y 7'^F^" ^-- ?^??!^^^^ •w-^ippj^ --- "' '"' "I "" ;:^-^- ' » -*-^^""j*?" â- PPir'P"f!Wfl| it; ir' '«n!j. vx M i [Now FiBST PlTBLISH£D.1 [AU. RiOHXB BXSKBTXD.] LIKE AND UN LIKE. By M. E. BRADDON. AcTHOB or " Lady Audlkt's Sxcbxt, Wtllabd's Wkibd, Etc., Eia CHAPTER XLâ€" A Dangeeous Pilot. Lady Belfield came next morning to fetch her faiore daagh'„er-in-law, and Colonel Deverill was not displeased to see hia young daughter carried ofi to a haven of safety. He Had a vague idea that the billiard room at Morcomb waa hardly the best place for an engaged girl, and that a kind of society which was all very well for Helen Ddveriil was not 'good enough for the f ature Lady Belfieid. " Ic IE a capital mitch, and it would be a deuced pity to- burke it/' thought the Col- onel. So Helen drove away in the roomy bar- ouche, sic ini? by LtdyBelfield's side, with Adrisin seatedjopposite. She seenfied pleased to go with them, and she had a quieter and more thoughtful air, which chctrmed h'r Madge had been more than three montha at the Abbey, and ahe had given no reason for f«alt finding in either Mrs. Marrableor the upper housemaid. She had worked well,, and had shown harself quick and clevar in learning the duties of domestic service. She was very quiet in her de- meanour, kept herself to herself, as the other servants said, and was not i^ood com- pany. She had a little room of her own in the great gabled roof, a room with a dor- mer window that overlooked the wooded valley and that broad deep stream which was the chief glory of Belfield park. ,.he would stand for an hoar looking out of this window, far away over the valley to the distant moorland, thinking or dreaming, just as Helen sat thinking or dreaming in the drawing room below stairs, lulled by in an ont-door Bporti,ia »I1 gamM rf ikilL She playa billiards better than many yonag men, and she rides better than any woman I know. She is juat the wife for a oonntry squire. I only wish I ware better fitted for making her happy. ,, " My dearest Adrian, how cut she nil to be happy with yon, who are so kind and good to her " " An, but goodness doesn't :onnt for very nrach in this Ufa. People would rather Inve congenial tastes. It ia a ooostaat tronble to me that I cannot share the pleasores Helen lovesâ€" that if we are to be much to- gether by-and-bye as man and. wife, she may feel like a snared bird, that haa been accustomed to its liberty, shut up in a cage. " She will never feel that if she loves lover. That chastened ana softer manner i *^* pathetic melodies of Beethoven or seemed only natural to a girl on the eve of a i Mozart, or by soft, sad, wordless songs by new life a girl for whom^the responsibiities of womanhood were so soon to begin, It was early in April, the hedgerows were budding in the soft Devonian air, and there were violets nestling here and there along the grassy bank Tne final meet of the foxhounds had been advertised, and people were beginning to put up tennis nets on asphalte courts, and to talk of the otter hounds that were to be out in June. Lady Belfield was delighted with Helen's more thoughtful mood. It seemed to bring them nearer together. They sat together, and worked and talked in the qaiet morn- ing hours, and in the evening, wben Valen- tine had carried his brother off to the bil- liard room, Constance Belfield would sit down to her beloved piano and play, while her young companion sat on a low chair close by, listening, thinking, or dreaming, with hbr workbasket standing by untouched, or her book open in her 'ap. That dreaming' mood was a new phase in Helen's character. On her former visit she had been all gaiety 'and lighiness, full of movement and fitful ness. The mother loved to talk of her sons, and she found a sympathetic listener in Helen. She talked of both, but she talked most of Valentme of his errors and fail- ings, his wildness, recfeleaauess, follies of all kinds, but somehow or other the result of all the mother's talk was to prove that way- ward son the most brilliant and loveable of young men. Unconsciously, that favouring love pleaded and apologised for him, and spreid a gloss over all the dark spots in his charactei. " I am sorry you and he are not better friends," said Lady Belfield, after one of these conversations. " Oh, buc we are excellent friends. Mr. Belfield was very kind to me out hunting. He was my pilot through some of our best runs." *-A dangerous pilot, I fear, child. But you are so very distant to each other." "Are v/e?' faitered Helen. "Perhaps we have very little in common except our love of fox-hunting. Mr. Belfield cannot care ti talk to an inexperienced girl." ' Oh, but I think it is you who keep him at a distance. You might be a little more sisterly in your manner." " i'Jl try"' said Helen, "but as I never had a brother, I hardly knonr how brothers are to be treated. " " If you liked him there would be no difficulty," answered Lady Belfield, re- proachfully. Helen hung her head and said never a word Coos an. e Belfield had been struck by Eom^t'ing strange ' in her son's manner to his brother's betrothed, and in her manner to him. Tnere was not that frank, easy friendliness which the Uiofner would have liked to see; and knowing Valentine's diffi- cult temper and overweening pride, she fore Bit !*• trouble in the future. Tie Abbey belonged to Lidy Belfield for her lifetime, but it had been agreed between Adrian and his mother that he and his wife were to live there, and to be master and mistress in all things. Constance Belfield would slip into the second place. She could lead her quiet intellectual life juat as happily as queen uowager as she had done when she was queen regnant. She would have her own rooms, aud her own occupations, her own uld friends. •"' Everybody will naturally look to your youag wife as the principal personage in this house," said Lidy Balfield. " It would never do for her to be secondary in anything. She had better begin as sole mistress. Sae will fall into her place more naturally, and fill it better in the days to come With such a housekeeper as Mrs. Marrable, she can have no difficulties. As for myself, I shall be quite happy when I am no longer sovereign. Audi shall not be too continually with you. I am contemplating a ottage by the sea, somewhere on the coast of Cornwall â€" a wild, lonely spot â€" where I can take an occasional rest from all society. ' "Dear mother, do you suppose I could ever have too much of you, or Helen either. She will look to you for help and couui-el in all tiinga. And when you start your Corn- ish cottage, it must be big enough for all three oi us." " I have only one difficulty about the future, Adrian.' " What is tnat " "Your brother Valentine has been used to think of this house as his home." ' And it will be his home still, after I am married. There will not be the slightest lessening of his freedom. You know what he and I have been to each other, and that I could hardly live without him." This waa satisfactory, but Lady Belfield had a lurking dread of evil. She could not help thinking that there was a silent an tagoniam between Valentine and Helen. There was such a chilling reserve in their manner towards each other they seemed so scrupulously to avoid all occaaions of £riend- ly compuiionahip. Valentme seemed to take a diabolical delight in wididrawing Adrian from the society of his betrotihed. There was always an excuse for carrying him off somewhere in the morning and in the evening there was the billiard room, which at the Abbey was an exclusively mascolue apartment. Valentfaie smoked there, and smoked f arionily. He kept his gnns and ringle sticks there, his foils sad fendng appuatns, and had contrived to â- tnmp the room with his own individnality. TbebilliMrdnMaiwMu mnoh bit peooUar Schumann or Schubert, In the heart of each girl there dwelt a profound sadness, a yearning for escape from the actusd into the unreal. Madge had seen Valentine but few times since their conversation in the corridor, and their meetings on those occasions had been accidental and brief. The girl would have passed him without'a word, without a look even but on their latest meeting Valentine was in a conversational humour, and he stopped her with a strong hand upon her arm. " Well, Madge, how are you getting on?" " Very well, thank you, sir." " Sir. That's rather formal, ain't it " " No, sir. You are a gentleman, and a strangei." " A stranger. Come, Madge " " I told vou I could be nothing to you if I wasn't to be your wife. I could never be that, you said â€" so there it ended. Can't you understand that ' She spoke as deliberately as a man of business who wants to be decisive and defin- ite about a business matter she looked him in the face as resolutely as a man looks at a man. "No, I can't," he answered, doggedly. " What devilish hard wood you are made of, Madge. I never met a woman like you." " I know my own mind. Sjme women don't know even as much as ttaat. There's one in this house that doesn't, anyhow." "What dj you mean?" he asked, au^ily. " No need to say. You kn^w well enough. Good afternoon, sir. I'm too busy to stop here talking." She made him a curtsey, and left him, left him brooding, with his head down and his hands in the pockets of his shooting j icket. The corridors at Belfield Abbey were places to live in low and wide, with Tudor windows deeply recessed, and pro- vided with cushioned seats, on which a man might loll at full length. There were old pictures, old china jars, old cabinets to break the monotony of the long straight passages there were thick damask cur tains to keep out the cold. "Trust a jealous woman for scenting a rival," muttered Valentine, flinging him- self upon one of those comfortable window seats, and taking out his cigar case. "Yet I thought 1 had kept thiogH very dark, and that no one but my angel herself knew the state of the cage. She knows. She knows, I'll swear. I've seen it in her face when we rode over the breakneck ground together once when I was leading her across a fence that might mean broken necks, I looked back as my horse rose for the leap, and saw her eyes. They said as plain as words can speak, "I don't care if ^i follow you to.vourf death," Yes, I saw the love-light in those ' eyes, and I knew ahe was mine. Poor Ad- rian. He's so absurdly fond of her that it seems a pity to come between them and she hasn't a stiver, and it will be altogether a wretched match for me. I certainly ous;ht to fight it out, and give her up." Tho third week in April began with south- winds and sunny skies. The old oaks and beeches in Belfield Park seemed to smile in the sunshine, though not a leaf showed upon their ruggsd branches. But there was the purple of ripening leaf -buds, there was the warmth of reviving nature, even in things that seemed still dead. It was glorious weather for tennis, and everybody at Chadford and in the neigh- bourhood seemed to be seized with a tennis mania. All the young men and women put on flannel garments, and met at each other's houses, and played Tvith all their might and main. There was no tennis club at Chadfard. There had been talk of such an institution, but no one had been enterprising enough to set the thing going; so play on private lawns, and tea drinkings after the play, were eminently popular. Valentine excelled at tennis, as at all athletic games so di- rectly the hunting was over, he had the ground marked and the nets out, and in- vited Helen to play with him. They played all the morning, and a messenger was sent to Morcomb to invite Mrs. Biddeley and Beeching over for the afternoon. Mr. " Da you know, that surly fellow, Beech- ing, is a crack player," said Valentine, at lunch. " I'm rather sorry you've asked him over, however good he is," answered Adrian. " I dislike him intensely, and so I think does Helen." " He certainly ia no favorite of mine," agreed Helen, "bnt Fiank seems deeply at- tached to him. Frank haa alwaya aome friend of that kind, without whom he seems hardly able to exist," "Oh, but one doesn't ask for a certificate of character from a man who is wanted to play tennis," said Valentine, hontemptuotis- ly. " All I ever inquire is can the fellow play, and will he help me to keep up my form. There's no use in playing against one's inferiors." Helen and Valentine want off to the lawn again directly after lunch. It was hardly weather for sitting in the garden yet, or Adrian would have sat bjr and watched the play. As it was, he stnllad op and down an adjacent patii with his' mother, stopping now and then to look at the pUyen. " How well aha playa, va bow itcaoafal ahe is." said Lady Belilald. vatofibg the dim ^riiA figno in » dn^la flnaa-iriiita (own. ' *«Y«VihaJiiaMVi|wihi. eii»«aoda '♦•-:?" siT;^ ' t,-" you. " Oh, I know that she loves me. I have been sure of that from the first but I don't know if I am right in accepting the sacrifice ahe will have to make in marryinga man who may be alwaya something of an invalid â€"forbidden to do this and thatâ€" a dull companion for a high spirited girl." "Bnt as a wife her whole nature will un- dergo a change. Yon will not have a highl spirited girl to deal with, bnt a womui, f ul- of loving care and womanly though tfnlneaa.' " Do you think so?" he asked wonderihg- ly. " Will not that be asking too mnoh of her. That ahe ahould paaa all at once from girlhood to womanhood, from the holiday of life to the bearing of burdena. She ia ao bright a creature ahe does not aeem made for though tfulneas or care." " Oh, bnt she nas been much more serious of late. I have seen a marked change in her." " Yes, she is certainly more aerioua." A ripple of girliah laughter came like a mockinff commentary upon his words. Helen and Valentine were finiahing a ain^la game in wild spirits, he playing aa if hia life depended npon the game, ahe flnahed and excited at her own success. " 1 on play as if you were bewitched," said Valentine when t2iey had finished. " I never saw such strokes from a bit of a girl like you." " I don't think I am so very insignificant," she aaid, drawing heraelf up to her fullest height. Mrs. Baddeley and Mr. Beeching appear- ed upon the lawn at this moment. The lady in a terra- cotta tailor gown, which would do for tennis or anything; the gentleman in flannels. They would only stop to shake hands and say a few words to Lady Belfield, and then begui a double set with Valentine and Helen on the same aide. Mr. Beeching distinguished himself at tennis and behaved rather nicely at tea. He unbent considerably and showed a some- what hoyish simplicity, which pleased Lady iBelfield. Mrs. Baddeley was superbly pat- ronising to the three young men, allowing them to wait npon her and administer to her appetite for pound cake and chocolate buscuits. It was arranged that they were to play tennis on the Abbey lawn every afternoon until Lidy Belfield gave them notice to quit. " I am not likely to do that," said that lady. I am very glad for Helen to be amused. Her life has been very dull hither to.' The tennis afternoons were highly appre- ciated. Jack ireemantle and hia sister Lucy were invited, and came frequently. The Miss Toffstafla and the Miss Treduceys put in an appearance, and Major Baddeley sometimes drove over to the Abbey, not to play, he waa too lazy for that, but to fetch his wife. " I am bound to show my alleciance occa- sionally," he said, and people agreed that the Major's devotion was very occasional. He was a large placid man, with a brca,d good-tempered face a man who liked to take everything easily, and to whom dinner was the leading event of every day. He ad- mired his wife as much aa it waa in hia pow- er to admire anybody, but he had never known what it was to feel a pang of jealousy. He had far too high an estimate of his own merits, and had never met with a better fel- low than himself. He was very particular as to what kind of champagne he bought or drank, but he was not over choice in the se- lection of his friends. So long as they amus- ed and served him he nev°r stooped to con- sider whether they might or might not be worthy assooiates for his wife. In a word, he was irankly and unconsciously selfish. Lord St. Austell had vanished from Chad- ford with his hn -iters at the end of the sea- son, l-ut Mr. Beeching and his atring of hor- ses still remained at the Lamb, and there was no talk of his departure. (to BE CONTINtTED. Money for Beligious Purposes. Lotteries, lucky bags, aemi-theatricala, chanty balls, funny recitations, kissing games and voting for the prettiest, wittiest or wisest may not be very sinful on appro- priate occasions, but are all abcminabJeme thods of raising funds for a church. If cash cannot be obtained for a religious purpose without fun and foolery, then let the pur- pose bs. nnaerved. In that case the only really good it can do is to die. In secular matters people frankly ^ve for this, that or the other thing what they honestly think It IS worth their whUe, they think, to give so much for this article or that, and Siey give It. Till the same thing ia done for re- ligion and benevolence the wheeta will drag heavily. The professed Christian acknowledgea giving for church pur poses to be as much his duty as providing for his little chUdren. Let him then aettle what proportion of hia income is to go in that way and let him lay it from his control as fully as what he owes to his butcher or baker. If he is paid every week let him put aside his church and charity por- tion every week, so that it may be rmdy when calls upon it are made. We hav« known men in Toronto and elsewhere who did this systematically. When the devoted sum was exhausted before the month waa over, they simply refused aU appUoations fall replenishing came from the next montti'a mcome. This plan wiU be fonnd to anawa best, ud whefi acconnta axe woond nt at the end of the day or of tiie life thay wffl in this way give more pleasure in tiia r«ti». apect. ♦ "Have you many aodal attraotioai in your far Wwtarn home?" ahe aahad of a Wall, •wd aaOa, WaVainti I HOUSEHOLD. A Ohaptar on Acoidepta. A yonnit girl in one of the achoola in the Western States, anrronnded by her pupils, heud a rumbling noiae, and, looking from a window, saw a dark, funnel-shaped olond Bwiftiy approaching. She nnderatood ita meaning, bnt though her heart almoat atop- ped beating, ahe turned her white face to the chUdrna, who aa yet were ignorant of danger, and said calmly, ".Children, we have often talked of viaiting the ' Hermit'a Cave. Let us take a little time and make that visit this morning. Fall into ranks and march in double quick to it noV. I will bring up the rear with the little ones." Before she was through speaking the older scholars had taken the lead, and, without speaking, the mouth of the cave waa gained just aa the pillar of cloud came roaring acroaa the prairie. The children b^an to Bcream as the air grew thick with duat and broken timbera, but a few quiet words from the young teacher induced them to enter the dark cave, where they remained in aaf ety until the roaring and rumbling of the atorm had ceaaed. When they ventur- ed out into the sunshine nothing but a heap of stones and splintered timbers remained to show where the scbool-honse had stood. Had the young teacher communicated her alarm to the children, a panic would have ensued and the results would have been most diaaatrona. A few yeara ago in a school I attended a young girl fainted and fell to the floor. In a moment the teacher had raiaed her to a sitting posture and the frightened children crowded around her, wringing their banda and crying. In the midat of the conf uaioa a young misa of a dozen years came to the res- cue by stretcbintr the unconscious girl flat upon her back. In a quiet, firm voice she said, " Mary has only tainted and you must stand back and give her air." Instantly the circle that had formed about her widened, the windowa and doora were thrown open, and the young commander, in a quick calm manner, proceeded to remove all the com- pression about the chest of her patient. Ap plying ammonia to the nostrils of the pros- trate girl, she waited patiently for signs of returning animation, and soon we had the satisfaction of knowing that Mary was quite heraelf again. " Who taught you hojv to act ao promptly, S»rah " inquired the teacher when her alai m had subsided. " Long ago my little brother fell from the landing at the top of the stairs to the hall below, striking his head upon the banisters in the descent. Thinking him dead, the nurse picked him up and began tossing him about. Mother to jk him from her arms and laid him upon the floor, setting the door wide open to give him air. Soon he began to breathe regularly, and then mother told us that when people fainted or were knocked senseless by blows about the head they should be laid upon their backs with their heads a littl^ lower than their bodies." As fainting is caused by the failure of the heart to supply the brain with blood, no one need be at a loss to understand the advan- tage gained by the prostrate position yet in spite of this fact people still continue to pile pillows under the heads of their faint- ing friends, while the child who has receiv- ed a blow upon th^ head is jolted about roughly or carried in an upright posture, as if blood could run up hill more easily than down. 4. little girl of eight who had been trained what to do in CMe of fire was so unfortu- nate M to drop a match on her cotton apron. Almost immediately the blaze flashed up in her face. Without a cry or pause she threw herself face downward oh the carpet, clap- ped her hands over her mouth and nose, closed her eyes, and rolled over and over on the thick woollen rug. Hearing the un- usual noise, her father hurried upstairs in time to put out the smouldeting fire. The child's apron waa in ashes, the front of her dreaa badly acorched, but beyond a few slight bums on her hands the brave girl was uninjured. _When questioned about her conduct she said, " Mamma has told me over and over to lie down on the blaze and stop my mouth ao aa not to swallow the smoke, should I catch fire. I knew I would be burned up if I started to run." Spring Time Suggestions. Before apples and cranberries grow poor and Bcsrce, it is a good plan to make jam of them, tor use later in the season. There is a time in the spring when fresh fruits are scarce and have lost their flavor. When the canned fruij; and berries in the atore-closet are almost gone, is a time when one feels the need of something to tempt one's appe You have empty tumblera and bowls that held j sUy of different kinds, why not fill them again I make a jam in this way. The cranberries I pick over, waih, fill in the porcelain kettle, add just enough water to keep from sticking. As soon as they be- gin to snap I mash them with a wooden apoon._ As soon as most of them are broken turn into the squash strainer and press through with the spoon into a large pudding diab. Thia leavea the akins and most of the seeda behind. When all are done I meaaure the pulp in a pint bowl and take an equal quantity of fine granulated sugar, put it into a dish set into the oven to heat through, then add to the pulp in the kettle. Give a good stirring to mix, set on the front part of the range, but do not leave it a. moment When It bills up, tame it and boil five minutes, stir- ring to keep from burning. The leaa the oranbeniea are cooked the finer will be the flavor and the brighter the jam. Have tumblera or bowla ready, setting on » wet towel to prevent braaka«e, Iklle out boiling hot, fiUing the disheskslnll as may be, as It shrinks aome when cold. The next day ciit some white paper (drnggista' large enough to cover and come down well onthendea. DipinthewMte of an egg, ^^"dUbelapaato kniw the conteBta wiMi covered. I nae pint bowlsaa the jam lookaweUonadiahwWtamadoat. Soma momlnga in early apring whanap- «SL?/*? M»d «»e wanta aometiiing aoid, whan freahmmbarriaa are gone smdlipplefi Z^S^^ ^^PK *^ P»»-plwit ia not big «Mgto oat, and rtmwbania. hav* n«* HJ^J^you oanatap to tiia atore-doaat, dwv^* Wl,mioavarthe oontenta, '^^:^^ !»«oi^^^ adgaa wad tun thi quTCring .(triaaaa mmm oaom of your Greemngs or otiier wT* »4l " Htheakinaar?ffi*W*!5l^ wash and wipe • *• »?^ •eeds and corea for fll^J" Pvt â- pecks or bruisea and A^'^V' •ame mamior a. lonh^L Ki^* Do you ever make t,!?"*^ ' S ^nng? They are U?t]^ J the empty pickle jiuT' "^1^1 Pare, core and -qSrttt "^l nto the stone pickfe jj* ^^ •«. cider vmegar add fivi ^J" *?5» toMtiier. Makea8mSl^.*«««?^ with doves and cS„"'°*Vi' ^^' ^wwiuh:'-,xj.sj Manual training ia „„ "• things that are gidfo/ •'*««* good for the richCt^H^ tor the dignity of LntiM""»i good for the po^r boy to S^ *»*• for handling toob, if ^T^ "^^ thing he mlsttandle fo^rte^*»" ItisgoodforthebookUhtl away from bwks. But «^"*A»I good for the non-boowi^ri him there IS something he «!' boyutterlypnable.evf„i{K«, to ke-p up in bookknowleK; age with the brighter ^If^ couraged. dullan'd„^i"l^ the workroom for an hour \r^« f can make a box or pfane' i*?^" board as well as theLtf,^ very Ukely better tha^tf £ J bor, and you have given him .!• .elf-respect that is o'/rt^KL when he goes back to his 8tnd^^^'£ be a bnghter and abetter bo, fort out something that he can do Vdl ?fmV' '" »l»t.Pl"ning the board thit him good It is planing the board b the presence of other boys who can mi er look down upon him when they J well when he can plane. He mightT after school and plane a board b the ot his family, or go to an evenbg A learn to plane, without a quarter pm without any, of the invaluable effect' his manhood that it will have to let plane side by side with those « mental attainments may be his bui CookiDg Eeceipts. Fib Cecst.â€" 1 wish to tell yourr my way of mskingpiecrnst. Itbaii from the usual way of making it, l try it and you'll find it good Patiii of flour, and a teatpoonful of salt in ihei ing dish, then take three caps of b and three tablespoonfula of lard, pats dish and put over the stove till it l When it boils add a scant teaipooni saleratus, pour over the flour and ahJ m (X stiff. This is very easy to roll od^ will make six pies. Grange Cookies.â€" Two eggs, one-k cup of butter, one cup of sugar, ODfri cup of cold water, oneteaspoonfalofi tus and two of cream tartar, flour t a stiff dough fl-ivor with lemon or Roll thin and bake in a quick ovei. recipe makes a large quantity, andthe;^ keep cri»p for munthBif patin adiyfi where the boys and girls cannot fiadtl Cauamel Cake.â€" Oae cap of sngir,i half cup ot butter, one half cup two cups of flour, two eggs, two te of biking powder, Bake in two 1 the filling between. The top may be Ij ed or you can add chocolate to the f and the top. Filling. â€"One and one-half cups oi« three fourths cup of milk, a piece of h the siz i of ah egg. Flavor with vanilli Brown Betty PnDDiKG.â€"Greiueii put in a lawyer of sliced spples, then* «r of bread crumbs, half a cap of engtf.i pieces of butter and cinnamon, and 8i)«l the dish is full. Bake about two holing with cream. In Terror of Wild Beasts. A Brahmin surveyor, a Bachelor oil and of Civil Eagineering, emplcyedoni works in Madras, has been living ml' of wild beasts ever since he arriyel hears elephants 'growlingall night. Lord Connemara, ' ' which sends h down to zro-point of courage. Jl«« says, been ' chased by a blueeytH « and, flying ' with great velocity, hia theodolite. The instrument br he tried to replace the cobweb mm his own hairs-a wire cable to « thread. When remonstrated w«o," he droppsd the theodolite 'm"â„¢*'?^ life (his own). On another occ«^»a«; down a precipice, and '"f^K^ killed had not gravity come to M""' is this the full tale of his advenfir*^ day, while carrying fbig «i««- bear, or thought he did, and fl^ •« " his work-peopie to face the anj, executive engineer told wm have left his men; but be ex^ seeing the bear he immediately m» tal osculation of his stickBpo;' tance by ^oiglmon^^o^:^^^^ them insufficient. As for the w ha left them ' because they wnia fast aa he could.' H^ brother «» get into trouble one ^^^^f\j^i^ %l Arts and Engineering thanae" his brother, and not '"°*";«qB drew less pay, and would_ co h leas missed by the fan"ly- 1 "n^' ia a source of much wn«*3 th^ great things for bimfelf, »y^^'l he came up he has "^^l^Xa^t a man.' It is quiteaDew^Teirof-' and educated Brabmm, the ,. -Hindu-agts, to take to alL" A Curious BtiteP"' Ooe of the most ^^'^f^f£^ traveller, I found f/j^^' and thia town is fa^ " lad*" ia on quite a large stone, •â€" inscribed â€" ^^â- H« re lies « »ry, â- » -- ^j^ v' HeraUesAlexMider.J^i„* Here Ue» J*n»t -jrfi:' Ontherever«.arD*» uj. ^1 Whenl enjoyed tte'MJJ'gerfM' J Toit Stone I o"S^n-' J To Ornament awiwj'j,* Of Me »U My Ha»|^^^^^ Smpacor Frederiok jTj^rf •pMonoo Soieq aw uo^Smqm;!^ ^j^^ejij w^ ui suoinim oqx 'spnoods no^ r^mjds snouw} oq* 'n^moiMi;;! -3 IJ^ gonoi oq» »«qi *no paojui %i ^â- ^ „-?q?u jeau iC^^sjd twn »» â€" • P^ ^^ unnoJOB o» jfoq 'aoi P9U«» 'Wil^nd oqi '8jnoqp«jj[ " ^«in "V^ L\irK9 uoAi pmB spacoss ^Si^seA eow »^» P*â„¢ '**"** ' ^^ ^i^" -ipoO «« 000 S? !J»q uorajjoo^s "J*-* nT •»P!" OeS$ Joj pagawa* fc «^ noijwn « pn« »s«J pail*; noos 'L-r uourB «*^ P" ^Jinnoo oqa ij^q; !Sr»«R "*^ 'J P°* '^P*^ '° ®'°"' '^jsJwdOO} « po»B«oq Bp«.t ^Do%8 aqx ^«jM « OW P9^ooi pu« goiq^oiD 'Z, aina « no p«q »H ..-s-iaaie 8,p«p „ naaiBV^P" iiJ»nnoo oqj moj| fi«M oiw'oi* 'o«ra aajmnsE^un 'iiainb b Tio MOip « T»?*^ *P^^ ^^*^* o3«0!10 'ij peddojp ojeqi oSb B^«p jajv •pedooog nsTn^ooug sqx i ™„q« nooq B«q qojvos eqi «qa ajq^o J5J^ 8«q aoa«n8g oqn pn« 'jwdsap /noAiS s«^ osudao^uo oqx "pnuosun V^^'peAOJd ♦uojuoodsoi osop no ono *BW 'Bouorav oi poiJodsu^Ji Fuisq joA vek Xnnewdds !H?q? »8b iuoSti oq* PIP "oq sno ^lUQ "" V*^\ an BoioodB umqwy p3nni5|8-5jos 'po^o I MnaoAO BBMoq qoiq* O) ossssip joqio imMip«»OTW» ^o 'P^'n 'n»5I"«lPniM iqSiiU •paniA-eds bwm uiiq uAoqs esioq U«qV !»o«l oq* a«q? Joq?© ouou guiaq !}j » 4aaJ«»B'P « â„¢oJ| poiiwj or uoAOMoq I iiq ^q poj^io 8Â¥A OH "•lojtnag paimn 8M! JO f^soaa^ni aqj ui nviu vs/M»x o\ n«ing oq; Soip^nsiad m omil P«1 P*"" '°' P«q«^nd 8j[ -MM AjxA JOJ pOB 'B8i«n08J8d l^Xol 01 R sdooxo }o pasodsip j3A8 8j« easjoq OV on »«q* eAaqaq ^isoiaoaeiq oqi pip 9a !»a8?« B Jaraivj J05«a8g junup jon nil "BOBJoq JO oopwiJodxa jaqwnj aqa Qiqojd n«?|ns aqi A pansBi uaaq p^q I « ij«in paaa«8X oq o8c ssfaaM maj « ireQ j« |«AiJJ« Biq uodfi -eaaioq aqi J 01 ^iirrq*" S'l P'^dwgajaa eeq ica8« •vousiuV 'n Sniqi.$n« mojj inaas^ip H« JO 'Oil JOiiadns aq p.noM i^qiBSBjoq jq« eiqiBeod ji 'aonpojd pn«e98-oq iBj qjiM BBOJO o^ psjisap aq qoiqM uviqviy papooxq-nn| SAg '*ioj;a(i ^^s^no 8q» uo mjtj e,aoa«nag aqj Joj 3jnd o\ «iq«JV o* !»ua8B ub jnas 'uoaSai JO jerajp^ Jiai«u8g jatiniA as«[ ^iJ«a |-88U0}T UBiq^iy J*' ss9npimosn£i \, "^jq^qojd a.- qjns BBS^ 'eouago wnanj Lxm jo pjiqj I 0OT3F P*" 'pnooaa aqi Joj e^j ((Bjg aqa j«j 0S3F Y ^^S « « 'esnou BJj nontnioxa o* uopipps U| 'aiq«il Ipinoqs oq 'n«mji«q3 aqa Jo ja^«adg I Xq pomvu naoq s«q jaqjiem « naQA\ batiA « s«m iinapaodBajJCO juo jo nopsaS )wij, ;j8UUBX 'JQ! "o 'ajwaq^oo^ •i\ 'H "'K '^n ^^â„¢ ^ouaoap q%v\ na^q^uj jiqt m ojaq) si 9«qM â€" Aisp « joj asnoyj Btouioaad aqa mojj noienpsg 'A] aooo pa^idop^ aq ppioo a^qi Jaqio Lxm £)I«iiad i^naioi^a ajom c ^ipai^qnopun I "jtHp ui „A9iii8ipni„ Lrya 81 ajaq^ s^q^ I oq 4oao«o ^i onqM pu« i anp iCq pnq« 1 ejv (»uo JO}) jaun«x '1. ^^Fl Bjapn8j[(o iftiBiSaq pnuoioo jno jo qsom ni pa« ti j UI '«puoj{ no i^no pa^mod B)uapuod jno JO ano ey 'noiseas jaajc noiBses eqi paavjSaip eA«q 8« saoaej^o qouB im 00) jvj i^uamqeinnd « emaas 31 sn lano qsiii omos ^q b« (pm b« sjaqmem 803 amos ^q iC;ni8ipni o« paii«D b«m. 0(0X3 }o lap JO aqa pnaixa o) og 'eionp 4ioniJO})u 8)1 mojj !)nq asnog aqi jo [â- 8m}«q8p eq' mojj i^ino non Ai«jpqaiM I Jaqmam Sorpnajgo eqj !i«q} nosvaj aqi J8q)o (u« n«qq peeoddo ^{mjcM ajom I BAvq o^ emaas 'Soitiais B,A«p a«qj jo 8J eqj Snunp eanofj aq!) mojj L\^'6 Avjpq^m o^ ^(japjOBip i!|e«oj9 ei BOO SBoqA Bjaqmsm japjo o) msmji^qf) ' I eqa sajmbaj qoiqu apii eqx iP JO ^uemqnnnd eqi joj n«q9 ai«q nopou^sei aq^ joj 8|q«^i«maj ajom [unpeoojj JO se|n^ Man aqx.,â€" b'«9 DOft JO esnog q«i|J$ag aqa niSBaoisnq 4"in{iaj eq) joj ojupaoojd jo Ba(nj a* an 8in^«ode •ajjsau^ ,«»«««/ •;S' aqX -ainpeooij jo 89jb^ •aqaap I""'â„¢! «» BWM %3X9\\ Smasjuq 'jocd Xj^ l*â„¢*q* Iiai ;ou pjnoa ijng •panaddwq l^J'iqwmos !}Bqi 'oonj na^friJjB jeuS ^ra ^no i« A«8 '^o«q Lxa go oisvd }0 sinol* I 'U8A11B 8oid pm 'aun pms 'i^enp gniduioe f »m JO ano 8mmoo am aiw oqm ajdoaj ' i\ vwm eg "jgniB qnns ajom im qaiM ' «Tn«o jaAo I JI em m^ p|noA oq i%m "â„¢8j eq 8aiA«a*i ***^ J â- * P°V "qoiaiis wejo^wqo epoaS 'suiaoi 'jsap jaqijo iJP P«n!^ OBj« eg •ma joj miq pain^i eq ^lltnaqv ^|eji Aoq »«8 â€" juos aj^aapis «ep %%m â€" JO!»ip8 8oi8«mrai aijx "*M' " W*»q «m !|,up«q J 'poapui 'qv 'JI' '•'^â- '•Pna 'IV in^ S.^PIP I 'na^^Jq ifcr**" 8»M y *|ajj«q ia%vm v oonj I "iPlie pn« jfosmiq jo aqon«|«A« ms 3ni I jJP** 'Mons oq; go {OAoqa oq jooj aqa no I â- '5** ^qnpna -jpi unoqij ijoas ilonnj .2^^ J n*q^ -8mMOJJ.q ajom i Wti j^ 'Ip«qog â- soaiiiadxa amct • •ajLH"*^"-^ B8iJ«qo •AvMV paiJjnq -^•" o^ui Jiii|Q8jnq 'paqqoB aq 'aqmcj ^t^ pa^jjj, ,8r.[ 8A«q i„ -pa^Bi ijJ*^*" '" "I 9*^A4 .. "PIJ* 3™«i '!^*'» Moq eotrens^nnoo Biq pire 'i«I J^j^* •1? no it«8^o«qx aW spueiJ, j« To^ wop « JO psjaunj oq? papua: i^*S *«p q8noq9 ev smooj Jiaqa 1 "•mnT"*^ ^nnjnjnom \i* anq 'pjoM li^y I® wio pfooo jou 'Bjraj HI paqaw ftSTl^? "v "*a ®iWH '» '^»««i IJT^*'!* 9auoBnn«m j«q jo waivd oq ?I IM^ovwqo B|q pn« joqan- •Id*9d Ajuo)}] sn %aq ^poqox my JO sSirejet[x ^*S(oq *penjnotp« Supaai l^iOBn.1.^ ""P °! P»l1«odep b«m' Bse Vf^qepsd jj, c^^ g^jj^ j,„j,jj g^j. *^J0A Xj«no]8e|m Mfo o» oomimp« aojj o? pn "9 J|W| 01" poi^ifoo aw q;; ^^••*»q eajiSap £m jo sjaqma] dt** *IP8S *m o» ^OM 01 qnt •*^* aq niM. jwiwqa « wod- ** ** w pm 'oiqiBBod m no [2**P« ' ^i* 'uopvTititeAul ^Vf'PMittjM tKM. ioefquB oqx I â- uozo £n noi I xaoi m 9M^)i k^