MHAT 3 : . i ' J ti -yj m All A ft LA I t i' i YOU i Ton fwl dull. lnuiLio .nj ln.W-rtb.Ujr mrSuH. aud m.iitiiy; jxp,no ,- or emptm. or .tni,J (... .-.mti. b,ltw rli. irregular .(.rtt?i, dim?? U rn tl.e y.- nwou. pttiSf1,0 -:- Immunity of teVnnI?i mini wittt chilly JJLEZ;. " el? nr. Uuii.l.-nt pm hor, TTrf J ...n.-iii.-w, niter mi-. ''"sT 11H..-I nnd mireri-mm,,? ..-r-. foolm- of OtmmL ril, mill V OJ uajZf ,r. If ,.. VS' I. . .n:.n. .itnn muliiuit .glT!- Itl I i'ii- l.iinif. Shin ''!, jLV,'. ' 1 "iiMi!, or y lintili ... I In fur,. i uintioit,i i- rr ! u i u a OQ th. tn.' -.... fr. mv ttl k and . ft ti.-nil "' "niiliii th,. a, 1 1 . t l 1 1 1 'l UM i n-l. in W..11-I.-I ' t-' in .r. I'l'llll t. r-ton.tivo tonic (taTi ' I nutrition, thwbj buK?M ml med,.-!,,,. hJs-.f urinir r.-verami As..7? . Au... n. k..,arMf.w. uaidu -wla"" lr. IMc ..wry CUHLb ALL HUSSCRS n ii i-omnion lll.it.-h. or Enintu- iii. il t-rhrnn, S ., .-ni, m snort, ui r nirir, - lnr a, tavt,ro3 ' t Kat in I l.-rB rnpiill, kf nitliion.-.-. Fj.HH-illT1bZ;M ..t.'iu-T In runnv Tt J51! rf 'ill ....-..i ..!'! w.-h,i,b HlB-Jnim iMiiif. t.)itn, r Tlik v .-.l i.iiin.U. n.l trti A litrirf Tnnriiu n lii-iu-. or Ui CONSOIPTIOX ,., i ..i.t ovt-r this tt-rnhly fi ! .... . -"iTv-iwn( - i . i. ti. i" t inw ITU -I ,.1 t!i:tt naniw ka tMi ttnca ; r.. ... i:- whM-h, fmm it wxi4ert i .' in f tnnti, r mrnuifattniny i i .....l.'i.-:ui.-4iic. aiiu-btiuniA, pirtcn,.,.! ,::-.!ivh i-mifTtnA m unquajfii m ' , rv T' "m-'v t'-r onmimpuuo, but ftrirf" ironic i4'iUM' i)t Uuu I .iver, Blood, and Ltr V r W.-,: Ppfttlmc of RlW. iv . f r.M'i'U. hromo NttMtl Ctn, tv : . Asfir.i.i. Sv'p ourhrV d4 - . I 'tuijiitH. at fl.00, or &ih -..". i t.-n 'Ttt in flt am p fre Dr. hrf a . ;.-umi'tnn. Aiumt, 1 War'd's Di:p8nsarf Madical TRi4TEO FUEL rill BUC JP" . BM Tn p - 'f It . . i u t -U Curt jmt iimii.i! i 't h .-... ti n.t Wvt fft mk Krt 'a-" in, . '! ru (ti.tpr Ml -9 i(h' tt : twt'-t 1 . a s.aytar ,; ( .. i x. ir . hunt uc v i.ni m I r t f 1 rr trtinBi ir - a -M 'irt"f of Mf fM t .b '"-n p tt'imrMr of 1 . - " r.-4 nn , ta it k VMf. i , ..-v o itA-n. .-. Hi to k -t, - v. s--.i fur fr- pamphlet mm II II. .UK 1 wiV. H. k ml crtrtrm fall o " 7 .: -'. S 1 j:h St.. belrw CUobill. PiiiJ . . , ., , ..rr.rn.nn ill PFCI At 1 ..... v r.,.... tlio kpiwd br . .'..rwr.t. A.1ici frxnJ .; 1 .r : ii a. m. tui .wT FRAZER: AKLE GREASE ., t W..rl.t. M.vlr.mlTllTtbr r ''T WANTED: nl i.l T FOIITHISCOr r .'M f.r n;rjiD SMAli'J LIFE-sizECRAYOHPiCTJ; . . . .!! hMnftfoL :r in''. . .1. AKnl rim rM a .-' . irw-v riuiimtuQ. Aaurv I ill. rn.illonuJ rublihinPn,li' S2S MAUKET ST., rillLADSL" !, - I V I T It. II0BL '.: l.cal and Surgical 0c" 4l liv ' -"- P . . .... rLJ. ! .-.', Jr K.-m.rr.l . In ui trriiurnt w ? v.. : i...rv..ii .Iciiilltr . -i-ri..ii H.m.o.ri'-" 4 ;. . on unir. cum"-"! Tr . 41 IO t it i U.'rcUaul only' wnlJ t j . r i ' .. iii.l.nrvnnr-l-";1' - , .ii, ai h ..K'i - r i-::-.l-..-1-'.----:,i'?'': .. i.M.-.l. v.li' -:..-1,i.i--T a : tc. w . m m i i i ii pi ; i -! ..vcrn.rCHVr.!;-;vtiA l i v. ... ' in.. j.ai Ji'ii --, PAT U i:, r n j.e. U'"- '-VL, i- r ' N Mw.xluil)f up rf!i r:iL irn-at I.I.....I ........ "W nrstiHii f R binTiy i j ..l...i. in .Hin"u'SIS.I r . .Tirana -4 Im mIihi no S.nriil.... a 1 - vm nuuQui FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LlR i mrliiv . l.-ino it Krumni Dr. ..1.1. it MrUlral Blw.ifrjiJJ" . ''! buornnt HMrum" .. nctti and tHolUy lii-uita will h . -i 0 r-jt,.7 ... -"-r' 7T I - ...,.,.l!.W'lMJ . ,:..Mt..(J'.fl"'l L - . ...... - .laut 1 SOLDJERSK&g: ........rw'',;!'"' I u.liibtfat"w f. Rjn fe& lu BB . B.F. 8CHWEIEB, VOL. XM. ... w,:,ri:r. am. i ni t A".'h . .-i;t t!i tnu. drift, on ; rTT 'tV. Ive of life U gon. v hrr!u" -lrt.- th hour u.tom, a 1 nrrr-'" rouu.l tomamM th ly, Thr i'mi lT l.rn., r :n- cro. iu.!r-'fy tU"t ' ""'rtDKy- 1 l,r tilling'" JKMnt forrst slaJea Tl.r ! .-oii-r rule br tlm bank ol Nrnuc, M .1 1 in-t" tulrij!ai ' tnai.l " a'iJ ii-'i.nr.l iww o( Knululi men. t-1 r:b-r t" H' "v" Siiin thwr t.il.-n witb iut bl.l, TUn li" lii:-r.l. t tbelrill Il.-t urn uU-.li"" tlj hum!. Wti.it :. wtiat ny il ci mncy, li i .;-:. r (J'irtin, Liixib'Hi, , n i ...ni li.mtlon tetl(y. Tins r . ''i wimi.n wltnfirth I r-...'" r.l of prison Kruuad, ri ic i.uil.l'i! 1i-i;h Irfi iuno, Jv Mn.- I ir "lilt bovrr n.nu.l !i .r M.ry' b.low of luroue. oM.im MM.th. r. nitl.l .lirinu. Ii .ii mi .' '"-'I't wrt-n, 4 ..rry '.i;lit "ii r.irili w:m ruluo In lr a man. ami a .inreul -.. n in iv ili.--" niortiil irin bars l.rl.irr'll. V wliltH 1IIII SlUl b ritbO, g.n u. iv it - ir itbv tli mars, An. I i ti l nnl." liiil of braren. AT Al DIKU.NIi x:r Arthur Sclwyn, lUrt., La.ly Ma-iiMa "; ii, iforKliia Saville, .'vi.;e Il.'iiif, Ilatuptou. Surtey, Kutf ati'l. I'll in UJ tliree travelers insir b.- thwiiM'lve.i on tlie register ol U.-!rl i'..i"w toulier at AuJierae, l i'.l.rr U'-y li.i't tven conveyeJ in kn ai.t.ii'i.itt-J beiliu from luiuitier-Cov-n l:u. Vny r.istly .;i:i.-.iit'J were they, tbia 'i.iv.ni: ji.ui; ciaij.lr. who bad taken t.i ttie continent imuietl lately i.p..!-j i.'iium i.itioii of the nuptial Lriie.ix'.iou, and tin.- gentle Ctrl, youn s i;er of l.aily M.tlilda, who knew inr.li:ug of life save through the pages of tlit; romances of Itichardson and Miss Burney. Wliile w.utiugdinner the new couiws amused theinelvts by looking out f tl.e win. lows of the dining room, ami . re delighted with the gay as-j-ct i'ie?eiiteil by the tlocks of the little Uretoii village. It. waa at the cloae of .n- teii.i ei : t; e cod ti-Uing otT the coast of KeLn .l I .i i heen favorable, all the ;,l eiii,en were irtiirning to port, none t.iv;i. i' s: the iuiiui-r of their niess, tint cieat Hal. r.sH, Hie sea. Laving for ome shown herself clement. Wliiie the two ICngUali women prat :1 m that ft accent which on femi u:ue US translonus the. rude Suion iU.oiii into bit'lilkn wartllng, a man rnteieil at. 'I seated himself at the table. Very strange m uptarance waa this ler-Hii:.ie; ins uttire was negligent, bis branl stragjiiug, his hairhuug down to his sliioiI.U-i -i, his nose was iniuillne, h'.i niontli iiisd.nnrul, his bis blue eyes niriundio'y mid troubled at least so tliiiiiht M--s .ivii;e. A few moments later Ihehi'Si, of the hottt bustled In au i haleiird to present the stranger. 'My guest, the physician of Au-da-ri.e,'' he Bind, with something ol erui'li".-' i.i.l as Sir Arthurlowed slighlly, he milled: "a feilow countryman." No uiatl.-r in what part of the world (ouuil, lor a native born Briton the title of "Englishman breaks the ice; tlie larimet unbent and extended his tai.d to the doctor, who appeared in no seu.-e overpowertd by the conde scension. "tril forgiv me," murmured Lady Matilda, "but this village doctor seems to cotiM'ler himself on a footing of quality w'.tli a baronet. One must euxe to France to sej anythiug so ex traordinary." Whatever he might think or be, the doctor expressed himself la choice terms and the purest English. Ills nuiewl,.it ferocious physioguomy light ei.ed up as he talked. lie was enthu-.a?tu-u. 'y in love with 15rlttany, and he i'r.i:.-.l her sceu'.c beauty with per suasiveelinpieiiee. lie made interested listeners of the little ilugllsU party, limner was long over, but no one cared tn leave the tab.e. Vk'rio, In the course of a life, has not a remembrance of one of these loin and seemingly endless chats with a fellow countryman far from home, who may hanpen to be the improvised friend o au hour's ac .lu.iiutance. As the clock struck 10 the doctor ijuickly rose. The pleasure of speaking my mother tongue once more Las ruaiie me forget the flight of t.me," he said, "ana I must hid you good night. But do not ht.l to visit, tefore you leave, the famous caves of Douamenez." '"That IS lllll ossilile " rnliil T.al Matil.l.i. "We have ouly one day to devote to this place, and to-morrow there ii a Pardon at IVnmarch that has rather excited our curiosity." "Much obliged for vour Tardon," exclaimed her sister, who bore the pet nameol (ir.gory; "but I would iruch rather visit the caves." ' Nothing easier iu the world,' said tfc doctor. "I am going to see a patient at Trogtieur to-morrow and ciin Lffer yon a seat iu my pony chaise. e can readily push on to Douarne Ilez., "I accept gladly," responded Gre i"r, giving herself no uneasiness, not it!.3taiiiiiuS the stormy glances shot it !r by her sister. "Very well, then; that is settled," pursued the doctor, "To-morrow at t on " IC'i Slli1'' e a' our P08'" Har lly had tiiey returned to their 'kt.i.g mom when Matilda broke forth 'a wrath. '"ion naughty, rartlepated, ungov r.iab.e girl, have you lost your senses? '-'ve you become a fool, that you thus "range to k- riding about the country r';"-ureak with a complete stran- should I refuse a proposition .e with so much good grace?' re wniM the yJlltl woman, -and one snrTUnfJ by our EndHah usage? I'm v,fi Arlhur "on't blame me for it. ill you r" ttn' ut " an'" spiled Sir Arthur. "I confess that this melancholy look- tte 7,ll''mlt, has made a conquest of B- He has the style of a perfect jren- J ic WL 11 in.1, ncu- t!. , r. C,reRory to his care. It is a llt- -;"r.u.ar, out t.lat man's fc-y unknown t j me. I' ffirthims.: i,,v ik i s face Is net ve certainly ...'"1.1"'.taiir' reason for belmr on one's Sot i ,' . f"1'1 ''y lwyn- "One does t.. h, , 1 al,i!"n Lome and friends "Nr: niy Jeilr-" "a'J the baronet. thing. lDeT arB eatable of any- limit ,, , 13 c that passes the hm.ir r Vtt m. conceals TTr" 'or some rr.r. r.Uon. .. - "Jh, Bay ngU out that be has com mitted a crime and have done with It," cried the impetuous Gregory. "Good night, I'm going to bed now. so that I may be up by sunrise to-morrow." . . Long before the appointed hour the little Englishwoman was watching at her window. The doctor was punctual to the moment. Gregory stole away softly, trembling lest his sister should venture to assert her authority. But Lady Matilda slept peacefully beside her lord, and no one hindered the girl from mounting the doctor's pony chaise which set off at a smart gallop. The doctor no longer wore the attractive air that had marked him during the conversation of the previous night; his face was sorrowful as ir painful thoughts had haunted him all through the hours of darkness. Georglna re mained silent and just a little fright ened, gazing at the landscape which liradualiy revealed itself with the rising of the morning mist; the sterile moor and the stretches of heath reaching far beyond the line of sight. Hardly a dozen words had been exchanged be tween the yald when Trogueur was reached and the doctor drew rein to call on his patient. While the young lady waited for him glancing at a volume of Tennyson that he bad brought with her with a view to killing time, two washerwoman were hard at work in a neighboring pond, beating their linen with wooden bats to get out the dirt. "Say, Jeanne," said one, "who's going to pay the fees of this tine gent that's doctoring Magloire? The poor coot hasn't got a ceut." "Fees for the doctor of Audiernel" ejaculated the other. "That shows, my dear, that you haven't been very long in this part of the country. Why, girl, his science, his remedies and everything else he gives for nothing; night and day bis little trap Is rolling along the roads; be is at l'eumarch, at 1'logofX, at Douamenez no matter where, so long as there is some unfor tunate to be helped. Seems to me that our good God sent him here to be a blessing in our villages where life is so hard and wretched. Georgy allowed her book to fall from her hand and became an eager listener. What! This man wai rich! He might live in luxurious ease, and yet he bail thrown himself into this barren country as one enters La Trappe or La Grand Chartreuse. What could have led his steps thither? Charity, despair or remorse? Here was a mystery that the romantic maiden would gladly t enlightened upon, but the sphinx seemed Indisposed to part with her secrets. The sick call ended. The doctor re sumed the reins of the light vehicle and in half an hour they stopped at the Hotel deXorvege. Gregory hurried down her breakfast to that she might rush to the beach. The gray mists bad disappeared, a radiant sun illuminated the bay in all its ity-four kilometres of circumfer ence. The Uu Ilia-' uplifM-d their iu.itrr.ts within easy reach like so many era ban It-r! fortresses, while at ttie verge of the horizon the Daretx hilht sank away into the waves like the foothills of 1'ausillipus in the bay of Ba;:e. Tne wives of the fishermen were squatted out on the strand mending nets; chil dren played around in hosts like kit tens sunning themselves, and the sea faring men, justly luxuriating in their rest after hard labor, consumed tobacco with much and becoming gravity. a . Georgina w as delighted. She entered each of the caves opening along the coast, eager to see, collect and carry away ail of ocean's treasurers that were udfolded before her gaz;; the soli tary crabs in their grotesque shells, the sea anemones in their yellow glitter and all the host of marine worthies bad an uudescribable charm for her. Mie laughed merrily, when her feet, slipping on the treachesous moss, splashed the water that was hidden in the rocky rifts; she shrieked with tear when long-legged'ctaw-tish or lobsters in the throes of digesting heavy meals came within her purview, wrapped up like monks in long, brown cowls. The doctor, following slowly after her and smiling at the childish delight of the girl, ex amined his watch at length and said: "We had better hurry. We have been amusing ourselves too long. You must know that this is no longer pleas autery with us. The tide lills these caves completely when it rises to the full " And when the girl insisted upon gathering a fresh collection of sea shells, he cried. "For the love or heaven, no more imprudence! Here we are at the ex tremity of the shore and iu order to return to Douamenez we musi aouoie Point de la Chevre. Half an hour lon ger and it will be impossible," Both quickenea tueir steps uuu iuo wind drove the waves along with un common force. In vain they sought refuge on the narrow path that skirts the caves; whirlwinds of sand and drifts of sand blinded them and clogged their pace. Skudderingly, In spite or herself. Georsrina recalled the beautiful scene in "The Antiquary," which a short time before she nail reaa in me terrace of Savllle park to the piacia murmurings of the Thames. Suddenly she observed her compan ion grow pale. J hey nau rracueu spot where the beach, making a sudden turn, formed a point iu the sea. There, an hour previously women were singing iunn r and children were playing iu the sund; nothing now was visible but a vast stretch of troubled ocean. Toor child," cried the doctor. In distress, "what a sin of me to have v.i-.-.tirht. rnn intii this terrible danger. But all is not lost. We can call for a : b.1 tkA ka,n-i1 neip, anu possiuiy j uaj An.i with his Hturdv voice he sought to dominate the tempest. Her feeble treble was joined to his shout, but none heard their call. They ran from edge to edge of the narrow spot of beach which was left to them, but which was hinir constantly encroached on by the tide. The waves became mountainous n.i fairlv rushed upon them. Five minutes more and they would be en gulfed. . . "Alas!" moaned Gregory, benumbed with terror, "what an awful fate, to die thus, a girl of 16 and only at the threshold of life. Save me, doctor, for the love of God I" Without answering, the doctor drag ged the girl to one ot the adjacent caves. Imminent danger inspired him with a desperate resolution. He deter mined to climb to the utmost height of the natural arch and there fight to the last the incoming of the waters. The horrified girl found her strength fauln her; ten times she essayed to scale the lagged point of granite and as often she fell back with lacerated and bleed ing hands. At length by a marvelous TO MIFFUNTOWN. exertion of strength and address, the doctor managed to raise himself to the summit of a rock, which commanded the whole sweep of the cavern, and drew Miss Saville up aft him to a point of precarious safetr. w.en a sin gle false movement might pruclpitate them into space or dash them against the rocky sides or the recess. Already the sea began to wa.-h the base of the cliff. Stopped .r an instant by the narrow opening, tiey returned the next moment with monotonous and terrible regularity. The flood gradually gained the victory, the hollows and channels of the sod were first filled, then the rocks were swiftly gained on by the advancing sea and in turn disappeared. Molluscs, crabs, lobsters and shell fish of all sorts recovered trom their torpor and began a busy quest for food, a whole submarine world sprang into activity and a crystalline light like that of an aquarium filled the cave. An enormous breaker struck the rock on which the doctor and bis trembling companion had taken refuge; a second would Inevitable topple it over. Greg ory closed her eyes that she might not see the approach of death. Several moments ot unutterable an guish were spent when the doctor said: "Be brave, child; we are now safe. The tide will rise no higher to-day. It will remain at flood tor an hour, then it will begin to fall, and tn two hours we will be able to walk hence dry shod, while in three hours Point de la Cherve will be released from Its watery embrace." Yes, but how are they to live during that time, bent double and cramped up on their risky perch, suffocated by the heavy, foul air, their position growing momentarily more difficult. The act ive vigilance of the doctor never de serted him. Carefully he drew from bis pocket a phial of cordial and forced a few drops between Gregory's clenched teeth, and at the same time briskly rubbed the stiffening arms of the sense less girl who was, despite herself, rap idly falling Into lifelessness. How slowly and painfully the hours dragged along. As soon as the tide permitted, bruised and stiff with their double imprisonment, they descended from their sore but saving perch, crawling along the wall like lizards, Gregory too feeble to walk and her guide no longer able to carry her. Happily their absence had awakened general uneasiness, and search expedi tious were organized on their behalf. They were soon discovered and taken to the Hotel de Xorvege, where they dried their dripping garments before a roaring wood lire. Miss Savllle insist ing upon starting back to Audierne without losing an instant, for she knew that her brother-in-law, Sir Arthur, and her sister would be In a state of normal terror because of her protracted absence. Night had fallen. The pony chaise rolied along the silent country road. The villages were wrapped in slum ber. How good it lelt to live after having sat face to face with death, saved by him, and to be alone with him In this starry night following a day of tempestl They approached Audierne; at the end of the road the steeple of the village church uplifted its gray pro file. "I shall never forget this day." whisiered Gregory she did not dare say "I shall never forget you." 'And I," returned the doctor, "shall never recall it without emotion. In five minutes we shall separate; perhaps to say good-bye forever, but in my exile I shall often invoke the image of my charming companion of a dangerous day." .Never to meet more! Gregory felt her heart turn to ice; she completely lost her head anil seuse ot propriety. "Why should we ever part?" she asked in a choking voice, "One word and my hand is yours,' ot joy but a sal astonisnment was it thai transtigured the features of the physician. "You dear innocent child," he an swered softly, "look at me, 1 am more than double your age. Can you not see that wrinkles are already creeping into my face? My heart is still more seared with scars. My life Is Mulshed; yours is only about commencing. For get me, or rather, if you sometimes do me the grace to think of me, let it be in your prayers." "But what matter the years which you so cruelly oppose to me," she cried, "when I love your" "You are imprudent," he replied, with emotion. "Do you know the man whom you think you love? Do you know that lie hides in his exile a past that nothing can efface? He is as dead to all of his blood as though he were already deioited in the tombs of his ancestors. Shudder, well you may; for the man beside you has blood on his hands!" It was too much, the day had been too full of emotion, and the over exci ted girl swooned. When she returned to her senses she was on her couch and Lady Matilda w as seated by her side. As she seemed to interrogate her with a glance. Gregory, glad of a chance of easing her aching heart, poured out the whole history of her day's adventure. Hardly bad she concluded when Lady Selwyn cried: "Now I remember all! The doctor of Audierne is none other than Lord Henry Fltzroy, whose adventure caused such a terrible scandal in Loudon so ciety. I had good reason to dread this man. He had been fatal to all with whom he has come in contact. Lady Otney, one of the most beautiful and virtuous women of the court was his latest victim. She eloped with him from her ancient spouse and they fled to a feudal manor in Scotland which the Fizroys have possessed for centu ries. One evening, while walking on a terrace at whose foot flows the Clyde, the dishonored husband suddenly sprang upon them with a drawn pistol, which he fired at the lady. In frenzied rage Lord Fiteroy seized Lord Otney and flung him into the Clyde, an im petuous river that never gives up its prey. Lady Otney lost her reason and ? . . ... ,.. TSM.nAA her oeirayer iooa m ugc iu a iuwii where he puts to good use a science that be had studied for occupation in his leisure, but the good that be does to-day can never blot outtbe evil of his past. At your age, my sweet sister, one becomes easily consoled; before long, I trust, you will have forgotten this unhappy hero of romance." "That will never be," cried the un haopy girt, whose cheeks were already glowing with incipient fever. "At the very threshold of lire my heart is mur .Wa.. mr first affection disdained. I feel deadly ill, but dont try to have me cured. Why should I live any longer? Of what good am I In this world?" . - ui with riAltnnm AnrV for six weeks she lay a sufferer from fcAkia O0IBTITUTI0I TKB HTI01 AID JUNIATA COUNTY. fever. The doctor of Audierne fre quently called to enquire about her; it will readily be understood that she was not under his care. As soon as she became convalescent Miss Saville returned with her family to England. Never was the subject of the strange attachment that sprang up in the caves of Douamenez mentioned by the two sisters. Gregory had de clared her intention of leading a s ngle life and resolutely declined many offers of marriage. Six years later, on Christmas eve, Gregory beheld her sister. Lady Sel wyn, mortally prostrated under an attack ot congestion of the lungs. "Dear sister," whispered the dying woman, "had you died at Audierne, who now would there be to care for my two little girls?" Miss Saville understood from that moment that she had no longer any right to dispose of her destiny, and she solemnly promised her sister to be a mother to her orphan children. She kept her word. Her romantic visions gave place to inflexible reality. The fond dreams of the past she re tained, but as a soft and melancholy memory. Many years after she learned that the doctor of Audierne had died on the field of honor attending the victims of a fell epidemic, and the lips of the old maid murmured a prayer for the soul of the guilty one who had so nobly expiated bis sin. A SL'UOKOVS L.IFK. A Pivgo From Hie KajMrrience or tho Fat tier of Surgery in Ilia Day. I have always maiuuuued that it Is impossible tor any man to be a great surgeon if he Is destitute, even in a considerable degree, of the finer feelings ot oar nature. I have often lain awake for hours the night before an important operation, and suffered great mental distress for days after it was over, until I was certain that my patient was out of danger. I do not think that it is possible for a criminal to feel much worse the night before his execution than a surgeon when he knows " that upon bis skill and attention must de pend the fate of a valuable citizen, husband, father, mother or child. Sur gery under such circumstances is a ter rible taskmaster, feeding like a vulture upon a man's vitals. It Is surprising that any surgeon in large practice should ever attain a respectable old age, so great are the wear and tear of mind aud body. The world has seen many a sad pic ture. I will draw one of the surgeon. It is mid-day; the sun is bright and beautiful; all nature is redolent of joy; men aud women crowd the streets, ar rayed in their best, aud all. apparently, is peace and happiness within and without. In a large house, almost overhanging this street so full of life and gayety, lies upon a couch an ema ciated figure; once one of the sweetest and loveliest ot her sex, a confiding and affectionate wife and the adored mother of numerous children, the sub ject of a frightful disease of one of her limba, or, it may be of her jaw, if not a still more important part of her body. in an adjoining room is the surgeon, with his assistants, spreading out his instruments and getting things in readiness for the impending operation. He assigns to each his appropriate place. One administers chloroform, another takes charge of the limb; one screws down the tourniquet upon the principal artery, and another holds himself in readiness to follow the knife with his sponge. Tha flaps are soon formed, the bone severed, the vessels tied, and the huge wound approxima ted. 1 he woman Is pale and ghastly, the pulse hardly perceptible, the skin wet with clammy perspiration, the voice husky, the sight indistinct. Some one whispers into the ear of the busy surgeon: "The patient, I fear is dy ing." Restoratives are administered, the pulse gradually rises, and after a few hours of hard work and terrible anxiety reaction occurs. The poor woman was only faint from the joint induence of the antithetic, shock, and loss of blood. An assistant, a kind of sentinel, is placed as a guard over her, with instructions to watch her with the closest care, and to send word the mo ment the slightest change for the worse Is seen. The surgeon goes about his business, visits other patients on the way, and at length, long after the usual hour, he sits down, worried aud exhausted, to his cold and comfortless meal, with a moulh almost as dry and a voice as husky as his patient's. He eats mechan ically, exchanges hardly a word with any member of his family, aud sud denly retires to his study to prescribe for his patients never, during all this time, forgetting the poor, mutilated object he left a few hours ago. He Is able to lie down to get a moment's re pose after the severe toll of the day, suddenly he hears a loud ring of the bell, and a servant, breathless with ex citement, begs his immediate presence at the sick chamber with the exclama tion, "They think Mrs. is dying." He hurries to the scene with rapid pace and anxious feeling. The stump is of crimson color, and the patient lies in a profound swoon. An artery has sud denly given way, the exhaustion is ex treme; cordials and stimulants are at once brought Into requisition, the dressings are removed, and the recu sant vessel is secured. The vital current ebbs and flows, re action is still more tardy than before, and It is not until a late hour of the night that the surgeon, literally worn out in mind and body, retires to bis home in search of repose. Does he sleep? He tries, but he cannot close his eyes. His mind Is with his patient, he hears every footstep upon the pave ment under his window, aud is in momentary expectation of the ringing of the night bell. He is disturbed by the wildest fancies, he sees the most terrific objects, and, as be rises early in the morning to hasten to bis patient's chamber, he feels that lie has been cheated out of the rest of which he stood so much in need, is this picture overdrawn? I have sat for it a thou sand times, and there is not an educa ted, conscientious surgeon that will not testify to its accuracy. Japanese l-'avshiuus. The dress of Japanese women and children is uniformly of bright-hued calicoes, fresh and clean, their bead covering a gayly lacquerred bamboo hat of native manufacture. Every woman must have elaborate inlaid silver breast pins with which to fasten her loose upper robes. Some bamboo hats are exquisite specimens ot plating; the fin est qualities are made ot carefully pre pared strips ot bamboo, costing In Ban tam but a mere trifle, while in Paris they are retailed at a profit of nearly 1,000 per cent, as true Panama baM. TXZ EROSOEICZXT OF TUB LATB. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOHEU 12. ISS7. THE POTENT STEAM WHISTLE. Stanley and Other Explorers Scaring the Natives Oat of Their Wit. When a traveler takes a steamboat for the first time upon an unexplored river he usually finds that the whistle is as potent as a howitzer would be in keeping unfriendly natives at a re spectable distance. The cable informed us recently that when Stanley reached the big town of Yambunga, on the Aruwiml River, the village was de populated In a twinkling by a blast from one ot his steamboat whistles. When they found that nothing had hart them, however, they came back. The scare they got may have accounted for the friendly reception they gave Stanley. When he visited this town several years ago the people would not sell him a particle of food. They had abundauce. as be was able to ascertain, though they pleaded that they were In a stuxving condition. This time, however, they sold him plenty of eatables, and did what they could to speed him on his way. Nothing impresses a savage more than a big noise, and nothing inspires him with greater terror than a noise he does not understand. Baron Von Schwerin says that firearms are chiefly useful to the Congo natives for the noise they can make with them. He thipks the native with a gun in his hand is not half so much to be feared as when he is armed with his lance. Flintlock muskets and gunpowder are two leading articles of import into the Congo region, but as yet the natives use them merely to contribute a regu lar Fourt of July racket to all festive occasions. Y hole kegs of gunpowder are sometimes burned to celebrate a victory in war or the advent of a new chief. Sometimes the wretched guns burst, to the great personal injury of the men who handle them, but these tragic incidents do not shake the native faith in the white man's shooting Iron as, on the whole, a very innocent and most enjoyable plaything. But these puffing steamboats that are evidently things of life are great sources of terror on first acquaintance, an ! when the strange swimming mon sters emit an earthly shriek everybody within hearing feels that it is high time to take to the woods. Grt nfeli. Wolf, and other Congo explorers, triumph antly proved the elHcacy of the steam whistle on occasions when the natives were determined to be hostile at short range; and when Capt. Everill ascended the Fly River in New Guinea two yevs ago. meeting many unfriendly tribes, a blast from his steam whistle was usually enough to cause a let up in the showers of arrows that everywhere greeted him. Ljovc at lait. - Out of a small brown house on the outskirts of White Plains a young girl stepped one evening in June. She was dressed with one white cap and apron of a lady's maid, and looked cautiously her as she walked stealthily along the lane. She had not proceeded very far before a man stepped from be hind one of the trees that stood on either side of the road and confronted her. "Dolly," he said. In a trembling voice, "what does this mean? 1 saw you coming out of that house where they ten me ouly an old woman lives. I heard a man's voice and saw his shadow. Tell me what this means? I demand it!" "Can you not trust me, Edward?" the girl stammered, trembliug; "1 can not. dare not, conQde in you!" He stood silent looking at her for some minutes, then turned sadly away, never looking back, and was swallowed up in the night. The next morning Mr. and Mrs. Perkins were discussing a late breakfast in the back parlor. Mr. Perkins exclaimed suddenly in looking over his mail: "Why do you know that fellow you made me work to get clear from the charge of house breaking proves to be a son of old Murderer Lark Ins, who escaped from justice ten years ago, and for whose recapture there has beeu ever since a reward of $5,000 offered." ".Nonsense." cried Mrs. Perkins, conclusively. "Why, you forget my man is Dolly's father!" "As if that hindered it!" impatiently ejaculated Mr. Perkins rising. "I tell you my lawyer has evidence that your man is a house-breaker, and the son of a murderer, and you've made me make a fool of myself, and it ain't the first time." "But do consider, dear," replied the wife in a mollifying and convincing tone. "I've had Dolly years, and she'd be as afraid of a house-breaker or a murderer as I would myself." Mrs. Perkins here evinced some In dications of bursting into tears. Mr. rerkins, knowing his own weak point, hastened to avert such a painful climax. "After all," he said, concillatingly, "It is likely to end in the security of both men. A detective is" At this moment the conjugal confi dence was interrupted. Dolly herself stood before them. She looked excited, and asked ir mission to "go out for an hour's air ing." When she was gone, the master of the house said severely. "The girl must be watched. Let this be the last time she goes out alone." Mi s. Perkins perceived a certain look In her husband's eyes that caused her to meekly respond: "Yes, dear." "How rldiculods men are!" she pet ulantly exclaimed to herself, when alone. "As if I would keep poor Dolly In to prevent her from such ab surdity as seeing murderers!" Meanwhile Dolly, by a circuitous route, but with great speed, hastened again to old Mrs. Prim. She entered unbidden at the rear of the cottage, where no opening was visible to the uninitiated. Within, an old man crouched In the most obscure corner ol a aaritenea room. In a plaintive minor key, he cried: "You can't come in, whoever you are you'v no business here. Keep away! Mary, Mary! come and send them off.' The poor wretch shook like a palsy, and was only induced by the presence and urgency of old Miss Prim to re move his skinny hands from his hag gard face. He was a vivid illustration that the wages ot sin are something more than physical death. "Oh. grandmother." cried Doily. "I did not mean to frighten him, but there is need for haste, Indeed indeed there is!" "There la none," responded the old woman, heroically. "Do you suppose I am not ready for this? Do you think I have bid and guarded him these ten years to let him outwit me now?" Looking about, Dolly then for the first time perceived evidence of prepar ation for flight. The old woman went up to the trembling wretch and slid, comfort ingly, -Don't be afraid. I saw a man around here last nuht, but he shan't lay a hand on you.' With the confidence of a sleep walker or a monomaniac, the old woman 'ed her charge forth toward a wood at the rear of the cottage. She appeared to have utterly for gotten Dolly, who was left sitting there blankly, entirely alone. Some words of the old woman still rung in her ears. Was Edward there, her Edward, the representative of a law ani justice that would destroy all of hers? Dolly was no sophist to question the rectitude of her position. If her hands fell listlessly in her lap. if her blue eyes filled with tears, it was be cause she had lost her lover, not be cause she had helped to evade justice. "In this dejected attitude she sut, too much engrossed iu mourning after her lover to see him enter. "Dear, faithful, true girl, I have found you out at last," said a voice that electrified her. Dolly, the whilom, proud, piquant Dolly, thrw herself in au attitude ot supplication at the feet of her lover. "Do not ob, do not!" she cried, "hunt him down. If you could see him, if you knew of his repentance, his misery oh, spare him." "Why, bless your dear heart," an swered the detective, raising Dolly in his arms. "I wouldn't touch him it he'd eaten my grandmother. How could I know? 1 wa3 in hot pursuit of the five thousand dollars reward to set my little wife up in housekeeping in a style worthy of her. Now she will have to be content with something plainer. But no! you are my prisoner. I can lock you up in jail if I will. Now beg me not to!" "Can you tolerate me, knowing all? Can you overlook my being" "If you will ask with your arms around my neck, I think I can bear it," answered the detective. "In fact, I don't think I could tolerate your being the least bit in the world differ ent from what you are!" Two hours later they appeared before Mrs. Perkins. Dolly beaming, Ed ward looking like a shorn Samson, and asked her consent to a speedy mar riage. That evening Mrs. Perkins triumph antly explained to her husband that he was altogether mistaken about Dol.y having anything to do with the mur derers. "How do you know, dear?" he asked. "Why, she is actually to le married in a week to the detective who is here hunting them." This was conclusive, and Hon. Mr. Perkins ejaculated "Ohl" A OamMinsr 1 " f Two lKtliarx I'ilyb Twenty Thousand. T was talking with a gentleman from Nebraska recently, aud he was telling me of the wonderful jump real estate has taken in some parts of that State, but one incident he quoted was par ticularly interesting. He said that about two years ago a former regular army officer, an acquaintance of his. called ou him with the deeds of some property in his city aud asked him where the property was located. It was in the evening and the gentleman told the officer to stop with linn all night and they would look up the proi- erty in the morn in j. Tiiey had a pleas ant evening, going over old army life aud swapping stories of life on the frontier when tiiey were both young and lively aud were liable to bet a month's salary on a poker hand. In the morning they looked up the property, which happened to consist of five acres of good laud within the limits of the city. "What do you think it is worth?" asked the officer. "About twenty thousand dollars," was the answer. "I've beeu offered ten tnousand dol lars for it," said the officer, "and I'm glad 1 met you. Now do you know how I got that property?" "I haven't the slightest idea, unless you bought it," answered the gentle man. 'Well, I took it for a two dollar poker debt when I was on the frontier years ago." Great Scott! A twenty thousand dol lar property for two dollars. Join the array aud go West aud play poller. Honor Anions OvtK.ie. It may be strange information for those who regard gypsies as outlaws that no people living are more regard ful than they of the law aud the rights of others. But that is true. Go where you will along the quiet countrysides of our land, where, as the sunny days of the year return, they bring these welcomed cavalcades among the farm and village folk foi tha annual dlcker ings and duckerings, and you will find that no gypsy family or band pitches its tents, builds its fires and puts its beasts together without an actual legal bar gained right to do so. Sometimes the price Is paid in money, sometimes iu tinkering, sometimes in dicker or horse or mule, and sometimes even in free fortune telling for the farmer's family. But it is always paid. From the Pemaquan of Maine across the conti nent to Los Angeles, and every w here north and south where farm homes are in ail that mighty distauce, the gypsy camp fires are annually relighted above the ashes of the last year's cheer ou this clean cut, canny plan. A Dummy AVayinjr a Handkerchief. It is a custom among railroad men whose homes are situated within view of their passing trams to be always on the platform of the cars and to salute their wives or other members of the family, who are generally at the win dow at the time wbeu the trains pass. The conductors and brakemen have come to regard it as a duty on the part of their families to be at the window. A certain conductor on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, whose home is near Orange, N. J., is very particular to have this custom ob served and only discovered recently that his wife, for an Indefinite period, has been circumventing him by having a dummy dressed in ber clothes near the window With a flutteilng handkerchief that gave ber husband the idea she was there waiting to salute him. L.CTIES LOVER. Th Story of a Scarlet Shawl. Lutle, my sister, worked in a fash ionable millinery store, and I made a few dollars every week on fancy bask ets and picture frames, which I sold in the city. It was an awful come-down for me, who had known what the com forts of an elegant home were, but there was no help for it, since papa died and left us'almost without a dol lar. Lutie came home one night in the rain from her work in a very excited condition. She looked flushed and her eyes were full of a strange fire. I did not ask her what the matter was be cause I thought she would tell me If she wanted me to know. At supier time a boy brought a note for her. She turned very pale as she said: "Take this back: where you receive! it, and tell the writer never to send another." I was at a booth, some months later, looking after my little stock, when 1 saw a tall, liue looking man approach me and examine the baskets eagerly. I was surprised at the interest be took. 'Would you mind tell.nj me who made these baskets?" he asked. "My sister and I made them," I answered, curtly. "And this lining is so queer. Is your sister Lutie Ludlow?" "Yes," I stammered. "1 thought so," his face flushing. "When 1 have an upport unity. Miss Ludlow, I will explain this," and he disapiieared In the crowd. I felt that there was some trouble brooding, so I ran home to tell Lutie. She listened to my story with a pale face. "I love him, Bess," she sobbed. "He is the sou, the only sou of a lady for whom my old employer worked. I met him at first when I took home bonnets to his mother. Then after wards he got to joiuing me in the street. 1 was foolish, mad, blind, Bess at least for a while. He wooed me aud won lue agaiust my will. I couldn't help it, Bess. But very soon 1 saw how wrong it was to meet bim clandestinely" "Well, dear," I said pityingly. "Ah, Bess, well may you pity me! For then be offeied to marry me at once. He wanted me to elope that very night. But I told him 1 would enter no family agaiust the wish of its head, and his mother would never con sent. And theu 1 broke away from him. "The very next day I was sent to h'u mother's to fetch a bonnet she w ished altered. He must have told her of his offer to me, aud the bonnet was only a trick to get to see me. She sent for me into the parlor, a look of mocking pity on her proud face. 'I'll try to repeat what .she said; I'll make it as short as I cau, Bess. It was her duty to warn me of the dajger I was in, she said. Her sou had no right to trifle with nie, as he had li u doing He he already had a wile of his own. "True, Bess! Why, b.i3 own mother told me so." Nevertheless, it may be a falsehood. I saw the man to-night, and his facb isn't the face of a villain. If he comes, Lulie, you had better see him" "1 can't," she interrupted. "Oh, I can't! The shame would kill me. I must go away." But she had no time to go. Ha was there, the next day, when we came home from church. Lutie found him in the sitting-room awaiting her. I had passed on into the dining-room which was next to it, w hen the sound of his voice startled me. 'Lutie, Lutie, have 1 found you at last?" Leave this house, sir! Tins lutru Dion Is unpardonable," cried Liitie. But his ea.er tones drowned her in dignant words. Hu came up close to the table, behind which hUe had en trenched herself, and rested his hand on it. "1 cannot I will not," he answered masterfully; "not till you bear me, Lutie. You need not explain. 1 know what sent you fluttering out into tho world, my precious, little dove. See ing that siie bad spoiled all my life for me, my poor mother confessed I he wrong she had done me. i'.ir mouths 1 have been tryiLg to trace you. You saw my mother. Her desire for my worldly welfare, her anxie.y to see me marry a fortune, caused her to seek to separate us. 1 have no wife, Lutie, aud I shall never have one unless 1 cau get you." Only Lutie's sobs answered him. "My mother," he went ou, "waits to receive you, with ojien arms. Come back to me, Lutie, poor, tired, storm worn little dove, come back to your shelter. Precious, pretty, labor-woru little hands," and I knew he was kiss ing them,"your toil is all ended, Lutie, Lutie, have you no word of welcome lor me? Look up, dear. Ol;! I have searched for you every wlu-ie, and at last, the dear old shawl, that 1 used Ut like so to see you wear, was my clear to your hiding-place. 1 knew the queer ftpots aud the brilliant colors the instant 1 caught sight of those baskets. 1 was sure; an odd sort of feeling convinced me that 1 wasn't mistaken. And it was so. I have found you ut last. Lutie look up and S-eak to me. Tell me that you have cared for me just a little through all the dreary mouths of our separation." "I have cared for you always," an swered Lutie, softly, and at that mo ment I realized what a shocking" thing 1 was doing in listening. Turning Itags Into Ituus I was waiting for a train at lied Bauk recently when there came trudg ing along a descendant of the law giver with a heavy bag ou his back. It was full of something knobby, and as he Btcpped to rest I asked him if he had been raiding a muskmeloii patch. He grinned and ofieued his bag ami showed me that it was full of balls of carpet rags. He had been gathering them up from the farmhouses, giving cheap trinkets, ribbons and other fa vorite feminine gear in exchange. When be took them home to Esssex street bis sous would weave them Into rugs and sell them. There was money in it, he said. There was a profit on the trade and a profit on the sale of the rugs. And having rested, he went plodding off through the red dust, a type of the patient persistency cf his race. He proposed to walk as far as Perth Am boy and fill another sack if possible before he wasted any monoy on a railway ride. "A man, ' said he, "has to be his own Anti-Poverty Soci ety in these hard time," and I guess Le carries his ideas out. Editor and Troprietor. NO. 42. XEWS IN BRIEF. There is a rich man in the Black Hills, who dates the beginning of hli fortune from the day when he sold his wife for 54,000. Engine No. 13 has been running six weeks on the Staten Island Kapid Transit road aud in that time has killed five persons. A thirty-two foot spruce log was recently sawed into boards in a Puget Sound mill, and made 6,400 feet ot lumber without a knot. The remarkable story comes from Colorado that a tlock of suowed-uudei sheep lived two weeks and grew fat feeding ou each other's fleece. A cycler iu Great, Falls, New Hampshire, has on hand a suit for $jOOO damages, brought against him by the father of a child he ran into with his wheel. 5an Diego, California, has one of the wisest Chinamen in the world, lie is a laundrymau, and he has kept an advertisement runuiug in the local laier for fifteen years. Celery ville is one of the familiar names for Kalamazoo, Michigan, where there are two thousand acres of celery under cultivation, with a stated aver age prolit of J l jo au acre. Several lnioks of county records iu Iowa, which had long lieen missing, were recently luiind in a Davenport saloon, where they had lieen pawned for liquor by a former official. Iu boring a well near Pine Grove, Esrneralda County, Nevada, steam of a tC'ii)ieralure hot enoiic'li to cool pota toes was struck at a depth of nearly sixty feet below the surface. The widows of seven clergymen occupy a single k-w in a Detroit church; but, it is explained, there are only two of them, one the widow of three, the other of four divines. The Swedes In Orange, Massa chusetts, where there are about two hundred of them, have arranged for evening school to study the Euglisli language, which is sp iken by very few of tbeui. A great tree, that is said to have stood for 1M years at the corner of two streets in Concord, New Hamp shire, has b.-eii cut dow n, as it ha-1 be come so much decayed as to be dan gerous. A Providence, Rhode Island, un dertaker, whose wile died lately, em balmed the body with fluid of his own manufacture and fo successfully did it work that he has placed the body ou exhibition. There is a negro man living near Coleman, Georgia, who is the father of thirty-four children. He is 84 years old, has bij third wife with a babe ut her breast, and is as active as most men at 5 J. A Canajoliarie editor lias an eye to business. He offers his paper for a year to "the farmer who will lay the largest egg on bis editorial table," well knowing he would get moie than enough eggs to pay for his paiier. The bones of a mastodon were found by workmen on the Minnesota and Northwestern lltilroal, not far from Galena, the other Uy. One) tooth, weighing seven pounds, and a huge tusk were a part of the find. A soprano in Buffalo seems to have a voice or power rather than of sweet ness. To a newspaper that had pub lished one complaint from him on the subject a correspondent sends another, saying, "Your lirst dose lias not abated the noise; the lady up stairs yells worse than ever. If you fall us all hoj is gone." At Scranton, recently, a baby car riage which had ln-eii left standing ou the sidewalk by Us juvenile attendant while he gazed in a show w indow, was started off by a gust of wind and rolled beneath the feet of a horse. The ani mal kicked the little vehicle to pieces, but luckily didn't, injure the ch'' ' oc cupant in the least. In Germany aiia rswitz.-rland, it Is state!, the principals of all schools are required to dismiss their pupils at noon everyday on which the the mometer at 10 A. M. registers 77 -. If that plan were introduced here and the thermom eter placed within reach of the ingeni ous boy or the period, there would be frequent holiday s. It is announced that Slate prison convicts in Minnesota will soon start a new weekly paper In the interest of the prison library fund. It is ho lie called The Prison Minor. One prisoner will lie editor in chief and another Willi) treasurer and business manager. A cheerful view, if not a strictly correct one. Is taken o!"i f-eeming mis fortune by a Texas paer, which oil serves: It isa good thing that the cattle iu Texas are dying off, for when they die off they deciea.se in iiuuilier; when they decrease in manlier they become more valuable; when they become more valuable their owner becomes wealthier. Therefore it Is a good thing for ti.o cattle to die oIT. Excitement has lieen caused lateiy in one or two communes Iti Hanover, and three or four In the Rhenish prov inces, over the discovery of the Color ado bug; also over the appearance of phylloxera in a vineyard at. Uitierlch, said to have been introduced In a lot of viues, expressly imported by the owner In order to guaid against the scourge. A I'arliamentiry committee (Brit ish) has retiorted that pensions, allow ances and payments ought not in fu ture to lie granted ill lerietuity, on the groundtlr.it all such grants shoul I be limited to the pei-ons actually render ing the services Intended to be rewaided by fcuch grants, and thai such tew-trls should be wholly or in mini pail de frayed by the generation benelitel by the bervices s rccogu.zed. Bravery seems to be a wholesale quality in the Bulgarian army. Lilly this year the Vienna Mint leceiv.-d au order for 0,00'J silver m-d ils, which, together with a second lot of about 4'XHJ, were promptly despatched to Sofia for distribution to the brave army. Besides those, .'iJ.OOO, made ot bronze, were delivered by au Austrian foundry. Within a m.mtii an addi tional order for '.' mji silver ones was sent to Vienna, which the Mint is now turning out as fast as it can. Thomas McCormack. who was foraierlv town c'.etk of Union Town ship, New .Jersey, win burled recently. His death resulted from the bi'e of spider. McC.umack was w.i k.ug in I a quarry, when be fe t a s'lugimt sen sation iu bis left arm, and sa w a large I black spider there, lie btuslied it I away aud thought no more of the ' matter. Soon his arm began to sweit and in a few hours it wai twico its normal size. He was taken to a hos pital, where Le del. t'. F i I ' i ir i il i 4 h I . ""V', aJ-l-lJH n --- 1