A ducing W71: " miscâ€""$55.3 THE TRAVELLING MONKEY. My master grinds an organ And I pick up his money; . And when you see me domg it You call it very funny. But, though I dance and caper, still I feel at heart forlorn. I wish I were in monkeyâ€"land,â€" The place where I was born! They grow the great green oocoanuts Around the m-tree's crown; I used to climb and pick them off. And hear MW!â€"wm down. There all da long the le figs Are dropping from them-Bough; There hang the ripe bananas. oh, I wish I had some nowl I'd feast, and feast, and feast. and feast, And you should have ashore, How pleasant 'tis in monkey-land! Oh. would that I were therei On some tall tree top's hi heat bough; 60 high the clouds won (1 33.11 Just over me, I wish that 'I \Vere swinging by my tail! I’d. swing, and swing, and swing, and SW“! I How megry that would be! _ But oh! a travelling monkey's life Is very hard for me. A BUBBLE PARTY. Scientific men are now blowing bub- bles, perhaps not altogether as an amusement, but certain it is they get a. great deal of amusement out of it while arriving at scientific conclusâ€" ions. Someone has invented a double bubble pipe, by which two bubbles are blown at one time, one inside the other. The pipe is a little tin tube about six or seven inches long. slightly sloping; flhe larger end is surrounded by a sort of cup, which is just a. little shorter iihan,t~he central opening; they are con- nected by an air pamage through the pipestem. The lower end of the pipe- stem is about one-half inch in diameter, and the surrounding cup about one inch. The inner mbe'is just a little longer than the outer cup, so that when the bubbles are blown together, the inner one may be shaken off and float clear inside the larger one,w1hich still adheres to the outside cup, and may be blown still larger. It is apretty sight, but it takes patience to become an adept. But if you can't get these double bub~ ble pipesfor your party, just get com- mon clay ones. They do not cost much, and, if broken, no one need cry about litl \Ve pay 1 cent each or 19 cents per dozen. Some think that a tin born about eight inches long and about an inch and an eighth in diameter at the big end will make bubbles much bigger and make them much- quicker than any pipe. If you (have the horns faintly lured for an inch upward from the base they will be imiroved, for the irregu- larities_ will ho d the fluid in small quantities and the bubble will be easier to start and. better fed. Such horns can be made by the dozen at any tinâ€" sho for a few cents. strongest possible fluid for pro- bubbles is made in this way: Take the fourth of an ounce of white costiile ; cut it up into small pieces and boil three or four minutes in three- fourths of a but of water; when the soap is Incite and the water has cooled. ad thme-fourtihs of an ounce of gly- cerine. This makes enough of the mixture for a bubble party. It is bet- ter made the day before it is used and kept corked tightly; the bubbles are then such visions of glorious violet, rose. green. orange and blue as cannot be seen in any other way on this planet. These bubbles will last half amin- ute or more and one of the prettiest in the world is to toss them in- to the air like balls. All that is noâ€" cessary for this feat is a rough woolen mitten and a. little care. Don't lift the hand to meet the bubble in the air, but. on the contrary, sink ii: a. little as the bubble approaches, so that it Will settle on it in the gentlest pos- sible w ; then, gently again, toss it up and i. will rise time after time like a. balloon. A long table covered with an old blan- ket is a, fine thing for showing off bubbles , they can be formed from one end of it to the other and a prize can be offered for the blower who success- fully forms the greatest number of bub- bles through the whole 'ourney. \Vith a. fan. too, bubbles can kept in the air and a great variety of games in- vented with them. A fine chance for showing off a pretty figure this exerâ€" cise ives. Buibles can be blown to rest on the damp edge of cups. and they last long- or in this position than in any other. f thegeare put under a glass case, so as to quite protected from currents of air, the color in them will settle into regular rainbow. bands and the effect is most curious as well as bewildering- ly beautiful. GIRLS OF THE ANTIPODEES. The Burmese girl is, perhaps, the most charming and picturespuc. and the most happy of all Oriental women, not even excepting Japan, in which country we are led to believe they are very much advanced. The Burmese costume is invariably gay, and consists of a jacket of silk or cotton mailing to the hips, and a wide strip of bright-lined material which is wound about the waist and legs so as to have the appearance of a tight-fit- ting skirt, and is fastened with a twist in the front. Above the tight-sleeved jacket is generally worn a gorgeous silk shawl over one or both shoulders. They are exceedingly proud of their black hair, which they wear coiled up on top of their heads. adorned with bright or- chitin. they know no schoolâ€"days. as female education is considered quite superflu- onu. Kite-flying and dancing are their chief occupations. The dancing consists of numerous queer contortions of the body, and from constant practice from an early'age, they have great Supple- ness of body, and can twist themselves into aeemmgly impossible attitudes without any difficulty. At the age of thirteen the celebratâ€" ed ear-boring takes place, and after that it is time to think of marriage. A girl is free to choose her own husband, only ancient superstition decrees that she shall not marry a man born on a. cer- tain day of the week. Disaster is sup- posed to overwhelm the girl born on Sunday whose spouse is born on Wed- nesday, and that there shall be no un- certainty in the day of birth, a. child always has a name beginning With the letter of the day of the week on which she was born. _ Marriage is a social and not a relig~ ious ceremony in Burmah. The priest ignores women entirely. The wedding party assembles at the bride's home, the band plays; and the guests sit about on the floor, chattin , smoking,‘and_eat- ing sweetmeats, an after a time it is announced that the two young people who are mentioned by name are man and wife. This completes the formal- ity. The wife has equal rights With her husband in property, is, perhaps, his social superior. During the. first years of marriage be m t live With his mother-inâ€"law, and be p support her. The wife holds the purse and manages all household expenditures. A divorce is as easily obtained in Burmah as in Japan. Burmese girls marry Chinamen, but in this case they stipulate that they shall be treated as Burmese wives, and not as Chinese. The children of such unions are brought up, the boys as Chinâ€" ese, the girls as Burmese. GOLDEN SILENCE. Everyone knows that it is almost the easiest thing in the world to offend people. But how different it is to get them to forgive and forget! One does say so many ugly little things unthink- ingly when the temper is aroused. and the feelings of others are wounded. All the apologies in the world no not blot out bitter words. and the more we love the one who utters them, the harder it is to forget, atihough forgiveness may be granted a moment later. True friends always feel the little rift in theirfriendâ€" ship. and the peaceful harmony, once broken is never the same afterward. It is hard to learn to govern one's self, but if the old adage, “ Try. try again.†ever insured success in any undertaking. it Will do so here. To force unwilling lips into silence is a difficult thing to do. but it saves one much humiliation and regret afterward. HOME AND ABROAD RAPID FIRING, Comparison of British and Foreign Monu- lnln Artillery. An English officer on Indian service, who lately spent his holiday in the Alps with the special object of reporting on the comparatively efficiency of French and Italian batteries with regard to English, had no hesitation in deciding, says the Admiralty and Horse Guards Gazette, that in rapidity of fire and general smartness our men and moun- tain guns were ahead of both countries. There were some points of special ex- cellence about both corps, and with re- gard to the Italians one fact may be noted. The men were trained and ac- customed to carry the component parts of the gun themselves; but in accuracy of fire as well as rapidity, and with regard to the general. smartness of the men themselves, he would have had no doubt in putting our own mountain bat- -t.eries into competition with. either French or Italian. But the high stan- dard of merit attained with regard to accuracy relates entirely to stationary objects, and it is felt that the 'results attained at the ranges might be easily falsified on the field of battle against moving objects, and especially against the rapid movements of cavalry. At the present moment there is no place in India whire firing wt moving objects can be praciioed, and even in England it is only quite recently that the sun- pie moving target on a pair of rails has been esiublished at Okehampton. Even [here the target is never moved. at unyihing approaching the rate at which cavalry would charge, and, moreâ€" over the object fired at moves across the horizon instead of tounird the guns themselves, as would 'be the case With cavalry in real war. \VHERE COLORS COME FROM. Few peopleâ€"even artists themselves â€"-know where the colors used in the arts come from. It'is an interesting fact that one small paint box will often represent the four quarters of the globe, and all sorts of materials, ani- mal, vegetable and mmerul. The coch- anal insect. supplies the carmines and rich crimson, scarlet and purple lakes. Sepia is the inky 'luid discharged by the devilish cuttle fish. Indian yellow is from the urine of the camel and ivory black and bone black from [V- ory chips. Prussian blue IS made by fusing horses' hoofs and other refuse matter with impure potassmm carbon- ate. an accidental discovery. Blue black is from the charcoal of the Vine- staik. Turkey red is derived from the mndder plum. of Hindostan. Gamboge is a yellow sap of atrce, which hie ople of Siam catch in cocoanut shells. {aw sienna is the natural earth. from Sienna. Italy. “'hen burned it .15 Burnt Sienna. Amber is from Umbra}. India ink is burnt camphor. Bistro is the soot of wood ashes... Of real ultra- mnrine there is little in the market. as it is made from the precious la is lazuli. and commands a. bigprice: C i- uese white is zinc. scarletus iodide of mercury and native vermilion comm from quicksilver ore. LOOKING AHEAD. ' Here, shouted McFlimsy, as Jagson started up-siaira wokward. What are you going? Tim‘s or'righ', mutiered_Jagson, I wanier know how to fin'-â€"-hic-â€"me way -down iu'er mornin'." i l EASY. The girls have a very happy time ; I DO you really have a snap as Chumpâ€" ley's private secretary! - Well, I should say so. All I have to do is to keeiinhun in. good excuses for staying out to. and save rubbing. 'hyo tableqmonfuls to a. tub of water and let nhc curtains soak half an hour. First, however, re- !move the worst of the dust and grime FOR THE BEDROOM. ibydiqueesing them through a tepid Very pretty box shaped jewel cases s“ . . are made of celluloid. Cut the sides of is ï¬t Wagon†3’ “5°. “39°†3"!“ b: the box four inches long and two and! m “3 cu" m, 1063' p M . . licein shatter made ofoneegg a oneâ€"half inches wide, and the bottomis. ' {our inc sq e. P . t a i ign of :plinch ofdmltimtlyfvo heaped spponfuls of . w W “n . . our an mi . Fry pansia or buttercups on each Side piece. (ma hm biggest grilgdle' and Make small eyelet bola along the edges lserve with butter and sugar while very so the pieces of the box can be lacedllmt- The: are so good you'll ï¬nd your- HOUSEHOLD. \~\\~.\ ‘\ ., x . x . \~_\»\\A. 1“,“ . .. .--_...__.. , _.. ._ .l -_-._..___._--_.__.___.._.._.__.._'_._. together with heliotrope or yellow baby ribbon,and p‘acea small pad of silk, the same shade as the ribbon in the bottom. Butcher’s linen makes pretty covers for the commode or dresser. Finish the direct] ends with hemstitched hems two inches wide, and the sides with hams one inch wide. wide as the commode or dresser, and long enough tohang over the ends six inches or more. Embroider a spray of lilacs and leaves‘in two opposite cor- ners of each, using Asiatic filo silk for the flowers, and. shades of green Bosâ€" ton art silk for the stems and leaves. A splasher for the back of the com- mode may be made to match the cover, with a design of lilacs in the center. A pincushion for the dresser is pretty, covered with white linen with a small bunch of lilacs in one corner. Other designs may be used or course, and it is_ always best l‘p choose colors that Will harmonize With the furnishing of the room. A cover for a. commode seen recently, was made of a fine quality of unbleached muslin, with a border of oak leaves and acorns, done with brown Roman floss .across the ends. - It is very inexpenswe and. washes nicely. A pretty splasher can be made of old fashioned spatter work. Get a piece of muslin of the proper size, and fasten it firmly and smoothly on a. table With a. large piece of paper under it, so the table will not be spattered. Cut out paper patterns of leaves, or the natural. leaves pressed and laid in place Will do nicely. Fern leaves are the best for this work, although many pretty patterns are composed of oak and other leaves. After they are fastened in place so they cannot slip, spatter the_muslin= all over with indel- ible ink, using a fine comb and an old tooth brush. Leave it until it is dry, then remove the leaves. If the back- ground is very dark, at pretty effect is obtained by spattering lightly after the leaves are removed, The work is quickly done. Pillow Shams are useful as well as or- namental. Finish the edges with lace or hemstitched hems, and they Will be easier to launder than tucks or ruffles. Stamp a_ floral or conventionalized design in each corner and a mo- nogram in the center, and work them in any color deSired or in black, using Asiatic twisted em- broidery silk. Good bleached musâ€" lin is usually used for them. If some- thing nicer is desired, a fine quality of linen ma be chosen, and the de- signs worke with Asiatic etching 811k. Delft designs are one of the fads of the season, and the dainty shades of blue seen in the finest or heaviest materâ€" ials. but are prettiest on whiteJluéen. GREIDDLE CAKES. Rice Griddle Cakesâ€"One cupful of sweet milk, one cupful of warm boiled rice, one-half teaspoonful of salt, the yolks of tWO eggs beaten, one' table- spoonful of melted butter and flour en- ough to make a thin batter. Stir- in lastly the whites of the eggs beateni stiff and dry. Bake on a hot griddle. Bread Griddle-Cakesâ€"i One pint of stale bread-crumbs. Pour over them one pint of hot milk, add one table- spoonful of butter, and when the crumbs are soft rub through a strainer ing-powder. If the batter not thin enough, add a little cold milk. Squash Griddle-Cakesâ€"One cupful of sifted squash; pour over this one cup- ful of boiling milk, add one teaspoonful of butter, one tablespoonful of sugar, cine-half teaspoonful of salt. When cool add one egg well beaten, .two tea- spoonfuls of baking-powder, mixed and sified with one cupful of flour. If ~1he batter is too thin, add flour; if too thick, add milk. The squash shoul dbe dry. Indian Meal Griddle-Cakes.~â€"One pint of Indian meal, one teaspoonfuil of sug- ar, one saltspoionful of salt, one tea.â€" spoonful of butter. Add to this gradu- ally sufficient boiling milk to wel, the meal. .‘\\'hen cold and two well-beaten. eggs, and sufficient cold milk tounake a thin batter. Raised Graham Griddle-Cakes.â€"One cupful of graham meal, one cupful of flour, one-half yeast-cake dissolved in one-quarter of a cupful of lukewarm: waier. Mix With this one pint _of milk scolded and cooled, and let it rise over night. In the morning add half a tea.- spoonful of salt, one Leaspoonful of molasses, and one sultspoonful of soda. If the batter is too thick' add a little warm water. : . HELPFUL HEN'IS. iersewn the fresh appearance These covers should be just as:‘3l~1'9~>'s iself lad when there are plenty of his- cuit eft to warm over. Towel fringes should always be over- sewn before being sent to the wash. Unless this is done the towel becomes more and more frayed and is shabby y. If the fringe be carefully ov- will be preserved for along time. The laun- _ should vigorously shake the fringe and beat it against the back of a chair. This will separate the strands and make it look better than any comb- ing process, which is more destructive. The best vinegar that can possibly be made is that obtained by the gradu- al acidulation of cider. No chemicals, no "processes," simply the natural fer- mentation. It is a slow operation, but the product I swoth wanting for. -Put the cask of cider in th egarret, on sumo place where it will keep modemtelyi warm. The cellar is the crest lace _while the cidazr is making,0 becauge it is cool. iWarmth hastens fermenta- tion. Keep the bunghole open, but cov- ered With mosquito net to keep out in- sects. It hastens the conversion into vinegar, to turn the cider from. one‘ vessel into another, exposing ‘lt to the air’in so dOIIlg. To add a little "moth- cerra. or a gallon of strong cider vin- egar, makes the change more rapid. ILiWill takeclose toa year to convert a barrel of_ cider into vinegar. ili‘or table use, or in making pickles and. spiced fruitâ€"lushort, for any purposes where vinegar is needed for family consump- tion none is at once so excellent and so healthful as th t d. _t cider. Ia ma e from pure BETTER LETâ€"THEM PERISH INDIA’S DYING MILLIONS THE VIC- ' TIMS OF NATURE. ‘ ‘ So Some of England's Social Philosophers Argue With Regard to the l'laiguc and Famineâ€"New Theory About Great Epi- demlcs. It was inevitable, perhaps, that the double scourge which has turned all eyes of pity toward India, should also have revived public discussion of that pitiless topic, "the survival of the fit- tes ,†says a. London letter. It is a cold and relentless philosophyâ€"but no more so than nature herselfâ€"which is questioning the ultimate wisdom of ser- ious interference with the natural calâ€" amities which are devastatng the most populous sections of the British Empire. The debate which has begun in the Eng- lish press has been suggested by such obvious queries as these: What part do these great epidemiiw and periodical famines play in the economy of nature? 'Are they, after all, the unmitigated ev11 which they appear to be at close quar- tors? Was Damvin right or wrong in making these great natural visitations the basis of his thcdry of natural se- lectionâ€"a. theory which holds a most important place in the evolution of the human race? i . Cold logic, unsoftiened by any considâ€" erations of human sympathy, has led some debaters of these questions to con- clusions which are much more creditable to their heads than to their hearts. It is not, however, in any spirit of un- chariltableness that the discussion has gone on. Now that the popular heart has been touched, the outpouring of English gold for the benefit of the perishin‘g millions of fellow subjects of the Queen-Empress makes one of the SUBiL-IIVIEST SPEC'I‘ACLES in the history of humanitarianism. The English people are entitled therefore to discuss some of the deeper social ques- tions involved in the calamity without exposing themselves to the charge of shirking a duty of charity. The sub- ject has also been forced upon their attention in another way. The anti- Brilish press in Germany has recently attempted to hold the British authori- ties in India responsible both for the garages of the famine in the interior {and for the spread of the plague in i Bombay. These charges have been de- ,nicd with a good deal of heat and in- 'dignation. But the defenders of Brit- ish rule have proved too much. The Times, for instance. said a day or two ago upon the point: "It is due to British. rule and to .no- thing else that the famine has not made itself felt until so late a period, and A whisk broom is better than a. cloth that, notwithstanding an immense in_ for cleaning outside blinds and window .crease of um populmion’ it is now be_ sashes. lVben cleaning fresh water fish do not let it lie in water. for“ it is very apt to make it soft and flabby. 4 To test the freshness of eggs, drop them slowly into a lbwl of water, and if the small end comes to the top they are fresh. :When drying black stockings do not ing fought with snow. It needs no I inquiry Lo tell us that the vast popula- tions of agricultural India live up very closely to the limits of subsistence. That follows from their immemorial habit their traditions, and their modes 0 thought. In fighting as we do the con- sequences of these things we are trying a gigantic experiment which our own Sin-ass makes more formidable each place them in the m 0,. they will time that a deï¬cient rainfall stops the turn dried in the shade. green. All woolen goods are best food supply- We are insensiny substi- tuting prudential checks for the natural ones which we have removed. This is A Pretty deflation for WM di‘he‘ : proved by the improvement in the genâ€" is made by chopping parsley and lemon rind finely and scattering it over the meat or on the flat edge of the dish. Born: is much to be preferred to am- monia for cleaning badly miled paint. It is much better for the hands, too. and add the beaten yolks of- two eggs, one cupful of flour, oneâ€"half teaspoonful of salt, and two teaspoonfuls of bak- Lsc born: to whiten the lace curtains era] condition of the population not- withstanding its incmase in numbers. But the Process is. a slow one, and the future 0 our Indian empire cannot be regarded from an economical stand- pomt without grave annety." _The lation of India, as Lord George ‘lLon remarked in Paer menttheotherday,haslnoreasaddur- mg the past twenty years by no less FIFTY MILLIONS. A; small portion of this was by annexa~ tion.. but by far the larger part was within the old ares. Alt that rate of increase, as the Times observes. the day is not for distant when all the re- sources of the British Eznpire will not suffice to cope with a succession of bad seasons and a. failure of rains over an extended area. It is a. d further that the excellence of British ruleâ€"the unprecedented security to life which it has suppliedâ€"has chiefly contributed to this condition of overpopulation. In other words, British government in In- dia has been far too good. It has brought about an abnormal condition which only a great doub'le cataclysm of nature can set right. And now Great Britain and the charitable world at large are domg their utmmt to thwart nature in her necessary and inevitable prooess. - . This cold-blooded conclusion is shock- ing to every human sensibility, but howus it to be esmped ilmm., say the casuists. It is a view which may, haps, be adopted wiith equanimity w on it includes only the distant and ' soual millions of India, but how about it when it is applied to the teemingi ilhousands in the East End of London.- The plague, although it is far less serious in the number of victims which if has thus far_ claimed than its brother curse. the famine, just now obtains the larger smile of public attention. The reason is obvxousâ€"it is a. direct menace to the wozrldat large, and iits seat is in the coast city of Bombay, which is now a‘suburb of Europe, instead of being hidden in ï¬lm unknown interior. The bacteriolong and other modern ene- mies of this once omnipotent destroyer. are rapidly bringing the resources of science to ear against him. Encourag- ing, but, I . premature, news of success on the Side of modern knowled c has already been sent out, but in the mean time a. historical study of the great scourge has suggested an inter- esting iheor . It is said in general terms that t e plnlgue is ‘ A= Dilile DISEASE. This, which a London writer says on the subject, is at all events interestin .: “The dirt question in relation to t e plague is one of the things that are still obscure. Roughly speaking, the laguve has ravaged Europe from the 9 inning of the Christian era, at inter- va 3 of 209 or 300 years. Ilt has thus had long intervals of quiescence. \Vas there no dirt then to promote its spread? \Vhy, of course there was plenty of it, but the plague came not; and the reas- on must have been that during these intervals some unkn- own conditions re- quisite for its propagation were absent. When I my that medical science still knows little that is essential about the plague I mean that it knows nothing about these mysterious conditions. There is the case of India, for instance. The ï¬gue is there now. \Vhy was it not t: re five years ago, when all the visible conditions, dirt included, were this same? It may be said that the plague is always simmering somewhere in the East, like cholera, and I agree. But why does it pimmen at some periods, and launch out on a career of devastation at others? "'As to the mysterious conditions, I know just as little as the most eminent bacteriologists, but I will hazard a guess as to one, which professional eti- quette in his case might not allow him to do. I fancy that the principle of vaccination has a wider application than is commonly suspected, and that whole peoples, and even races, after suf- fering from some virulent epidemic, be- come proof against it for a timeâ€"inoc- ulated, in fact. I have long suspected that this decrease in Smallpox may be due not only to vaccination, but also to its having burnt itself out to some ex~ tent in Europe; because when the infec- tion happens to be introduced into. some savage tribe, where ‘it was prevmusly unknown, iit rages with a fierceness to which the case-hardened European is a stranger. Now can it be that the plague in its successive outbreaks at ong intervals 1 [BURNS lTSlflLiF OUT for the time being, and that the races of mankind have to accumulate what I may will fuel for the gown to_fced 'up- on? This would be an mien-sting point to clear up, the more so that it llpplles, in some degree, to all. germ diseases. It is now 1330 years since the plague last raged in England. Judging from! historical record this would be rather a. short interval for its reappearance, shorter, that is to say, than the average; but it could be dun again.†This theory is unmapiud in part by sevâ€" eral high authorities on the subject. It. is a well cslnblishml fact that among the districts .where the plague is al- ‘VILFS Simmering {LI‘O ('l‘l‘llllll IIIUUIIHUII villages of Person, Kurdislumund many marshy sctilomcnis on the lower l‘lu- phraixes. The. bacillus of plague is a product or a normal inhabitant of those regions, but the. inhabitants tin-re by some process, Slill ii. niysiery to medical science, have acquired a cvrlniii im- munity from its effects. It is when this organism is (mint-.s‘yml to other loâ€" calities that itrsonietimus shows (I. rate of multiplication and increase in viruâ€" lence which occasions an epidemic. One of the chief mutton-5 of concern in dealing with ilm present plague sit- uaiion in India is flit-e approzuzliing an- nual pilgrimage to Mom. This gath- ering of the faithfulâ€"din: mosi ignorant and the most dirty of the faithfulâ€"is, as is well known, the most dangerous cvont of the year from ii sanitary point of view. And yet. its arbitrary prohibition (would bu, a delicate and mos-L Ilangnnms undertaking. The fuiih of MUIWDXIM'XIADS, as one writer points out, in lhu divine importance ut- larhing to a )ilgrimuge to the holy shrine of the Ix’rophci, and lo the cov- eted title of “Ilaji†which follows it, is blindly strong and fanatical; the believe, indeed, that the moral di - ficulty encountered and the more do- vastation err-aim], the more in propor- tion are the divine blessings to be real- ized. To tell some would-be 'jllajis" that their pilgrimage to Moon is like- ly to spread death throughout noncMo- hammedan countries is to make them the more eager and determined to un- dertake it, W. in the iinion of the more ignorant, the Great I rophet'a pro- phac can only be by the annihilation of all the "unfaithful." The cooperation of the Sultan, of the Shah. and of the Ameer of Afghanistan would be almost mantial to the anc- oessful prohibition of the mecca. pil- rimage. and it is extremely (1wa In! if this could be obtained even by strong diplomatic pressure. The at» tempt will probably be made, however. . A... -m...‘ n. 'WOâ€"yv, 1...-m...‘ MM