SUNSET ON Down bolind the western hill the red sun sinks to to re ¥ ‘All the world js Weary, and I am weary, too. Conf partridge seeks its coyert, and thu red- bird seeks its nest. And I am coming fram the flelds,dear heart, to home and Home, when the ayitint is waning ; : Home when my toiling is done ; Ah! down by the gate, sweet, watching i eyes wait ' My coming at setting of sun. The sheep from off the hillside haste to the shepherd's fold,— For death lurks in the mountains and dark- ness comes apace. The fleeing sun looks backward and turns the sky to gold, Then folds the mantle of the night across its THE FARM. orimson face. Home, when the daylight is Waning + Home, when my toiling is done Ah! down a by the gate, sweet, watching cyes My ne Bo at setting of sun. Lay aside the hoe and spade, and put the sickle bys All the world is weary, and I am weary, Gently des the rosy light from out the ‘western sky, And Iam coming from the fields, heart, to home and you. Hyme, when the hs is waning ; Home, when my toiling is done ; Ah! down by the gate, sweet, eyes wait My coming at setting of sun. dear watching —Arthur J. Burdick, in American BD realtRsiet: et lbh fe te ll Pe Al fe fl BAM The Other Girl. ‘When I arrived at the station Lady Mannington, Molly and the French maid had collected their chattels and stood round the immense heap, in at- titudes denoting various degrees of im- patience. I apologized. “It is of no consequence,” said Lady Mannington, in a tone signifying it was of the greatest. Molly shook her head at me and smiled. I looked at the two ‘ladies and the French maid, and then Ilooked at the miniature mountain. “The brougham is only seated for two,” I hinted. “Celeste can walk, ’said Lady Man- nington. +1 shall be glad of her company,’ I responded, politely. Lady Mannington glanced at me doubtfully. “Perhaps she could manage by the coachman,” she sug- gested. “His wife is most particular,” T in- terposed, quickly. ‘I should prefer to walk, mamma,’ said Molly, with an air of ‘much nea nature. “Perhaps that will be best,” Lady Mannington conceded, reluctantly. **f am sureof it,” I 'indor sed, heart- “If only your aunt had sent the omnibus’’—Lady Mannington began, aggrievedly. “It was most careless of her,” T ad- mitted instantly. I caught Molly's eye. She has a curious way of smil- ing at nothing. So Molly oe I started to walk over the crip snow. Just outside the sta- tion I helped her over the stile. ‘‘We may as well take the short cut,” I ob- served; ‘it is not so very much longer, and I have so much to say to you.” | “What about?’ asked Molly. i I hesitated. ‘It is about a friend | "of mine,”’'I replied at length. ; “Oh!” “He is in the deuce of a mess,” I began, confidentially. ‘I want your help.” ; ‘““What can I do?” asked Molly, opening her eyes. ‘You canadvise me,” ing courage. ‘‘A woman’s wit Molly was pleased. ‘‘Go on, - Trevor.” “I fear you will think my friend particularly foolish,”” I said, sorrow- fully. “Very likely,” replied Molly, indif- ferently. “I assure you he has many good points; but it happened a girl wanted to marry him.” “What!” exclaimed Molly. ““T can’t think what she saw in him,’’ I replied, uncomfortably. “I hope,” said Molly, ‘‘you are not going to tell me anything that is not proper.’ ‘Oh, no,’ Ireplied,eidrnestly. “The girl was quite respectable. ‘Al the ‘parties are most respectable,” “She could not have Been quite nice,’’ said Molly, decisively. I stopped to test the strength of the ice over a pool. “I have seen her look quite nice,” I remarked, thoughtfully. “You know her?” quickly. “Oh, yes. I replied, tak- 3 Mr. asked Molly, It wasn't really the girl who wanted to marry my friend; it was her mother. 1 mean the mother wanted the girl to marry my friend. 1 hope I make myself clear.” “1 don’t think that improves mat- ters,’’ retorfed Molly. “She hag a large family of ters,” I explained. “Go on,” said Molly, with a severe- ly judicial air. “My friend was in love with shother girl—a really nice girl. In fact, quite splendid girl. One of the v ar best,” I said, kindling. “You know that girl, Molly, a little coldly. ‘‘Ye-es.” “Well?” / “My friend ‘was staying at a coun- try house and so were both the girl and her mother, and she-——" “Who?” ‘asked. Molly. “The girl w hose mother wanted her to marry him. Ido hope I am clear. She got him into a quiet corner and somehow or other my friend found out she had hold of his hand. TI-—I don’t know how it happened. It just oc- curred.” : “How clever of your friend to find it out,” said Molly, sarcastically. "I went on hastily—‘‘And then he saw her head coming nearer and near- er his shoulder, and he didn’t know what to do” oiSeT wonder, said Molly, ‘‘he did not oa) for help.” “You see,” 1 went on, ‘he was ~ afraid she would propose or-—or—the He guessed the was, pretty near. . Then he thot nght of the other gil, nd he got ~ into.a dreadful panic. Sh ct, he lost hig head.” could not have hoon a great Sbacteed Molly, disdainfully. daugh- too?” asked 13) ‘was the only one he sesustoned f to it. He b b didn’t know what to do. So he said he was already engaged.” “Did he say ‘already? ”’ “Yes.”” It was a cold day, butI mopped my brow with my handker- chief. Molly uttered a peal of silvery laughter. ‘‘I am really sorry for that girl, but it served her right.” “The girl didn’t turn a hair. She simply straightened herself up and asked to whom he was engaged.” €é ‘Well?’ ‘‘He blurted otit the name of the other girl. - He couldn’t think of any other name.’ *‘T'o whom, of course, he is not en- gaged?’ ‘No; and I don’t suppese she would have-him. She is far, far too good for him.” ‘Is that your whole story?” ‘““Very nearly. The girl went away and told her mother, who came up gushinglyand c¢ongratulated him. She is a true sportswoman. Afterward she went about telling everybody of the engagement, and my friend has had to receive congratulations ever since.” “How awkward!” said Molly, medi- tatively. ‘“Has the other girl heard of it?” ‘Not yet. terday.” “Yesterday?” T nodded. ‘‘And the worst is the other girl is expected to arrive at the Towers almost immediately.” “Dear me,” said Molly. ‘‘So your friend is at the Towers now?’ “I didn’t mean to let it out,” I re-. plied, a trifle abashed. Molly began to laugh. amusing; but why did about it?” “I want your advice.” “Who is the other Molly, curiously. ‘‘Please don’t ask for names, This all happened yes- “It is most you tell me girl?’ asked ” 1 im- plored. ‘‘But my advice must depend, on the other girl’s disposition.” *‘She is everything that is perfect,” | | I replied, fervently. “No doubt,” retorted Molly, satir- ically. : “You might almost be the other girl yourself,” IT went on, with careful carelessness. “Really!” said Molly. ‘I believe that must be contidored a compli- ment. Thank you very much.”’ “What,” 1 asked, with elaborate in- difference, “would you do if you were the other girl?” Molly stopped and broke off a sprig of red berries. They were not so red as her lips. “‘Of course,” she said, ‘I should be very annoyed." “Ab, of course,” said I, forlornly. ‘At any rate, I should pretend to be | very annoyed.” ‘‘But really——" I began, delighted. “Ob, that would depend on the man. ‘Supposing, for the sake of illustra- tion,” said I surveying the wide ex-- panse of a, neighboring field, “I was the man?” : “This is nonsense,’ said Molly. ‘“We can’} make believe to that ex- tent.” “Why ean’t we?’ “You would hever be so foolish.” “But if “Let us talk about something sen- sible, ” said Molly, with decision. ‘‘But my poor friend is depending on me for advice.” She thought. “Of course your friend must get away from the Tow- ers before the other girl arrives.” “You are quite clear he ought to get away?” I asked, mournfully. “There can be no doubt of that. Just fancy everybody rushing to con- gratulate the other girl and your friend being present at the time. There might be a dreadful scene.” “I can picture it,” said I,repressing a groan. We had arvived at the entrance to the avenue. I stopped’ and held out my hand. “Good by,” 1 said. “What do you mean?’ she ex- claimed. “I= 1 am going away. TI am the man.’ I do not think I am mistaken. color faded slightly from her face. ‘‘And the other girl?’’ she queried, faintly. “You are the other girl.” The red replaced the white. She stood quite still, with her eyes bent downward, and then she began to trace figures in the snow with the toe of her tiny boot. ‘‘Gtood by,” I repeated. She looked up. ‘Of course, I am very angry,’’ she said. And then she smiled and held out her hand. T took it humbly and forgot #0 relinquish it. “Mamma will be getting anxious,” she remarked. ‘‘We must hurry.” an we did not hurry.—Pick-Me- P. The Although Spanish women are sup- posed to be smokers, one never sees a woman smoking in public, except in the EYPSY. quarters. di o LUCK IN DISGUISE. 111-Guarded Speech Led on to the Oper- |. ator’s Fortune. It isn’t easy to tell when fate means well by a mdn. © Some of her appar- ently hardest knocks are all for the vietim’s good. He was a telegraph operator, and a good one, but he wasn’t in favor with the chief. In fact, the chief doesn’t possess many friends among the boys. He was disposed to be sharp and quick with them, and telegraph | operators are a sensitive lot. There was a vacant room that hadn’t been occupied for a long time and the chief one day took possession of it as a sort of private office. = The operator whose story we are telling didn’t know about this change, and that very day when he happened to be in the wash room with one of the boys he opened up on the chief in a particularly sav- age fashion. The washroom was sep- arated by the thinnest kind of parti- | tion and every word could be heard distinctly on the other side. The oper- ator dipped his his face over the wash basin and as he sputtered and splashed he blessed the chief ina shockingly left-handed way. The man with him triéd to stop the tirade, but he couldn’t catch his eye,nor could he get near enough to him in time to shake him. Finally the other man ex- hausted himself and turned around with a towel in his hands. Then he saw the look of horror on his com- panion’s face. He knew that he was doomed. «tks As he stepped from the washroom with a jaunty air he met the chief. ‘I suppose,” said the latter, ‘you are ready to express your personal opinions in public as well as behind your vietim’s back ?”’ The operator never wavered a hair’s breadth. ““T am,” he said, smilingly; ‘‘and I can add a little to what I have already said.”” And with that he expressed his opinion of the chief in still more vig- orous language, took his hat and stalked out. It vas the first time that he had’ been an idler since lie was a boy. He felt a little dazed. Then he. resolved on a bold Stroke. He would go straight ‘to New York. That night he was on his way. With- in a week he had secured an excellent situation; Today he commands a sal- ary of atleast $6000. “And I owe if all,”’ he said not long ago to a Cleveland friend, ‘‘to the fact that I fired myself ont of the old oper- ator’sroom.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer, QUAINT / AND CURIOUS, . In 1897 Ohio furnished almost 37,- 000 tons of grindstones. The common pond frog’s natural lifetime is 12 to 15 years. The coinage of a sovereign (about $5) costs the English mint 3-4d (about 11-2 cents). : There are parts of the Ganges val- ley in India where the population averages 1200 to the square mile. The fastest flowing river in the world is the Sutlej, in British India, with a descent of 12,000 feet in 180 miles. Iceland’s geysers never shoot their water higher than 100 feet, whilesome of our Yellowstone geysers go more than three times as high. The only surviving ' daughter of John Brown, of Harper's Ferry fame, is living in a small town in California, in nearly destitute circumstances. She is a temperance advocate. France has set up about three hun- dred monuments to more or less dis- tinguished Frenchmen during the last twenty-five years, and there are now 127 committees collecting money for more. Wales is the richest part of Great Britain in mineral wealth. England produces annually about $10 to each acre, Scotland a little less than $10, the product of Wales amounts to over $20 per acre. A fibrous preparation of steel, made in the same manner as -the so-called ‘mineral wool,” by passing an air blast through molten steel, is coming into use for cleansing, polishing, etc., instead of sandpaper. In 1525, the year of the plague, so great was ‘the gloom in England that it has become known as ‘‘the stil Christmas.” ‘‘The Christmas of the Great Frost’ took place in 1739. The Thames was frozen from bank to bank and barbecues were held upon the ice. The earliest mention of “liveries” made “in history is in the reign of King Pepin of France. This king flourished about the year 750 A. D., and because of his diminutive size he had bestowed upon him the rather dis- respectful appellation of ‘‘Pepin the Short.” ; A chewing apparatus for people who have lost their teeth and do not care to wear false ones has just been in- vented by a Frenchman. The food to be chewed is placed between the blades, which are opened and closed three or four times, and the food is thus re- duced to a’state of pulp. A Plant's Curious Habit. A curious fact is the tobacco plant’s habit of erecting its leaves at sundown and dropping them at sunrise. Of course it is only possible while the plant is immature—while the upper leaves are not more than two-thirds developed—but it is so marked as to "make a wide difference in the looks of a field at evening and 12 hours later. And the results are so beneficent as to make it seem the result of reason, for if the dewfall is heavy it “all runs down to the stalk, trickles down to 1 the root and thus Tortifies” it against the blazing sun; While, if the leaves remained in pendulous spread, the moisture would either drop from their points beyond reach or else svapotate in the morning sun, ~~ Ei Cashmere Again Popular. Cashmere is perhaps of all dress goods considered the smartest, but until this moment it has been undeni- ably too light for heavy winter weather. - The Muscovite species is nothing more than the weave of cashmere worn in winter in Russia, with a thick, woolly inside facing that keeps up the heart and the heat, while outside it is sim- ply beautiful cashmere that pleases the fastidioys eye. Old Lady’s Cap. The foundation for a well-shaped cap is an oval of heavy-starched net of grayish white. Over this the out- side can be shirred. For the outside cut a larger oval of ‘tarletan and gather with coarse thread upon the foundation. A little ruffle of tarletan finishes the edge. The strings are hemstitched and hang from the sides of the cap. The top is set off with a bow of ribbon in 3 lilac, pink or black. Tulle a Rival of Straw. Tulle will prove a strong rival of straw during the early part of the coming season. The most novel ways of using it are not in quillings or puffs, as last year, but in layers, one over the other, until it is quite opaque, and then it is either stretched smooth- ly over a firm shape, or arranged in the form of a beret, with the loose edges of the tulle separate, like the leaves of a book, and each one bordered with extremely narrow satin ribbon or a row of spangles. She Trains Race Horses. Miss Loretta Elliott of Orient, Me., is the owner of many fast horses which she raised and trained herself in her father’s stables. She is a well edu- cated, cultivated young woman, and the fact that she recently won a race on the track at Pottsville, DMe., has by no means taken from her popular- ity. Shes an accomplished horse- woman, and at the same time as sweet and maidenly as she can be. The horses love her and follow her round like dogs.—New York Journal. Responsible for Bird Slaughter. The fashion which certain loud women are trying to introduce, of wearing a whole stuffed bird on their bonnets, is probably the most vulgar and offensive, even from the artistic point of view, that has been foisted into practice since the day of the Gre- cian bend. There is no ornament so becoming to a woman as her own womanliness. . The fashion that is making silence in our once tuneful fields and woods, that is taking the play of bright colors out of the air and the road sides, that is letting loose on the earth vast multitudes of destructive insects, is a fashion based on cruelty which is most unwomanly. Neither men or women can afford to counten- ance such a practice. It is a woman who makes the murder, though it is men who kill the birds for her. Take those poor little dead creatures out of your hat, madam, and the gunners will stop their mischief soon enough. —Brooklyn Eagle. 2 A Woman’s Watch, They were sipping chocolate at a down town fashionable cafe and talk- ing of watches. And this is what was said: “I have carried my wateh for ten years,” said the senior member of the party, ‘‘and it has never cost me a penny for repairs.” *‘Mercy!” exclaimed another “How do you manage it?” “I took care of it. You know, men are always making disagreeable re- marks about women’s watches, and when my husband gave me mine he said it would probably be out of order most of the time. And I just made up my mind to show him there was one woman in the world who knew how to take care of a watch.” ‘‘But have you never lost or had it stolen?” ‘“Never; I dropped it several times at first, but it did not show any marks.” “But do the works never get out of order?” “The what?” “The works “inside. Have never broken the mainspring?’’ “I never looked inside.” ‘‘But how do you wind it?” “I don’t wind it. That’s how I take care of it and keep it nice.” They all stared for a moment. Then they said: ‘Oh, you clever thing!”’and adjourned - sine = die.—Philadelphia Times. one, you Sleeves and Chokers. The wrists of long sleeves are inya- riably trimmed inside the slight flare that covers about two inches of the hand. The trimming is, however,con- fined to the inside of this little funnel, and is not allowed to fall over the whole hand as it was last winter. A little fan of plated silk and lace flaring out from the slash on the back of the sleeve at the wrist is a neat and popu- lar way of trimming a cloth gown. ~ As for the very important choker — that bit of a thing determines almost ‘as much as does the shape of the | sleeve the smartness of the rig. The collar is getting plainer and smoother every month, the very latest one be- ing of velvet or silk folded softly about the throat, and pinned with round jeweled clasps, with no bow at all. When there is a bow it is a square one in front, with a buckle, usually a huge cravat affair, and often wifh long, fringed ends. = If anything is put about the top. of the choker it is a small lappet, a shaped piece and not a ruffle of lace, or a small turnover of velvet or of fur, which stops on each side of the front. Tailor gowns and jacket rigs ave completed with big cravat bows of plaided silk or velvet, or with large andivery handsome Asc sot scarfs pinned mannishly about the throat and with their long ends reaching to the waist. They cost $4 or $5, and are no end swagger,-as are also the same shaped scarfs of red flannel which is worn with golf and sporting rigs, with skat- ing gowns of serge and cloth,’ or wit heavy driving coats. : The small knotted tight little four- in-hand is the cravat worn after the Ascot, and it may be a more elaborate and feminine affair, with ends fringed or plaited, or trimmed with puffings of chiffon and lace ruffles. Coats and capes of fur and velvet are worn with a tight choker effect of jewels, or with a velvet or lace scarf with a big bow in front, the high ruf- fled or ruched Medici flaring up about the head above this arrangement. Fashion Notes. The newest Russian blouses have pleated backs and triple fronts, the latter resembling revers, showing the same width at top and bottom. Velvet ribbons, in widths varying from a quarter of an inch to two inches, are growing in popularity for belts, trimming and millinery purposes. Percales will be seen next season. No end of pretty, odd designs will make the goods unusually attractive, and it will be used for shirt waists and children’s dresses. 3 Damas glace and damas quadrille are stylish silk fabries that will make up into lovely waists, blouses and gowns for next season’s wear. Baya- dere effects may be had in damas. Pretty new taffetas show pin stripes and small checks on a light ground, sprinkled with tiny Dresden and Pom- padour buds and flowers. Ring de- signs are seen on the newest taffetas. Poplin barre is the name of a pretty new dress fabric that will be worn in spring and summer. It may be had in a number of popular street shades and will prove an excellent wearer. Tobacco, cocoa and.¢apueine browns are favorite shades. Blue, showing a gray tinge, is popular across the water, and indigo, prunelle and deep violet are stylish colors for this sea- son. Charming bodices for evening wear are made up, sleeves and all, of gath- ered mdusseline de soie frills, not more than an-inch in width. Each little frill is bordered with the narrow- est comete ribbon, gathered into a fairy frill. E Two new shades of Russian green are known as Kapock and Preabra- jensky. Some of the new light greens show’a yellow tone that is most effect- ive. In reds, the scarlet,old rose and geranium shades are seen much in Paris and Berlin. Dress goods showing braided effec ts are exceedingly popular. On colored grounds the designs are black, in wavy or soutache effects. / The mate- rial is an all wool satin finish. The favorite grounds are brown, green, heliotrope, blue and red. Light, tissue materials in medium qualities will be in demand another season. Chiffons, gauzes, nets, Lib- erty silk and mousselines in endless variety of clororing will soon be seenin the stores, and for evening wear will prove both satisfactory and stylish. Novelties in neckwear are seen at the largest stores. Long scarfs of gauze and muslin are to be worn, ty- ing in a bow under the chin, with the ends hanging loose to the waist. The ends of the scarf show machine stitch- ing, a lace ruffle or lace braid applique in scroll patterns. Some of the latest skirts for ball and reception gowns are of moire an- tiqgue and moire velours, showing pleatings of lace set on to the height of the knee. Skirts and waists of silk are both much trimmed, and show a great deal of insertion, in the same or in contrasting shades. In Paris, among the new color com- binations in plaids, are seen fine lines of dark shades appearing on lighter grounds, Gray is seen on back- grounds of light blue, white,pale pink and heliotrope. A novel plaid showed threads of dark blue in combination with bright green, red, white and clear yellow. Jackets of black cioth are more sty- lish than any of the colored cloths. In the latter,pale gray is worn more than any other. Elegant carriage jackets are of green~and lilac cloth, tailor made, Persian lamb is the favorite trimming for collars, cuffs and re- vers,and-after the lamb comes marten, mink and sable, i Y3simple matter, "SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS. A full-grown-man exhales 17 ounces of carbonic acid gas every twenty-four hours, From 140 pounds of gas tar in a ton of coal over 2000 distinct shades of aniline dyes are made. A new discovered spot on the sun, which is visible just now, is said to be 30,000 miles in diameter. Astronomers tell us that in our solar system there are at least seventeen million comets of all sizes. The difference between the tallest and shortest races in the world is one foot 4 1-2 inchesand the average height is five feet 5 1-2 inches. The lake of Urania, in Persia, con- tains more salt than the Dead sea, which holds twenty-six per cent., or eight times as much as the ocean. Singers, actors and public speakers, since the introduction of the electrie light, have less trouble with their voices, and are less likely to catch cold, their throats are not so parched, and they feel better. This is due to the air not being vitiated and the temper- ature more even. " Many persons are desperately afraid of night air, and so shut themselves nto close rooms and breath an atmos- phere poisoned by human exhalations. [t is well to avoid draughts, but night ° iir, as Florence Nightingale put it, is ihe only air we have at night, and it is nuch wholesomer pure than impure. In Berlin the firemen wear water- ackets, with a double skin, which they {are able to fill with water from the i aose. If the space between the two ayers becomed overfitled, the water scapes through a valve at the top of ‘he helmet, and flows down over the ireman, like a cascade, protecting him ioubly. M. Forel, in his excellent work on nts, has pointed out that very young nts devote themselves at first to the are of the larve and pupa, and that ‘hey take no share in the defence of ‘he nest or other out-of-door work intil they are some days old. This seems natural, because their first skin 's comparatively soft; and it would aot be well for them to undertake rough work or run into danger until their armor had had time to harden. Soiled Glasses Dangerous. The oculist expresses himself very amphatically on the amount of dam- age that is done to the eyes of the community from negligence in a very that of keeping. their spectacles and eyeglasses clean. He says: ‘I am shocked to see the num- ber of persons, intelligent men and women, who should know better, who spend their lives behind grimy eye- glasses. Lawyers, writers, students, schoolgirls and schoolboys, and eye- taxers of various sorts who use eye- glasses rqrely use them clean. To keep the pebbles in good wearing condition they should be cleaned about once an hour. Water is not so good a clean- ing agent as alcohol, and a handker- chief should give place to a piece of tissue paper. Chamois is also useful, and either is better than a linen hand- kerchief. The amount of injury done to the world’s eyesight through cloudy glasses is almost incalcuable.’ Another authority says thatif alcohol is not at hand, the glasses should be placed in a washbowl and sonked with warm water. Then they should be washed with soap and rubbed with a soft nail brush. Afterward theyshould be polished with tooth powder and re- ceive a final rub with tissue. A few drops of ammonia may be added to the water in which the glasses are soaked. An optician who has the patronage of many of the lorgnette sex declares that he has customers who come to him and demand that their glasses be changed, saying they cannot see. through them. ‘‘The only trouble i: that the lenses need washing,” says the optician, ‘‘and all they usually get is polishing witha chamois leather.” Jew tlers’ Review. How It Feels to Fall From a Height, F. R. Richmond, the architect, is now able to be in his office, but his thigh, which was broken close to the hip by a fall September 1, is stil weak, and he has a painful stiffness of the knee, which, however, will prob: ably not be permanent. The effects of his many severe cuts and bruises have disappeared. Mr.’ Richmong¢ fell thirty-five feet, with nothing tc hinder his flight, and landed on s lumber pile. He was on the roof of the Hooker schoolhouse and wished to get down on a. staging just unde: the eaves ‘to look at a cornice. Tc swing himself down he caught hold of » a rope reeved through a pulley block As his weight came upon it the rope. which was secured on the other side of the block by a knot, pulled througl and Mr, Richmond went hurtling down. In less than a second and a half he reached the lumber pile, but during that time he was able to think over the facts in the case and do a little philos- ophizing. “‘I felt myself falling,” he said, ‘‘and reckoned from the distance I had to go that I should probably be killed. My mind worked clearly and I did not lose consciousness, as 1 have heard men sometimes do in a fall of that kind. I thought to myself, ‘Every man. must die sometime, and this is probably the time for me.” 1 did not lose consciousness when 1 struck, but the thought came immedi- ately: T'm prettygbadly hurt, but this fall isn’t going to kill me.’ »_Spring- field {Yuss. ) Republican. A Long List. 7] have received nineteen proposals in the last two months.” ‘You don’t say! What a large num. ber of suitors you must have. Whom 2 were the proposals from?” “One from Charlie and lighted from that French count.” Judge.