A WANA Be CATT dant. the o land pon: whee ont. i lying reefs the steamer Drammond Cas- sin ran, sinking three minutes after axrd and carrving down every soul on “ilabant’’ 18 the Anglicieed form of | “Onessant,’’ the French name, Pliny | calls the island “Uszantis,” and the | {Britons know it ak “Enez Hensa, '* ‘which means “The Isle of Terror. *® It | pwell deserves the Celtio name. The inhabitants of Ushant are a hardy rt race, the men all fishermen and seamen, the worsen all filers of the woky sail The Iatter on high with its flat coif, which strikingly re fealli the feminine headgear of southern ey ee brie wens A bariad, often for long weeks at a time, tltale, mod whence their dark hair streams in fre breed of ponies still roansed in mi Fwildness over wn Inge part of the tiland, | and for centurion the inhabitants than from any intercourse with the main. Jive. Bat st the same time they pre. {swerved the primitive virtoos, sod Bon. | tielos of Ixith among them, : Lgolarhir a a poor or two of their own vr I Rith and kindred in the treacherous y waters arcand their isle, their sympa | thies have always been with those | whom shipwreck has imperiled. Several Tof the Broton islands have notoriously harbored ecoramunities of wreckers, hl but the peeple of Ushant have again { and again Sistiugoished themselves by their efforts to save distressed vessels 6 | or their crows. Whenever ono of the islanders is Tout 1 at aN tomching covemitry, called “the ci proelia’ is performed. The rejatives , rjand fricrids of the deceand carry to his | house un small Weadén cross, over which the that ot he oan a #3 inches distant froma and of the oe of nine upon Ee bad it is : ries, —-Poatt + heen en ea saeing in ; be styled i HY me jergy repeat the prayers for the dead, as if this symbol were the pOrpee jtseif. Then tho _oross bearer, who, whenever instance of symbolism), incloses it in a ors, deposits it at the foot of a statao of St. Pol Aurelien, the patron of the isle, LA fiw yours ago a hundred or soof fhese ooffars could be sen assembled aroand tho stat, Ushaut is known to history Ascanty aa 1258 an Eaglish expodit 5 xian and ravaged it wi aod sword, Then, in 1378, is watem witnessed the mach eritivhend naval on gagerce et between Keppel and d'Or Villiers, Ww visio h English histor ris 8 senally From: ) : carinhly 1st i A 8 Gi saw the *‘gloricas fort of June,” when Joel Fewe ooriminly shattered the Frooeh ships of war conmandod by | Villarot-Jorense, but at tha same Sime my sgnally faded to prevent the large flood of Frepeh worchantmen, on whose ar pended for reaps to pros fia | the port of Brest. Fi id month y | ¥ Maganine, is the nel predesthind to Creda of Blac and denth in shown by a strange rhymed proves, “Memoirs Prema Beyond the Grave," afd which may be Englished thos {He who wees Belle Tale doth se Bist joy, at gare ig rv ehant’s Sood, yon re your blocd. (Hf the wild scenery around Ushant | iz | there has probably never been any bet {ter descoriztion than that given by 1 Chateantiriand. The island is the lar pest snd from the mainland the most distant, of these forming the sre hipehag ts ve pich it gives fe name. Molese, the Tuext in size, trades largely in ite own soil, which on account of certain chem deal properties is sought after by Breton puriste. Then, in addition ty Socires of Httle islots, some of than mers sits amd rocks, there is Quemsenes, Twhich js abimt a quarter the size of { Ushant, while near to the mainland i Berdquot, or the Blessed Isls, 80 called {on account of its proximity to the Bre- : tn shore asd the refuge it offers amid | Sa that of Los Pierres Noires, Many a stout ship and many a frail > fishing boat have been shattend among | these reeds, where the witersever soe thi . lonr fathers was ge 1 1 | aud roar, even on calma summer days But winter ix the time 10 so Ushant i and its neighboring isles, all bare and rugged, rising from ansid the gale lashed {waves Norock bound coast can offer & {more impressive spectacle than that | which (ho ocean then presents as is 1 lonps in its dread, blind might arvand The Lele of Terror,” — Westminster Ga- Wants It This Time. “Hand over aud be quick about it,” Leaid the “hold op’* as be put a revolwr {to the head of the belated man. “‘But you held me up last week wid didn't get anything," remoustrated tle victim. “Well, hand over what I didn't get 3 then!" — Detroit Free Press eb Af The 5 cent silver piece familiar to authorized by congruss 792, and its coinage was be d 1 Feb i 1878 some mit ia thus that we lve to nothing and isize of the vesdl. For instance, a ave | sterner of 150 tong borden carries on 1 an wrerage 80 gallons of oll This ofl 1s { the refuse discarded by the oll refining boned, exeept throes, lies off the north. | is wiht extremity of France and forms the corner around which vessels from | "the south torn into the English channel | | after crossing the Bay of RBiway. | a and holidays | {still often display their Ansiont costome, . recdom below their waists J Within the last quarter of a centory a wl apon as savages. De- pasa and, they cortainly lod very primitive esty cod hospitality have ever been ar | {in onsen of alu peril that the tan Living your by year, with entailing : ! importuned declared he ecnid give his | comrades no assistangg, ss his matches but a good, fut salary betvven himself elmrnd io was in the same fix, and the proofreader relented and gave him done is the godfather | of the defunct (this again a touching | cotter gid, flowed by all the mourn. 1 STIk 1 whith you havi so generons- preccdioet my grandfather telling me of | {ing lights in the old dwrs—how be worild paddie around in her pretty bare '§ foot hooting the flint on dold wit victory. Finally, 19 years lator, Ust sant | 2 | arent piocfreadie. “LH you bad spent the tisoe you wisted on that chestiug roan cee of Mr. Eden's candlon e- | pomte the war, from getting safely into | That Ushant is, in Preton estimation, hi disiiguring discolorations, from which which Chateaubriand qoorcs in hin} { and anpoyanes, It dw worth while to fale: Ho who sooth Grod doth sen J | equal quantity of capsicum aman. with Yrgised serface should de carefully Uses a camel's hair brush nod allow it cost aN #00n as the first is entively ab bo wholly prevented. It is 1250 said shes phesunatisns or atifnoss of ths seek public pobscription. Every day the bell | 1% rung three times—at & 30 © ‘clock a mnnsville ig the signal for the people to arise, und in sunimer mest of the resis bell ansoances that it in the time to BaLST Its coinage was dis- | 8, to think always to the qanntily varying with the factorios and often consiste of a mixture ¢f whale oil, peornlenm and vegetable | oil I ross ot tormenor a4 gallon, and B Lirpe seed vise] cai be well sap plied] far 20 shiliings i donk it others think he same, Cr even wish $0 alive my thoughts That men were faidish who baw sought | To lave a pever dying cane When thot toot ran thine mrihly rae, Thon wilt pot live 4 work] wm earn” War srill woe ean in aftvir Years To vient vinci periicly resting place Thy poor romain wil righ ga will; Thr spies will be io tows Trem, fiouph i% 15 pert Aine tur Fe A Milton or o Raphael, The cil fv stowed in #pacions give tanks, soranped Di te bold of the «hip to act ae baliaet ach tank cobtains 80 gallons of oil, and go ingeni ns mechan. | fral tap arrange connie e the uns with the ontside of the vessol i If a dangercod gale ariges and the ship becomes nmansgeable and likely to fonder, the sitios are opened, and | 20 gallimy or mon: of the oi bi allowed | 10 shea Jot Che aes The fort instantaneous However | stomny the ses misy be, the vessel live in a getitly heaving milipond. There is po further danger of foundering, and the pil moves slong with the © for som time, often half an +0 ir which i# breaks nip and digwrses, The | ship mist slacken speed a Uttle, and | mors ¢i]l is Jet out from the tanks Enormons waves nay bear down on the | ship, tot on approwhing the mingle | oiled circle they seem to melt away and | harmlessly beneath the vessol jo Sailing vessels are pot so often fur | pished with oi] tanks as stenmers, Tt is eatiinatnd, Bowevir, that over 200 ves | i sela have been saved from shipwreck by | means of the ofl tanks sinve they wer introdineed a fow penrs ago If sor A CITY PASTEL. oR BA Weslthy Proofreaders Toil. Once npon a time a weaithy proof. | readier ‘who possessed an entire box of matches was acoosted by an indigent editor who wanted five for his pipe and od nothing but a (opy of the “Light of Asia." The proofreader thos were hurd come by and be lied nothing and » heartless world Thy editor de- mosly fogitive match with a bead on it that was so small it was nly » pine pla “This piateh, said the o dito aR be ly donated to the relief of safferiog ho manity has effected a maricione revo. lation in society for so small » thing. 1 the trotible they need to hate in obiain- | world ®t up in bed while grandma mornings, sod bow when she had found i while sie was knoeking + spark ont of the tld Bint and steel be wos sure of another bail hour's nap ‘Wow! That | jnfienal thing burned sy fps. Gime me Bother match” Not to any ixtent,”’ rplind the op | in lighting your pipe, you wend have | bean out of the woodi. Nob can gitber hunts fins and steel or procare 8 1 ah ] Chieago Dispatch. For Black : Hyon Tt ds often the onse that people mest | with steidents and braises (hat ssa they suffer pot a Little embarrassment | kine that thers is a simple rensedy, and on quite within the reach (if every one, Immediately after the accident sais an macilage ade of gum antbic. To this adil & few drops of gliverin - The clonnsed ‘and dried, thes painted all over with the capsicurs preparation to dry, then put on the secimid or third {sorbed A medical journal is authority | for the staternent thas il {his cours 1a paisa issmediately after the injury diseoloration of the bruisil tissce wil this retpedy is umm uased da a cure for New ¥oxk Ledger. A Vitage Rintng Miekt Wor more than 20 years Bowmae- ville, Pa, has had what 14 known as a village bell It is swung between two kizth upright poles snd wis paid tor by | m., 11 o'vlock a ra. and § o'clock In tha afternoon. The leading oliject of its ringing is to annonnee to farmers and other working people the Hme of day. The first bell in the noming at Bow dents ure oat that carly. Ube ll o "clock Juve the Selds and prepary for dinper. Af 4 o'clock in the afternion they pres pare for supper. — Cor. Philadelphia Rewerdl. ~~ A Most Unressousliis Max. The women ins North Atehiscn fam. ily think the bead of the family is a» when a crowd of ‘women congregate on his porch and keep up u racket until daughters and make po Noise at all he does sot Ike in eftier, oil tehilanns Chl rst, a The epidermis of a bruiette i said to | bet ove-tenth of a millimeter thicker than that of » bicad. In Russia a patent mag may Tt taken cat at the pleasure of the patcatee for thous, fve or ten years Pietared In the Dens Where Editors snd regndar old crank. He bejomes furious | Prot sot these? bot heaven thant HH sll the pool That thon canst Gi May Ty wx dome thE only few Xoid evar know iy p ims 1 sande rnd € Finke 11 mente pat Ere th oon s Fe meet again’ £f knowing v9 14 1s to part Ome loving be 8 thon yeayest era'es Lent all the arlst for on arih : Shentd seer 3 Lees no Indting worth And end fore: rin the grave Core faithful | rt Yenvath the sky, Tr whieh to 0 sven send of owe, To blossssn © « a world above And bear a fr f wWikeh shall net 3 OJ Bo in i Chissstiery’ Jib WORE THE | AMOND ~N Hig LEG. wy eh; Kas Su) A Story of the ‘ay the Orloff Stone Was | Taken Fro: Pirsis to Rusein Gas Fox, » coalor in diamends on | Fourth street, mons Orloff Cemnt Orloff, + bonght it. Foo sys: “It wan originally the eve of an iol in Trichinagell It wit stolen, rooording to the acewptndg t gocornt by a Freachman, who escaped with if to Persid, where be soli it for the equivalent in soir money of £5,000 fa a Jew ish morehant, The Jewish merchant eld 1 to an rmenian named Shafras, who bad | weled in Rosda and eosrelved the | 3 of taking thé dimmond 10 that ntry and selling it to the Empress thevine for a great sum. $hafras paid v 846,600 for 11 “Haring secared the stops the next au owtion with Phafras was Row (0 pet it tums, or robe how 0 odneeal it “oon he weas sea bod by robbers, 88 ie 4am $0 be on the road The jonmey woo % dong and perilous one, and thieves walling the stone when he shonld aken by the robbers, but wan obliged jive thst plan vip, as the dlasond » toe Farge to willow, He began to fuel be had a white ele rut on bis hands when a thooght oe cod to him. He procured s sharp 1 oe, made a cat Dy the fleshy part of Eo te leg and thripet the disssond joto t pelle and a silver wire. I healed, Yeo ving the disnwod fmbeddedl fae in the log, mite oat of sight “liecay he started for Russia On the again apd was thercoghly searched, Being an Arnieniun ie suspected of going oo Rossin t00 trade, tha thievor marveled greatly at fading nothing af value apap his penis. “He sevived in Flassia at bast, and, after extricting hin dismend, visited tho empress Ee was willing to sell is for shoot $150,000, bot the vipypees baud pet wo hires an apdient in casle fur the purchass, and Shafvses preforsed 8 go cor to Amsrerdany, the seat of the die mond catting industry, whore be had the stone pesliaheul wealthy Ruscinn, sw the diamond and was film] wih a domination ta si sure it for the Romslan cvown. He dig meena if, Saf Shales exacted from tbe Russian, prvernment 8300 0060 or x paity of £20000 and » tithe of sobiling Fo died no oaillionision “The Orloff dinmend weighs 1085 carats sid ia about the wee of a ple goons opi. It is smaller than the Kobi queen, which fs supposed 80 be with 750, 600 Cincinnati Esquire. a SEND i ly, ARATE ome The Laut of the Fulstuth. A ecrvmpondent writes: “Apropos of the latest Falseat?, 1 weil reniember a tor, when George Bartley—-calied then the last of the Faletaffa—ade his fare. well bow to the pablo alter 50 yoars mervies ‘On this very nights of the werk, the very date of the month 50 years apn,” ho said, be had made kis her, ton, hin saying be had played On Jando to Mrs Jordan's Rossland, Asa boy Ewns much streck by the trans. formation from the durly knight to the | aristoorstic Joolting old gentleman in evening dress as be tearfully bade his andienon farewell Charles Kean was the Retr, Ryder the King, Lacy the ing. H. Saker, Mis Murray and Mm Emly were in the east. Pos Bartley died within six years afterward and was laid in 8 Mary's churchyard, Ox. fod, when 1 Was an pudergradaate mn that nniversicy. "= Westminster Ga | aetie. Say RY PE BR BS ATTA - she Melleved Tt SBotaebedy asked President Robert El- lis Thompeon of the: Central Fligh school if judgment is sacrificed in the enltiva sion of memory, and be, fa unhesity tingly affirming soch to be the cass, me lated a story or Bra at the expen of his own menwry. Saud be: VI came vOry near spe aking > Jonah as “Wha you ray call bus! in the pulpit ones, and at anther tizge iu the course of a eouversation 1 said ton woman: “ sPw yom believe that Jonah swial- Towed the whale? “1 diy’ abe sadd unbesitatingly. — | late, snd when yrang vin call on his Philadelphia Call Language is a solemn = thing. 11 grows out of fife—ont of its aggonies ami conta gies, its wants and iis weariness, Every language is a sample in wileh the soni of those who speak it a enshrined ~—O W. Holmes, . The expenses oo x he ¢ queen's house bold are £173,500 nin ian story about the fa | Camemd, psamed | after] 4 first Eusoosin who mde everywhere. Shafras thought | womgeh. Flo soured np the cut wigh | way he was soined hy robless again and | “Here Count Orloff, au axtremely | noor, in the possesses of thy Eonglil memoraide perforiiance of “Howry IV on Dec. 8, 1852, ab the Princess” thea | first appearances on the Boards. I romem- Prince, while Harley, Meadows, J. Via. | How Sara Wepsrs Projmed and Was Aes copted by Hin Annle-. i Tie Tragedy Which | Grew Ont of the Lave of the Rowland | Brothers For Jennie Dunbar, SHAR HOB All the spectators of the ginnt leap For lite in the cireus tent held thoir bresths with terror wibile the lithe aro bat plunged forward, releasid Isis he id and shot throngh space, to begpecnrvly | eaught in the firm grasp of his partaer, who hong fran hin fois fran another froachierous trapeze. Twelve thonennd nine Bundied and pipety-cight persons aught their breaths agnin as the feat ‘was soon lishe 4 The two remaining jeryons of the i, 000-—a big cirens tent always holds 19, O00 persons, You ksow-——watiohed the proceedings with sn air of perfect non. ehalanoe, as if a swing for life was no | pars serious matter than signaling An | electric car. Well might they be calm, for they | were retired circus performers, and the perils of the tents were old stories them, and then, as the show wnt on, they hogan exchanging roninisconons, while the Hetening Journal mean forgot all about what was before hits tw his futervst in thoes Yarns “That jump renxitds me of the way Sam Myers proposed to Ausie Juhuson The Journal man notiend that the veteran cirens man omitted the “Sige nor’ and “Ma'amsilie'” from bis con: versation, so that Bun Myers and Ane wie Johnson did not bear in private life the names which jderned the circws me and the particolorsd litho! | graphs which inflanie the circus going propensitios of Young Amerion You ee, Sam Mvers and Pete Wil. port and Annie Johnson wens albinos that season and did a great net on the fiying trapese, in which Annie mide ever so many june across the tent amd | wis conght »y Sain, while Pete was performing on a third bar way up above thew, One jnmp after another | wis made all right 55 her, and sodden. | Iy sveryicdy was mirprised 0 see Sang Hirt Annie in the air ax be canght ber sud kis her before she fares 10 make i the leap i K tt her (awn trues. Every. § body wonderost what it all meant, amd after the art wos over they woos found ant, “Iv weorer that Bam mid Poe bad both fallen in love with Augie, and jot | before the sot Petegontided fo hischnty Bis intentions of proposing to the preter porther Sam ude 3p bis mind {hat hot werd per Bo 00 nos se Tike thin | Fait he Had roo chal fo ep le for Bim sdf anil they begin “When Annin made her first jump, bo started to pop thd question, and the proposal continoed with ietorraptions | an the young lady would swing back i forth wud jump to and fro om the poguiar custom of her performanct Pisully the questialt was seked just i she swan. Son. lnaaging hy his toes waited until she nade the pat bap and si Bo heard Ber say Yous lie Lifted lar op aud Riseed ber iwith wah & sack! that it could be haund all vvor the big ms *Eeeryiaely cosratniated the pair Bpt Pete. Semon! be Bal Cw Smpres | sion that be fad nod been treated sgn | Iy in this proposa, and the fir broke | up then and there.” “That reminds he of scther foam which was with a ¢ireus that T was per | forming in a down yew aga The Howland brothers veers doing a double trapess act, with sil softs of daring jumps, much the sme sirt a8 the ole we just saw. In the sayge eirous the leading rider was Jennie Drinbar, win was the cleverss little wuman who ever ju unged thraugh a Boop, and both the boys fei] in love with ber, “She was really fond of bothof then, but when they prigosed sh acoeptisd Will and told Freel thas sho conld only be a sister to him. ‘When Fred proposed, | we were performing np is Canada, and the proposal was tase Just before the afteriion performances. When the boys came up for their warn, we all notiond that Fred was pals and nervous, while Will was just the reverse. Their act went on just. the same ws ssual, and finally came their last jump, which was the most daring of ail Fred hang by Bin tows, and Will made the wwing clea across the eat We never knew how it happened, whother Fred Was so nervons that he lost his grip or whether he did it deliberately, but Just ua Will cape flying through the air Fred trembled aud dropped from his bold down jako the net, while Will shot thirosgh the sir and fell in the ring clewr lwyond the edge of the net. When thoy ran to him, he was dead. Jeanie was almost crasy with grief, asd Food had an attack of train fever, from which be did uot re cover for montis, “No ene could tell whether he delib- srately dropped to ges vid of his rival or whether ho wad 80 sick that be conld uot hold himself Jnger. At any robe, | as soon a8 he got well be proposed to Jennie again and was accepted. They are married now and relived from the business. Boston Journal, ni Vs Uh i lb P| BY A Novel Advertising Sobeme. An ingeniens Chirinan bigwels mana. facturer has invented the Soiiowizg she wien as an advertising scheme: He has published a notion in thy dally press, scoording to whith he promises © give A high grade machine and » bicyoling suit to any ene who pays | cent spot cash bat, secending to the agreement, | the purchaser must pay for two weeks tie double of the supount that hal boven { paid the preceding day. kis but a sit. ple problem in arithmetic to discover that at the end of two weeks the bivyole | apd suit will have cost seraething over $180 Ingenious advertisements, as will be | meen, are pot confined exclusively to the United States. —Exehange. I, WO AIPA eb front right paw his peep There wore nee for brothers, Who _ had inherited a storage warehotss from i thelr father and who equally divided the prsperty among them, ci gronrienances thereto was 8 ont, » fine gil excellent for mousing, and thin, fs, os divided, the elder brother owns ing 1% right front quarter, the second brother the left front quarter and the younger brothers the two hind quarters. Now, sufortanately, the cat in one of its nostummal prowls injured the right front paw, snd the dder brother ate tended! to thas portion of his property by binding the injurmd tuember with 8 relief to its sufferiog. went to sleep oontativedly before the fire, but in the myidit of its slambers a falling coal ig- nite] the rag, and the animal, bowling with agony, dashed through the ware. house, and, coming in contact with some | combustibles, wet the building on fim. When the Joss on: the three younger throw it all spon the elder, upon the grovnd that had he not tied up his part of the cat with the inflammable rag the building woald not have been destroy- od. Be, on the contrary, contended that had the ent only been possessed of the vit would awe itood still and. to death. It was the three other paws a _— damage. The trothers drgand the east until they disd, but conld never Loe a Ph cA ee ‘THE OLDEST KNOWN BIRD, Bt flail Tooth In Its dew and Wiss Other. wise Wiegant, “The Solenhofon slate of Bavaria,” writes Professsr H. 6G. Seeley in his pocenit ortho volume, The Story of the Earth [uo Past Ages’ ‘makes known panpoax insects and other fore of ter restrinl life of thin period, insinding the aldist kuown Bird A bird is known by to fearhers, though there Is 10 reason why the covering to the skin stiouid not be iis variable in this gronp of animales as wnong reptiles or mammals I is, therafore, remarkable that the oldest known bind, the mchwopleryx, bas feathers av well developed as in the ex. atin representatives of the clases and wnilarly srcanged. The animal is an slegunt, slender bind, which is chiefly remarkable for showing teeth in the jaws. About 13, short and sontoal, coonr on each side of the wppor jaw. The bind was larger than the robin in ite body and had » tail of which there was a bony core { soa mix inches fn length. The wings wren quite ax wel ldewIbpad as the legs, and there are some evidences that the forme could bo applied to the fround, as are the fore legs of guadrapeds, al- thowgh the feathers show ths wings to have been eonsts tod on the same plan as the binds of today The Solephofen wtp, in which 0 many of the remains of fishes, reptiles and insets are found, in the sane ss that weed for Lithographic purpbes, being of exceeding close fex- tars and of remarkable Soothe whi prepared for} its We When His Nerves Failed. The sroeities of the French revolution Joss nothing hy the manper in which arcs Ferdinant Rothwehild has de seribind tham in his book: “13 far the most wantonly savage of thw Republican sommissioners was Le bes, who exercised the powers of a pro- consal at Arras. The Marquis de Vied- fort was lying sound sader the knife of the guillotine when Lobon, who was liking on from the baloony of o neigh bering bouse, made a «ign to suspend they execution. Thy mob, fancyiog be test to pardon the condemaned man, wer greatly surprised at suoh anwont- ok ¢lemeney on his part. Lebom, how avr, took » newspaper from his pocket, wud out a long avcount of & viesdey the. Bepnblions army had joss gained and suded by shouting to the marquis, ‘Vil tain, go and inform your friends of the wows of our victories’ “Michelot plates that » man known for his colossal strength and iron nerve petted that be woold stand by and see the ixeeutions from first to last without faltering. For some tine bo unflineh- ingly bare the sight, but when a young girl named Nichole, a mere child, step ped forward, lay down on the plank and gently asked the exveutioner, "Am I right this way? his brain reeled and. be dropped ix in 4 dead fatut. te Wonderful Figures on Sunlight. Frown a comparison of the relative in- tensity of solar, lunar sod’ artificial light, as determined by Professors Baler and Wallastén, it appears that the mys of the sun have an illuminating power that is wonderful in the extremes. Ao- carding tw their deductions, the illami- nating power of the ‘great day star’ is equil to that of 14,000 candles at a distance of one fot, or of 5,500,000, - O00; 000, DOO, (00, 000, 000, 000 candles af a distance of 85 000,000 miles. From the above figures it follows that the mucmnt of light which flows from the solr orb eonid not be produce! by the duily burniag of 200 globes of tallow, eepual to the earth in magnitude, ~8t Livin Republic Criticism, “Thm told you were at the theater Just evening. How did you like 67 “No goed. “Well, what did you see anyhow?’ “Oh, I saw a dozen imbeeiles on the stage who wore trying to amuse the au- dieses, which cousisted of a dozen ttioga. — Figaro, The trade doliar was originally coin. ed for foreign use, particularly in our eastern trade. It was suthorised by act {of congress, passed Feb 12, 53 oe its coinage was begun in 1874 - “4 -» .