Wf. .;ij»: N ".-4 *i'Si««*ia. â- . jacw ;5ir. il NEWS IN A NUTSHELL. rive I*'""*â€" Selest Readlas. Samnuiry of Foreign. Domestic and Otker ltem»â€" Concise, Pithy and Pointed. DOMESTIC. Sir Jchn A. Macdonald has returned to his resideuce, StadacoDa hall. The Grand Trunk Railway foundry at i relations which France desires to maintain that BaaBia^U rapport the pacific poHcy of Gennaay and Austria, to which Italy given, explicit adhesion. lBJonunittee of the French Senate recent- ly, Du lerc confirmed the fact of a new treaty with Tani* abrogating the -capitula- tions and providing lor the r.demption of the Tunisian debt. The rupture provoked by the proceedings of "the Queen of Madagascar will not, accord- ing to the Paris Temps, affect the excellent Hamilton is to be enlarged immediately. A direct steamship line v.ill be estab- lished between Montreal and Germany next season. The laaters' strike in Montreal is in s t at quo, with no effort in progress on either side to settle matters. The Dominion Government hss granted a bonus to the Montreal Harbor Police of ten dollars per man. A man named Lonis Layden was recently run o. er by a Canadian Pacific railw ay loco- motive at Point Douglas. Mayor Logan is again in the field for the Winnipeg mayoralty. The only other can- didate is Aid. McMicken. The schooner Tecumseh, of Owen Sound, ran ashore the other day on the east side of Cove Island on a flat rock. Sheppard Pike, of Roffenston, Maine, brother of the Hon. ^. F. Pike, dropped dead in Young's hotel at Calais. A private telegram has been received from the Hon. Dr. Schultz, containing the information of his rapid recovery. Sir Hector Langevin will be feted in Mon- treal next month by the merchants' clerks of the city, connected with the early closing movement. The Rev. C. G. Glass, an eminent retired Presbyterian minister, died at Montreal the other day. He founded the presbytery of York, N. B. An action has been entered for §10,000, on behalf of the Allan Steamship line, against the steamer Clandon, which recently ran into the Polynesian at Halifax. C. L. E3tabrooks, of St. Mary's, N. B., has been postmaster there for a number of years. Some one forged his name to a re- bi£;nation which was sent to Ottawa and accepted. The lobster factory and meat packing es- tablishment at Forest Sherar, at Cape Sharps, eight miles from Georgetown, P. E. I., was totally consumed by fire the other morning. Sheriff's officers who attempted to enforce an injunction preventing the working of the Salmon River Gold Mine, N. S., were driven off by a large force of miners, who threw them into the river. A lad entered the woods in the Gatineau district hunting for deer, and ran against a gun-trap, which had been set by another hunter, contrary to law, discharging the gun witti fatal results. The wife and six children, th3 eMest only eleven years, belonging to a lat; clerk in the Montreal post-office, who died a week ago, were founil m a state of absolute destitution. The father served the Government twenty- one years. TNITED S'JATES. Maude Granger, the actress, is seriously ill at Brockton, Mass. There is an epidemic of scarlet fever at the imbecile asylum at Columbus, Ohio. Frank James has besn indicted for com- plicity in the Musselshoals robbery. 2^Iost of the Creek Indians, who fought for the Union during the rebellion, are asking the Government for pensions. At Louisville, Capt. May, o" HarJin County, aged 101, has procured a license to marry a girl of nineteen. Cliarles Peckham, one of the leading lights of the spiritualistic circles in New England, dropped dead in a store at Newport, R, I., recent'y. James Smith was arrested recently at New York for offering a jeweller in payment for c;oods two. $10 bdls of +.he defunct Consoli- dated Bank, of Canada. At Frankfork, Mich., the other day, Mr. Anderson, a Scotohman, 90 years old, com- mitted suicide by cutting his throat from ear to ear with a penknife. A two year old child of Mr. Cogswell's, of \Varren, Pa., playing on the carpet, was Inirnei s badly from a fire caused by a fallen lamp that it died about six hours later. Samuel Brummel, an employee of the Cornell Mining Company, surrendered him- self on Saturday to the Deputy-Sheriff and confessed he v.as the man who shot John Lind in Menominee. A gane of cow-boys boarded a train at Sweet Water Grove recently, drove the passengers at ths point of the revolver, and bound the engineer and conductor back to back. It was supposed that all the scientific re- cords of the Jeannette expedition were lost, but engineer Meh-ille states that a complete copy of Chipp's auroral and magnetic obser- vations were found among the official papers of Capt. DeLong. and is now in custody of the Secretary of the Navy. GENERAL. Prince Ghika has been re-elected President of the Roumanian Senate. The other day the physician stated he ex- pected Gambetta to be convalescent in four days. The Paris Municipal Council recently presented a medal of honor to M. de Brazza. Earl Granville has directed the gnn-vessel Seagull to proceed to Madagascar to protect British interests there. Ex-Premier Zankoff, of Bulgaria, who was arrested for the second time on Wednesday, has been releiEised. The British barque Wm. Weyght, at Gor- ston, from St. John's, Nfld., lost her deck load on the passage. The City of Dublin presents its usual appearance each night, notwithstanding the proclamation placing it under Curfew law. Seven Italian anarchists have been ar- rested at Marseilles. Compromising docn- ments have been discovered in their posses- sion. Sassegena B»ys the visit of De Giers proves with England. The Paris Temps reports that two warlike tribes in Madagascar have resolved to no longer bear the intolerable yoke of the rul- ing tribes. Le Temps regards the agitation as wholly superficial. A schooner ffom the south seas reports that when recruiting for islanders the boats â- were frequently fired upon, and a number of returned natives were seized, murdered, and eaten by the inhabitants of Pasma and Apy Tonoi. The Freeman's Journal, in commenting on the action of the Privy Council in pro- claiming the city under the Curfew section of the Repression Act, says it believes this step wdl intensify the evils already existing, and will injure credit, weaken confidence, and paralyze trade. Dangerous American Fortunes. There is evidence forthcoming from Amer- ica that fortunes may be accumulated on a scale of which Englishmen have little con- ception, and that when they have been ac- cumulatel their increase may be sought from a motive which is never quite satiated, the thirst for direct and indirect influence on affairs. Europeans, even those who study the subject, underrate American fortunes, first, because they think the rich must spend largely, and, secondly, because they assume, what is quite false, that great wealth must be inv'ested at about 4 per cent. It may, as American example shows, be invested by millionaires who do not care for rest in work which yields from three times to ten time? that rate. Now, the governing finan- ' cial fact about the Vanderbilt railways is that they are managed to yield, a steady 10 per cent. and Mr. Vanderbilt ought, there- fore, to be in possession of an income of £2,- 000,000 a year. It is not, probably, so much, because part of his fortune must have been estimated for probate duty on shares above par but taking it at only a million and a half, Mr. Vanderbilt, who does not spend un productively the interest of his dividends, might easily at 70 own £50,000,- 000, yielding an average of 8 per cent. None of his known rivals, perhaps, could do this but their sons might, and it is quite on the cards than in 1920 the American Union may possess a dozen capitalists each with fifty millions solidly invested,yielding incomes of from three to four millions a year. Be it ob- served, we do not include any fresh making of money by the millionaires, though they make it every day or any calculation about compound interest, though there is such a force in movement in their favor. "We as- sume only that they live on the interest of their interestâ€" in Mr. Vanderbilt's case £60,000 a year â€" and invest the remain- der in the new railways, telegraphs and steam lines which they construct or regulate. The temptation so to accumulate, in a coun- try where lazy wealth brings so little enjoy- ment, while working wealth brings power, status, and celebrity, is great, and the draw- backs, to a man not afraid of occasional threats, are not many. Railway managers are easily found, other stockholders take much work off the millionaire's hands, and as against ordinary accident, so vast an in- vestment forms its own best insurance. If an Englishman could own 51 percent, of the Midland and Great Northern, and appoint any director he pleased, his wealth would be fairly secure, much more secure than if he owned a wheat-growing country in East Anglia. Is the existence of a fortune of this kind, in the hands of a man whose busi- ness in life is the acquisition of power, safe for the community We cannot but feel a doubt of it. â€" London Spectator. â€" ^-^ â€" m â€" â- » â€" â- Etiqnette. Etiquette is not-as strict as it once was- as when, if a courtier sat on a red-hot stove by mistake, the had to roost there â€" and it is good form to compliment your hostess when she gives you a nice dinner. The Chinese, who think we are uncivilized, and that their table demeanor is perfect â€" claim- ing all things, as ttiey do, will probably claim they have taught us this. It is simply what the Kansas folk call "dead common sense." In China no conversation is allowed except remarks ujjon the food â€" compliment- ary, of course â€" as, for example, to the host " Oh, Beaming Sun, essence of gentility, deign to allow the miserable worm at your feet to remark (casually) tha*; this chow-chow is prime " or words to that ef- fect, t In China iaU plunga chop-iticks, after a flotirish in the air, at once, and it is horrid form to finish before anyone else does. In India, esp«;cially in Lucknow, they are excruciatingly polite. Two natives, once up- on a time, fell into a ditch. You think they floundered out io.a twinklina; They didn't anything of tht? kind. Politeness inter- ferred one said " When your honor rises then I may get up." "No, your honor must get up first," said t.he second. "How can I take precedence of your hon- or Never " Neither woold consent to violate the laws of good breeding, and I fear they are lying there yet. People who ask you to take part in ama- teur theatricals are not troubled in this way; they sometimes act as if missionary work were needed among them â€" they ask you to take a part and then make a "super" of you â€"Quiz. ' â- DOIPXSTIC. Twenty miles of Winnipeg and Hudson Bay ra'droad fnnn Norway House have been located by next Angast, which will enable the company to commence the work of con- struction by Jane, 1884. Major-Gleneral Luard has received a tele- gram from Cairo, aononncing the death of Major Herbert, on the Ist of November. Major Herbert, it wfll be remembered, was a Ca nadian officer, who had tiie pririlece of active service in Egypt. We all admire flie busmeai man^who »• terse and to the poinl^ and we dislike the Hian who hangs on to the door knob as though life was a never-ending summer dream, and refuses to say good-by. It s so with correspondence. v u n ♦i,z For instance, here is a Ime which tells the story in brief, without wearing out your eyes and days by ponderous phrases and useless verbiage. ' 'Useless verbiage and frothy sur- plusage" is a synonym which we discovered xn '75, while excavating for the pur- pose of laying the foundations of our impos- ing residence up the gulch. Persons using the same will please fork over ten per cent, of the gross recei^^ts Bahgob, Me., 11-10-82. " Find 10c., for which send sample copy Boomerang to abore address. Yours, c. Thomas Billisgs." Some would have said "please" find en- closed ten cents. This is not absolutely necessary. If you put ten cents in the let- ter that covers aUseeming lack of politeness, and it's all right. Here's another style, which evinces a pecuiiarity we do not admire. It bespeaks the man who thinks that life and its associa- tions are given us in order to wear out the time, waiting patiently, meantime, for Gabriel to render his little overture. It occurs to us that life is real, life is earn- est. We cannot sit here in the gathering jjloom and read four pages of a letter, which only expresses what ought to have bosn ex- pressed in four lines. We feel that we are here to do the greatest good to the greatest number, and we dislike the correspondent who hangs on to the literary door knob, so to speak, and absorbs our time, which is worth §5,35 per hour. Here we go New Centtreville, Wis., Nov. 3, 1S82. Mr. William Nye, Esq, Laramie City, Wyoming Dear Sir â€" I have often saw in your home papers little pieces cut out of your paper the Larmij Bom^rang, yet I never saw the paper itself. 1 hardly pick up a paper from the Mreside Friend to the Christian at Work that I do not see someth ng or another from your faseshus pen and credited to The Bomerang. 1 have asked our bookstore for a copy of the paper, and he said go to grass, there wasn't no such perioddickle in existence. He is a liar, but I did not tell him 80 because I am just reco^'ering from a case of that kind now, which swelled both eyes shet and placed me under the doctor's care. It was the result of a campaign lie, and at that moment I do not remember whether it was the other man or me which told it. Things got confused, and I am not clear on the matter now. I send 10 cents in postage stamps, hoping you will favor me with a specimen copy of the Boomerang, and I may subscribe. I send postage stampa because they are more convenient to me, and I suppose that you can use them all right, as you must have a good deal of writing to do. I intend to read the paper thorrow and give my folks the benefit also. I love t read humerrus pieces to my children and my wife and hear their gurgly laugh well up like a bobbllink's. I now take a Western paper which is gloomy in its tendencies and I call it the Morg. It looks at the dark side of life and ^costs §3 a year and post- age. So send the speciment if you please and I will probably subscribe for the Boomerang. I have saw a good many extrax from it in our papers here and I have not as yet siw your paper. So good-by. Yours truly, J.\siEs Letsox. Tlie Madagascar War Cloud. In reference to a report that two American had been murdered .on the west coast of Madagascar it is learned that one was killed and one seriously wounded. The name of the former was Emerson, thfr-latta; Hallett. One native attendant*lind -a EwjiiS^n inter- preter were killed. As expeHitji^had been ordered to punish the tdb^swhS^^committed the murder, but it was ^evented from sailing by the French Consul at Tariatoiva. The American Consular Ageait at McilMidrastates that although he warm^ Emersoa «jid Hal- lett against the ]M0ll0xixe country' 'ib'fv. in- tended to visit, she' hjad no reason to fear^^Ji personal djM^r to them. i In consequence of the disturbajjces in Ma- dagascar, tue Br^lj 'AdmiraJtJ h^ directed the gun^veasel "S^^nW\to: c^l at Mada*- ga^car to protect Britislj fliurerts ' ateo -ta assist in obtainbiif inf6rti»tioa in We|e*fc td the proceedings of the French representative. The commander (^ the "^Eaipt Ipuiaif '^tj^on â- has beei|iiiirected.to tetief ^Vtiet distance if ueceaitary, â- •â- â- ' â- • ..'.... ;i.. The Eftris, JVinps reports that't*o Warlike tribes in Madagascar have resqlyed no longer to bear the intolerable- jOke of the ruling tribe. T|ie Tentps regdrds the agitatfon in England regarding Madagascar as wholly su perficiaU The mpture provoked by the pro- ceedinga of the Queen of Madagascar will not, it aays, affect.'tjie^excflleat relations which Ejaace desires to maintain with Eng- land. -•â-º^ ♦•»-•- ' A KUKjr Preaeat. A Frenchmen of borne note made a pres- ent to a young lady, recently, which was considered a rather sarcastic one. It was a ball of cotton havmg a gold band around it upon which were these words "Employ m- diligently, and yoti will obtain a brilliant success,^? The cotton was rather scornfully flung oione side, till *avihg occasion -to tie ap a large bunch of flowers, the yonnjr ladv nearly iismL np Jitoead, wid then xo itt surprise, saw something shining in the cen- tre. She was industriously quick in unwind- mg that which hid the secret, and was re- warded for her labor by a most splendid emerald ring. The giver made a very hazardous experiment there wm scarcely enough in the advice to to be diligent to excite the desire, or to arouse female curios- ity to the point of wishing to know the meaning of the riddl«i It is stated in London that the Madacas- car embassy have reoisived a number of ap- pUcations fromAmericainsfOTlettersofmarqae m the event of hoetiUties with Woe. The American eonanl in Madamscar hn Ueves the United St«te3 M^rtftf^TpiSL has b^ instructed to make friendly repre- sentatioDs to France against the pro^d aggression. i'l^jiweca The ch»racteri8tics of young soldiers are to play a winning game to attack with dash where success seems probable or eirm to stand up to superior forces when coui»ge has not been damped by previous reverses, and faith in their leader remains unfln- paired. Under such oonditicms they may even surpass their older comrades. But in times of danger and panic, when the bugle sounds to retire, when everything seems to be going against us, and when total rout can only be avoided by order and presence of mind, then it is that the old soldier element becomes of incalculable value. Without it a commander would be indeed badly oft. Let any of my readers think of themselves at twenty, and then, if they have advanced so far in life, see in what res- pect their character has changed at thirty. Mo,t will probably allow that, if in dash and daring they mide no progress in the intervening years, at thirty they can at least face misfortune with greater equani- mity. A mishap which reduces a youth to the verge of despair hardly disturbs the man who has seen something of the world. The same feelings which actuate us in ordinary life continue to do so in warfare, and although moral and physical courage do not invari- bly go together, it is the combination of the two which carries an army through sll vicissitudes. The great Duke has such a bad time of it lately 'at the hands of some of our reformers, that one almost hesi- tates to quote an opinion of his. In case, however, there should still exist any one who believes in that once trusted leader's know- ledge of what constitutes a soldier, I give the following extract from a speech made by him in the House of Lords when the Ten years' Enlistment Act was brought forward. After explaining that the eflciency of an army depends quite as much upon the experience and soldierly habits of the men as upon the talents of the officers, and after describing the night attack of the Eight- ieth Regiment at Sobraon on some Sikh guns, which were pluilging shot among them in their bivouac, he said: "I ask you, my lords, whether such a feat could have been performed, under such circum- stances, except by old soldiers. It would have been impossible. Bear in mind the conduct of the Emperor Napoleon with res- pect to old soldiers remember the manner in which he employed them. Recollect, too, how much they are prized by every power all over the world, and then I will once more entreat your lordships never to con- sent to any measure which will deprive her Majesty's serviceof old and experienced men, and thus pave the way for disasters which assuredly will follow when the army should come to be employed in war." Some people have even gone the length of arguing in favor of boy bi^ttalions, because, forsooth, the batt le of Waterloo was fought by an army which contained a large proportion of young soldiers. This was undoubtedly the case, but not from any choicT of the Duke of Wellington, who always i eferred to this army as the worst he had evci- commanded, and surely a General of such vast experience may be given credit for knowing the quality of his troops, esj^ecially as he could have no earthly object in running down the men who had gained for him the greatest victory in his exceptionally eventful career. On June 13th, 1815, his Grace wrote as follows to Lord Stewart " I have got an infam ms army, very weak and ill- equipped, and a very inexperienced staff." Seven days after* the battle he writes to Lord Bathurst: " I really believe that, with the exception of my old Spanish infantry, I have got not only the worst troops, but the worst equipped army, with the v.'o-st staff that was ever brought together." Another soldier of almost equal renown, but whose laurels have been more recently won, Field Marshal Graf von Moltke, when asked what he considered a model battalion â€" as regards the age of the men in the ranks â€" replied as follows "I could not desire anything better than what is represented by a German bat- talion when mobilized, for it has sufficient age for stamina, that is to say, from twenty- one to twenty-seven years." â€" Major General Roberts, in the Nineteenth Century. The Peerless Lnrllno. Night in St. Louis. Seated in the parlor of her father's mag- nificent residence, Lurline Loosehair allow- ed her taper finerers to wander idly over the keys of the piano, and. obedient to her de- 'l^cate touch, there floated forth upon the ifir the strains of that beautiful miserere, l^^ince Papa Tore His Pants." And as she Mt there, absorbed in the sad reflections to *»iich the music gave rise, the door opened »fftly, and Berwyck Hetherington entered ttb room. Lurline, all the senses of her pas- $ianate nature absorbed in the music, con ^ued to play, not knowing that the man she loved, and to ynn whose pocketbook in tetum she would have hustled around with dread eameetnsss, was stand- by her side. But at last Berwyfck placed his hand gently on her ^ulder, and by that indefinable sense that tells us of a human presence, although we see it not, she knew that somebody was wound. Turning quickly, she saw Mr. He- therington. "I did not know that you were here," die said, a blush flooding the face that such », little time ago was pale aqd calm ••Or I should not have played so confidently." "Canyon not favor me with somethine more " he asked. The blush grows deeper and more vivid ndw, and the drooping eyed are moist with tetos. 'I cannot play any other pieoe, " she says, halt sadly, and half defiantly. ' Are you sure of this, Lnrine?" Ber- w^ckasks. bendmg overherin a loving way. ^»rrhmkweU before yon speak," he TOntm- ues, "for on your answer may depend the future lia^jiaeBs of two yoUng lives." " I am quite Bure.*^ she nirB |«"^i^*^0»KlGK] Tmm Fnuiee, Oomuuqr, Hiuai. Distant Cott»trlo4**'*l OENERAl^ The West End Theatre, with all its contents, has b'jen It is stated that the docnn, from the Glennan mail bags were ant. Eleven lives have been lost dering of a steamer off Portr^jJ' South sj DotiJ Tia coast of Cornwall. Sanders, arrested for sending Mr. Gladstone threatening to I been committed for trial. The steamer ' ' Cambronne, " \»\ Nantes, was sunk in a collision Channel on Monday. Fourteen peill drowned. ^^1 M. Zancoff was re-arrested oa his house at Rustchuk. One hun partisans were also arrested. great excitement. The Madrid Diario contradicts th that Spain intends to liberate thecl' fugees. It says no legal or friendj. exists to induce such a course. It is asserted in Vienna that the I have definitely agreed to appoint a sion to meet next spring to arrai Montenegrin frontier difficulty. An explosion, supposed to be cawl ether, destroyed Tyndale Chemical T at Newcastle, on Sunday. A nnij houses were damaged and many petj, jured. One hundred and eight students m in the recent demonstration in St. burgh have been arrested. The trooal into a crowd of Kazan University m killing three. Mr. Wilfred Blunt appeals to thelj public for help to defray the costofJ fence of Arabi Pasha, as thj trial, i. J hes assumed the charactir of a/ enquiry. The Spanish lederal Republicans l solved to maintain their principles, j pointed a committee to draft a Ministerial journals expect that t ment will have a majority of question of confidence. The eldest sister of the Marquis of bury and j,of Lady Florence Dixie, l who hasjust completed her fortieth yet married a young baker of exactly 1 age, who was taught his trade at a school of which his present wife was^ ness. The French Cabinet has decided to J pacific expedition to survey the cedes! tory on the Congo and report on its r ces. The Senate has ratified the tre M. DeBrazza with the Congo Chief 1 The report of the Committee dwelt t pacific ch^acter of M. DeBrazza's tion. Tne Senate also passed a bill A ing the powers of the comiiission to] compensation to the French and citizens for damages sustained d civil war in America and Ftmico-P.t war. ^gretd ;theG THE FLOODS IN GERMA-W, The Town Council of Mayence teJ 10,000 marks in addition to the ISdt ready granted to relieve the sufferers 1; inundation. The railway embanba^ the lower end of the town has giv( Sappers and miners arj keeping con tion open. The waters of tlie Rhine have reacliei| metres, but have ceased rising. Ttsli of boats was washed away at Cobla landed abo/e here. The greatest o: I danger is now p;ist. In the Prussian Diet oa Tuesday Hesl Putlkmer read a telegram from ttM press at Coblentz, stating that thei was forcing its way from all sides inJl Castle Gard.n and half the boatbndcfj been torn away. It was impossible t see what the end would be. Herr Voiif] mer said he would seek an audiesi^ the Emperor and ask if he thought i sary he should proceed to the scene o:| ger. At Bonn tne lo\er stories " houses are submerged. The river iil rising at Frankfort. THE MADAGASC.\ « TROUBLE There is much speculation in Par'S*^] reception the Malgassy envoys " in London. The Teleg-aphe, referr the proposed visit of the envovs »1 Granville, says: "Much good may them " The Malgissy embassy are acorf to Paris, L'jndoo, Berlin and ^^a quite sure," she says. Then you mn^t b6 ay wife. " Add as he speaks the^ %ords Bwwyck Hrthenng- ton 8 fiMO hghta up with a rapturooB, Shny- ler Colfax smilje. • 'U^\ wiUcome ag^ to-monow' even- mg she asks. at 8^**'" *** "P^"' "Vou may tiethe ixig And ymi will not tegnt your choice?" "i wl** »'»'»y». in clear, stendytoiies. I 'w^x "Pâ„¢*"** best years of my life THE REPUBLIC OF FR-^XC^ Count Montebello, the only surviTi* of Marshal Lanners, is dead. "Three persons have been arresb picion of being concerned in the rot" the cathedral of St. Denis. Gueade, editor of the Paris i^*i been arrested for being connected «J^ Socialist movement in Central Fra"" The Madagascar Ambassadors haj^| the ultimatum requiring Mada^"" cognize theprotectorate. The Amb started for London. It is said in London that t'^^p %i envoys were informed that the If* 1 mander at Zanabar will beorderea i mence war immediately. Paid in I'heir Owx Coi'--'-^ seller at Shubenacadie, Colcheste baulked his trial under the Scon with » {he â- rul«' city J Sbob tune on tEe ^auo.' ^^^^ » *^e^ n»i*pb*erM thing in tiM serving the m^istrate """^leSi certiorari, removmg the case tot Court. In about two weeks eial Chief Justice granted a quash the. writ aforesaid, and ney iiqfaediately went to tomed with the Supreme C«i"' trial to proceed before tie Upon the attorney's arriv»l "" beougbt on with so mucb ii»°. defendfot could not fis^^fL in time and haS to condnc* ^^ Jadgment irM g^ven e^ T and an execution at once isai *!.. ll'" 'h: -..iidsiMJlijiiifeii