Metamorphosed By DOROTHEA HALE Copyright, 1910, by American Press Association. The manager of burlesque opera sat at his desk. He had given out tliiit be seeded oue who could take a woman's part to act, dance uud sing. - A girl About twenty years old, comely, wllh a good figure aud a bright face, entered. "Dance?" asked the manager. The girl replied by pirouetting about In good style. "Sing?" She rnu the scale. Her voice was n full, round soprano- and very sweet. The range was remarkable. "Act?" She recited a .passage In a well known play. "You are engaged." Miss Fredrlca Harrow proved a suc cess. She bad iu bcr a certain spirit of delivery that wos especially appro priate to the parts she took. One role she played was that of a female Meph lstopheles. When the audience left the theater after the performance they felt that they had been under the in fluence of a deliciously bad girl. One Sunday morning the manager went to church. It Is possible for a manager of a burlesque troop to go to church and with religious motives. But this manager did not go with such motives. He went because he had heard that in the choir was a remark ably fine tenor. The services opened with a tenor solo. The manager was astonished. There was Miss Harrow In man's clothes. He not only recog nized her by her face, but through her voice, which was Miss Harrow's lower notes. But there was one difference between Miss Harrow soprano and Miss Har row tenor. The latter was as heavenly as the former was develish. She sang an "Ave Maria," and It seemed that an angel rather than a mortal was praying to the Virgin. The manager did not wonder that l lie tenor was ex citing attention.. But he had no use for him In burlesque opera. He ex pressed the good, and with that the manager was not concerned. "Where were you last night?" asked the manager the next day when Miss .. narrow came to rehearsal. "At home." The manager said no more. He had - elept over the tenor's Identity and had - come to the conclusion that he could not be Miss Harrow. Not long after that a man In bis troupe fell sick, and there was no one - to take his part. "How low are his lowest notes?" asked Fredrlca. The manager told her, and she said ..that she thought she could take the part He also asked her to sing the lower notes, but she said she couldn't ; jump right Into them; she must get it ty practice. She left him, agreeing to be ready for the part when required. Miss Harrow In man's clothes was a very different person from Miss Har- - row In woman's clothes. In the first - place, Instead of singing the part In a low soprano voice, she sang It as a tenor. In the second, she made a fail ure In her action. Instead of being adapted to burlesque, she sang as if she were In oratorio, "What the dickens Is the matter with you?" said the manager after the TSt act. "Your singing is all right ""Indeed, it's a wonder for a woman but you act as if you were preaching sermon." Miss Harrow hung her bead and looked hurt. However, she finished the performance, and before the man ager could catch her to find any more fault with her she had gone home. But the next day when she went into the theater he tackled ber. "There was something funny' about your work last night. How did you get down to a real baritone, and what made you act like a clergyman?" "I told you that with a little prac tice I could do the low notes, and, as for my acting, the part is different from those I've been playing. It is not a rollicking role." "And It wasn't taken out of a hymn Book, either." . - "I'm sorry. I thought I could take baritone parts sometimes." "So yon can, but not where there's any deviltry In them." In a few weeks the regular baritone was down again. 1 think," sold Fredrlca, "I can tnke that role. It's more serious." "Who'll tnke your part?" "I think I can take them both." "Nonsense!" - "I'll show you how it can be done to morrow at rehearsal." And she trip led awny. When the rehearsal came and the Manager went on to the stage to con luct it he wns more bewildered than ever. There were two Fredrlcn nar rows, fine and superfine. "How's this?" asked the manager, staring from one to the other. "Permit me," said Fredrlcn. "to in troduce my twin brother, Frederick Harrow. He hns a tenor voice." " Then she admitted that she had sub stituted him for herself in the man's pnrt; that while she was nil frolic he . was religiously emotional "Well," said the manager, "I want yon two. I have a scheme for an opera involving a transformation scene, man metamorphosed to woman and woman metamorphosed back to man. You two will do It to perfw--ifon." And so it was that the twins appear ella a part prepared for them ;:rt'! leaped a harvest. The opera was c:;li- - uV'The Devil and the Saint." ' FUNERAL COSTUMES. Their Extravagance Curbed by Law at One Time In England, . . Sumptuary mourning laws were for merly. ' found necessary In England to restrict the extravagance of the no bility and their imitators In the mat ter of funeral costume. ' At the end of the fifteenth century It was laid down that dukes, marquises and archbishops should be allowed sixteen yards of cloth for their gowns, "sloppes" (mourning cassocksi and mantles; Arls fourteen, viscounts twelve, barons eight, knights six aud all persons of In ferior degree only two. Hoods were forbidden to all except those above the rank of esquire of the king's house hold. - In the following century Margaret, countess of Richmond, mother of Hen ry TIL, Issued an ordinance for the "reformation of apparel for great es tates of women In tyme of mourn ings." So it seems that men and wom en have met In the extravagance of sorrow. Even 200 years ago London trades men found that court mourning seri ously affected their business. Addison relates that at a tavern be often met a man whom he took for an ardent and eccentric royalist Every time tills man looked through the Gazette he ex claimed, "Thank God, all the reigning families of Europe are well." Occa sionally he would vary this formula by making reassuring remarks respect ing the health of British royalists. Aft er some time Addison discovered that this universal royalist was a colored silk merchant, who never made a bar gain without , inserting in the agree ment, "All this will take place as long as no royal personage dies In the In terval" London Chronicle. MENTAL INFLUENCES. The State of the Mind Hat a Direct Effect Upon the Body. A good 'deal is said In these days about the effect of mind on matter In the way of the cure of disease, but less is heard about mental Influences as a cause of bodily Ills, yet it Is an old truth that the state of mind has a direct effect on the body. The gloom and depression caused by worry and anxiety create a morbid condition of tho physical system. It Is Impossible to feel well physically when the mind and spirits are downcast The blood does not circulate properly, appetite falls, the head aches, and if these mor bid conditions continue more deep seated ailments are likely to arise, and cancer may be one of them. With many persons a fit of anger is followed by an attack of Indigestion. Excitement destroys the appetite, bad news creates nausea, fright causes falntness, and so on. Violent or de pressing emotions always disturb the equilibrium of body and mind alike. This being the case, It is inevitable that when these emotions often recur or become continuous serious physical results will follow. The obvious les son is, then, that mental serenity tends to health is, In fact, an essential element of health and that Instead of resorting to mind "cures" after the health is broken it is wise to preserve the serenity as a preventive and safe guard against disease. Indianapolis Star. Lordly Disraeli. Disraeli once told a lady that two possessions which were Indispensable to other people he bad always done without "I made," she said, "every kind of conjecture, but without suc cess, and on my asking him to en lighten me be solemnly answered that they were a watch and an umbrella. 'But how do you manage,' I asked, 'If there happens to be no clock In the room and yon want to know the time?' 'I ring for a servant,' was the magnilo quent reply. 'Well, I continued, 'and what about the umbrella? What do yon do, for instance, If you are in tbe park and are canght in a sudden show er? 1 take refuge,' be replied, with a smile of excessive gallantry, 'under tbe umbrella of the first pretty woman I meet" Easier to Write It. In 1871 Edward Lear was staying with the governor of Bombay at Ma habaleshwar, the hill station of the Bombay presidency. I was there and took a walk . with him one day. He asked me tbe name of some trees. I told him thy were called "Jambul" trees in India. He immediately pro duced his sketch book and in his in imitable style drew a bnll looking into a jam pot He said it would help him to remember the name. London Spec tator. Pleasant Prospect To' isn't stopped at de Palace hotel befo', Is yo', boss?" Inquired tho col ored man who was piloting a just arrived traveler from tbe railway sta tion to the hostelry. "No. But what makes you sure of it?" "TJbkase yo' gwlne dar now, sab." Pnck. Amiability Rules. Don't flutter yourself that friendship authorizes you to say disagreeable things to your intimates. On the con trary, the nearer you come into rela tion with a person the more necessary do fact and courtesy become. Holmes. Admitted. She Oh, I have no doubt you love me, but your love lacks tbe supreme touch -unselfishness. "What makes you say that?" "You admit it Yon want me for yourself alone, you say," The Utopia of today Is tbe reality of. tomorrow. Passy. DECAY OF TIN. Remarkable Alteration Which Takes , Place In the Metal. Anything made of tin. It seems. Is doomed to a brief, existence. This metal Is subject to n remarkable kind of alteration, a species of disease to which it is liable. When exposed to the air tin . undergoes no chemical change, as do Iron and copper, which, ef course, chemically combine with the oxygen or with water. The tin, how ever, still remains metallic tin, but gradually becomes gray and dull and falls to fine powder. 1 The disease is "catching." It Infects or induces the same change in other masses of tin In tbe Immediate neigh borhood. We are told that In a Rus sian Imperial magazine, In place of tin uniform buttons, little heaps of powder were found. A consignment of Banka tin sent from Rotterdam to Moscow in 1877 arrived at the latter place In the form of powder. This alteration Is due to a change In the internal crys talline structure of tbe metal and is analogous to the slow transformation of monocllnlc sulphur to rhombic sul phur. As a result, objects of tin of archaeological Interest are rare. Those that have been found have been In the form of earthenware vessels, knobs, etc., which have been found in the Bwlss lake dwellings coated with tin foil, Casslterlte or tinstone is tbe Bin gle ore from which the tin has been obtained in any quantity. Knowledge and Scientific News, London. A PLACID MERCHANT. He Had Some Regard For the 8oclal 8ide of Trade. The summer visitor in a small sea port town was amazed and amused at the assortment of merchandise display ed in the little store at the head of the wharf. The showcase was devoted to an assortment of candy at one end and a lot of cigars and tobacco at the oth er end and no barrier between. Next to tbe showcase stood a motor engine valued at several hundred dollars. Thinking to Dlease the nrnnrletnr. the visitor remarked that even the large department stores in Boston could not boast of such a collection. 'Well." he said. "I ain't anlnir them stores, 1 can tell you. I aim to keep wnnt my roiks want When a man wants an engine for his bo't he wants it, and if tbe fish are running he can't wait to send way to Portland or Bos ton for it. He wants it when he does, then and there." After a little pause he continued: "I don't like tbe way they do business In them big stores, anyway. Why, when you go into a store up to Bos ton the first thing you know some body asks you what you want "Now, I never do anything like that If a man comes into my place I pass tbe time o' day and ask htm to set, and after he's set and talked a while If be wants anything he'll tell me. "I never pester a man to buy. May be be ain't come to buy; maybe he's' come to talk." Youth's Companion. ' The First Universities. To fix precisely the date of the rise of the first universities is Impossible for the reason that they were not founded, but grew. They were started by a few able men who had something they wished to teacb and youths wished to learn. Gradually the free, voluntary center of learning became the organized affair we know as the university. Among the earliest of these centers of learning were Saler no, Naples and Bologna, Italy being the first land to experience tbe literary revival. We may say that Salerno university was fairly established by the year 10G0, the University of Bo logna by 1160 and the University of Naples by the year 1200. The Uni versity of Paris, which owes its ex istence to the genius of Abclard, was founded about the same time. New York American. Handed It Back. A clergyman in the neighborhood of Nottingham was complimenting a tai lor In bis parish on repairs which be had done for him. In the course of conversation he, however, incautiously observed: "When I wnnt a good coat I go to London. They make them there." Before leaving tbe shop be Inquired, "By the bye, do you attend my church?" "No," was the reply. "When I want to hear a good sermon I go to Lon don. They make them there." Lon don Tit-Bits. - Tea In the Time of Buddha. At tbe time of Buddha China was en joying a large foreign commerce In tea. It was carried by ber junks to Japan, Korea, Tonquln, Anam, Cochin, Bur ma, Slam, India. Ceylon, Persia and Arabia. ' According to one record, It wns sent to a great black river country west of Arabia, from which It was sep arated by a long and very torrid sea, which mnst have been Egypt It was carried by caravans to Manchuria. Mongolia, Kuldja, Tartary, Tibet, Per sia and northern India. Couldn't Tell. "Has your pocket ever been picked?" "Really, I don't know. It never was before I got married. If It has been since I. of course, would have no way of finding out about It" Chicago Record-Herald. I Not Always. The Inspiration. i Teacher (of night schooll-What do "This Is a pretty good poem. You you understand by the term "life seu must nave had some stcong inspire- tence?" Give an example of oue. tion "I had. The editor promised me 10." Louisville Courier-Journal. The heart of a loving woman is a golden sanctuary where often there reigns an Idol of clay". Limarae. I DEATHWATCH BEETLES. Their Tapping 8tands For Courtship and Not For Warning., -Much mental anguish could have teen saved to past generations aud some not so very far past If people bad known that the mysterious tap ping of the "death watch" stood for courtship and not denth. A writer In tbe Scientific American explains that tbe various species of tbe beetle anohl nm and .their bigger relatives of the genus xestoblum not ouly attack furni ture, but so completely riddle the whole woodwork of old bouses by their borings as to render the structures un safe. Indeed, a beam that has been tenanted by these Insects for a num ber of years is little better than nn outer shell containing a mass of wood dust The xestoblum is the common deathwatcb, while the anoblum also Is In the habit of making a tapping sound. The nocturnal tappings of these In sects, distinctly audible In a room where there is an otherwise complete absence of noise, bos for many centu ries been regarded by the supersti tious as a warning of tbe approach of death. Tbts uncanny interpretation of a mysterious sound Is scarcely surpris ing when it is remembered that only in recent years have naturalists dis covered its true cause. The little beetle has been found in some secluded spot Jerking Its bard bead at regular intervals upon tbe sur face of the wood beneath it So far as can be told. Its rapplngs constitute a kind of courtship ritual. Obviously they have no connection with the lat ter end of mankind. A RAIN OF FIRE. The Great Meteorlo Shower That Scared Folks In 1833. In Scharf s "Chronicles of Baltimore" there is a vivid description of the star ry hailstorm, the fiery meteoric show er, of 1833, and old files of newspapers are made luminous at that date witb the impressions of editors aud contrib utors. One writer said It was tbe grandest and most charming sight ever presented to the vision ot man. Awak ened from sleep, he sprang to the win dow, thinking the house was on fire, but when be looked out he beheld stars, or fiery bodies, descending like "torrents." The shed "in the adjoin ing yard to my own," be wrote, "was covered with stars, as I supposed, dur ing the whole time." Professor Olm stead of Yale college thought that the exhibition was the finest display of celestial fireworks that bad been wit nessed since tbe creation of the world, although be, too, while knowing Its character, was sufficiently Imbued with the theological spirit of tbe time to believe that it was a solemn portent that carried a divine warning. One editor whose comment upon this phenomenon was probably more quoted than any other be ever made said: "We pronounce tbe raining fire which we saw on Wednesday morning an awful type, a forerunner, a merciful sign, of that great and dreadful day which tbe inhabitants of the earth will witness when the sixth seal will be opened. Many things occurring In tbe earth tend to convince us that we are now in tbe latter days." Dreams of Genius. An Interesting book might be written on the subject of the dreams of genius. Stevenson maintained that much of bis work was only partially original. His collaborators were the brownies who ran riot through bis brnln during the bours of sleep. He Instances the case of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," "I bad long been trying to write a story on this subject," he writes, "to find a body, a vehicle for tbut strong sense of man's double being which must at times come In upon and overwhelm the mind of every thinking creature. For two days I went about racking my brains for a plot of any sort, and on the second night I dreamed the scene at the window and a scene afterward split In two, in which Hyde, pursued for some crime, took the powder and underwent the change In tbe presence of bis pursuers. All the rest was made awake and consciously, although I think I can trace In much of It the manner of my brownies." London Chronicle. Opportunities and Limitations. Tbe world is full of opportunities Tbe world has it place for all kinds of people. If a man look no higher than pickax or bod, but be Industrious, the world can use him. The opportunities for the man who has spent tbe least time in school, getting only the prac tical studies, are better and higher than come to him of the hod, but such a man soon reaches his limit. He Is on a short ladder. . Tbe one Who bus laid the foundntlon of a broad general education as well as a technical one has, given Intelligence, Industry and loyalty, practically no limit to bis ca reer. K. U. Graduate Magazine. A Hard Problem, A certain debating society is discuss ing tbe question as to which is tbe an grier, the husband who goes home nni finds that the dinner Is not ready or the wife who has dinner ready and whose husband does not come home. It is believed tbut the debate will end In a draw. Shnggy Haired Pupil "I pronounce you husband and wife." Chicago Tribune. We can do nothing well without joy and a good conscience, which is the ground of joy. Dlbbes. SOWING HIS WILD OATS. Nlghte of Wasteful Debauchery That Wore Him Out. "Yes, I'm dissipating too much," said the red faced rnsilc us he rubbed his bead despoudently. "Dissipating?" gasped his friend. "That's the word I used. You've heard that expression about 'burning lues candle at both endsr Well. that's my case exactly. To tell the truth-. I have been having too cay a time. Last night 1 weut down to tbe Blue Moon and drank a soda. Then some traveling man offered me a cigar. Of course I had to take it" "You don't mean It?" "I mean Just what I say. Then I bought a ham sandwich. 1 ate it and actually forgot myself nod took an other. On my way home I dropped into the church social for a few mln ntes. Some of the young Indies made me try the 'penny dip,' and I drew a blank." "Such extravagance!" 'That's exactly It Extravagance and dissipation will kill me. It was 9 o'clock before I reached home." "Nine o'clock!" "Yes. I must be sowing my wild oats. Well, I've finished now. Night before Inst I called on my girl. She wouldn't let me leave until I had taken her out and bought chocolate creams. Talk about pleasure bunting! I'm simply worn out after these nights of wasteful debauchery." Pearson's Weekly. BLINDING A SHARK. A Pearl Diver's Ruse by Which H Made Good His Escape. A successful diver must possess great courage and nerves of steel. Such a man connected witb a large wrecking company was visiting some years ago the pearl fisheries in the gulf of California, where sharks abounded. On one of his trips in quest of the pearl oyster be bnd a narrow escape from a fearful death. He bad been Instructed never to stir from the bottom until be bad looked up and around. Fortunately he heeded the advice. Having filled bis bag, he glanced quickly about and caught sight of a huge shovel nosed shark watch ing him. In an emergency men think fast. Near the diver was a large rock. Ho moved quickly to the other side of It, hoping to dodge the ferocious monster, but the maneuver did not work. The shark watched every movement chang ing his position by a slight motion of his powerful tall. Time was precious, and the diver conceived the Idea of blinding tbe i shark by stirring up the mud. Under cover of that be might escape. He worked for dear life and had the wa ter thick with mud in less than half a minute. Slipping around the rock again, be rose to the surface, having barely strength enough to reach the side of the boat and was hauled on board just as the voracious man eater made a rush for him. Romeo Not Taken Seriously. Juliet was only fifteen years old, but she thought she was quite grown up. One evening, says Mrs. R. A. Pryor in "My Day," she was receiving on tbe moonlit veranda a young man caller. He, too, It seemed, considered himself grown up. Tbe anxious youth was moved to seize tbe propitious hour and declare himself. Juliet wished to an swer correctly and dismiss him with out wounding him. She nssured him mamma would nev er consent A voice from within they were sit ting beneath ber mother's window settled the matter: "Accept tbe young man, Juliet, if you want to. I've not the least ob jection. And let him run ulong home now. De sure to bolt tbe door when you come In." Evidently tbe mother bnd small re spect for boy lovers nod wished to go to sleep. A Prince Edward Island Legend. There Is a delightful legend among the people of Point Prim to tbe effect that when tbe English attacked the French fort at that place a chain bnll from one of the attacking vessels cut the steeple from tbe old church located on the very point In falling It toppled over the promontory aud carried the bell which It contained Into tbe sea. Dwellers along" the poiut affirm that from time to time tbe sound of that bell comes over tbe waters at eventide and that its phantom tone Is ever a warning of a fierce storm or some im minent danger to those who make their living by the spoils of the ocean An Office Engagement. One of Washington's gilded young men came rapidly down the steps of his house half an hour after noon the other day. "What's the rush?" asked a friend. "Oh, I've got to hurry down to the office or I won't get there in time to go out for lunch." Saturday Evening Post Her Excuse. Her Horrified Mother Maude, 1 should like to know why you allowed that presumptuous fellow to kiss you. Tho Daughter 1-1-1 thought, mother, no one was looking. Real Reform, Knlckcr-Whnt Is your Idea of mu nicipal government? Bocker First provide an auto and then create an office to fill it New York Suu. Safe Ground. "Every big millionaire likes to tell how he got bis first thousand dollars." "Yes; he's usually on safe ground there." Pittsburg Post ft IN A SPIRIT OF MISCHIEF By SHIELA ESTHER DUNN Copyright, 1910, by American Press Aesoclatlon. "My child, what's the matter be tween you and George?" , "Oh, aunty, I'm vexing him!" "Don't do it." A young girl sat at the feet of a wo- man of ninety. The tender curves inl the face of the one contrasted strongly with the wrinkles of the other, who wns her great-great-grahdnunt The one was of the early twentieth cen tury, the other of the early nineteenth. "When I was your age," the old wo man continued after a pause, "General Jackson wns presldeut. He was a great fighting man, and since he not only fought the enemies of bis coun try, but his own enemies, his examplo affected every one. He fought a duel with uud killed a young married man who said something disagreeable about his wife. I always thought she was no saint, but the romance of it fired a young friend of mine, Albert Steven son, and he wns constantly looking for." some girl on whom to practice Jack son's knight errantry. "I wns accepting the attention of a young Arirglnlnn, Fits Hugh Fairfax. He was a remarkably handsome man and full of real chivalry, not the spurl ous kind affected by many others. He was devoted to me, and I loved him desperately. "But our southern girls had the samo romantic Ideas as tbe young man. Wo thought it a fine thing to flirt with two or three men and at last give our selves to some suitor who was ready to play Don Quixote In our defense. I was at the time playing a game with both Albert Stevenson and Fits Hugh Fairfax. I had one other string to my bow, but I have forgotten his name. And yet at one time I thought I should murry him. Oh, dear, how one's mem ory falls after so many years! "One day I was walking in the gar den with Fairfax. We sat down on a bench under a tree. Stevenson called, and they told him I wns in the gar den. I saw him leave the house and come townrd us. Fairfax was turned away from him. I am sure Fairfax was about to propose to me. He was bending over me with his face near to mine. - Suddenly I jumped up, assum ing nn offended appearance. At the same time Stevenson joined us. "He asked Fltz Hugh what it all meant Very red in the face, he told Stevenson to ask me. Stevenson turn ed to me, and I, acting under the guid ance of the spirit of deviltry that was In me, said never a word, but walked to the house. "I was no sooner on the gallery than it occurred to me that some real trou ble might come out of my freak, and, returning to the young men, I told them that there was nothing of mo ment between Mr. Fairfax and mo ana they were to Consider the matter as not having happened. Then when : Fairfax gave mo that cold, contemptu ous look, which I can see at this very moment, my blood ran cold. 1 knew he had loved tue, that I loved him and that I had lost bim. "Neither of the young men spoke. A I had nothing more to say and Influ enced by the look Fltz Hugh had given me, I went away, leaving them togeth er. I made a second mistake in doing this, but I couldn't remain where Fltz Hugh was after that look. I wished to go to my room and weep. There was more to weep for than the loss of bis respect, and no man can really love a woman without that. It did not oc cur to me that after I had exonerated him there would be any trouble be tween hlin and Stcvcr.son. "I lay awake that night till dawn and then fell asleep. I awoke late in the morning and went downstnirs Into the dlnlng room. " 'La's a massy. Missy Imogen,' said our table servant, 'have yo' heerd de news?' " 'No,' I said. 'What Is It?' " 'Mars' Stevenson and Mara' Fltz Hugh fought a duel dts mawnln' befo' sunup, an' Mars' Fltz Hugh killed Mars' Steveusou.' "I sank on the floor In a swoon. "It wns a long time before I recover ed from an attack of brain fever. I re covered from the fever, but thafs all I have recovered from to this day. "Fltz Hugh never camu to see me oi, as far as 1 could lenrn, asked for me. I knew thnt in my heedless act and? Its result I bad fixed a great gulf be tween him and me. ne went back to Virginia. He never married, nor did I. But we never met again. "A friend of both parties told roe what had happened after I left tffo two young men. Stevenson assumes! that I had exonerated Fltz nugh be cause I wns mngnnnimous and did, not wish to make trouble. He posed as my defender und sent a challenge to the man who had Insulted me. In cited me! In another moment he would have asked me to be his wife. They fought with pistols, and nt the first shot Fltz Hugh had fired In the nlr. Stevenson then made some Irri tating remark, whereupon Fltz Hugh on tho second shot had sought to wing his opponent. By this shot he unin tentionally killed his antagonist. "By that one ifct I lost the only man I over loved, mndo hlin a murderer with a sting upon his conscience, caus ed tho premature death of one whq loved me and have lived for three quarters of a century under a blight. "No, no, donr, don't vex your lover. Many a pair of young lovers have been separated and tbch jives turned uwry, by a spirit of nile'-Ln the pnrt oi the girl. But mine Is the worst of aL'.