..9 a .nâ€"waser' new... .» ... I, i '1 . “32'; 1: _, BITIS NEWS Playing with Dynamite. 0110an BY A CHEW or To- moo. â€" A Foolhardy Wagon. At Derbigshire Assizes, on Wednesday, Catherine Roberts, 30, a charwoman, was sentenced to 20 years’ penal servitude for the manslaughter of her illegitimate female child, whom she had subjected malong course of ill-treatment. Mr. T. Stead, who has been apologizing for the Prince of Wales, suggests that for time passing he should be made the head of a commission “to elaborate a normal standard of the necessities of civilization.†Two more deaths are reported by drown- ing in County Donegal. Two young men from Rosnowlagh were out boating, when the boat was upset by a squall, and both were drowned. The British Government is said to be taking active steps toward learning from the inhabitants of Wales where they would liketo have their national capital. A cycling co 3 has been added to the equipment of t- e Salvation Army. Fifty young men have been requested to volunteer for three years to travel on wheels. The oldest church in Europe is said by some who are discussing the question to be St. Martin’s,C-autcrbury, which was built as a church before the end of the fourth century. St. Mary-in-the-Castlc, Dover, was built about this time but for nearly two hundred years it was used as a garrison fuel depot. The Badder brothers, who won the doubles lawn tennis championship in Eng- land this year, and one of whom won the championship, are more like each other than the twin Renshaws. It is said to be abso- lutely impossible to tell them apart, unless they wear some distinguishing mark in dress. The Hon. Arthur Moutmoreney, Mr. Douglas Johnstoue, Mr. Percival Browne, and Mr. Ralph Caldwell, midshipmeu on board H. M. armoured cruiser Warspite, the flagship on the Paciï¬c station, are missing. W ien last seen they were in two Indian canoes in the Straits. A search has been instituted for them. A sad fatality was reported on Sunday to have occurred at St. Bridget’s Well, near the cliffs of Moher in County Clare, which people visit in the belief that they will be cured of certain ailments. A man of twenty- seven years, suffering from paralysis of the left side, when praying there slipped and fell head foremost into the well, and being powerless to save himself was drowned. Two boys, named Cumleigh and Gard, aged 15 and 10 years respectively, living at Congletou, Cheshire, obtained possession of n dynamite cartridge to which one of them applied a match. The cartridge exploded, and one of the boys had three ï¬ngers and thumb blown from one hand, and the other lad had the sight of one eye destroyed, in addition to other injuries. They were at once conveyed to the cottage hospital. Charles H. Atkinson, a boy of 13, was char ed at the Liverpool Police Court on Mon a with robbing children in the street. The plolri mont s. He is believed to have been mak- ing £1 a week. Thirty recent cases were read out, in all of which prisoner admitted robbing children of money var ing from 58 hese had all occurred within three months. Prisoner was to £4, the total being remanded. The British Government has undertaken a preliminary survey with a view to acertain wheth at a railroad between Mombassa and VictoriaNyanza is practicable. The con- struction o diminish the labor and expense now incurred in the suppressioï¬ of the slave trade on the east coast of Africa. The House of Com- mons has been asked to provide $100,000 to meet the cost of the survey. On Tuesday two brothers named Rice, who had been drinking freely, got to argu- ing which was the best swimmer, to settle which they went to swim in the sea near the North pier at Whitehaven. The young- er brother, Tom, at a considerable distance in front. When 1e was near the pier end his brother Jose h, who was about thirty, anda collier, sank and was drowned. Tom, who heard of his brother’s fate, was rescued with difficulty. A young man named “'alker dived and boats went in search, but the body was not found. An inquest was held in Manchester touching the death of Edward lVall, a. brewer’s drayman. The deceased was assis- tiu to load it lorry with barrels, when he echaimed he had swallowed a piece of tobacco and was going to be sick. He got- off the druy and almost immediately fell. A doctor was sent for, but the man died before his arrival. The jury returned a verdict of “ Accidental death from choking by swallowing a chew of tobacco. " The Cunard steamer Cephalonia, which arrived in the Mersey on Tuesday, reports that while passing the Tuskar Lighthouse on Monday signals of distress were seen flying from the rock. A boat was lowered, and it was found that the li hthouse keeper had his right right hand s attered by a rocket which prematurely exploded while he was making some signals. He had also received other injuries. He was taken on board th Ccphalonia. where it was found necessary to amputate the arm. He is progressing favourably. A farmer named Thomas Mofl'at, a man of about fifty years of age, was engaged on Saturday in shimming turnips on a farm at Durdar, near Carlisle, when the horse took fright at a mowing machine that was work- ing in an adjoining field, and ran awn '. Moï¬'at become entangled in the plough, t. e sock of which entered one of his legs, and he was ed across the ï¬eld for some 200 yards. W en released, his body was found to be mangled in a frightful manner, and he was removed to the Chimbtrland Infirmary, where he died on Monday morning- The Indian elephant which Queen Victoria ordered some time since to be forwarded as a gift to the Emperor of Mercer» has, ac- cording to accounts just _to hand, got no further‘ than Tan 'er. The great. beast is described as deci edly thinner than when it armed, this being attributed to the dim- inished dietary provided by the local nu- cc had been in search of him for 18 sucha railroad was recommended by the Brussels conference as calculated to thorities on the ground of expense, and its" quartersare most uncomfortable. or: other hand, two Indian attendants sent with the elephant are home sick, and icon- sequently n at over attentive. The Emperor is on a tour up country, and his arrival at Rabat is anxiously desired. In connection with the drowning of two ladies at Bundorau, County Donegal, last week, some painful facts have come to light which show that but for gross su tition on the part of the ï¬shermen eceae might have been saved. The bodies were floating out- wards. and a boat secured them, but ' or- ant superstition prevented the men ing the bodies into the boat and attempting to resuscitate them, so they held them by the arms and towed them not to the boat quay, but to the strand, because if a body were landed at the pierï¬shing luck would depart. At the strand, superstition once more set in, and the ï¬shermen refused to wet themselves bringing in a corpse, and it wasreserved for those dry on shore to act a kindly Christian part. A Tipperary correspondent states that on Friday extraordinary and exciting occur- rences took place in that town. It is al- leged that a constable came into collision with a number of people. It is further stated that the constable entered a house in which a man who had a broken leg was ban- daging the injured limb, that he assaulted the sufferer with his own crutch, and that the latter, onproceedin to the police station to report the affair, he. the tables turned on him by being arrested. The constable, it ap- pears, received a wound in the course of his various encounters. Several persons were arrested on the charge of having inflicted the injury, and others who went to the bar to make a complaint were also taken into custody. In all, thirteen persons were made prisoners, eleven of whom were discharged on Saturday. Kitchen Notions. Next to a_good range a good clock is of paramount importance in the kitchen. Coffee cake should be wrapped, while warm, in anapkin, and there remain till out. Keep shar the knives for cutting meat and bread an for peeling vegetables. Folding towel racks set on the wall near the sink are a great convenience in drying dish towels an dish cloths. Gildin on silver should be rubbed as little as possible ; wiping it with a soft linen cloth moistened with ammonia. is all that is neces- sary. When you have spilled anything on the stove, or milk has boiled over and a suffoca- ting smoke arises, sprinkle the spot with salt and it will disappear immediately. Sometimes the ï¬re will not burn readin at ï¬rst, because the air in the chimney is cold ; in that case, burn a quantity of paper or shavings before trying to light the other fuel. Tin vessels rust and are often worthless in a few weeks, because, after washing, they are not set on the stove for a. moment or in the sun, to dry thoroughly before they are put away. Brooms which are hung up keep their ï¬rst shape better and sweep more evenly than those left standing; if they are dipped in warm water every day, they will last longer than if left dry. Ovens will not bake well unless the ï¬nes and bottom are clean. \Vheu an oven burns on the bottom, cover it half an inch with clean sand ; if it burns on tep, put a. layer of sand or ashes over it. It is better to have a special pot to cook onions in,'lined with porcelain, or of granite ware. Iron turns this vegetable black, and it is exceedingly diï¬icult to get the odor of onions out of these pets“. The most serviceable house rags are old flannel or merino underwear or old canton flannel. These never show lint and can be rung out nearly dry from hot water with out losing their moisture and warmth. Do not ï¬ll lamps to the top, and do not burn them until they are entirely empty, for fear of an explosion. Do not keep them on the chimney-piece or in a very warm place, lest the gas expand with heat, and thus cause explosion. The best silver-smiths advise the use of boiling hot water, castile soap, a stiff brush and 8. Chamois leather to clean silver. A stiff plate brush is said by experts to be much better than the soft plate in general use. Silver not in use should be kept in cotton flannel bags. If a wick does not move easily in the holder, draw out one or two threads from one side. The wick should be as large a one as the holder will receive. Do not cut it after the ï¬rst trimming to make it even, but pinch off the burned rtion every day with a cloth. The best wic 's are woven soft and loose. If lamps or burners become sticky or clogged with dust, boil them in soda- water, taking care not to use it on gilt metal. Metal lamps are safer than those made of china or glass : no opening is need- ed save the one which receives the wick- hclder ; the lamp can be ï¬lled through that. Exceptions to the Rule. It is'quite unnecessary to caution anychild not to " eat with his ï¬ngers,"since that is a physiological impossibility, and it is a terri- le stretch of the use of language to speak of “eating with one’s ï¬ngers " when we mean to say simply the holding of food in them. But there is quite a respectable list of things which should, by the best usage, be held in the ï¬ngers when eaten, instead of being lifted by fork or spoonâ€"of course the knife is utterly tabooed. For instance : Olives, to which a fork should neverbe applied. Asparagus, whether hot or cold, when served whole, as it should be. Lettuce, which should be dipped in the dressing or in a little salt. - Celery, which may be properly placed on the tablecloth beside the plate. Straw berries, when served with the stem on, as they are in the most elegant houses. Bread, roast, and all tarts and small cakes. Cheese, which isinvariably lifted with the ï¬n era by the most particular people. ven the leg or other small pieces of a bird are taken in the ï¬ngers at fashionable dinners, and at most of the luncheons ladies pipk imall pieces of chicken without using a or . G. Boomer defeated J. A. Ten E ch in a three mile scullin ram, on Lake nuisign- mon last week, for a side ; time H.525. [ sofas assassinations e ' Press: the name to the Ridiculous. ‘Well constructed parodies are catchy and attractive, their force depending largely upon their close imitation in form of and Wide diï¬'erence in purpose from the original lines. The more preci itous the descent from the sublime to e ridiculous, the more startlin the efl'ect. Though some parodies, so as “ Pluribusto," which is a humorous version of Longfellow’s " Hia~ watba,†and which for a season outsold the original work, have been published in pre- tentious volumes, they are usually mere bubbles thrown upon the passing stream of literature. Sometimes they " point a moral or adorn a tale,†but oftener their purpose is to simply awaken a. transient smile and then to be forgotten, though the parody sometimes lives after the original verse has been forgotten. Shakespeare’s “ To be or not to be†and Tennyson’s “ Half a l ue†have been very much paraphrased. T e latter author’s “Break, Break, Break†has been ï¬tted to scores of topic: and here are some of the lines they have suggested : Break, break, break, On the quiver-in air, high 0, But the much-nee ed rest you have caused me to lose Can never come back to me. Brake, brake, brake, Ye brakemen, wherever you be, But the name of the town you so jumble and drowu Is ne’er understood by me. The third is supposed to have been writ- ten by a young lady at a seaside resort where there were not enough young men to go round : Break, break, break, At the feet of thy crags, 0 sea, But oh ! for the presence of one young man ! To come and make love to me ! There isn’t a youth in the United Kingr darn, it is safe to state, but can give the original of the following : The boy stood on the back-yard fence, ‘v’lhence all but him had fled, The flames that lit his father’s barn Shane just above the shed. The bunch of crackers in his hand, Two others in his hat ; With piteous accents loud he cried : “ I never thought of that l†A bunch of crackers to the tail Of one small dog he’d tied ; The dog in anguish sought the barn, And ’mid its ruins died. The sparks flew wide, and red, and hot, That lit upon that brat ; They ï¬red the crackers in his hand And eke those in his hat. Then came a. burst of rattling soundâ€" The boy ! Where was he gone '3 Ask of the winds that for around Strewed bits of meat and bone. And scraps of clothes, and balls, and tops, And nails, and hooks, and yarn ; The relics of the dreadful boy \Vho burned his father’s born. When Gray wrote his grand “ Elegy †he did not dream that he would be responsible indirectly for many such parodies as these : Full many a gem of purest ray serene The dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear ; And yet the genuine are seldom seen, And most of them are paste which people wear. Full many a. joke old as the ancient hills \Vithin the f unny papers we review : Full many a chestnut dressed in modern frills, And pulmed off on the world as some- thing new. Brief poetic 5.1 quotations are frequently paraphrased, and often without any loss to the truths they convey: There’s many a slip ’Twixt the cable and grip. While the gas holds out to burn The meter will shillings cam. You may smash, you may shatter the case if you choose to ; But the scent of the Limburger clings where it used to. ‘ Two voices are there : one is of the sea, One of. the mountains ; each a mighty vorceâ€" Both offer you summer bozrd vociferouslee ; And both are bad, and you may take your choice “ Comin’ Through the Rye †has been parodied as often as there are words in the verses. The following is clever : Gin a body meet a body Lookin’ after rye ; Gin a. bod treata body Need a ody cry? Gin a body has a shillingâ€" Be it you or Iâ€" Do or don’t you think he’s willing To put it into rye? The originals of the following will be readily suggested : No one has such an ugly face But what someone will in it trace A charm, and make it known, And woo it for his own. You must wake and call me earlyâ€"call me early, mother dear, For if you don’t the chances are I won’t get up this year; Be sureand keep on calling incâ€"say ï¬fty times or more, And when I wake I’ll growl because I wasn’t called before. I never had an early flame To whom I did attention pay, But what another fellow came And coolly stole my girl away. The breaking waves dashed highâ€" Dashed hi h with a ri ht good will ; But with 1 their das they were not so high As the seaside hotel bill. Little drops of Bourbon, Captured by a wink, Make the Soda water Easier to drink. are other" that _‘ cannotEhu-m. factthe satirical parodis have it in their power to render unpopqu that which they choose to render so. hile the may have done some wrong theyoare to credited with haviu hro ht a utreforms in for which e pub ic feel grateful. Here is a sample of the “ passion pee " that at one time threatened to sweep the and : She touches my cheek and I quiverâ€" I tremble with exquisite pains ; She s‘ sâ€"like an overcharged river My lood rushes on through my veins. She smiles and in mad tiger-fashion, As a she tiger fondles her own, I clas ed her with ï¬erceuess and passion, An kissed her with shudder and groan. It was the pen of the arodist that came to the public rescue an arrested the con- ï¬agration before it had completely consumed the normal literary taste of the times. The happy result was achieved by adding to verses like the foregoing lines like the fol- lowing: She smiled when I mentioned the oysters, And grinned at the sight of a stew, Ve much as a frolicsome boy stirs hen he dons his ï¬rst jacket of blue. I gazed with enchantment and wonder On her beautiful Japanese hair, And squandered my money like thunder On this wild, Witching maiden so fair. But when she was filled to repletion, With stews and hot coffee and pies, And the sup r had reached a completion In front oFï¬er bright hazel eyes, Behold, she arose from the table, And accepted the arm of another, And ere to pursue I was able, She had gone with my strapping big brother. â€"â€"â€".â€"â€" How to Cook Green Corn. Of usual and unusual ways of cooking this delicious vegetable the following re- ceipts will be found reliable and the best of their kind : Housekeepers who must depend upon the markets in large cities for their sweet corn seldom taste it at its best. W hen you can go out and select from among your Stowell’s Evergreen, or your Early Minnesota, such ears as are just ripe for the table, picking themin the early morning when the dew lies thick upon them, and half an hour after can serve them on your breakfast table, you have aluxury that the wealth of aVander- bilt on Fifth avenue cannot purchase. The neatest way to boil corn is to remove all the husks except the inner row, lay back the strip of silk from the ear and with a bit of string tie the husks in place. Have ready a generous pot ï¬lled with salt-ed boil- ing water, lay in the corn and allow from 15 to20 minutes, according to the size of the cars, from the time boiling recommences. Before sending to table strip off the husks very quickly and envelop in a corn napkin to keep in the heat. Sometimes hot melted butter seasoned with salt and pepper is served in the hottest of gravy boats, but if you eat your corn from the ear in the good old-fashioned way, you had better butter and season it yourself. Roasted corn is delightful if you have a very hot oven or an open grate stove before which they can be cooked. Husk the ears and rub them clean; rub with butter and reason with salt and pepper. Place before the ï¬re or in the oven, and turn the ears oc- casionally so that they may cook evenly. \Vhen all are browned serve very hot. Miss Carson’s green corn pudding calls for six large ears of corn grated, six eggs beaten, three half pints of milk and a sea- sonin of salt, pepper and nutmeg, to be bake for half an hour in a moderate oven. That of an equally celebrated cook, which produces a. somewhat different but equally palatable result and has the added merit of cheapness, requires you to split the grains of three lar e ears of corn, pushing the pulp out with a knife. Mix with three pints of milk, two beaten eggs and a seasoning of salt, pepper and if it is wanted for a. desert, half a teacupful of sugar. GREEN CORN FRITTERS (l).â€"â€".\Iiss Corson gives this receipt : One pint of grated green corn, one gill of milk, the yolks of two eggs dropped in without heating, salt, pep- per, and about half a cup of flour or enough to make a moderately stiff batter. Lastly, stir in the whites whipped to a stiff froth. Bake as fritters in plenty of boiling fat, or as griddle cakes with just enough fat to keep them from burning. Cons Fm'r'rmis (2).â€"Grate six cars or split the grains and scrape the pulp out with the back of a knife, add one beaten egg, one tablespoonful of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt. Cook as before. Con}: Fmrrnns (3).â€"Thc caterer of a New York club makes his fritters as follows : Put two raw eg 5 in alarge bowl, stir in three tablespoonguls of flour, salt, pep er, and a gill of milk and mix smooth ; a d a. pint of grated or pulped corn and mix again. Fry in )oiling fat. Srswsn Coaxâ€"Cut through the centre of each row of corn, scrape the rains from the skin of about a dozen ears 0 corn and put into a saucepan with enough water to just cover, steam for twentyminutes ; add a tablespoonful of butter and as much flour, smoothly mix with milk: season with salt and pepper. and af‘rr a minute’s boil add a. half pint of milk or cream. The remain: of 'l dish of stewed corn may be has'n-«i xvi 1: a vial potatoes and cream, lettiw: Ill 1 ' ilidl'ullgllly hot. Equal quantum. n‘ i - . malted corn and tomatoes heated together and served on toast makes a nice lunch dish. â€"[Alice Chittenden, in .‘l (bang Cuz'lira/ar. The French Fleet. King Oscar, as everybody knows, is the royal poet of the North. He came of Gallic stock, and has sung in glowin verse the praises of the French navy. Considering these things it. is not to be marveled at that the presence ofa French fleet in Swedish waters made an epoch in the ordinaril quiet social life of the capital. The Frenc i officers were feasting at Drottningholm after a fashion that fairly took their breath away. The insidious Swedish banco, a. unch that is as treacherous as it is sweet, sowed like water and ran away with the senses of some of the younger of the part . The King toasted President Carnot and t a navy, and the Admiral of the fleet respon- ded, claiming the Swedish ruleras a country- man and a friend of the tri-color, amid the enthusiastic applause of the company. Similar scenes enacted at St. Petersbu While many poems are so delicate in suggest curious reflections, Sweden an thoughtand expression nsto make any kind Russia are arch-enemies, implacable and of a parody seem like a desecration, there i irreco' ucilable. . ..... .. _ was»: .nsss JAMES airflow In BroadDaylight 3 Ian Enters a Bank and Takes Away $121). Shot 'hvo lien to Get Honey. Jessie Jamm’ deeds were outdone at Col- umbus Grove, a small town in Ohio, the other da , and the country thereabouts is now wil with excitement. A daredevil entered the Keystone Bank at about 9 o’clock, shot the cashier and another man, terrorized the whole town, and escaped with $1200. The man is de- scribed ns about 5 feet 7 inches tall, heavy set, with full face and small black mustache. He wore a black alpaca sack coat of the same material and color, blue striped trou- sers and no vest. He appeared to be about 351years old. e jumped 08‘ a freight train this morn- ing, and going to the hardware store of John Crawford asked to see some revolvers. He selected two and asked the atorekeepcr to load them. When the latter had done so, the customer coolly poirted the guns at his head and said, “I’ll pay you in cold lead if you want me to.†He then left the store and went to the Kc stone Bank near by. T. J. Marple is one 'er of the bank. He 0 cued upas usual this morning. Being Satur a heavy busi~ ness was expected, and be ad taken out $1200 in reenbacks, and had them near the paying to ler's desk. To protect the money lying on the coun- ter a plate glass about two feet in height ‘ run around the top of the bar. Sitting o achair out in the lobb was 01. Syford, ; big strong fellow and, courageous. His chair was tilted backas he conversed with the cashier, who was not busy, owing to tho early hour of the day. TAKING THE BANK BY STORM. Suddenly a man entered the bank. either hand he flourished a monster revol ver. His eyes roved wildly about the room, and withouta word he be an shooting. , The ï¬rst ball flew harm esst through the air and lodged in the wall above the cashier’( head. Before Mr. Marple could make a movl to secure the revolver that was always kept for such an emergency, 9. second shot shat tered the bones of his right arm, and th( cashier fell from his chair, pierced in tht rioht side by a deadly bullet. 1Turning to Syford, the desperado, spoke for the ï¬rst time, and in the foulest lan- guage ordered him not to stir, or he would meet a similar fate. At this juncture Wil- liam Vandema‘rk appeared on the scene. He was a prominent farmer living in Union township. He had driven into town this morning with some hogs and received an order on the bank for his money. The desperate man without a word faced the old farmer and leveled his gun at him. The unfortunate victim had turned just half way around when the rufï¬an ï¬red. If struck him in the side just above the hip, and assed almost through his body. H fell, leeding and senseless, and still Syforti sat horriï¬ed and spellbound. The fellow broke the plate glass, and shoving in his arm through the ragged aperi ture, raked up all the money, amounting to about $1200, and thrust it into the side pockets of his long sack coat. By this timt several people had been attractei by the sounds of the shots. The dcsperado inside realized it war time for him to be skipping. Again brnud« ishing his revolvers, and in true \Vestera style, he dashed out on the street. Thert was a wild scatterment 0'1 the part of th( people. No one was looking for thieves and murderers, and there was not a weapon in the crowd. ANOTHER. VICTIM FALLS. The poor fellow failed to get out of th( way in time, and Henry Buck fell piercef by a. ball from the revolver that alread scored two victims. The robber ï¬red sever times and shouted: “ I'm a second J ess¢ James,†with appropriate oaths attached. The fellow ran down an alley, and mu last seen disap caring into a big corn ï¬el at the edge of t to town. The wildest kin of rumors were afloat, when the news spree. over the town and surrounding country likf wildfire. W. T. Marple,brother of the cash: ier, came to Lima, and the local police and citizens from here and all the towns won} in pursuit of the new Jesse James. They or now scouring the woods in every direction, and say they will bring him to town a corpse. It was thought once he had been surv rounded in some woods, but he was not found and the search still goes on. This evening Vandcrwork died. E. J. Marple the cashier, soon recovered con. sciousness, and was able to keep up long enough to direct the movements of the police. The ball passed through too near the flesh in his side to reach any vital part. The Speed of a. Horse. While the public is still marveling over Salvator’s wonderful performance in run- ning smile in 1.35.}, there are few who have though couiparsion and analysis, sou vth to realize what a terrible burst of speed t lie is. It is nearly forty miles an hourâ€"a rate averaged by very few of our fastest rail- way trains. There are 5,280 feet in a mile so that for every one of these ninety-five secondsâ€"for every beat of a man's ulseâ€" this wonderful horse covered fifty- ve and three-tenths feet of ground. The shortest space of time noted by the turfman’s watch is a quarter ofa secondâ€"4m interval so brief that the eye can hardly observe, the mind can hardly appreciate it. Yet in every one of those 382 quarters of a second that magniï¬cent creature leaped sixteen and three-tenths feet. Such are the amazing results of careful breeding as exhibited in the race horse. ' â€"â€".*._ Wedding Rings for Men. An invariable custom revailin among Creole women is to insist t at at t e mar- riage ceremony the bride room shall receive anarrow,plaingold wed in rin .whichheis obli ated never to putfromt ct ird finger of his lift hand until death to them twain. To be without this seal 0 wedlock is held shameful in a wife, but now, for the first time, women everywhere are making posi- tive demands upon a fair exchange in the matter. These lattenday brides ive thier liege lord no costly ornament for t is hand to attract admiringI attention, but severely sim le jewels of eavy polished gold, that both weight and purity may be accepted symbolicallymnd the culiar ï¬mnly pub- hsh them to the wor d as Bent: ' . v;rustlfltfimaymknrswfli. “cams “NI-W“ I 3N“ ‘50:“ v“ ._.r “Anna... .4. .. . . .-