'' added the general, "this is the third time in inv life I have told this story. I do not remember to have been spoken to la fore ou that subject for many years." He looked at me and seemed to tie considering with himstlf a f<-w m<>- iii'-nts. and then said: "Remcmlicring your intimacy with General Worth, I need not inquire how you came to a knowledge of our secret." "Well, general." I replied, "I have kept the secret faithfully for more than forty years, always hoping to obtain ; your own version of what struck me as a most remarkable incident in your military life." Whistling Superstitions. In whatever way regarded, i ither as a graceful accomplishment or a- the sj>ntaneous expression of light h art<-Iness, whistling has in our own and foreign countries generally at tracted considerable attention. Why it should have been invested with so much superstitious awe it is diflicult t.i say, but it is a curious fact that the same antipathy which it aroused among certain classes of our country, men is found existing in the most dis tant parts of the earth, where, as yet, civilization has made little or no im perceptible jMigress. Thus Captain llurton tolls us how the Aral's dislike to hear a person whistle, called by them el sifr. S.me maintain that th whistler's mouth is not to It- purified for forty days; while, according t-> tin explanation of otlu-rs. Satan touching a man's body causes him to produce, what they consider,an ofT. nsive sound. The natives of the Tonga Islands, Poly nesia, hold it to lx> wrong to whistle, as this act is thought to Ih> disrespect ful to God. In Iceland the villager? have the same ol.je. tmn to whistling, and so far do they carry their supersti tious dread of it that "if one swing! alwut him a stick, whip, wand, ot aught that makes a whistling sound, he -< arcs from him the Holy Ghost" while other In landers, who consider themselves free from superstitions, cautiously give the advice; "Do it not; for who kuowttli what is in the air?" Howes er eccentric these phases of su perstitious It-lb f may appear to us, yet it must not Is" forg.'tb n that very sim ilar notions prevail at the present day in this country. A corresjiondcnt, of Sate* unit tries for instance, re hites how one day. alter attempting in vain to get Ins dog to olrey orders t< come into the house, his wife tried t< coax it by whistling, when she war suddenly intcrupt'sl bv a servant, P Human Catholic, who exclaimed in tin most piteous accents, "If yon please, ma'am, i! in't whistle—every time P woman whistles, the heart of the bless tsl Virgin bleeds!" In some district? of North tiermany the villagers say that if one whistles in the evening it makes the angels weep. Papula t Sn> Monthly. A Fowl Hall. Scene at the baseball ground. A ball was knocked aidewise and caught on fiv. "Foul and out!" was the cry ol the umpire. A charming high school girl looking at the game ejaculates; ; "Ah, really! How can It be a fowl I 1 don't see any feathers!** And she turned to her attendant with an inquir ing look. "Well—oh 1 Yes, you see,'" he stammered, "the reason you don't see the fearers is liecause it lielongs to the picked nine." — Peoria Tratttcrijth ; * FIKHEJIT PA it At, it \ PUS. A watch like faith, is comparatively worthless without works. Why are there no female bill-collec tors?- lb-cause a woman's work is never "dun." " There's millions in it," said Smith. "In what?" asked Jirown. " Why in billions, of course, ha! ha! ha!" .Many a man thinks that the world lias taken up arm* against him when his stomach is struggling hard with a boiled dinner. " You say your brother is younger than you, yet he looks much older?" " Yes, be has seen a great deal of trou ble; but I never married." '• 1 am saddest when I write hurnor us articles," -aid a ' funny man' to an acquaintance. "And I," replied the ac quaintance, "am saddest when I read tliein." it is wrong to laugh at the erookcl l<-gs of tin- young in.ui in tight trousers, but it is jierfeetly proje-r to laugh at the tigiit trou- rs upon the man with tli • crooked legs. Modieal journals continue to Inform ja-opb- "how colds are taken." The Glob* gently imitates that a little infor ■nation ujion how to get rid of them promptly would be equally acceptable. J It gives a New York man an awful start to suddenly observe a clipping from the Chinese newspaper which lias liccn left lying on bis table by some misi hievious friend. His first thought, of course, is that it is aw ash hill. ! Two young city ladles in the country were standing by the side of a wide •lit< h, which they didn't know how to cross. They appealed to a boy who wa coming along the road for. help, whereujmn he poiutel behind them with a startled air and yelled " Motkes!" The young ladies < ross'-l the <1 i ■ h at a single bound. Lili a-ks her mother: "What do you like best, g"<d dreams or bad ties ?' "Corel ones. And you?" "Oh, I like bad d reams best." " Why?" " lb* a use w hen 1 have good dreams I find when I wake up that they are not true, and that annoys me; whilst when I have had bail ones I am happy w hen I wake, because they are not true." Jsimncse Holiday. The Japanese have more than twenty fanciful names by which they designate their Is-autiful untry, but the sobri quet which ti a foreigner seems must fitting is certainly the land of holidays. No excuse is too trivial for a Japanese to make holidays, and when he does not make them himself, the govern ment jeditely steps in and makes tliem for him. Thu.\oneday in every six, call* ed ir til roku, is a statute holiday; so is the third day in every moon, whilst the list of national festivals commemorative of great men or of great deeds is sim ply inexhaustible. If a great man dies in England, they commemorate hiui by a monument in Westminster Abltey; if a great man dies in Jajian.heis remem liep-d by a holiday; so that what with the mythfi al great men who are tbui rememliereil and the historical great men who have died during the past five thousand years, it is a little difficult to find a day of the Japanese yeat which has not the name of a celebrity attached to it; just as, in glancing down a Roman Catholic calandar. w* find that every day has its parti' ulai saint Hut the greatest day of the year fl the festival par excellence of the peopl& the festival into which is compressed fl the essence of the fun and enjoyment fl and happiness of all the other days fl together, is the festival of the new year. We may be familiar with the celebration of the day in Paris or New 1 York, but the proceedings there art tame and lifeless when compares! with the spontaneous outburst of rejoicing I which characterizes new year's day in Japan. 4|fl Fele's llalr. A singular product of vitreous lavas I is called in Hawaii "Pole's This silky, filamentous substance is scrilied by Miss Gordon Cumming her latest book of travels, as "of a rich I olive-green or yellowish-brown color, I and glossy, like the by-gsus of c. rtaio I shells, but very brittle to handle." It I is said to be produced by the wind H catching the fiery spray thrown up H from the crater, but the extreme fine- H ness of its texture seems rather to sug- I gest the action of escaping vapor* I ; withito the lava Itself. This view % I st rengthened by the circumstance that s perfect counterfeit is fabricated at I ; iron-Works by passing jets of steam through molten slag, when a material I resembling vitreous cotton-wool, ad- I mirably adapted for parking fragile fl articles, results. The chief scat of dm I natural production la the gtafc I Hawaiian crater of Kilauea (pereonl- fl fled as the Fire Goddess Peie), and It fl ia found well adapted for nest-biilldiig; I by somt? Inventive Hawaiian binls, I
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