. U. .'V , ', ' y.; Clif orrflt lUpnMiffltt :'" ..'... fi FTIIUMIID ITEKT WXBKHSDAt. T -V ;':" J. E. WENK. . ' . .' OiTlce Id Smearbaugh Oo;' Building, TI0NE3TA, PA. AA' ' Wrip:i-M r.v cived for a shorter period , , . t'inii, iti (0 lix 1 . - V .'.' V i:-(hi.mIi!ii. .oliritod from all ptrtaof th , , ,-v ' .I'M'imi v.- X notice whl betaken of anonymous "iniiniiiiciCKiilH. 3t A WELCOME. sjTh.llie nanny RotWh sho lingors, .' Yet-Slowly comes along, With fairy garlands in her fingers, . With' snatches of sweet song, tier eyes with promiso are beaming, Hor aniilos will rapture bring, The sunlight from her hair is stroatning Thrice welcome, lovoly Spring, She brings us gifts, tho royal maiden, Fair flowors to dock tho hills; , With primroses her arms are ludon, Bluebolls and daffodils. Tale croeuscshave como before her, Wild birds her welcome sing; Ten thousand longing hearts adore her The gray world's darling, Spring. J. M. Ellofi. AFTER MANY YEARS. " Thus, you see, my own Hortense, that I must leave you. I shall pro vide an inc imo of a hundred louls for your expenses. Look forward con stantly to my return; and when for tune again smiles upon mo I shall como back, never again to be separ ated until death." weeping wife could not be coiu forcfid. It was hard that, so soon after ner marriage, when the world seemed so bright and gay, and when wealth and fortune smil 'd so serenely upon her, all should be swept away, and she loft, like a lone widow, to protect her self. Tho husband was almost dis tracted with tin thought of leaving her. His heart had been bound up in bi 4 beautiful Hortense. Sho had been his Idol from boyhood, the bright dream . of his existence; and when he had at tained the distinction of ono of the merchant princes of Montreal ho mar ried her and placed her in the very heart of luxury. Misfortunes came on swift wingi to tho happy pair. Ono by one Ida pos sessions h ft him, and worse than that, others were involved In his affairs who were less able to lose than himself. He could not look upon tho ruin of those round him; for he had a kind heart nnd would not wrong any one for tho world. They that lost by his ill fortune admitted that M. Valentin was a strictly holiest man; and that is groat praise from those who nro in jured by a man's ill luck. 1'eople are but too apt to call it dishonesty. There was but a single bright spit before M. Valentin. Australia gleamed , up warm and golden, and with a des peration born of lovo to his wife and justice to his creditors, he secretly em barked for tho land of promise. .There was a nine days' wonder as to where he was gone and to what purp se; and then he died outof the thoughts of the community as thoroughly as if ho had been dea I and buried. The weeping Hortenso removed to another locality; tho fashionables who had strained every nerve to get in vited to tho house of tho rich mer chant, never pause I to ask after his wife; and lonely and miserable, with out frie:ids or relative?, Hortense drooped and pined, until tho b'auty which her husband so praised was changed into dimness. She never heard from M. Valentin. No tangle word had ever cho;red her solitude since he left her. As month after month dragged its slow weight along and no tidings readied her, her heart utterly sunk within her, and she be lieved him dead. "What indeed could she think? It was better to think so than to believe him unmindful of her, and day after day sho watered his memory with tears of genuine sorrow, as ono sorrows for the beloved dead. Sho put on the 'deepest mourning. " kept her room for months, and when she finally went out again, and that only to church, her sorrow was written plainly in tho face, which if it had lost some of its beauty, was yet most deeply interesting. So at least thought the young Eugene Stanbury, an Englishman of unblemished character and prosperous business, lie saw her at church, devised some ingenious ex pedient to be introduced, and begged the privilege of waiting upon her. Tho lady pleaded her inability to enter tain company, the impropriety of her receiving gentlemen, and a thousand re.'isons why he should not visit her. He overruled them all, besought her to waive all ceremony with him, to consider him as a deeply-attached friend, a brother, anything in short, if he might bo permitted to see her some times ; and Hortense. wearv of her monotonous and dreary life, at last con set' ed. One having renewed tho delicious consciousness of a protecting presence, sho found it hard to give it up for the mere punctilious fear of what the ' world would say of her. Indeed she , had long since shaken hands with the world, and parted from it. She owed . it no favor. It had no right to criticise ' her conduct. Tims she reasoned while listening to Eugene's impassioned en treaties that sho would lay aside her sorrow for the dead and become his wife. Still she hesitated. She truly . lieved in her husband's death ; would ho not have written had beeji living? Of the manv letters be for he she id written him, the many inquiries T she had instituted, no answer could be ; obtained. No one knew anything i;f M. Valentin. Ii an hour of more than usual lone liness and trouble she whispered to VOL. XVI, NO, 2. herself that should Eugene press his suit anew sho would consent to marry him. Sho liked him. She was weary of her own life, caged and cribbed as she was ; sho longed for freedom from tho restraint that poverty and widow hood were constantly Imposing upon her ; and all theso combined operated wonderfully in Eugene's favor. The marriage was strictly private ; and half Mr. Stanbury's friends had no suspicion that sho tuul ever married at all until sho became his wife. He took hef to a pleasant home, a3 comfortable if not quite as luxurious as the one she had shared with M. Valentin ; and all that she could ask for was showered upon her with gen erous profusion. Their dwelling, two or three miles from the heart of Mon treal, was surrounded with trees and flowering shrubs of every description. Inside there was every comfort that a loving heart could suggest. The heart of Hortense awoke to life, to love, to happiness; and to see her thus, rejoiced that of her husband. " Two years of almost unmingled bliss went by, but the third year com menced with some nlarm for the health of Eugene. Twice had Hortenso seen him draw a handkerchief from his lips, which was stosped in blood; and often his nights were passed in cough ing until nature was exhausted, and the morning sleep found him drenched in the terrible sweats which so surely portend consumption Hortense strug gled against this new and terrible sor row. It was the first time that she had watched over one dear to her. It was the first time that sho had seen the effects of this insidious disease, and hope and fear alternated in her breast, until at length she hoped against nil hope, and the blow came down upon her all the harder that she had not schooled herself to feel its ap proach. It was hard to see him parting with tho mute evidences of his brief happi ness. Every window where he sat with her, every arbor whore they had rested, every tree under whose shades they had walked, or whose trunk he had carved with her name, all received a farewell look. "How can I part with you, dear est r" he asked, after his painful jour ney round tho rooms and the garden. "Eugene I do not name it," she said; " you will break my heart." " But you must hear it, Hortense. I cannot stay with you long. Thank heaven that I leave you above want. Promise mo, dear, that you will never leave this homo. Trust me; I will be with you in spirit when tho form is laid in the earth; watching, guarding, if possible, speaking to you." It was his bust night on earth. When the morn broke his eyes were closed in the slumber of death. Hortense wandered for months about her beautiful home like a perturbed spirit. There was nothing that had been1 touched by Eugene that had not a solemn and a sacred value in her eyes. Tho trees he had planted, the bowers he had formed, all had a mean ing to her that no one else could un derstand; and yet upon each one of these and upon her whole heart and life seemed written, the glory has de parted." , It is time to go back to the days of M. Valentin, and see what became of the fond husband, tho courageous ad venturer. At first he was almost dis tracted at tho thought of parting with Hortense; but once the ltubicon passed, he became more calm. A few years he thought would rind them to gether, never to part; and perhaps they would be nil tho happier for the separation. Full ot hope ho went to the mines of Australia. Day by day he wrought there, enduring hardships unheard of before, but bearing them with tho courage and fortitude of a hero. Ever before him wai the word Hortense. It nerved his arm in the rough mines, when he struck his iron into tho gold- giving soil; itsoothedhim when belay burning with fever in a rude shanty in the mountains; his thought by day and his dream Lv night was still his own Hortenso Not a word, however, ever reached him from her; and often he shuddered at the fearful probabilities that arose to his mind. Hortense might bo sick, suffering; might deem him dea 1 or unfaithful ; no, that could never be sho would have faith in him as in the sun. Come what would she would not be shaken in her trust, But as he lay in the miserable shed which held his sick bed ho would have given worlds for one glance from her eye, one pressure of her hand to show that he was not forgotten, and as be watched the stars overhead; shining through the crevices of the low roof, ha thought that if Hortense were dead she would appear to him then in his need. Tho rude miners were too intent on gain to watch beside his bed, and many were the long days and nights in which he lay untended. Aid came at last in the shape of a child a young boy whose father was at work in the mines, and whose mother supported herself and child by washing. Hours did little lien Cole sit beside him, watchL-g every movement and trying to give him ease; or, bringing water from the spring, he would bathe his fevered forehead with his little hands. A tender nurse indeed was little Ben, and on his recovery M. Valentin made the laundress happy by providing for the. boy. M. Valentin had been richly re TIOKESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL ll, 1883. warded for his enterprise. Gold had showered in upon him in almost fabu lous profusion, und now he seriously thought of returning home. Some what enfeebled by his late illness, lie was struck witli dismay at again being prostrated, and to find that his dis order was the dreaded smallpox. That he lived through this was only because his constitution was so excellent that even this enemy could not vanquish it. He did live, but his own mother could not have known him, so deeply scarred and disfigured had he become. "With his first returning strength ho set out for home. Hortenso! Montreal! were now tho beginning and end of his aspi rations. One only thing marred his joy on the homeward route. Would Hortenso lovo the Gcarred and disfig ured face that looked at him from the little glass in his cabin? AVould she endure the long, shaggy beard by which he was enabled to cover a part of the deep scars? lie had taken passage in an Amer ican vessel bound for New York. He arrived safely, and the next hour saw him on his way to Montreal. He bent his course to the neighborhood where Hortense had proposed going after his departure. He inquired everywhere for Madame Valentin. No one knew hor. Ho himself was not recognized, even when he haunted the old places of business. Another name, of course, was upon the familiar door; and hither ho turned his steps, to seo if haply some old friend of former days might not have heard of her. Even the name was unreme;nbered, or pretend ed to he; and yet the person he asked was one whom he femembered as plot ting zealously to be invited to his din ner parties. " They will remember me when thev find I am rich again," said Valentin to himself, bitterly. He turned into a by-street and saw a beggar sitting in the sunshine. It was the most cordial and happy face that had met his gaze since he came back. The man did not ask for anything either, nor show him the withered arm that hung loosely under his coat; and hopeless as tho question seemed, he thought ho would ask it. As he dropped money into the ragged hat that lay on the ground beside the beggar, he said, carelessly: Can you tell mo where Madame Valentin lives now, my man ?" " I used to know her when she lived in Queen street. "Was that the one?" It was the street where M. Valentin's grand house stood. She is gone from that house, but she did not forget old Jack, and many's the penny she has given mo since. Glad enough was I when I heard she was married again." " Married!" exclaimed M. Valentin. " Bless you, sir, yes; married to Mr. Stanbury; but, poor man, he died a year ago." "Do you know where she lives now ?"' 'Somewhere out of town. I don't go so far now I am so old. I think it is in Bloomsbury Place, AVest Terrace." To paint M. Valentin's feelings would be a hopeless task. Hortense married, but still free ! A painful re vulsion took place in his mind, and he resolved, as all seemed to forget him, that he would not yet discover him self. That night lie visited the neighbor hood of Hortense, read "Stanbury" on the door, and managed to secure the next house, which happened to be quite empty, and having its garden adjoining hers. The next day he furnished it richly, brought a number of itervants, bought aline carriage and horses, and under the name of Richie he settled down to watch at his leisure the movements of his neighbor. He chose all his private rooms on that side of the house that overlooked hers. The first time that he saw her was in the garden. She looked still hand some, but very sad and pensive. He wondered if it was for his loss or her late husband's, lie soon became satis fied that she lived a very retired and quiet life; that sho had little company and kept early hours. It was earlv spring, but ho -had plenty of flowers and fruit in the greenhouse, and he sent some for her acceptance with Mr. ltichie's compliments. Again and again he repeated tho gifts, and each lime wnn a selection mat marked a delicate taste. Hortense was charmed with her new neighbor whom she had not seen. The flowers had been sent several times when he added to them a re quest that he might call on tho lady. Sho returned a favorable answer, and under the cover of the twilight hour he found himself in the room with Hortense. The sound of his voice filled her with indescribable emotion, because it resembled that of her first husband; but she persuaded herself that it must bo fancy. Sho found her neighbor agreeable and attentive. He did not neglect any opportunity of being with her. They rode together, sung together, and often his voice would thrill through the soul of Hor tense like a remembered lay from some far-off land. Insensibly she was becoming inter ested in 1dm. He had told her much that was true of his past life, and openly mourned some being whom he said was lost to him he did not say by death but Hortense saw it in that light. More and more tender grew their Intercourse, for the lady seemed utterly to disregard his scars, until she 4 was scarcely surprised, and certainly not offended, at receiving an offer of his hand. Sho was Alone in the world; she had no one to consult, no one who had any right to bl ime her for trusting to one of whom she knew so little. It was her own risk, and she accepted him, frankly telling him how well she hal loved him who had gone from her sight, and promising tl.at she would try to love him as well. M. Valentin exulted greatly in this answer, and came near discovering himself; but ho had desired to delay it to a certain date, and he checked him self in time. The wedding day was appointed, and everything was in read iness for the occasion. In exchanging rings Hortense looked fixedly at the one which the bridegroom gave her. It was the very ring which M. Valen tin had given her at their first wed ding ! She fainted on the spot, and he began to think that he bad carried matters too far. He hung over her with an anxiety such as he never knew before. If she died now by his own folly, what would become of him? He execrated his scheme, and repented even with tears that he ha I been led to pursue it. But Hortense awoke to life, awoke to the new joy of his presence, to ask his forgiveness for the past, and in spire new hope for the future. There had ever been nn Inexplicable attrac tion toward him on her part, from their first interview, and, as she confessed this, her husband was quite inclined to be satisfied, and to forgive the ap parent disrespect which he fancied she had paid his memory. As M. Valentin predicted, the inhab itants of Montreal, as soon as they found out his wealth, were happy to make his acquaintance, and remem bered him as an old friend. "With tho true spirit of an honest man, ho has liquidated his debts to the last far thing; and now, with his still beauti ful wife, he is traveling through Eu rope, happy as any couple can possibly be on their bridal tour. Thumb Portraits. If the "ball," or cushion-like surface of the top joint of the thumb, be ex amined, it can be seen that in the center a?, indeed, in tho fingers also is a kind of spiral formed of fine grooves in the skin. The spiral is, however, rarely, if ever, quite perfect there are irregularities, or places where lines run into each other here and there. Examining both thumbs, it will be seen that they do not exactly matJh ; but tho figure on each thumb is Jhe same through life. If tho thumbs of any two persons ar.- com pared, it will further bo found ti nt no two are alike. There may be, and generally is, a " family resemblance" between members of the samo family, as in other features; there are also national characteristics ; but the in dividuals differ. All this is better seen by taking "proof impressions" of the thumb. This is easily done by pressing it on a slab coveted with a film of printers' ink, and then pressing it on a piece of white paper ; or a little aniline dye, Indian ink almost any thing may bo used. The Chinese take advantage of all this to identify their important criminals, at least in some parts of the empire. We photograph their faces : they take impressions from their thumbs. These are stored away, and if the delinquent should ever agaiu fall into tho hands of tho po'ice, another impression at once affords the means of comparison. The Chinese say that, considering the alteration made in the countenance by hair and beard, and the power many men have of distorting or altering the actual features, etc., their method affords even moro certain and easy means of identification than our plan of taking the criminal's por trait. Perhaps we might with ad vantage take a leaf out of their book. World of Wonders. E'twlu Rooth's Success In (Jcrmany. A London paper thus describes the phenomenal success met with by Ed win Booth, the American actor, in Berlin: Mr. Booth opened as "Ham let " to a house crowded in every part. Tho crown prince occupied tho royal box, attended by his suite, and fol lowed the play most attentively. At the termination of the piece, and after being recalled twenty-four times, Mr. Booth had to receive a deputation of artists and literati who had witnessed the performance. The crown prince also complimented him personally. The perform jco of the company was in German, and exceedingly satisfac tory, the play going without a hitch. The engagement up to now has proved a far greater success than could have been anticipated. The papers are unanimous in placing Booth in front of Salvini and ltossi (both favorites in Berlin), and it is difficult to get ik 'ace unless booked the day before, xlie speculators got fourteen to eighteen marks for six-mark seats, a pretty sure indication of business. The crown princess has been twice and the crown prince four times out of five perform ances. He was accompanied once by his late tutor, the great German Shake spearian scholar, Professor Werder. Since Mr. Booth's success was an nounced he has received invitations from nearly all the principal theatres in Germany. fi . no . . Li I I aVVv V-v' U 4 $1.50 PER ANNUM. SCIENTIFIC AND IXDrSTIlIili, On August 1 an international elec tric exhibition will be opened at Vienna, and a fine disnlay ds antici pated. The coal deposits of Colorado are practically inexhaustible, and they are to be found in almost every portion of the State. Two millions of tons were mined last year. A German linn has put upon tho market some transparent paints to use on coarse-lined cloth. The effect is said to be a perfect imitation of Gobelin tapestry work for wall dis play. In Great Britain the largi sum of $1(VMJO,00,000 is invested in railways. Some of the engines weigh forty-five tons and take a load of ninety tons at a speed of from forty to fifty miles an hour. English silk merchants are thinking about acclimatizing a species of spider which has liven discovered on the African coast. This spider makes a thread very like yellow silk and almost as strong. Jt has be n pnved by numerous ex periments that Hour c uinot bear the action of tin sun. even when not ex posed directly to its rovs. Wlnmlour is exposed to the heat of the sun an alteration takes pla in the gluten similar to that produced by the heat ing of the stones. Por this reason it Is advisable that the transportation of flour should t ike pl.ve, if possible, on cool days or by nigl.t, as well as that flour should be stored in a cool place. The ancients knew a great deal tor which they get very little credit. A short time ago a collection of surgical instruments was ilug up at Pompeii. It was evidently the property of some single establishment, and was quite elaborate. Of course, the "find" was removed to theft'aples museum. One of tho appliances attracted great at tention. It was a b ng rod w.th a me tallic plate fixed at one end at an angle of 133 degrees. At first it was thought to be a cautery for internal operations, but its resemblaneo to the modern laryngeal mirror tuggests the proba bility that it was so used. . The increasing cost of wood in America has led to a great number of experiments in preserving from decay all kinds of wooden structures ex posed to the weather. Among tht more recent plans suggested is one foi impregnating wood with asphalt, com bined "with si.inj kind of antiseptic material. The finished wood, ready to bo put together, is first submitted to heat to drive out the moisture, and is then placed in a hot la'h composed chiefly of asphalt and carbolic acid. On cooling, the solvent of the asphalt evaporates, leaving a skin or coating of the asphalt cn the surface of tht wood that resists water and keeps the antiseptic material securely locked w ithin the pores of the wood. Tin exterior of the wood presents a smooth, black surface that does not need to be painted. WISE WOUDS. Study to be what you wish to seem. Woman is most perfect when most womanly. The man has not lived in vain who plants a good tree in the right plane. Hard workers are usually honest; industry lifts them above temptation ' lie is happiest, be ho king or peas ant, who finds peace in his own home. Men usually follow their wishes til suffering compels them to follow theii judgment. The sleep of memory Is not death; forgotten studies are certiiiu nptitudet gone to sleep. We never know tho true value oi friends. While they live wo are to sensitive to their faults ; when w have lost them we only see theii virtues. Tho best rules to form a man'i character are to talk little and heai much, to reflect alono on what hat passed in company, to distrust one'i own opinion, and value others that deserve it. It is easy to live in this world's opinion ; it is easy(in solitude to liv after your own ; but the great man is ho who, in tho midst of the crowd, keeps with perfect sweetness the in dependence of solitude. If there is anything which even a very clever young man ought to con gratulate himself on, it is the knowl edge, early acquired, that he is not I genius. Por if ho thinks otherwise, the chances are that the mistake may spoil him ; while if ho proves to be a genius, the world will find it out before he does. It has never been ascertained pre cisely what the scorpion lives on. Per haps he is sustained by the conscious ness of knowing that he is a pedipal pous pulmonary arachnidan. AVehave known some people with high-sounding titles whose mode of making both -nds meet was a profound mystery to t lie general public Nobody ever has been known to die from the rebuke of a scorpion, but that they cause a spe cies of madne.'s will not be denied by anybody who has been btung. If the sufferer is not dial for the tyne, be talks as if he was. -iiftiwjs. , flATTO OF ADVERTISING. One frqitsre, on inch, on iniwtio... $T On f"i anri, one inch, one month IS (hie Hiinnre, one inch, three monlhi. .. One Hiinnre. one inch, one year... Me Two fciinsres, one year I Qnarter Column, one year W Half Oolnmn, one rear On Column, one year K M lgal notice at established rate. Marriage and death notieee gratis. All bill lor yearly advertisement eolUatml quarterly. Temporary advertisement att be paid in advance. Job work, cash on delivery. THE HAPPT E3IiA2rD& Herofttna about the town from dawa 8. dark, in old man with bent form and whitened hair, ' - Who dreams the arth he treads on is a bark -' That sails to find a shore loreye fair, ' . The shore so many seek and do not find.' ' -.' Among the busy crowd, he heeds it not, Bat goes and comes to all our pleasnr blind; , The world he lives in p eois by him forgot. Sometimes he stops one ir. the crowded throng And questions thus: "Why do w sail so far? I know full well the vessel's course is : wrong, For farther sonth the Happy Inlands are. And we are near them, for last night I heard The sound of ' mnsie coming from their shores, And caught the scent of flowers, and on bright bird Flew homeward, over us, to roam no more I almoet thought I saw them in the dawn, Fair as the rosy peaks of Paradise: ' ! Bat when the day broke fully they were gone. Far, farther south the shore we search for lies! Pray God they turn the vessel ere too late! . ( Must we sail by, 89 many times betOre? They make mistakes and lay it all to Fate That we have never reached the longed-f oi shore." .'-".. And as he talks the old mau'e eager eyes : Are looking southward, where he hopes to see 11 The purple peaks, crowned with tfVrang glory, rife ' ' i 'Neath fairer skies than thos of Italy. No sight of land breaks on his- hopef nl eyes. "Ah, we have missed them, as eo oft be fore! And we were near, .so near to them," h cries. "Must wo sail on and on forovermore?" Where are oar Happy Islands? Must we sail Forever past them when so near tbey seem? Blow from the shores v left, O'a favoring gale, And waft us to the shores that haunt each dream! v. - Oh, fellow voyagers, pray God we find .'V The land we seek and do not pass it by! Oh, blow ns to the south, inconstant wind! For there, we think, tho Happy Inlands lie Eben E. Rexford, ii The Continent IIUMOK OF THE DAY. A fat office The soap-boiler's. Headquarters Tho hatter's store. Carvers of their own fortuuos Butchers. The early angler catches the worm ind a cold. Every carpenter h;w a plane duty before him. To the average Athenian the dear est spot on earth is tho Greece spot. A sermon always seems short to the woman who wears her new bonnet t church for the first time New York Commercial. "There is a coolness between us; good-bye," said tho fish under the ice to the fisherman on top, who was try ing to break through and catch him'. The Drummer. It the report that General Sherman kisses every girl to whom lie is intro duced has any truth in it, we don't wonder that so m:wy of our young men have military ambition. Oil City liliz:ird. Oliver Wendell Holmes says that oad air, bad whisky and irregular hab its keep the doctors alive. He must be mistaken. Those very things have killed several doctors in this city. I'hayuiw. A man at a New York hotel tabb the other day, had some Liniburger cheese sent to' him. A littlo boy who sat beside him turned to his mothei and exclaimed: "Mamma, how I whh I was deaf and dumb in my nose." Mine. Scalchi, of the Patti troupe, sings three times a week and gets t2,')M per month. She began life as a scrubber in t'ueCovent Garden theatre. Her voice, therefore, . should be soaprano, but it ian't.-i'Ulsl urj yruph. This Is the way that a Galveston J Texas) paper "drops into poetry" : ' Early to bed and early to rise makei a' m an healthy, wealthy and wise: but still it won't work, however hard he tries, in bringing him wealth unless be advertise." AVhat can a man say to this excla mation from the Wouittn Suffragist: "Women ara called the 'weaker sex' and yet, up to the hour of going ti press, not one of her sex iu this coun try has shown enough intellectual weakness to embark in tho weather prophet business, or attempt to eat sixty quail hi thirty days.' TBS XIXmNT.- Their pa tient said They must Not wed. Quoth he, , "lot's fly To par Son nigh." Quoth she, "Ay! Ay!" -A TALK. From win Dow ope ' There hung A rope, By which To slop. Without A sound Bhe reached The ground, Hr lov- r found. One night She roxe. Took her Tl ey flod, Uttet cloth-", Were wed. Wliil Pop Knougb HUd. Did do.. Arthur Let, in Puck.