*Wb ^mmm f^^^^ Lv's IN A nutshell: ftVZ mm i«, MiKITTKS SKI.KCT XADIIVG.. ^•rv itf Forclg-t. nom^Ktle nnd War |l*iii»â€" '""'***• •*'*•»'• â- â- •* â- *«â-º!»»«•- 'alls despatch says that the general .pi-ssi'iii j)r"diiced there by the dia- â- iivs "f the yellinv book issued recent- is th.it w ar ir mediation (jnly will settle jij,utc liutween France and China. I; 1. said tu be fashionable this fall for ,^.iic;tn lieiresses to wed young Irishmen • Muality. (lernian l)arona, it is learned 111 the saiiie source, were in vogue last aiul En'^lish noblemen two years ago. fiftv-rivc murderers have been commit- 1 111 Logan county, Ky., since 18G5, and ,( ,,,if i.f tlicm ]ia.s been hanged. Only i.,nf thciu were sentenced to life impri- â- iinut. anil iiiif of the two was pardcjn- IDIOll, 5'BELLOWi FORCES '" the Domi ERCHANT3 p n. STEAMERI Tl LII â- x'coption anions,' th ot Ocean Steamâ„¢ th special refen-ao 'A-'-^enKcrs. and fo i-'I. arc unexcelled or tiie regularitj c iveather. The steel If the highest ordei nd every provision iitortami protectia ifion to the total am sincrle men and wfl -uTicri compartman and arranged tha i"ily has a li ' );u-ticulars ttle pr apply t towns in Ontario Lgent, 23 York3tre« ST. SAFEST, .ill HEAPEST I THE WOELD oading .Shot Uu SbellK, Toolii. I Icp $13. 1 113 t:un 1.5. The barrels ireecli-loiidiiig t'h r, TOKOTO, Icpeatin? Arm- Cd nion where a (nlj iescription of KiW i kept. .ilogiie, cnntaauM •arms, rfilverwain vxr 1 ilk at Wholi' ack Silk, wide j ijh with order to any part o' .BORNE ST at Wholesak' ch Blue Black â- iit3. Send for .ndsec foryour- BORNESi eteen. Our â- •en ii worth â- ' a dress lengtb 1 kinds of Dress .11 can save l i ins by sending BORNE S' FT nan in Cans'i" reet, and oa^j' are not as rt BORNE Si TORON' â- fli,; late Englisli hangman's wife, Mrs. i[jw'"pci, died the other morning, her ith lieiiig ha.stened by intemperance. It ..;tated that on the occasion of each vt-cutioii hfv liusband gave her a bottle â- 'in. iievv warrant has been issued under .;^.('ii.stMins Smuggling Act against Holmes ^,i P)racken, the arrested Halifax dyna- iteis. in which they are charged with :;n.'iii'-C explosives across the border ,:hait liaying duty upon them. The entries if freshmen at the various Ilei.'r,^ I if Cambridge I'niversity, Eng- .:iii. tlii.s year exceed those of 1882 by i;v-iiiir. tile numbers being 710 and 707 »|netively. The name of Prince Edward \\ ales lieads tlie list at Trinity. The I!erlin Museum has purchased for i;t;.(Mi() Reiiil)randt's painti'.ig of "" Poti- !iar Aceii.sing .Josejili Before Phartioh. " 'h. u.ak was formerly in possession of â- :r Tlmiiias Lawrence, and is one of tlie -t fainiius iif Jlembrandt's pictures. Fii'iii Dublin it is i-eported that Michael Aaltei.s, sentenced to imprisonment for iiiiplicity in the Crossmaglen murder t'lispiiaey, recentl}- died in jjrison. Mr. Healy, "M.P., jiublicly declared that Wait lis prcitested to the last his innoc- â- ace. Recent advices from Ton(j^uin contirm ;he re]"irt tliat the Black Flags in Annam are .secretly encouraged and assisted by the (.'hine.se authorities. It is said to be the inpuhir belief in China that their army is '.irciuii iiig fora warof extermination against .ill fiiivigners. In tile \\ ouien's Congress in Chicago, .Mrs. Wiilcott cif Mas.sachusetts told her -wteis tliat the outdoor work of a farmer :s n^'t s(i hard as that of the kitchen, and -he instanced many women in Kentucky .th ' are doing farm work rather than burj' •hciiisch cs in kitclien. .Mr. .Iiidali P. I'eiijamin's friends, ac- nhiiLr til tlie London T/m^.s, are having MS likeness engraved and among the sub- lilicis are Lord Cairns, Lord "Hagan, I.i'id Watson, Mr. Justice Deiiman, Mr. r.aiiiii I'lillock, Sir .John de fiex, and many :\i"V distingui.slied persons. I'.cilin des])atcli states that two .lews '.ivc Keen ciinvieted at distin of setting â- .!• !•' the synagogue to obtain the insur- I.. ' 'I'liey Were sentenced to four years' :::!â- ! i-iiiiiiient. )tliers iinijlicated in the i:;ic wci'e sentenced to sliorter terms. Hi" i-riine was uriginally attributed to the ' 'l;!-it ians. An KiiLflish country paper contains the â- ii'.MiiL' curious instance oi niispunctua- '!i â- â- Lnrl Palmerston then enterel on iw head, a wliite hat upon his feet, large "lit Well-polished lioots ujion his brow, a lark cloud in his hand, his faithful walk- iil: stick in his eye. a menacing glare say- I"Z Hi 'tiling." A St. Petersburg desiiatch says the .!â- 'â- , ,,,,,[ ,/, ,\Y "tri:ih(iiini declares that 'Iir loiri^ii jiolicy of Russia is entirely de- o ted to jieace. Her relations with all â- :ciL.'n powers ai'e excellent, and n(jques- " :i !~ now pemliiig likely to disturb the iU:c; whicli all (iiA-ernments are striving â- ' iKaintain. An item of society intelligence from Kiii.-as says that elopements are becoming 'Inn js of tlie jiast in that State. "It is " niing tlie rage now," says the writer, "'-r nei^dlbors to take the bride's father :i' ' till' next room and sit on him, so that m't interrupt the wedding cerennmy, 'â- â- get the mother ujistairs discmssing 'vies of boiniets." ir latest Niliilist proclamation, being iisively circulated, demands that the lall summon the representatives of /.ar ig rtova iplain Ivnssiaii jieople, and asks for a full amnesty, freedom of the j)ress, freedom of ^lieeeh, and tile right to hold public meet- ings as the only means of preventing a re- lutioii. Pitilwss vengeance is threaten- 1 if tlie demands are disregarded. The Porte has issued a note to the i-'Wers protesting against the continued recognition of Prince Alexander as sove- 'â- eigu of Bulgaria. The grounds of the JTi^test are the frequent and continued absence frtm Bulgaria of the Prince, who " re(iuired by the ccmstitution of 1879 to i'-side permanently in the principality, or appoint a regent during his absence, and iitheracts on the part of a ruler which trench upon the rights and dignity of Tur- f^ey ;us treaty-suzerain of Bulgaria. Lord Kossmore, Grand Master of the "tangenien of Monaghan, writes to the newspapers calling attention to the seri- "is state of affairs in Ulster. He says t'lat henceforth the self-restraint of the 'raiigemen cannot be reckoned upon. •hily the utmost efforts of himself and "thcr leaders prevented the Orangemen storming the hill at Rosslea during the iVnellite meeting. If the Goverment alli iws such disloyal meetings to continue ia Ulster the result will be bloodshedâ€" per'.iatis civil war. 'Valoe at 8«ap •• Food. The value of soup as food cannot be over-estimated. In times of scarcity and distress, when the question has arisen of how to feed the largest number of persons upon the least quantity of food, the ali- ment chosen has always been soup. There are two reasons for this First, by the addition of water to the ingredients used, we secure the aid of this important agent in distributing nutrition equally through- out the blood, to await final absorption and second, we gain that sense of reple- tion to the satisfaction of hunger â€" the fact being acknowledged that the sensa- tion we call hunger is often allayed by the presence of even innutritions substance in the stomach. Good soup is literally the juice of any ingredient from which it is made, the extract of the meat, grains or vegetables which comj)ose it. Even the most economical soujis, eaten with bread, will satisfy the hunger of the hardest worker. The absolute nutritive value of soup de- pends, of course, upon its ingredients and these can easily be chosen in refer- ence to the maintenance of health. For instance, the pot licjuor in which meat has been boiled needs only the addition of a few dumplings or cereals and seasoning to form a perfect nutriment. That produced from skin and bones can be made equally p^atable and nutritious by boiling with it a few vegetables and sweet herbs, and some rice; barley or oatmeal. Even the gelatinous residue â€" produced by long- continued boiling, without the presence f any foreign matter, is a useful emollient application to the inflamed mucous sur- faces in some diseases, while it affords at the same time the degree of" distention necessfiry to i)revent flatulency. The time retjuired t( make the most palatable and nutritious soup is short. Lean meat should be chopped fine, placed in cold water, in the proportion of a pint to each pound, slowly heated and thoroughly skimmed. Five minutes' boiling will extract from the meat every i)article of nutriment and flavor. The liciuor can then be strained off, seasoned and eaten with bread, biscuit, and vegetables. Peas or beans boiled and added to the soup make it the most perfect food for sustaining health and strength. It is the pure juice of the meat, and contains all its savory and life-giving principles. Cbaraoterlstics of Bands. Hands are divided into three different kinds those with round-pointed fingers, those with scjuare tips, and those that are spade shaped, with pods of flesh at each side of the nail. The first type â€" with round-pointed fingers â€" belongs to char- acters with perceptions extra sensitive, to very pious people, to contemplative minds, to the impidsive, and to all poets and artists who have ideality as a prominent trait. Tlie scjuare-shaped belong to scien- tific people, sensible, self-contained char- acters, and to the class of professional men who are neither visionary nor alto- gether sordid. The spade-shaped type, with pods of flesh at the side of the nail, indicates people whf8e interests and in- stincts are mostly material. Each finger, no matter what kind of a hand it is joined to, has a joint representing each of those types. The divisitm of the finger that is nearest the palm stands for tlie body, the middle division represents mind, and the liighest joint spirit or soul. If the to]) joint is longer than the others it denotes a character weakened with a too abundant imagination, great ideality and a leaning towards the theoretical rather than the- [U-actical. When the middle j(»int of the finger is long, it promises a logical mind, and when the lowest joint is longest, it indicates a nature that clings more to the luxuries than to the refinements of life. If they are nearly alike, it indicates a well-balanced mind, especially if the length of the fingers equals the length of the palm. Figbtlag a Fantber. Henry Snook, of Readsville, had a des- ])erate encounter with a panther in the Seven Mountains recently, says the Phila- delpliia Timi.- It seems that he had been informed that such an animal had been seen the day previous on the back moun- tain, and he, acc(jmpanied by his brother and Robert Dignan, also of Readsville, ecjuipped themselves and started for jjoints in the Seveo Mountains where panthers have been known to fretiuent. When the men reached the vicinity of tlie place they concealed themselves some distance ajiart. Just as the sun sank behind the hills, and shadows were shutting out tbe light njces- Siuy to aid the hunter in making a sure shot, Henry Snook's eye fell upon a large panther cautiously moving towards him. Mr. Snook fired a load of buckshot at the animal, breaking one of its hind legs. The enraged and cri2)i)led creature advanced upon Snook, who retreated a short dis- tance when the animal halted. The hunter then returned, when another con- flict ensued, and Snook ran the muzzle into the animal's mouth and fired, break- ing its under jaw. It then struck several terrific blows at him with his jiaws, and owing to the darkness Snook drew out of the fight. Two men returned to the place the next morning, but did not see the panther. There is another monster trial to come up shortly before Yice-Chancellor Bacon, in England, which promises to last as long as the Tichbome case, of which Lord Cole- ridge was a great part. The amount in dispute is S2, 500, 000. There are ten de- fendants, who make separate defences and employ separate counsel. Three ojunsel are engaged for each defendant and the plaintifl" a well-known company, hasfive. The company's leading lawyer has §5,000 marked on his brief, and the others on both sides from S2,500 down to $1,500. The pleadings make up a • large folio volume. As Sir James Bacon is 85, it is likely to finish him. WItn Aerostat. I It wa«;Scialife», to; fba bf^tof iu-4^Be- i collection, who thanked' God thai He h^ put it into the hearts of some men to make dictionaries. The practical utility of people who believe that they have solv- ed the problem of aerial navigation is not as yet quite so clear as that of lexicograph- ers, although when we go to Chicago by balloon, we shall no doubt be invoking the blessings of Scaliger upon the series of experimenters who have made that re- sult possible. The ca»se of aeronautios has not advanc- ed in proportion to the labor expended on it. The other day it was cabled as a sur- prising feat that an aeronaut had crossed the British Channel in a balloon, whereas that same feat was performed almost a centurj' ago, in January, 1785, namely by Blanchard and Jeffries, less than two years after the first ascension in a balloon had been made (October, 1783), by a per- son who was afterward killed in an at- tempt to cross the Channel, and not much more after the Montgolfiers had discover- ed that a light bag with the open end d(jwn would rise if a fire were built under it. The first crossing was in "the in- fancy of aeronautics," and we are in the iifancy of aeronautics still. Although the intervening century has been th* most fruitful in mechanical successes of any the world has seen, no real progress has been made. The vision in which the laureate Saw "the nations airy navies grappling In central blue. Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails. Pilots of the parple twilight, dropping down with costly bales," remains hitherto all in the laureate's eye. Nevertheless the problem has been so sup- cessfully solved by birds, with a cubical capacity "of brain infinitesimal compared with that of man, that it is no wooder it should continue to provoke the ingenuity of inventive and unfeathered bipeds. Mr. C. F. Ritchel, of Bridgeport, Con- necticut, is the latest of the inventors in- to whose hearts it has been put to solve the problem, although his efforts appear to be rather towards aerostatics than to- word aeronautics â€" to enable man to hover rather than to fly. However, the suc- cessful solution of the problem of aerosta- tion would take us a long way toward flight. The great need of the aerostat has been a tissue light and not transpirable, which will retain his gas in an efficacious state without destroying the buoyancy of the balloon in a few hours by leakage. Mr. Ritchel uses for his balloon, which is a cylindi'ical reservoir of gas, Scotch ging- ham coated with rubber and sulphur. For this comjiosition he claims the advantage that it will not rot the balloon as the ordinary coating of boiled linseed-oil does by generating an acid that eats the vege- table fibres. The composition in this case is pressed into the fibre with heated rollers, and then vulcanized. The balloon â€" that is to say, the cylin- der â€" is 85 feet long by 35 in diameter, and has thus a capacity of 81,000 feet of gas. Pure hydrogen gas having a lifting capacity of seventy pounds to the thou- sand feet, this cylinder is expected to carry a load of 5G70 pounds. The weight of the cylinder itself is 1200 jiounds, of the frame and machinery 1500, of the bal- Itist (water) (iOO. and fifteen men, crew and passengers, are estimated for at the low average of 120 jiounds each, making the total weight 5100 pounds. The fans, four in number, are three feet in diameter, with three blades set at an angle of thirty degrees from an horizontal plan. There are no valves in the cylinder. Reliance is placed for lowering the bal- loon upon the fans, which are to be work- ed by two men at each wheel, and, for raising it, upon a series of shutters under the car, worked by a lever within the car, so as to open out like a para- chute, or rather like a brake, so as to slacken motion in either direc- tion by increasing the area of resistance. The inventir believes that the material emiloyed in the balloon will enable him to retain his sujiply of gas iruch longer than has hitherto been poss.oie. The balhust is meant only to compensate for tlie loss of gas by decomposition or leak- age, the latter being reduced to a mini- mum. It must be owned that this looks a good deal like an undertaking tliat a man shall not merely lift himself, but soar, by tug- ging at his waistband but Mr. Ritchel avers that by applying the princijile used in the construction of liis air ship a man ATeighing ninety-six pounds raised fourteen pounds of shjt to the ceihng of a room every half -hour, working a fan of fourteen inches diameter, making 2,000 revolutions a minute. But the fan is intended to be used to lower the machine only, the lift- ing power of the gas being virtually a con- stant quantity. This is a step beyond Archimedes, who required a place to stand as a condition precedent to moving the world. -^â- ♦«- ^111^ A singular species of acacia is growing at Virgininia, Nev., which shows all the characteristics of a sensitive plant. It is about eight feet high, and growing rapidly. When the sun sets its leaves fold together and the ends of the twigs coil up like a pig-tail, and if the latter are handled there is evident uneasiness throughout the plant. Its highest state of agitation was reached when the tree was removed from the spot in which it was matured into a larger one. To use a gardener's expression, it went mad. It had scarcely been planted in its new quarters before the leaves began to stand up in all directions like the hair on the tail of an angry cat, and soon the whole plant was in a quiver. At the same time it gave out a most sickening and pungent odor, resembling that of a rattlesnake when teased. The smell so filled the house that it was necessary to open the doors and windows, and it was f uUy an hour before the plant calmed down and folded its leaves in place. .â- J*;.I..J ' .J How People Die. Miss Nightingale has pointed out bow Aprb]^ -qil "Sir ^osea Montefiore, constantly the mental state of the dying ^^^hose approaching energy on his hun depends on their physical condition. -As a rule, she tells us, in acute cases interest in their own danger is rarely felt. "In- difference, excepting with regard to bodi- ly suffering, or to some duty the 4yiBg man wishes to perfonn, is the far niore usual state. But patients whAftflie^df con- sumption very frequently die in:a«tate of seraphic joy and peace the countenance dredth year is a subject .of such general congratulation, what is the best recipe for a very long life â€" supposing a man to con- sider it an object worth attaining â- ? Mil- ton laid stress on "the rule of nTt too much," which is no doubt an excellent one, but vague in its application. More- over Milton followed liis own advice, and â- ^ yet failed to live sixty -six years. Fon- almost expresses rapture. Patients who tenellfi^ ivtMiaeJiJfe„euibraced almost ex die of cholero, peritonitis, etc., on the contrarj' very often die in a state ap- proaching despair. In dysentry, diarrhoea, or fever, the patient often dies in a state of indifference. " Those who have care- fidly examined the dead on a battlefield, or in the streets after an enu.ate, are struck with the fact that while the expres- sion on the faces of those who have died by g«ndiot wounds is one of ngony and distress, the dead by sword have a calmer expression, though their wounds often seem more painful to tlu eye. A ver y careful observer, who was through the Indian mutiny, entirely confirms this. After giving several instances, he says, â€" ' ' A rapid death by steel is almost pain- less. Sabre edge or point divides the nerves so quickly as to give little pain. A bullet lascerates. " The Mormon Chiefs, says the Salt Lake Tribune, tell of their converts. They could get many more immigrants were they to say nothing of their religion, but simply use the emigration system they have adopted. They assess their people ten per cent, on all their earnings. This gives a fund of probably $1,000,000 per annum. If they set aside but a tenth of this for an eniigration fund, it is easy to see what might be accomplished. But now the debts contracted by former emi- grants are being paid with interest, and probably it is not tiny loiigeniecessary to draw upon the Church fund. The Mor- mon religion is certainly the most stupen- dous fraud of the nineteenth century, but the Mormon emigratioii system is a most thoroughly effective one. Some interesting biograpliical notes on Alexandre Dumas, pere, are being pub- lished by M. Blaze de Bury in Paris. One story, showing the facile fecunditj' of the great novelist, is in .cresting. He was out shooting one day with a i)arty at Com- piegne. He h;id kUlcd twenty-nine head of game. "I shall kill my thirtieth and then return to the chateau, for I am tired and have had enough of it," said he to his neighbor. Dumas brought down one more partridge and departed; It was noon. The rest of the party returned at five o'clock, and found Dumas seated in front of the fire, rubbing his hands. "Ah! so you have hatl a nice snooze, eh " ex- claimed his son, "No such ulck," was the reply "those confounded cocks and hens in the farmyard have kept me awake all the time." " Tlien what on earth have j-ou done with yourself all the afternoon alone ' "Why, 1 have written a piece for the Frangais." The piece was en- titled "Romulus," and was a great suc- actly a centurv. (11th of February, iCo/, to 9tli ;dÂ¥ Jwilfi»ly, 17S7), "was formally asked his bpinwn ontMs weighty question, and replied that he ascribed his length i.i days to two niaxims he htid laid down f.i himself and rigidly adhered to â€" the first, " everybody is right " the second, " eveiy- thing is possiWfe. " Tlie late Canon Bea- don was less sent-entious, and woulil laughingly explain that he had reacliei a hundred simply by never wearing an i vei coat. It was either he or another cen- tenarian who said he had never eaten ci ld meat, but always hot, and thus saved his digestion from premature cxhaustii.in ow- ing to double work. It is related of Ltird Mansfield that whenever a hale and hearty old man gave e'vidence before him. he would question the witness in a friendl\ way as to liis habits, with the result that he found every one to be an early riser. The topers are said to have been as nu- merous as the water-drinkers which is probable enough, the latter being an ex- tremely limited section of tlie English people in the eighteentli centurj.-- ^f Janus" Gazette. Vaccination. The following conclusions were adopted by the Thiixi International Congress ot Opponents to Conqiulsory Vaccination, recently held at Benie, Switzerland, under the Presidency of Dr. Adolf Yogt, Prti- fessor of Hygiene and Medicine in tlie Bern L'niversity, in favor of the abroga- tion of the law^s 1.- â€" That a comprehensive study of vital statistics proves that the extension of the practice of Vaccination bears no logical re- lation to qhe reduction of small-pox. 2. â€" That whilst the virus used for the excitation of the disease designated ric- various origins and uncertain it is also liable to occasion, and convey, other and serious cinki is of character, intensify, maladies. 3. â€" That statistics gathered from Euro- pean States, and from India, establish the fact that small-pox (like the other members of the class of zymotic diseases to which it belongs), originates in, and is fostered by, insanitary conditions, and is only ef- fectually combatted by their removal that Vaccinati(jn is inoperative upon m(jrtality where sanitation is defective. and superfluous where sanitation iirevails. 4. â€" That enforced Vaccin.ation is an in- fraction f)f personal freedom, inasmuch as a conviction adverse to tlie utility of the practice is a matter of scientific conscience. which is entitled to tlie same respect as is accorded in all civilized coiiinr.'.nitivs To the theological conscience. 1A pilAJNt WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE MEOCRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL SEE BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE Chicago, Rock Island Pacific R'y, Bolns tho Oroat Central Line, affords to traveler*, by reason of Its unrlvalod geo- Braphloal position, the shortest and best route betweon tho East, Northeast and Southeast, and the West, Northwest and Southwest. It Is literally ?»nd strictly true, that its connections are all of the principal linos of road between the Atlantic and the Pacific. By Its main line and branches it reaches Chloaco, Jollet, Peoria, Ottawa, La Salle, Oeneeeo, Moline and Rock island, in Illinois t Davenport, Muscatine, Waahlnston, Keokuk, Knoxvllie, Oskaloosa, Palrfleld, Des Moines, West Liberty. Iowa City, Atlantic, Avooa, Audubon. Harlan, Cuthrio Center and Council Bluffs, In Iowa Qallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City, In Missouri, and Leaven- worth and Atchison .n Kansas, and tho hundreds of cities, vlllases and towns Intermoillate. The "GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE," As It Is familiarly oslled, ofFsrs to travstsrs all the advantasss and comforts Insldont to a smooth track, safe bridces. Union Depots at iMI oonneetins points. Past Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL HEATED, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES a lino Of the «OST MAQHIPIOENT NORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built PULLMAN'S Mtest deslsned and handsomest PALACE S^EWMHO PARS, and DINING CARS that ars aeknowledBsd by press and people to be the PINEST RUN UPON ANY ROAD IN THE COUNTRY, and in whioh supsrior msals are ssrvsd to travelers at the low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS BACH. THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER. TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL, via the famous ALBERT LEA ROUTE. A Nsw and Direct Line, via Seneca and Kankakee, has rsoently been opened, between Newport News, Richmond, Clnolnnatl, Irtdianapolis and La Fayette, and Oounoll Bluffs, St. Paul, Minnoapoiis and intermediate points. All ThrouBh Passoncers carried on Fast Express Trains. For more detailed information, see Maps and Folders, which may be obtained, as wsll as Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices in the United States and Canada, or of R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN, Vios-Pros't A Gen'l Manager, Csn'l T'k't A Pass'r As'te CHICAGO. r- £.