rersistence brings success. No doubt eome town will eventually get up an exposition that pays expenses. The United States by paying off iti own debts and lending money to Eu rope makes it plain that prosperity a.' a national proposition is no myth. Justice might do better service in fome parts of the United States if the bandage were removed from her ryes and a modern weapon substitut ed for the Roman sword. The saie rule to guard against mala ria is to Map at every mosquito that comes along, without waiting to deter mine whether it is an anopheles or a culox. There is as yet no society for the protection of the common punc ture r. In ISSS the first law adopting the Australian system of voting was passed in Kentucky, and by IS9B the Austra lian system had come into force by legislative action in every state of the country, except North Caiolina ami South Carolina. The Chinese residents of the com!- try are evidently taking to heart, the old slogan "The Chinese must go,"for they have "gone" to the number of 29,000 in the last 20 years, and we now have less than 90,000 of them. When the Chinaman makes his little for tune he goes back to China to live as a nabob among his people, and this ac counts for the decrease. A new theory concerning the in crease of appendicitis attributes it tc worms or microbes swallowed by the patient when eating raw fruit. Old school physicians and surgeons sling, however, to the opinion that most ol the alleged cases are fictitious and the product of imaginative young practi tioners who desire an opportunity to, display a little surgical skill at the expense of the patient. The unveiling of the monument to Commodore Perry at Kurihama, Ja pan recalls the fact that in 1853 the people of that island were hardly su perior to the Chinese, and certainly not less exclusive. By opening theii ports to commerce at the instance of the United States and by welcoming the advances of civilization the Jap anese have devloped into a great eastern power which must be con sulted in relation to all international questions affecting the nations that border on the Pacific. Not only com merce, but education, industries and social customs have been influenced by the contact with the white races which was made imperative by the landing of Commodore Perry. Japan has every cause to make that occa sion memorable. According to the Baltimore Sun a man need not be a scholar to be an inventor. One of the most successful aeronauts of old times who had made a study of aerial currents and the management of balloons, once deliv ered an address in which he referred t6 the "anaconda" as "the largest bird that ever flew," and he also remarked that "the mental faculties of a man's mind is so constructed as to bring things down to a pin's pint." He also referred to the currents of air as stretchums, meaning strata, and yet lie was one of the foremost balloonist.? of his time. He was an inventor also of many useful things, and was the first man in the country to suggest an ironclad man of war with slanting sides. He built a miniature vessel on this plan of sheet iron, placed it in the water and fired musket balls at it at short range. Every ball glanced off. The Merrirr.ae was built on a sim ilar plan, and from that humble be ginning the evolution or revolution ir. naval architecture took its start The exhaustion of the world's coa) deposits would not create the alarm that Englishmen felt some years age when a statistician announced the date when the working of the coa) mines would be difficult and costly There is a belief in Texas that the supply of fuel oil which was recently discovered in that state is virtually without limit, and it is affirmed that the Texan product has many and great advantages over coal, including cheapness. It is found that there is still another substitute for coal— "masut," or German brown coal tar, the heat producing quality of which is said to be one-fourth greater than that of ordinary coal. Masut will also produce steam in less time than Is required in the case of coal. Coai tar has been almost as surprising as the cotton plant In the matter of its adaptability to many uses. A num ber of the most efficacious of modeio remedies have been extracted frcui ?oal tar—among them some whieb are used in the treatment of disease! Of the nervous system. With bold bacilli in a kiss and germs in the ice cream, pray who can tell what will become of love's youna dream? In dry regions there is a great deal of talk about meeting the drought problem by irrigation. There is only one drawback to irrigation, and that is the absence of water. Those who have studied the sub ject carefuny have estimated that a loss of nearly $10,000,000 is sustained annually by the cultivators of the soil from insect ravages in the United States and Canada. An Irish judge sitting in four courts, ■Dublin, in summing up a case in which the plaintiffs were a lady and her daughter, began: "Gentlemen of the jury, everything in this case seems plain—except Mrs. O'Toole and hei charming daughter " The Philadelphia Saturday Kvenine Post remarks that to keep up with the average small boy in these swift times requires 16 hours of exercise daily, a bicycle, an encyclopedia and all the latest editions of Ready Replies to Instant Inquiries. A Paris schoolmaster has petitioned the French chamber against king? still being portrayed on French play ing cards. He suggests that king? should be replaced by pictures of Thiers, MacMahon, Grevy and Carnot, and queens by equally prominent re publican women. The parliamentary commission sitting on the petition ha? replied that the change is impossible, since it would ruin quite a number oi playing card factories. "Blind Tom." who was the musical prodigy of the last generation, has re appeared in concert at the age of 52 years. He is the same mental imbe cile as of old. and since retiring from the stage has spent his days in asy lums and sanitariums, but his musi cal powers are said to be unimpaired. He can still play three airs at once, play with his back to the piano, and immediately reproduce any air which he hears. He is a human freak, unex plained and unexplainable. Lord Dundonald, the well-known British cavalry general, has been giv ing, in an after-dinner speech, his conclusions drawn from his experi ences in South Africa. He said that the ideal .mounted man of the future would be one wno was skilled in re connaissance and outpost duty, could attack a position and defend a posi tion, and was, above all, a good shot, and able to walk many miles without fatigue to ease his horse. As to the retention or not of the sabre, he thought the ordinary cutting sword should go.and some light weapon be substituted that could be utilized at the end of the rifle or for thrusting. The future was the mounted riflemen. The Toronto Mail and Express states : "In 1867, the year of the con federation, the population of Canada was 3,371.594. In 1891 the popula tion was 4,833,239. In 1901 the figure is estimated to be 6,000,000. If we have but 5,500,000, as some suppose, our increase will have been 2,100,000 since the Union. In 1817 the areu of Canada was 499.700 square miles; in 1901 the acera is 3.470,392 square miles, or about 40 percent of the area of the British empire. The ad dition of Manitpba and the northwest in 1870 and of British Columbia on July 20, 1871, and of the province of Prince Edward Island on July 1, 1573, brought in the aditional three million square miles. In 1867 we had 2350 miles of railway, which had cost $150,- 027,000; in 1901 there are 17.164 miles, which have cost $993,266,000. In 1867 we exported $57,567,000 worth of products; in 1900 we exported $158,- 896,000 worth. In Michigan a compulsory vaccina tion rule has come in conflict with the compulsory school-attendanco law, and has had the worst of the en counter. The supreme court of tho state was arbiter in the contest, tho case passed upon being the right of the Kalamazoo school board to ex clude from the schools unvaccinated children. This It may not unquali fiedly do, the supremo court ruled. The legislature, the court says, has provided who shall and who shall not attend school, and it has nowhere un dertaken to confer power on school boards to change the conditions. If the rule was that du-ing the preva lence of smallpox in Kalamazoo the pupil could not attend school unless vaccinated, a dierent result would be reached, but as these epidemics never last very long the standing rule of the board that no person unless vaccin ated can attend school at any lime is beyond the power of the board to prescribe. ! THE FALL OF A SEA-MONARCH. } BY FRANK T. BULLBN. Glorious in all his splendid majesty, the great sun issued forth of liis chamber, and all the wild sea basked in his beams with a million, million smiles. Save the sea and the sun and the sky, there was nought apparently existing—it might well have been the birthday of Light. The one prevail ing characteristic of the scene to a human eye, had one been there to see, was peace—perfect, stainless Yet beneath that sea of smiling, placid beauty a war of unending ferocity was being waged, truceless, merciless; for unto the victors belonged the spoils, and without them they must perish—there was none other food to be gotten. But besides all this ruthless war fare, carried on inevitably, because without it all must die of hunger, there were other causes of conflict, matters of high policy and more in tricate motive than just the blind, all compelling pressure of hunger. The glowing surface of that morning sea was suddenly disturbed simultaneous ly at many points, and like ascending incense the bushy breathings of some scores of whales became visible. Per fectly at their ease, since their in stincts assured them that from this silent sea their only enemy was ab sent., they lay in unstudied grace about the sparkling waters, the cows and youngsters frivoling happily to gether in perfect freedom from care. Hither they had come from one of their richest feeding grounds, where all had laid in a stock of energy suf ficient to carry them half around the globe without weariness. So they were fat with a great richness, strong with incalculable strength, and be cause of these things they were now about to settle a most momeiito.is question. Apart from the main gathering of females and calves by the space of about a mile lay five individuals, who from their enormous superiority in size, no less than the staid gravity of their demeanor, were evidently the adult males of the school. They lay almost motionless in the figure of a baseless triangle, whereof the apex was a magnificent bull over 70 feet in length, with a back like some keel less ship, bottom up, and a head huge and square as a railway car. He it was who first broke the stillness that reigned. Slowly raising his awful front with its down-hanging 20-foot lower jaw exposing two gleaming rows of curved teeth, he said: "Children, ye have chosen the time and the place for your impeachment of my over-lordship, and I am ready. Well I wot that ye do but as our changeless laws decree; that the choice of your actions rest not with your selves; that although ye feel lords of yourselves and uesirous of ruling all your fellows, it is but under '.he compelling pressure of our hereditary instiiiits. Yet remember, I pray you, before ye combine to drive me from among ye. for how many generations I have led the school, how wisely 1 have chosen our paths, so that we ar-> still an unbroken family, as we have been for more than a hundred sea sons. And if ye must bring your powers to test now, remember, - too, that I am no weakling, no dotard weary of rule, but mightiest among all our people, conquerer in more than a thousand battles, wise with the ac cumulated knowledge of a hundred generations of monarchy. Certainly the day of my displacement must come; who should know that better than I? But methinks it has not yet dawned, and I would not have ye lightly pit your immature strength against mine, courting inevitable de struction. Ponder well my words, for I have spoken." A solemn hush ensued, just empha sized by the slumbrous sound of he sparkling wavelets lapping those mighty forms as they lay all motion less and apparently inert. Yet it had been easy to sec that along each bas tion-likc flank the rolling tendons, c-ach one a cable in itself, were tense and ready for instantaneous action, that the great muscle mounds were hardened around the gigantic masses of bone, and that the flukes, each some hundred feet in erea, did not yield to the heaving bosom of the swell, but showed an almost imperceptible vi bration as of a fueus frond in a tide rip. After a perfect silence of some 15 minutes an answer came—from the youngest of the group, who lay re mote from the chief: "We have heard, O king, the words of wisdom and our hearts rejoice. Truly wo have been of the fortunate in this goodly realm, and ingrates in deed should we be had our training under so terrible a champion been wasted upon us. But therefore it !o that we would forestall the shame that should overtake us did we wait until thy force had waned and that all-conquering might had dwindled into dotage ero we essayed to put thy teaching into practice. Since thy dep osition from this proud place must be. to whose forces couldst thou more honorably yield than to ours, the young warriors who have learned of thee all we know, and who will carry on the magnificent traditions thou hast handed down to us in a manner worthy of our splendid sire. And If we be slain, as well may be, remembering with whom we do battle, the greater our glory, the greater thine also." A deep murmur like the bursting of a tidal wave against the sea-worn lava rocks of Ascension marked the satisfaction of the group at thi3 expo sition of their views, and as if actu ated by one set of nerves the colos sal four swung round shoulder to shoulder, and faced the ocean mon arch. Moving not by a barnacle's breadth, he answered, "It is well spoken, oh, my children; ye are wiser than I. And be the issue what it will, all shall know that the royal race still holds. As in the days when our fathers met and slew the slimy dragons of the pit, and unscarred by fathom long claws or ten-ply coats of mail dashed them in pieces a.nd chased them from the blue deep they be foulde, so today when the world lias grown old, and our ancient heritage has sorely shrunken, our warfare shall be the mightiest among created things." Hardly had the leviathan uttered the last word when, with a roar like Niagara bursting its bonds in spring, lie hurled his vast bulk headlong upon the close-gathered band of his huge offspring. His body was like a bent bow, and its recoil tore the amazed sea into deep whirls and eddies as if an island had foundered. Pull up on the foremost one he fell, and deep an swered unto deep with the impact. That awful blow dashed its recipient far into the soundless depths, where the champion sped swiftly forward on his course, unable to turn until his impetus was somewhat spent. Before he could again face his foes, the thive were upon him. smiting him with li tanic fluke strokes, circling beneath him with intent to catch the down hanging shaft of his lower jaw, rising swiftly, end on, beneath the broad spread of his belly, leaping high into the bright air, and falling heavily up on his wide back. The tormented sea foamed and hissed in angry protest, screaming sea birds circled around the conflict, rav ening sharks gathered from unknown distances, scenting blood, and all the countless tribes of ocean waited aghast. But after the first red fury had passed came the wariness, came the fruitage of all those years of train ing, all the accumulated instincts of ages to supplement blind brutal force with deep-laid schemes of attack and defence. As yet the three survivors were but slightly injured, for they had so divided their attack, even in that first great onset, that the old warrior could not safely single out one for destruction. Now the young est. the spokesman, glided to the front of his brethren and faced his waiting sire: "What! so soon weary? Thou art older than we thought. Truly, this battle hath been delayed too long. We looked for a fight that should be re membered for many generations, and behOKi —" Out of the corner of his eye he saw the foam circles rise as the vast tail of the chief curved inward for the spring, and he, the scorner, launched himself backwards a nmi dred fathoms at a bound. After him, leaping like any salmon in a spate, came the terrible old warrier, the smit ten waves boiling around him as he (lashed them aside in his tremendous pursuit. But herein the pursued had the advantage, for it is a peculiarity of the sperm whale that, while he cannot see before him, his best arc of vision is right astern. So that the pursuer must needs be guided by sound and the feel of the water, and u.e very vigor of his chase was telling far more upon his vast bulk than up on the lither form of his flying ene my. In this matter the monarch's wis dom was of no avail, for experience could not tell him how advancing age handicaps the strongest, and he won dered to find a numbness creeping along his spine—to feel that he was growing weary. And suddenly, with an eel-like movement, the pursued one described a circle beneath the water, rising swiftly, as a dolphin springs towards his pursuer, and dash ing at the dangling, gleaming jaw. These two great jaws met in clashing contest, breaking off a dozen or so of the huge teeth and ripping eight or ten feet of the gristly muscle from the throat of the aggressor. But hard ly had they swung clear of each other than the other two were fresh upon the scene, and while the youngest one rested, they effectually combined 1o prevent their fast-weakening foe from rising to breathe. No need now for them to do more, for the late enor mous expenditure of force had so drained his vast body of its prime ne cessity that the issue of the fight was but a question of minutes. Yet he still fought gallantly, though with lungs utterly empty—all the rushing torrent of his blood growing fetid for lack of vitalizing air. At last, with a roar as of a cyclone tnrough his head, he turned on his side and yielded to his triumphant conquerors, who drew off and allowed him to rise limply to the now quist sea surface. For more than an hour he lay there prone, enduring all the agony of his overthrow, and seeing for before him the long, lonely vista of his solitary wanderings, a lone whale driven from his own, and nev ermore to rule again. Meanwhile, the three had departed in search of their brother, smitten so sorely early In the fight that he had not since joined them. When they found that which had been he, it was the centre of an innumerable host of hungry things that fled to air or sea depths at their approach. A eiano* revealed the manner of his end—a broken back —while already, such hf.d been the energy of the sea people, the great framework ot' his ribs was partly laid bare. They made no regrets for the doing of useless things finds t O place in their scheme of things. Then the younger said: "So the question of overlordship lies between us three, and I am unwilling that it should await settlement. I claim the leader ship and am prepared here and now to maintain my right." This bold as sertion had its effect upon the two hearers, who, after a long pause, re plied: "We accept, O king, fully and freely, until the next battle day ar rives, when the succession must be maintained by thee in ancient form." So the matter was settled and proud ly, the young monarch set off to re join the waiting school. Into their midst he glided with an air of con scious majesty, pausing in the centre to receive the homage and affection ate caresses of the harem. No ques tions were asked as to the wherea bouts of the deposed sovereign, nor as to what had become of the missing member of the brotherhood. These arc things that do not disturb the whale people, who in truth have a sufficiency of other matters to occupy their thoughts besides those inevitable changes that belong to the settled or der of things. The recognition com plete, the new leader glided out from the midst of his people, and pointing his massive front to the westward moved off at a stately pace, on a straight course for the coast of Japan. I.ong, long l=\y the defeated one, no.ior.less and al'-.ne. '.lis cj.crtions had been so tremendous that every vast muscle band seemed strained oe yond recovery, while the torrent of his blood, befouled by his long en forced stay beneath the sea, did not readily regain its normally healthful flow. But on the second day he roused himself, and his mighty head swept the unbroken circle of the hori zon to satisfy himself that he was in deed at last a lone whale. Ending his earnest scrutiny, he milled round to the southward, and with set pur pose and steady fluke beat started for the Aucklands. On his journey he passed many a school or smaller "pod" of his kind, but in some mys terious manner the seal of his lone liness was set upon him, so that he was shunned by all. In 10 days he reached his objective, 10 days of fast ing. and impelled by fierce hunger he ventured in closely to the cliffs, where great shoals of fish, many seals, with an occasional porpoise, came gai ly careering down the wide gaping tunnel of his throat into the inner darkness of dissolution. It was good to be here, pleasant to feel once mors that unquestioned superiority over all things, ana swiitly the remembrance of his fall faded from the monster's mind. By day he wandered lazily, en joying the constant easy procession of living food down his ever-opened gullet; by night he wallowed sleepily in the surf-torn margin of those jagged reefa. And thus he came to enjoy the new phase of existence, until one day he rose slowly from a favorite reef patch to feel a sharp pang shoot through his wide flank. Startled into sudden, violent activity, he plunged madly around in the confined area of the cove wherein he lay, in the vain en deavor to rid himself of the smart. But he had been taken at a disadvan tage, for in such shallow waters there was no room to manoeuvre his vast, bulk, and his wary assailants felt that in spite of his undoubted vigor and ferocity he would be an easy prey. But suddenly he headed in stinctively for the open sea at such tremendous speed that the two boats attached to him were but as chips behind. He reached the harbor's mouth, and bending swiftly sought the depths. Unfortunately for him a large pinnacle of rock rose sneer from the sea bed some hundred fath oms below, and from this he hurled himself headlong with such fearful force that his massive neck was brok en. And nej t day a weary company of men were toiling painfully to strip from his body its great accumulation of valuable oil, and his long career was ended. —New York Evening Post How to Kilter Politic*. If you want to be a politician, the first thing to do is to get into the push, or at least create the impression that you are in. When there is a conven tion, if you can't work in as a dele gate. you can at least get into the crowd in the hotel lobby, and if you carry ourself in shape you can make the stranger who is within the gates of the city believe you are not only a dele gate. but one of the steering commit tee. Keep busy. Take at least eight or ten men off to one side in the course of the evening for private conversation. There is quite a good deal in making people believe you are cutting a good many lemons, whether you are or not. It is a good idea to be seen often on the corner talking with some promi nent candidate. You can arrange this if you have the proper amount of gall. You may not have anything to tell him. but then you will be seen in con sultation, and you will make some par ties who don't know you very well think that there must' be a hen on. But. above all else, cultivate your gall. If you can get some reporter to inter view you on the political situation, that will be a good scheme. The news papers can make a reputation for al most any sort of a man. —Topeka Mail and Breeze. An Ocu'lut Among School Children. An oculist who has examined the eyes of pupils in five of the Jersey City public schools has found that one-sixth of the children have defec tive vision. THE GREAT Ll SOME STARTLINC FACTS «dOUI THE VICE OF INTEMPERANCE. /nt'-mperance is Dccreaslne, I)Klsrc» th» Atlanta Journal—The Business World Has No riace For the Man IVh« Drinks. The "fresh" young man who feels obliged to carry a bottle with him to all places where he thinks he will not be o£i feretl something "to wet his whistle" if rapidly passing away. The business worlc has no place for him and he is growing into disfavor socially. The evidence o: this is seen on everv hand. A few days ago M. Jules Cambon, tin .French Ambassador to this country, said in an interview at Paris in speaking oi the American people: "There may b« some hypocrites among them, but the vast majority abstain from strong drink." In commenting on this statement edr torially the New York Sun says:"lt i» true, as general observation must have din. covered, that, prudence in drinking til! kinds of alcoholic liquors has increased, and that total abstinence from them is relatively much more frequent than for merly." It is plain that the business conditions of to-day require the services of sober men. No others need anply. Great enter' prises can only be carried on successfully by those who utilize fully their natural mental gifts and their physical energies, The hard drinkers cannot command the confidence of business men. hence those who indulge immoderately in the use of stiong intoxicants sooner or later become loafers. It is a noticeable fact that the thriftiest communities after they get settled down to business produce fewer drunkards than those where loafing is the rule. Only a few days ago the news columns 3f the Journal showed that fewer licenses to liquor establishments wore granted in Atlanta during the first six months of this year than for the same period of last vear, although the city has in the mean time grown largely in population. Ambitious men have learned that suc cess can only come either in business life or in the professions to those who keep their wits about them all the time and preserve themselves so as to be able phys ically to perform great labor. This state of things has had its influ ?nce socially for apnarent reasons, ami hence those who at dinners and other se rial entertainments habitually indulge to the extent of obvious intoxication are no longer regarded with amusement but with commiseration, and as needing such ten der care as is given to a sick man. It has always been a matter of remark that in the clubs in Atlanta there is very little immoderate drinking. The young men are busy here, and understand that he enterprise and sobriety of their com petitors will not suffer them to destroy >r weaken their capacity by indulgence iu ;he use of strong stimulants. The New York Sun says"even the Tammany General Committee, once called i collection of red noses, is now full of to ;al abstainers; that none of the great, po itjcal leaders of the present is a hard Irinker; that many of them are total ab itainers, and that the same is true of the. jreat leaders in finance, in trade and in :he professions. Strict abstemiousness is •lie rule among them and a reputation for ntemnerance is always injurious." Archbishop Ireland was quoted in the newspapers a few days ago as saving that :emperanee is increasing, and his conclu lion was based on information obtained! from the Total Abstinence Society o£ America, a Catholic institution. It will be noticed that the observation >f the French Minister has been confined :o the large cities of the West and tho 3ast where temperance is not enforced >y law, but is simply brought about by- * justness and social standards. The Sun arrives at the conclusion that is a result of increasing temperance imong the people the liquor question 'has been practically eliminated from pol tics, for the evils of alcoholic abuse are •ecognized by all parties and by liquor lealers not less than by there t of tho >ub!ic." Whether the Sun's conclusion in this >articiilar is correct or not it is gratifying o note the evidences of the fact, that ours s becoming more and more a nation of so lev and temperate people.—Atlanta Jour utl. Dancers of Alcoholism. It is needless to enter into details as to lie consequences entailed by overindulg ence in the use of alcohol. Most of us .re familiar with cases of ruined lives and vretched homes as the result of the fatal labit, and in these days of high pressure iving it is becoming more and more cotn tion. Mental worry, overwork, ill-health, vant of sufficient nourishment and cloth i:g, tend to swell the numbers of chronic ilcoholists, and the habit so easily ac juired is extremely difficult to relinquish. The real danger to the race, however, ics in the fact that the? great majority of jiebriates need no incentive to acquire he habit: they are born with the tenden cy, and it is to this cause chiefly that we nust ascribe the increase in the number >f deaths from chronic alcoholism during he last twenty-three years. A reference :o the table of statistics shows that ia i875 twenty-seven persons in 1,000.000 died is the result of chronic alcoholism: in !898 these figures had more than doubled hemselves, the number then being re timed as sixty-five per 1,000,000 of popula ;ion. The following quotations point to the :onclusion arrived at by some of the most uninent men of the day: "Heredity as a causation is estimated t<> 5e present in nearly sixty per cent, of all ;ases of chronic alcoholism. ninety-seven enfants nes de parents ilcooliques fourteen seulement etaient tains." "There are not a few human beings st> laturated with the taint of alcoholic hered rty that they could as soon 'turn back a lowing river from the sea' as arrest the narch of an attack of alcoholism." Much that has been said respecting in sanity applies equally to inebriety. Both seiong to the group of diseases of the ner ."ous system, showing a marked tendency :o degeneration, and both are liable to be :ransmitted hereditarily. Wcstminstei Review. Opinion of tll« Highest %utlioritv. For we cannot shut out of view the fact, within the knowledge of all, that the pub lic health, the nublic morals and the pub lic safety may he endangered by the gen eral use of intoxicating drinks'; nor the fact, established by statistics accessible to every one, that the disorder, pauper ism and crime prevalent in the country, are in some degree at least traceable to this evil. The United States Supreme Lourt, 1887. The Crusade In Brief. _ A movement has been started to estab lish a chair of temperance in London Uni versity. A protorial edict has been issued at Ox ford reviving the prohibition of under graduates entering any hotel or tavern. Most drunkards commenoe on beer and wine, and finally drink the stronger bever ages. A beer drunk is the worst kind of a drunk.—L. D. Macon. M. D. • rea ' an d dreadful cause of crime m this country, the overwhelming curse which debases and ruins the lower class, resides in the ale-house—The Rev. John C»ay, of England.