GREAT ERITAIN. Cardazo, a lion tamer, died at Plymouth from the injuries he had received in a. recent encounter with a lion. In View of the outcry made by the English \Lord’s Day Rest Association, Emperor W'il- Ham has decided not to visit the Naval Ex- hibition in London on Sunday, as he had intended. The Queen on Monday, accompanied by sev- eral members of the Royal family, proceeded to the Chapel Royal, St. James’ palace, and acted as sponsor to Lady Alexandra Victoria. Duff, the daughter of the Duke and Duchem of Fife, and great-granddaughter of the Queen. A special cable despatch states that, nego- tiations have been renewed between the Canadian Paciï¬c and Grand Trunk railways wish a view to make afriendly arrangement as to freight and passenger rates. Manager A; T. Smith, of the telephone exchange at, Kiuggton, has invented a. tele- phone by which communication can be had with divers working unéer‘ Water. As the immediate effect of the tarilf changes, the sugar reï¬ners in Montreal Lave issued p. :1ng list of prjces for white sugars No intimation has been given as to the measures Mr. Foster will take to effect his promised economy of $2} 00,000, to meet the loss oi revenue through the removal of the duty on raw sugar, but it is reported that Mr. Abbott seriously contemplates a cessa- tion of all railway and public woms’ expen- diture at once. rs. \Villiams, \Vallbridge, Ont, has died fro injuries sustained through her clothing acci entally igniting. Earnscliï¬'e has been leased by Lady Mac- donald for the next two months to Premier Abbott, who will occupy it till he can secure a. resxdence in the capitai for himself gmd family. .v t v lesale, ranging for 4% lated to 5% cents for lump. Mrs. Alexandel'" Mackenzie, wife of the Premier, had a. valuable gold watch and c rrings stolen from her room in Ottawa. on B onday. Capt. Shaw has resigned as chief of the London Fire Brigade. Mr. Parnell and Mrs. O’Shea were quietly married at; Steyning, near Brighton, last; week. Foku‘ huhdxted settlers from Ontario arA rived in \Vinnipeg In one day last week. Repk‘n‘ts from the Ottawa. district show that thy; crops are in ï¬ne condition. A Frenchman and a team of horses were killed by lightning near Winnipeg Friday. The name of R. L. Ashbough has been re- ‘moved from the list of Manitoban attorneys. \Premier Greenway says the Manitoba schools case will be further appealed if the decision of the Supreme Court, is unfavor- able‘ Arrangements have been completed in the Indian Department for the erection of a large industrial farm at Brandon, Man, to cost $22,000, to be managed by the Metho- dist Church. ’ D. S. \‘McIAnnes, son of Senator McInnes, ls ï¬rst mum of the year at the Royal Military College, Kingston. At a. meeting of the Agriculture and Arts Association on Saturday the idea. of an an- nual fat stock show being held in Toronto similar to thAt at Chicago was approved by resolution. The Education Bill was read a second time on \Vednesday in the English House of Com- mons. Twenty-nine sailors have been ï¬ned in Liverpool for refusing to go to sea. with non- union men. The latest despatches do not appear to warrant Parnell’s hopefuluess of restoration to public conï¬dence. IL is swid that an Ottawa. contra bought all the slabs from the mills form a. corner in wood. It is probable that Mr. Chaplin’s Cattle bill in Imperial Parliamen’r will be abamioned for this session. CANADA. :1 oposed to found a Macdonald Nati'tina. emorial Institute in Ottawa. The Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph received 3,940 visitors last week. Mrs: Alpminfler Mackenzie. wife of the James Such of Calgary and Mrs McGil- livray of \Viunipeg have eloped to the Paciï¬c coast. A number of Dutch sailors belonging to the SS. Batavia, now at Montreal, mutinied the other day, anle of them were jailed by Montreal police. It is reported that Sir William Gordon Cumming’s social relations are the same as before the baccarat scandal. The last letter ever signed by Sir John Macdnnald was sent to Mr. E. \V. Ranthbun of Deseronto. A special to the Montreal Star says Sir Charles Tupper has no desire to leave Lon- don. The retirement of Mr. Justin McCarthy, M.P., from the leadership of the Irish party is expected to take place as soon as Mr. John Dillon is released from gaol. Four-ï¬fths of the tin plate works in South Wales have closed their doors for one month, throwing 25,000 hands out of employment for that time. If Mrs. Parnell wins her probate suit; she will be rich, and. it is said, she will create a. political and artistic salon in London. The chamber of shipping of Great Britain denounces the cattle ship bill as it needless and dangerous measure and will strenuously oppose it. The German steamship Fuerst Bismarck has beaten the ocaan record for the eastward passage. Timeâ€"5 days 21 bonus and 10 minutes to Queenstown. In the English Ofï¬cial Gazette, an order- in~Counci1 has been published prohibiting the catching of seals by British subjects in Behring Sea until May 1, 1892. Henry Campbell, the Parnellite M. P., has been awarded $1,250 damages in his libel suit against The Cork Herald. 'THE WEEK’S NEWS The English courts last week declared legitimate the grandchildren of a. run-away couple who were married at Gretna. Green by the celebrated blacksmith who used to perform that ceremony in the early part of the presentcentury. The Princess of Wales having ordered her photographer to place likenesses of the royal an Ottsuva. contractor ha cents for grinn- and Will Eavng been’cut without authorfty and tak- en otx. The robbery has been going on for a. dozen years. r The flood at Cherokee, Iowa, drove 1,500 people from their homes, and causedS‘ZOOï¬OO damage. Mr. Ewing, United States consul at Van- cnuver, B. C., has resigned, owing to hostile feeling at his anti-British proclivites. AL Cloquet, Minn. , yesterday ï¬re destroy- ed 25,000,000 feet of lumber belonging to the Nelson Lumber Company. Loss $500,- 000. \Visconsin State land commission reports great frauds, milliqqs of feet of pine timber The U. S. authorities have debided that a. carpenter cannot go from Canada, engage to go to work, return to get his tools, and 0 back to his job without violating the con- tract labor law. Six Chinese women were burnt to death in San Francisco on Monday. Sunday was the hottest day in San Fran- cisco since 1877. . The strike of the Chicago ’IOngshoremen has spread until in now includes 800 men. Rev. William M. Ogden fell dead While preaching in a \Varrenshurg, N. Y., church on Sunday. Elizabeth Mcvey, of Rosehill, Ind.. suffering from some unknown disease, after a. fast at 43 days, died on Friday. A terriï¬c storm in Iowa on Tuesday caused heavy damage in several small towns and villages. Eight persons are reported killed. Governor Fifer. of Illinois, has signed the bill enabling women to vote for all school officers. After three days and the examination oi 162 men, a. jury has at last been secured in New York for the trial of the supposed Jack the Ripper. Dr. Goyne Talmage, brother of Rev. T. De‘Vitt Talmage, died suddenly at Somer- ville, N. J., last week. He was a retired minister of the Dutch Reformeddenomina- tion. A New York telegram says by the explo- sion of a. barrel of alcohol in the basement of Columbia. College the other day Dr. John J. Northrop, an instructor in zoology. and two assistants, William Simpson and Thomas Tighe, were seriously burned. Dr. Nor- throp’s injuries may be fatal. On Satï¬rday 30 skeletons were found in an old icehouse in Chicago. It is supposed they were subjects from some medical school placed there to bleach. All except one of the fourteen window glass factories of Findlay, 0., shut, down on Saturday night], thlowing 2,000 men out of employment. R. Gregg &, 00., a. Minnesota. milling ï¬rm have assigned. Liabilities, $150, )00. Eight ocean liners sailed from New York on Saturday with their staterooms ï¬lled with summer tourists. The ï¬rstwork in connection with the con struction of the VVorld’s Fair buildings was begun yesterday in Chicago. Herman Heinless, bartender, and Josie Gibbons, waitress, at the Russell house, Middletown, N. 37., took paris green the other day withintent to die together. Hein~ less died successfully, but the girl became sick and threw off the poison. The man was jealous and despondent, and the girl de~ cided to die because she could not decide between Heinless and another chap. A Michigan grocer has a. mouse that catches flies. He keeps it in his show Win- dow, where it does bebter work than a square yard of ordinary fly paper. IN GENERAL. The German vintage is a. complete failure this year. The outrages upon foreigners continue in China. Fears are entertained of a famine in the Madras Presxdency. Prince Alexander of B.xt.tenl)u1‘g is dan- gerously ill. Eight million marks is to be raised by lottery in Germany for East African explorâ€" ation. XIII‘ Mrs Leland Stanford has given $100,000 t9 endow the kindergartens of San Fran- c1sco. There is a. serious outbreak of Indians threatened in the north eastern portion of Arizona. Emperor William is opposed to'the return of the Jesuits to Germany. “731‘ has broken out between the Anamese allies of France and the Siamese. The Sultan of Turkey has ratiï¬ed the Brussels Anti-Slavery Convention. family on a. set of her daintiest china, the idea has been caught up by the public, and all England is engaged in embellishing choice crockery with family likenesses. The Italian Premier has been decorated with the Order of the Black Eagle by the German Empcror. “Peter’s pence†are a. failure in Rome and are much below the average in the pro- vinees. Emperor V’Villiam says the Dreibund was prolonged on Sunday for six years. There is not much hope that the Sultan of Turkey will consent to the Jews settling in Palestine. President Hippolyte, of Hayti, is said to have quelied the late insurrection. He caused the killing of 200 persons. Some of the German papers disapprove of Emperor \Villiam’s visit, to England on the ground that it is likely to alarm RllSala. The Berlin Reichsza ly/m' says the yield of winter rye in Prussia will be 75;; per cent, of the average, while the potato crop is un- certain. Those who are near the Emperor of Ger- many say his animosity towards Prince Bismark has grown rapidly of late, and may take a form very unpleasant for the Prince. Empress Eugenie, accompanied by Prin- cess Letitia, left Paris on Tuesday, for Eng- land. Before departing she had an affecting interview with ex-Queen Isabella. of Spain. Bironess Bodenthal, Whose family is one of the very highest in \Vest Prussia, has been sentenced to two months’ imprison- ment in a. fortress for lese majestc‘, she having used vulgar and insulting language towards the Emperor. iargl‘mal Gibbons of Baltimore is spoken gg a. probable successor to Pope Leo UNITED STATES ed at noon to have lunch under the shade of an oak ; but I was not hungry ;I was too full of the beautiful around me to think of eating. So I wandered off by myself to a lovely little knoll and stood there in a bed of wild flow- ers, looking up and down the green valley, all dotted with trees. The birds were sing- ing with very joy in the branches over my head, and the blessed sun was smiling down upon all as though in benediction. I drank it in for a moment, and then began kissing my hand and Waiting kisses to Heaven in thanksgiving to the Almighty for creating a. World so beautiful. I felt so near God at that moment that it seemed to me I could feel his breath warm on my cheek. By and by I heard papa calling. “Daughter, where are you? Come, child, we are ready to start and you have had no lunch.†I ran and caught him by the hand, sayiug, “Buy this place, please, amllet us make our home here. †He stood looking around for a moment, and said, “It is a lovely spot,â€and then We pass- ed on. band of armed Kurds are holding an Eng- lish (girl named Katy Greenï¬eld, aged four- teen years, who was abducted. at the Tur- kish consulate in Soujbolak, Persia, in de- ï¬ance of the English consul. The bakers of Paris are on strike. the grocers’ clerks have joined the movement, and the butchers threaten to strike also. The outlook for provisions is becoming very serious. The Vienna. papers construe the friendly reception accorded to the Emperor of Aus- tria by the British men-of-war at Flume as an indication of England’s tacit adherence to the triple alliance. Since the Behring Sea. difï¬culty could not be settled by the closed sea. argument, it was very wise to modify that resort by turning it into a closed season. The harvest prospects in Russia' have he- come worse, and there are fears of a. partial famine. Because of the bad condition of the crop it is proposed to prohiblf the exporta- tion of corn. Atthe recent election in New South Wales the labour element returned 23 candidates, the Ministerialists 45, the Opposition 36, and the dependents 3. There are 34 elec- tions undecxded, and the results may give the Government a small majority. The antirSemitic crusade in Russia has re- sulted in thousands of well educated Jews, who are I9gally entitled to get employment, failing to do so because it is reporteq the Umr regards them as Nihilists: and the result is these starved men have been driven to become police agents. spies, Nihilists, anything to gain a. crust of bread. VVordscannot tell how beautiful the spring a. peared to us coming out of the mountains from that long winter in Donner Lake in our little, dark cabins under the snow. Before us now lay, in all its beauty, the broad v3.1- ley of the Sacramento. I remember one day, when travelingdown Napa Valley, westopp- There is great distress in East Prussia, owing to the high price of provisions, and it is probable the Government will have to come to the assistance of the starving people. A despatch from Buenos Ayres says that a. bloodless revolution has taken place in the province of Santiago, and that Senor Delestero, the president, has been ar- rested and forced to sign his resignation. The way in which blind horses can go about without getting into more difï¬culties than they ordinarily do is very remarkable. They rarely, if ever, hit their heads against a fence or stone wall. They will sidle off when they come near one. It Sippears, from Despatches received in Madrid Irom Mar nilla. the capital of the Philippine Islands say England has annxed the island of Sabu‘ tan, which is claimed by Spain. careful oliservationI have made, that it is neither shade nor shelter which warns them of the danger. On an absolutely sunless and windless day their behavior is the same. Their olfactory nerves doubtless become very sensitive, for when driving them they will poke their heads downward in search of water ï¬fty yards before they come to a stream crossing the roadway. It cannot be an abnormally developed sense of hearing which leads them to do this, for they will act alike though the water he astugnant pool. Men who have been blind for any great length of time developed someth similar instincts to blind horses. Some one The police of Paris have searched the ofï¬ces of the Panama. Canal Company, and seized all the documents relating to the com- pany’s affairs. I fiudâ€"â€"from a fugitive paragraph going the round of papers aspiring to be of scientiï¬c characterâ€"says that none of the five senses has anything to do with this singular per- ceptive power, but the impressions are made on the skin of the face and by it transmitted to the brain ;and this “ unrecognized sense †“ facial perception.’ But possibly this per- ceptive power may have its origin in such conditions as prevail in somnmnbulism or in the hypnotic state. Are all such phenomena. in man and horse as I have mentioned to be accounted for by the two words, " facial peception,†if they mean anything? How- ever, Speaking of blind horses, why should they cast their coats as winter comes on, and grow long coats at the advent of summer and so reverse the order which is the invar- lable rule in the case of horses possessed of perfect vision? “ Fadder, vat; vas all dis in de papers about marriage vas a. failure '2†“ Go vay, Isaac ; you vas too young entirely to know somedings about marriage, mein son.†“ But fadder, I vas a. big boy now, and I vant to keep posted.†“ V611 and vat- vas it I must dell you '3" “ Vas marriage trooly a. failure, fudder ‘.†“ Vell, I tell you,†said the father, impressively. “ UK you marry a. real rich woman marriage was sometimes as good as a. failure.†Cruelty of women: “ Do you know, Mrs. Z. has dared to say she i5 oqu thixjty-sgven ‘years old i†“ Perhéps shé doesn’t, mean to prevari- cate.†“ Just as if one doesn’t know how old one “ Yes, generally; but Mrs. Z. is so old she has perhaps forgotten. " flow It Loom-d :0 Ihe Donner Pnrly. The Time When Memory Fails. a Failure. nan-Inge as Good 01‘ CALIFORNIA. Blind Horses. German ofï¬cers, in diSCusAsingvthe subject of the possible invasion of France, conï¬ne their attention to the German-French bound- ary line, as they all assume that, in case of war, the neutrality of Belgium and Switzer- land would be respected. The combined strength of the troops prepared constantly to defend at a few hours’ notice this eastern frontier is ninety-six battalions, twenty- three cavalry regiments, ï¬fty-two batteries with 342 cannon, and seven battalions of fortress artillery. This force willbe support- ed by sixteen regiments of the territorial army, with the accompanying cavalry and artillery, ten battalions of custom ofï¬cials and sixteen companies and twenty detach- ments of foresters. The manning of the east front fortiï¬cations in time of war Will require about500,000 troops. The fortiï¬ca- tions dot the Whole frontier, and consist of great intrenc‘ned camps and huge fortresses. The largest fortsâ€"Frouard, PontSt. Vincent, aney, Ville le Sec, d’Arches, Remiremont, and Giromagnyâ€"have added to their other- wise enormous armaments, armored towers, with the heaviest cannon. Every frontier fort or intrenched camp is within gunshot of the next one, is connected with the others by telegraph, and is linked to the other members of the chain by a double-track railway. The only break in the railway connection is between Fort Giromagny and Fort de Servance. Batteries occupy between the forts all the positions commanding ap- proaches. The guns of the forts vary in number for each between twenty and ï¬fty. Some, however, have as many as eighty. In several forts there is room Hr 2,000 head ofcattle, and in all for enormous quan- tities of provisions. The quarters of the men and oil-10ers are airy and ample. The can- nons command completely the slopes, which are, moreover, so woven over with wires and so mined with torpedoes that the stand of an enemy there and the undermining of the walls are impossible. The duties and (lis- cipline of the defenders of the forts are illus- trated by the instructions issued by Gen. Pierron in his former capacity of commander of the Twenty-ninth infantry regiment and the Sixty~third territorial regiment : “Re- connoitering the approaches within range of the fort’s cannon ; registration of the distances to the neighboring villages, hills, woods, and gullies, as the advance of the enemy will be made through gnllies and woods; preparationsior shooting at night, such as razing of near-by cover, painting of all visible masonry either black or green ; arrangement with individuals in the neigh- boring villages as to signals in case of the enemy's approach, and the use, when possi- ble, of a captive balloon, digging of rifle pits in the courtyard oi the fort for the handling of grenades which strike there, and construc- tionof underground means of communication among the men,as well as for the circulating of a'nmunition,constrnction of two trenches on each side of the fort, the ï¬rst for the ï¬ring at the storming column and the deep narrow one behind for the men when the enemy sends in the hottest ï¬re.†The fort, moreover, was directed to ï¬re day and night on all covers and ravines 1n which the enemy takes position, as long as the enemy does not answer. When the enemy begins the bombardment the fort should cease ï¬ring to bring its guns into the easement so as to preserve itself from the unequal conflict against the canoentrated ï¬re of the enemy’s batteries. During the bombardment only the wounded and ill should remain in the tort proper ; the active combatants should be kept for safety in the narrow deep trenches already mentioned, and should be occupied with ï¬lling sand bags. As a. precaution against surprises Gen. Pier- ron further recommends the burialanear the surface of grenades, in case the torpedoes are exhausted, before and on the flanks of the fort. At night wires with bells attached to them are to he strung across all ap- proaches, and ï¬res are to be lighted at ob- scure points, not only to reveal an advancing party, but also to mislead the enemy’s artil~ lerists. Every evening the damage to the fortiï¬cations is to be repaired by ï¬lling the holes with sandâ€"bags. As soon as the ï¬ring of the enemy’s artillery shall cease the fort is to resume its ï¬re. A series of articles by French and German military authoritites concerning the French fortiï¬cations on the eastern border has directed general attention to this Wonderful chain of forts, which although pronounced practically impregnablc by Sir Charles Dilke ve years ago, were not regarded as com~ plcte till shortly before President Carnot’s visit to south France last spring. _ VVheu the fort shall have been reduced to extremities by the hostile ï¬re or by Incl; of food the garrison shall at once prepare to destroy the armament- and the walls before negotiations shall be opened with the enemy, so that only a. ruin shall fall into the hostile hands. Special care in the destruction of the railway leading to the fort is recom- mended also by Gen. Pierron. ller l’nprvccdontcd Preparations Dls cussed by Both Frenchmen and Germans. The. last thing one would expectto ï¬nd in use among the ancients is' false teeth. Yet recent excavations in old Roman ceme- teries have elicited the fact that those mysterious people, the Etrusca ns, replaced the loss of their own teeth by the insertion of those of animals fastened in their places by means of small gold bands, which latter- ly gave place to the present plate. Five hundred years before the Christian era. gold was used for stopping the teeth and for holding the teeth in position, but though research tells us that the Egyptians had a thorough knowledge of the diseases of the teeth and the treatment of the same, we can- not trace the date of their ï¬rst introduction into England. We ï¬nd, however, in the “ Mathematical Jewel," published in 1585, of Sir John Blagrave having had a. set of ivory teeth inserted and ï¬xed by a. gold plate. A century and a. half ago goldsmiths did the work of dentists in making and cleaning artiï¬cial teeth. pose : 7‘7‘7He will give it back to me. me a dollar.†Gilhoolyâ€"I say, Gus, I Wish you would lend me a dollar. Gus De Smithâ€"What do you want 1.0 do with it ? “ You see Hostebter McGimnis over there? Well, I Want to lend the dollar to him.†“ What will he do with it, do you sup- 9! First Use or False Teeth How to Get Money Back. FRANCES FORTE. He owes He was one of those “ real mean †travel- ing men, with a. supercillious smile and a. long, low, rakish mustache. She wasa. dear little thing in a. pink dress. He stood for two minutes watching her try to put a letter into a. ï¬reealarm box and, just as she discovered her mistake, he edged over and inquired : “ Where is the ï¬re ?" She blushed and said there wasn’t any. “ I was going to suggest that if you lelt a. note tn: department might not get it until to-morrow,†he murmured apologetically. †Don’t irouble yourself, Eir,â€'she snapp- ed, “ I wa‘nted to call out the fool-killer not the engines. †“ How lucky it is for your dressmaker that Eve ate that apple and discovered her nakedness l†In Germany the police regulations are very strict, and any violation of them is promptly punished. The people have u- holy terror of the law. Two gentlemen happened to meet in Berlin, and the following conversation took place : “ Have you heard the dreadful news about Mlller ?†. “ No; what is it?" “ He was in a. boat in the river. He fell overboard and was drowned. The water was too deep.†“ Didn’t he know how to swim?††Sw1m ! Don’t you know that all persons are forbidden by the police to swim in the river '3†L 51d Lilly (slightly deaf)â€"â€"-“ Yes, a pug is a. nasty animal. I’ve always said so.†Good That Game of Evil. Mrs. De Style-Smith (showing 03' her new dress)â€"Wha.t do you think of my new Paris 301m '3 _ 0 Poor Mr. Smith(her husband)â€"How much did it cost? ‘7‘ Varirrifleâ€"only four or ï¬ve hundred, I believe.†Bingoâ€"“Things have gone so with me lately that I have to compel my wife to make her own dresses.†King]eyâ€"-“ Too bad. How does she look ‘2†Bingoâ€"“ Daggers.†“ I can’t let this girl travel over this road on that half ticket,†said the new conducv tor. Visitor (watching the antics of the little dog. “ He seems to haves. good deal of 17119210th abolit. him.†.. V “ Well, if that don’t beat everything then I’ll give it up. Here poor little Mamie has been traveling over this road on a. child’s ticket for the last ten years, and now all at once she is no child. That’s a new way to worry the traveling public.†The mother paia' Athe fare, and then the girl pulled herself out like a. telescope. “ Why not ? What is the matter with my little girl,†asked the mother. “ She is no child. She is more than half “ Saw wood ! Saw wood for my dinner !" said the tramp with a. look of horror. “ Not much I won’t. Itisn’t thatIobiectto labor. I yield to no man in respect for the God-given privilege ofezn'ningmy sweatâ€"I meunsweat- ing my earningsâ€"that is to say, breading my earn bythe brow otâ€"you know V‘Jhat I mean. I am rdemly, nay anxious to work. Give me some potatoes to hoe, right here under the trees. Show me where there is a. stone Wall to layâ€"behind. Anything but helping in the most distant way to devastate the mighty forests of this broad laml, that the Almighty meant. to gather moisture and in- duce the reviving rain to fail upon the parched earth. \Vhy, madam, do you know that this continent is doomed to become an arid desert if this destruction goes on? It’s a. fact, and I Won’t be a party to it. No forests, no minâ€"everything dryâ€"dry 8.51 am. I decline the responsibility for it. Tell me you Want some water brought from the creek, and I’ll see if I can’t send you a boy to do it, but no wood sawing for me, if you please." A ( No opinion more L “ NoLhing serious, I hope?†“Oh, no ; only I thought I was the man she ought to marry and she thought I Wasn’t. †Sagemanâ€"A remarkable girl is that Miss Snapper. You know her pretty well; has she any leaning in the direction of any pa!- ticulnr creed? asplrations last evening fsbouldsa)? she was a. Shaker. ticumr creed? BluntIyâ€"I can’t say deï¬nitely, but from the way in which sh? disposed of my marital “ Where is that, black cloud going to '1†Asked the boy of his grandma. dear ; And the old lady said, as she shook her head, ' “ It’s going be thunder, I fem; ’ We were in a. hammock sitting, Nestled lovingly together, Evening after evening flitting Found us thus in Summer weather But this night an inspiration Or the moon’s infection led meâ€" Seeking joy's perpetuationâ€" To beseech the maid to wed me. Breathless was the hush that followed, Deeper then I felt the pressmg In the nest her head had hollowed, And, this speeck her lips caressing, Rolled out. gliny as ’bwere reason With some lubricant did oil it,â€" “Courtship’s a. delicious season, Why get married, dear, and spoil it Merely a. Slight Difference of Oplnion. Objected to Destroying the Forests. I don’t meet you at Miss Svelte’s any She Wanted the Fool-Killer. she and I have had a. difference of A Brutal Conductor. Not as She Meant It. TIT BITS. Her Appearance. Her Opinion. A Fan Shaker. To Strict. Why? it ?â€