SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. IX. Every minute, night and day, the United States Government collects $639 und spends $461. A wealthy German offered a prize of $25,000 to any astronomer who will sat isfactorily demonstrate to him that the sun, moon or stars are inhabited. Drill instructors are being appointed by the labor organizations of Australia. The members are buying guns aud am munition. Lively times are expected. • A Philadelphia surgeon says that by three strokes of the lancet ho could para lyze the nerves acted ou to make a man get mad, and thereafter any one could pull his nose or cuff his ears, aud be would simply smile a soft, bland sinile. At Cotta, in Saxony, persons who did not pay their taxes last year are published in a list which hangs up in all restaurants and saloons of the city. Those that arc on the list can gel; neither meat nor drink at these places under penalty of loss of license. Harrison Ludiugton, tiie ex-Governor of Wisconsin, who has just died in Mil waukee, commenced his career at that point in 1838 as the immediate business sucessorof Solomon Juneau, Milwaukee's first settler. The lives of these two men cover the whole history of the great North west. < The New Yolk Sun learns that Cornell is going to improve all the roads on the University property, around Ithaca, N. Y., in sections and by different methods, and thus furnish a standing object lesson as to style aud cost of maintenance for the guidance of attempts to improve the roads of the State. " The Treasury authorities at Washing ton have just had their attention called to the fact that it would be an easy mat ter to tunnel from a neighboring build ing into their vaults, remove the coiu and ship it down the Potomac. Seven ty guards now watch the 'I reasury, aud every precaution his been taken to pre vent robbery. •' The New York Worhl declares that the population of the agricultural dis tricts is less than it was ten years ago, the gains having been made in the towns aud cities. 15ut the mortgage indebted ness is increasing at the rate of >'8,500,- 000 per year, and the loss in farm values since 1880 is estimated at *200,000,000, or an average of ~" : 7 per acre for the single State of Ohio. There are Sta'.es where the proportion shows a still worse condition of affairs. The Prince of Monaco having secured a wife with y000,0()0 annual income lias made up his mind to be good aud have uo more gambling iu his spacious realm after the prcseut lease of the Casino is run out, April 16, 1802. But the enter prising managers of the tables have made arrangements to reproduce the eu tire establishment, theatre and all, iu Andorra, the little republic in the Pyrenees ou the border of France an 1 Spain. Already 81,000,000 of the capi tal stock has been taken up in Paris. "South Carolina, like most of the Southern States, continues to be made up," notes the Dostou Transcript, "mainly of rural communities. There are but twenty cities and towns iu the State that have more than 2200 inhabit ants. Charleston, with 51,955 inhabit ants, has a long lead over the second city, Columbia, the capital, which has 15,358 population. Charleston has gained 497i in the last decide, while Columbia's population is 5317 larger than it was iu 1880. These two cities contain more than half the urbau popu lation of South Carolina." Professor Lombroso, a student of criminals, says that out of forty one an archists whom he studied iu the Paris police office, thirty-one per ceut. showed the criminal type of features. Of forty three Chicago anarchists the percentage of wicked faces w..s forty, aud that is about the percentage obtained from the professor's researches among the politi cal criminals of Turin. l£egicidcs or murderers of presidents, such as Fieschi, Guiteau, Nobilingaud historic evil-doers like Marat, had nearly all the criminal cast of features. Nobiliug, Guiteau and Booth, in the specialist's opinion, had hereditary tendencies to crimt. Certain socialists, like Karl Marx and Lassalle, > exempted from the doctor's classitica as their features are noble, but thcu men do not favor anarchy. A CHILD'S LAUGHTEK. All the bells of heaven may rin<». All the birds of heaven may sing. All the wells on earth may spring, ( Ail the winds on earth may bring £ All sweet sounds together; Sweeter far than all things hoard, Hand of harper, tone of bird, I Sound of woods at sundawn stirrod. Welling water's winsome word, Wind in warm wan weather. One thing yet there is that none Hearing ere its chime be done Knows not well the sweetest one Heard of men beneath the sun, Hoped iu heaven hereafter; Soft and strong and loud and light, Very sound of very light, Heard from the morniug's rosiest height, When the soul of all delight Fills a ehild's.clen' laughter. Golden bells of welcome rolled Never forth such notes, nor told Hours so blithe in tones so bold As the radiaut mouth of gold Here that rings forth heaven. If the golden crested wren Were a nightingale—why, then Something seen and heard of men Might be half as sweet as when Laughs a childof seven. —A. G. Swinburne, DOWN IN A STEAMSHIP. My father was a rich uian when I left New York, llis partner's only daugh ter was to be nay wife when I should re turn. I was a student in u Vienna hospital when I received a cable from home that the old house hud failed. It proved to be au honest failure and both faaiilies were beggars. I counted my pocketbook from cover to cover. I had just enough to leave free of debt and get to Liverpool. How to cross? Well, swim if necessary. In the Liverpool steamer office was an old Harvard College mate. This em barrassed uie. He owed inc a grudge from the football days at Berkeley Oval. Determined to work my passage over, I entered what I supposed was not the office where my old competitor was man ager. I did not see him, but he must have caught sight of 1110. I was sur prised with the promptness with which I was told togo on board the C , and something would be found for me to do. Two days out I was called to the cap tain's own room, insulted with the charge, at first politely put, of being a stowaway, aud finally stung to madness bitter enough to obey silently when the officer said: "If you really don't want to steal your passage, go report to the engineer and shovel coal." This I did. My experience I want to describe. It is common enough to hun dreds of poor scamps this mometft all over the seas. Out, God pity them,they have not the tongue to tell, nor, perhaps, always the sensibility to feel, what their life really is. Dizzy already with the tossings of the sea I staggered down those series of iron stairways till I stood at last on the ship's lowest deck. Behind me were the vast bunkers of coal that glistened from a million eyes when the furnace doors were opened, aud then faded out of sight. Before me the huge billows rose, not silent, but roaring monsters, so hungry that the toiling pygmies who fed them jumped to their tasks till the sweat rolled from their bare backs. The heat was, to one descending from the pure breath of the Atlantic, something fearful. I was dressed iu my ordinary attire,and even nu overcoat at that, so precipitate had been my action. The smell of baking lubri cants and red hot iron, the dead air, poisoned with coal gas and bilge water odors, the dust, despite all showering, but most of all the sudden transition from white light to blackest darkness, momentarily proceeding, as this and that furnace door was opened and shut,almost felled me to the floor. As I stumbled and caught my hold on the stair rail, again the hardy fellows shouted: "Give us your shilling and go back!" supposing that I was a curious passenger seeing the sights of the ship. The voices of derision roused me. I was no passenger. I was au honest beg gar like the rest; and here I was to be imprisoned for a week, watch on and off I In a frenzy I tore off my clothing till I stood in my trousers and shoes like my fellows. I stated my hiring to the fel low in charge of the watch, and he gave me my shovel with a pitying laugh. I was put at the boiler nearest the stair. The midships would havo been a less drunken spot, but I leaped at the hardest task. My head grew dizzy. I panted for a full vital breath. The corrugated floor ing, polished till it was glossy smooth iu spots, tangled my poor feet so that I re peatedly fell. Ah, that sense of whirl ing, whirling, whirling! How little the fair folk in the cabins, know of all this plutouian hole beneath their carpets. Really, I thought I could describe somewhat that lurid fantasia amid these scarlet skinned, good natured demons, but I cannot. Vertigo struck me down in less than a half hour. The next I knew I was being revived in the coin panionway, and the sea air was so grate ful. The ship's surgeon asked me if I felt able togo to work again, and courteously recognized that I was not a laborer. I was graceless enough to ; growl out my spleeD aud reassert that I I was no stowaway, which the good doc tor did not understand. I turned to thu assistant engineer, who j LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 14. 1801. stood by, and asked him to give me a job of which I might be capable. Thrusting his hands in his pockets, he walked oil with a command to "try him at oiling." Ed 15 , the head oiler—dear,brave heart—l often go down to the dock to see him when in port here, but the en gine is as dear to him as a bride or I would long ago have bettered his for tunes—he took mo in hand. We walked along those mere bird-cages of stair-ways and platforms, a labyrinth of passages in a forest of steel arms,wheels, shafting and steam piping. To a lands man, that endless maze of mighty anat omy is at first simply awful. It sobers one, this sullen, ceaseless throb of the monster's heart, the deep breathing of the steam chests, the sigh of tho crea ture's spirit as the pistons make one move and yet one more herculean thrust turn ing the crank shaft. Each time, as the piston slowly starts, it seems as if it must be the last, and in finite fatigue prevail. But no, it goes on, night and day, motion, motion, mo tion. Don't let me tire you, reader, but Ido wish I could express to you some thing of the soleinu impression that be gan to seize upon me, crawling like a fly after Ed, the oiler. Then the hiss, the scream, the little sighs and moans of here and there a jet of truant steam, al most humiiu sounds, issuing from the jungle of polished steel! "She's a tiger, she is?" cried Ed. "Look out!" I heard that kind exclamation fre quently as we went our rounds. There were others doing tho same work, but I became a chosen attendant of my cat like friend. He had a sprained elbow and I helped him professionally. He got my story. We were intimate iu two or three days, and I record it with hon est satisfaction, for Ed U was a gen uine man. It was ouo day off the Banks that wo stopped. The chief got a notion that the shaft was not sound, and tho next voyage it proved so, for a hair line along and arouud that huge polished arm of power turned out an incipient fracture. But it was on investigation decided this vsyage that there w;is nothing wrong. Still, there we lay on tho breast of the swells for more than two hours. Ed came to mc and said: "Now she's still, the second engineer thinks we might go into the pit and cleau out the waste and oil puddles. I don't like it, doctor, when she's got steam on. What if she turned her crank, eh?" The brave boy went jumping down, however; dow'Ji, down, till he stood di rectly under that massive crank, which had stopped at tho half turn over his head. The reader will understand that the space allowed for tho crank to make the full circuit round below was only suffi cient for the iron to sweep through. Into that «ow empty space Ed was pre paring to step. It was dark as a grave and about a grave's dimensions. I held the torch above his head. Men working by torchlight iu that place resemble | imps. We were good natured imps, j however, and, though very cautious, j were chatting cheerfully enough. "I never like this job at sea," resumed Ed, "nor any time, except wlieu the last pound o' steam is out of her, two or three days at dock." "But tho eugiueer knows wc are here," I replied. "Yes, he ordered me down—and there's no need of it—and he dou't like me," Ed got oil between his breath, bending to his perilous work iu the pit. "Ilaavens, man!" I exploded, catch ing at what I thought was his meaning. "That would bo murder!" "Hush, doctor! Not that, not that! But if I had refused to come, as he thought I would, don't you see he could break me—that is, discharge me wheu we get into New York." A few miuutes later Ed sent mo aloft for an extra mop of cotton waste. I was to hurry, for wc knew not what miuute the captain might go ahead. I remember I had secured the waste, I was picking my way along the enigma of lit tle ludders and platforms. Fur below, through the shadows, tlung from occas ional gas jets the sleeping monster, like a nickel plated lay prone, and I seemed to bo exploring its viscera like some daring pathologist. Away below me in the light of his torch Ed reminded mo of a microb. Suddenly the gong struck from the pilot house. God help me, 1 can hear it yet! I was near the engineer's landing. Quick as a flash I was on the ongineer, and like a tiger I caught at the wheel which he was turning to let ou steam. "Mau! B is in the crank pit!" But I was too late. She gave ouo turn, at least. Tlieu the scoundrel or fool, I don't know which, yielded to me and wo stopped her. But such a cry as came echoing up from tho very heart of the engine! "Thank God for that second cry," 1 fairly sobbed, as it floated up. Then I sprang away and down. Ed lay inseusible ou the arm of the crauk, as if the engiue had stopped iu pity and held him out to us. 110 had. fainted with pain only, for the sprained elbow had been broken. How he escaped heaven only kuows. Now this is the curious part of my story. Less than a year after, when she was cold and lying at the docks without a pound of steam, that engine killed this same engineer. It must have beeu in the middle ot the night. What he was do ing dowu in her no one knows. A list by cargo and tide must have moved the maehinery a half a turn and crushed him. Ed B says that engines have souls, but seafaring men cherish queer notions. —Jew York I'resa. Canning Crabs. A thriving industry at Hampton, Va., is tie canniug of hard-shell crabs, which was flrst begun in the year 1878. About the Ist of April the season for these crustaceans opens and continues until June. During that month and July the crabs arc found with spawn and unlit for canning purposes. Then in August tho woik begins anew and from that time until about the Ist of November the caiuerics arc kept very busy. The crabs arc caught chiefly with trot lines and nets. Beef tripe is used for bait and each line is attended by one man iu a light skiff. The average daily catch per man iu Hampton Roads is from sixty to seventy-five dozen, although 250 down catches have been occasionally re ported. Large boats go out every day and collect the crabs from tho fishermen. Upon arrival at the cannery the dead ones and spawners are thrown away. The others arc placed in open slat-work cars and conveyed to a wooden steamer hav ing a capacity of 250 dozen into which a ■car is rolled. Steam is then turned ou and the crabs cooked until they turn red, when the car is rolled out aud the con tents shoveled into baskets. Thjso are delivered to men technically termed "'trippers," who remove the shells, small claws and entrails. These men pais the cleaned portions to a force of w -men and children called "pickers," wlio take out all the meat und placo it in pans. The large claws are crushed aid the ineat deftly extracted. As these pickers receive but from two to three e tits a pound, it naturally follows that tley must be quick and agiio workers. Tie most rapid pickers can generally prepare about twenty-five pounds a day, lift the average is about sixteen pouuds. Tie hard parts and other refuse are dimped into sheet-iron barrels, placed in stows and sold tcrthe neighboring farm ers for fertilizing purposes. Tho upper sitdls, which the strippers remove, are ctrefully cleaned and used as receptacles fur deviled crabs, being packed up and said with the caus containing the meat. ■After being weighed, the crab-meat is tiken to the "fillers," who pack it in ote and two-pound cans. Each pound (iu. is estimated to contain the meat ex tracted from thirty-eight crabs. In order to prevent spoiling in the caus, the con tents must be very thoroughly cooked, aud consequently after being sealed these receptacles are placed in boiling water for half an hour. Theu they are taken out aud vented by piercing a small hole in the top of each and immediately re seated. After this they are given a final hot water bath, iu which they remain for two hours. Another process consists iu placing the cans in a strong solution of chloride of lime water. Upward of 11,000,000 crabs are thus canned each season in the Hampton es tablishments, and find a ready sale in all parts of the United States.— Detroit Free I'rcss. Convicts Off lor Siberia. The Moscow correspondent of the London JVeios says: "To-day I witnessed tho departure for Siberia of the first batch of convicts this season. They stood in marching column at the railway station, surrounded by a guard of about 100 soldiers with drawn swords. At the head came the worst class of convicts, about 300 iu number, all having le*r fet ters and chains. Many had the right half of the head shaved, an indication of lont;-scrvice sentences. Theu came about 100 without fetters, convicted or sus pected of lighter offenses, most of them being without passports, and therefore liable to punishment. Next follow about 100 women, some couvicts aud some prisoners' wives. It is pathetic to see little children and some infants starting on this long aud terrible journey of ex ile. The dress worn is gray, with a yel low diamoud on the bacrt. The by standers threw money to them to enable them to purchase comforts ou tho jour uey." Married the Family. A story of a Florida inau who married threo wives from one family is going the rouuds as somcthiug remarkable, but there was a family iu Maino consisting of six girls, and of the six three married men named Bickwell, throe married t3 the name of Young, one married a Liver more aud one never was married. An other paradoxical featuro is that there* were only five husbands in all. The ex planation is that two of the Bickwells died, leaving widows, nftid Mr. Young, who had two of the sisters before, took one of the widows. Then Mr. Liver more took tho other. So that there were seven weddings iu the family, aud only five men aud five women concerned iu them. Mr. Youug had lost one wife before he began ou this family.—Man r/tester Union. Custer's Last Sword. The sword which Custer used in his campaign against the Indians, aud which ho lost with his life at the battle of the Little Big Horn, is now in tho possession of a Chicago man. Its battered blade is as flexible as whalebone, audit looks as though it had beeu through mauy u hand-to-hand eucounter. It is covered with innumerable de3igus of drums, (lags, cannons aud other implements of warfare. — lndianapolis Journal. Terms—sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months SCIENTIFIC AND INDCSTBIAL. Marmoreine hardens plaster. Electricity is to revolutionize mining. Many of the big paper-mills have turned out paper belts said to be supe rior to leather. The juice of a half lemon in a teacup of strong black coffee, without sugar, will often cure u sick headache. The skin of a boiled egg is the best remedy for a boil. Carefully peel it, wet, and apply to the boil; it draws out the matter and relieves soreness. When your face aud cars burn so ter ribly bathe them in very hot water—as hot as you can bear it. This will be more apt to cool them than any cold ap plication. The compounding of locomotives will soon be gone into on a large scale, and triple expansion engines will soon be adopted in the larger manufacturing es tablishments. The breaking weight of a bar of iron one foot long aud one inch square is 5781 pounds. A piece of seasoned hick ory of the same dimensions would break at 270 pounds. A Philadelphia company recently made a fly-wheel which weighs 180,000 tons. It is tweuty-five feet in diameter, eighteen inches thick, aud twenty-eight inches wide. It will be operated by a 3000 horse power. Borers of the city artesian well at Fort Worth, Texas, arc of the opinion that the drill will soon penetrate a huge volume of boiling water, as the tempera ture increases with every few feet they go down, and at last accounts was 121 degrees, at a depth of 2900 feet. Chatin has proved that a parasite growing on plants of the Strychnos genus contains neither strychnine nor brucine. The mistletoe growiug upon tho oak does not contain the blue tatiniu of tho latter, but exclusively a green tannin. Iu like mauuer other parasites are shown not to absorb the peculiar principles of their hosts. Neuralgia in the face has been cured by applying a mustard plaster to the elbow. For neuralgia iu the head,apply the plaster to the back of the neck. The reason for this is that mustard is said to touch the nerves the moment it begins to draw or burn, aud to be of most use must be applied to the nerve ceutres, or directly over the place where it will touch the affected nerve most quickly. Sarno, a Gorman chemist, finds uitric acid abundant in unnual plants,and more or less in nearly all families of plants. A singular observance is that where plants formerly supposed to be root-par asites, and now called saprophytes, are connected with certain bush roots. Such roots have no uitric acid. For instance, the cancer root is only fouud under beech trees, and yet no connection exists between the beech aud this plant. These roots ought not to have auy nitric acid, if Sarno is right. For many years a spring of dirty water ran from the house Of a certain M. Korotneff, in the heart of Scbastopol, and caused the proprietor much trouble. At times the spring would cover the best street in the city with mud. Of late tho spring has become a public nuisaucc and tlit: city authorities compelled M. Korot neff to build a small reservoir around it and lead off the muddy substance by sewer pipes. But as soon as this was done it was discovered that the substance in tlio new reservoir was pure naphtha. Fot the last three months since the discovery was made nothing has been done to util ize this wasting treiisure. Bright Tliou % „.. Merry. Frank R. Stockton tells with greac glee how once, many years ago, he in vented a dish and got $2 for the inven tion. It was while he was sub-editor of Hearth and Home, a weekly paper of which Sirs. Mary Mapes Dodge was the editor. He had contributed to every de partment save the household department. This put him on his mettle. So he hauded iu a receipt of his own concoct ing. Mrs. Dodge accopted it, aud paid for it at the current rates—s2. The dish is called "Cold Pink," and here is the receipt: Take all the white meat left over from the Thauksgiviug turkey, and chop it uy very fine. Pour a thiu crau berry sauce over the cold meat. Mix well, put it in a china form and set it away to get cold. When cold, serve it. It makes a delightful dish. But alas! as Mr. Stockton himself remarks, there is never any turkey left over from the Thauksgiviug dinner.— Epoch. A Curious Name Combination. "What is in a name?" has been a ques tion sufficiently unanswered to still re main a subject for discussion, but what is iu two names should have a double interest. If you don't think so, take two names as well known as any iu American history ani look at them. They are the names Lincoln and Hamlin. Of course, there is nothing peculiar about them as they stand, but set them differ ently and observe the result. For an in stance, place them thiswise: IIAM LIN LIN COLN Read up aud down and then across. There is something in that, isn't there? Now, again: ABRA—IIAMLJN —COLN. Can you fiud two other names of two other men whoso otlicial lives and names combine as these do?— St. Louis litymo- Z»V. NO. 44. GETTING DOWN THE BARS. 1 Fair Jane stands near the woodland when The barn lane joins tho Held; The cows are coming at her call. Their treasure white to yield. •" The sun is sinking through the trees To give place to the stars, 112 And to tho task the maiden bends Of letting down the bars. J Young neighbor John, of manly mold, But timid as a quail, Climbs o'er the fence and gains her side And helps her move the rail. Her warm blush tells a tale; but fear From speech his tongue debars Till eyes meet eyes, then of his love Her glance lets down the bars. 0 woodland's breath and meadow's breeze, And soft eyed kine and birds! Know ye the rapture in your midst That cannot flow in wordß? Nor wisli for wealth, nor thought of fame. Nor aught the moment mars; These guileless souls And all their world While letting down the bars. —New York Advertiser. HUMOR OF THE DAT. Erasures on account-books arc sure signs of a bigger scrape coming.— Puck. When a initn fights in his mind he al ways conies out victorious.— Atchison Olobe. When one denies his own statements he is practising much self-denial.—Dai las News. *- Mr. Crossly—"l tell you before I go that I want beef for dinner, and when I got home what tic I find?" Mrs. Cross ley—"Fault, every time."— New' York Sun. He (accepted)—"Ah, what Happiness! Now I Can call you mine, loveP' She— "Ah I You haven't got through with your interviuw with papa yet."— Tims Siftings. A Sad Case: Mrs. Murphy—"An' sure, Mrs. O'Brien, did your poor mau die aisy, rest his soul!" Mrs. O'Brien— "lndade not, Mrs. Murphy. It nearly kilt poor Pat to die." Jake Jimpson—"You are the apple of my eye, dear." Cora Bellows—"And you are the peach of mine." "Why the peach?" "You are such a perpetual fail ure."—New York Herald. Mr. Oldgrad (Class of 'HO) —"Ah, this is our class picture. Ah, old boy, we were younger then than we are now." Mr. l)u Grec—"Yes, ur.-l i.ucw a great deal more."— Brooklyn Life. "How will I enter tho money the cashier skipped with," asked the book keeper, "uuder profit, and loss?" "No; suppose you put it under running ex penses."—Philadelphia Times. They say that a woman caunot reason, but as long as she has her faculty of in tuition she seems to got along all right. Besides, she can usually get a man to reason for her.— Somerville Journal. There may not be any royal road to wealth, but there is a royal road to learn ing. When a man gets rich the world is willing to regard everything he says as the utterances of a sage.— Somerville Journal. She—"l am afraid that bell ringing, means another caller." He (imploringly) —"You know there is such a thing as your not being at home." She—"Yes, and there is such a thing as my being engaged." Genius may be merely a capacity for hard work, but it is hard to make tho neighbors believe that there is any genius about tho young woman who practises the scales four hour a day.— Indianapolis Journal. Eiuersonia .Dorchester —"Oliviuia Holmes is not tho rechorcho girl I thought she was." Husselliua Waldo— "What has occurred?" Emersonia Dor chester—"l noticed to-day that she was wearing her winter spectacles."—Jew elers' Circular. Prudence —"Why did you hurry around the corner when you met Briggs a moment ago?" "Afraid of him?" "Why?" "Yesterday he paid me back a dollar he borrowed six months ago, and I'm shorter than usual this week."— New York llecordtr. "And what," :v>ked the young woman who is somotiraos facetious, "is the rank of the individual who brings up in tho rear with a bucket and a tin cup?" "Oh," replied the member of the militia, without hesitation, "ho is a lemonade de camp."— Washington Post. Alice—"l met Miunie Hence to-day, and she showed me the engagement ring that Horace Fledgcly gave her." Gwen dolin—"ls it a pretty one?" Alice— "You remember the one he gave you and me!" Gwendolin—"Lot me think. Oh, yes!" Alice—"lt's the same ring."— Jewelers' Circular. They took the Fit shburg from Bostou to Troy. At the Falls the brakeman thrust his head in at the door and seemed to interrogate—"Hoosick? Hoosick?" Alfred Kufus looked inquiringly around tho car, and discovering no object iu need of a physician's care, appealed to his father—"Papa, who is sick?"— Pharmaceutical Era. A small Bath schoolboy, who had been sent home by his teacher because his sister had the measles, was noticed by that teacher at the next recess play ing with the other children iti the school yard. "Johnny, didn't I tell you not to come to school while your sisters had the measles?" "Yes, but I am not going in school; I only came to play with the boys betore it begius. "—JJath Time*.