S 1 fl \M NEWS IN A NUTSHELL. FIV£ SKINXrrKS' SKI.ECT aEACING. SiiBUBary of Toretsa, Oomestie and War Itemsâ€" CoBclae, Pltliy and Poljited. DOMESTIC. The Parliamentary crisis continues to ab- sorb attention in New Brunswick. It is now considered doubtful whether the Quebec House will prorogue before Sastar. The Montreal civic revenue this year is $1,758,043; an increase of $25,000 over last year. A Customs seizure of jewellery at Fort Erie has been mode amounting to $1,000 or je.ooo. Wells, a bucket-shop keeper, has abscond- ed from Montreal with $5,000 of other people's money. The Winnipeg city debentures have been ofi'ered on the London Market at seven per cent, premium. The total amount subscribed in Hamilton for the relief of sufferers by the German fioods, has reached $1,287. Rumour says that the Montreal Bank has shut down on another large LoHdon house, and that a suspension is likely. A man named Garret Flyn was killed in 'ale county. New (ilasgow, by a fall of coal ill the Pillar woiks. The Molsons Bank, London, has caused a writ to be issued against the Globe Agricultural \Vorks Company for $100,000. The charge of embezzlement brought sgainst Deputy Sheriff Gibson, of Went- worth, by the sheriff has fallen through. Cardinal Simeoni, in a letter to the Archbishop of Quebec, severely condemns the interference in political elections of the clergy. Three more bodies stolen from St. Scho- lajBtique Cemetery a few days ago, are b«ng looked for in tlie dissecting room at -Montreal. A Mrs. Nally and her daughter were killed near Canterbury station, N. B., by e sleigh which they occupied being struck by a train. Magistrate Bartlett, of Windsor, has re- viewed the testimony taken at the Maher iBqueet,and deems it strong evidence against the prisoners. This year some 50,000 logs will be driven down the Mississippi by Caldwall Sons, â- last what P. McLaren is going to do about it is not known. Henry Joseph Lyall, who is said to be- long to Port Hope, was arrested recently at Hamilton for obtaining money on false pretences and forgery. Charles Pigeon, a Montreal barber, has disappeared, and so has a Lowell woman nameil Gilman. Mrs. Pigeon and two children are left behind in Lowell. Tke Imperial Government, it is suggested, will assume the expense oi sending out ten thousand Irish agriculturists to the ©aasidian North-west during May and June Bext. Holders of tickets in the recent Masonic lottery resident in London have been summoned. Manager Brunton is among the number, to answer to a charge of en- couraging lotteries. Michael and Henry Kinehan and Thomas Craig, were committed at Kingston recently, on a charge of stabbing one McCuUough at the Yillage of Verona, in the county of Aldington on election night. Judge Ramsay of Montreal, gave the firand Jury a lecture upon the sanctity of the oath, remarking that he did not know why some people required an affirmation when there was one included in the oath. The Grand Trunk Railway tor the period between the 12th August and 31 December, shows a balance sufficient to pay the full in- terest upon the first and second preference stocks and three and a half per cent, upon the third preference. Mayor Beaudrj' was elected to the ehief magistracy of iloutreal over Mr. Henry Balmur by a majority of 212. J. McShane beat Aid. Kennedy by thirty-six in St. Ann's Ward, and Vi. D. Stroud outset Aid. Proctor with a majority of 112. UNITED STATES. Thos. W. Palmer, ot Detroit, has been elected to the United States Senate, receiv- ing seventy-five votes. A party of ranchmen surprised an Indian cimp in Mexico, captured twenty-five squaws, killed ten bucks, and scalf)ed them. Subscriptions to the Bartholdi statue at New York recently, auiounted to S2,500. President White of Co nell University cave S2i0. John toodwia.of Chic 'pee.Mass., has ab- sconded. He was a contractor Bnd owes from seventy-five to a hundred thousand dollars. The diitrict Attorney, in a communica- tion to the Supreme C-irt of the District of Columbia, says the Star Route tral will probably last two months longer. Rev. Howard Crosby, lecturing before the Master Plumbers' Association, said the N w York debt of over a hundred millions is solely from the plundering of politicians. An official statement of the Catholic Churches in the charge of the Augustinian Fathers at Lawrence, Mass., shows the liabilities to be §567,000, and the assets $i«0,000. CENEKAL. The plague has appeared in Kurdistan. The French anarchist Eidier has been arrested at Brussels. All the documents of the "Black Hand J Society are in the hands of tke Andalusian CoTemment. The Prince of Wales recently visited Prince Bismarck, remaining an hoar with the eminent statesman.' The British Board of Trade has exonerated ^e captain of the City of BmsselB from blame in the sinking of his steamer. M. De Lesseps will start from Paris for Tunis on the 12th inst. in connection with the formatitn ot an inland African Sea. The Socialistic society, the "Black Hand," numbers fifty thousand members, with Geneva as the centre for Wettem Europe. Tlie Trencli Minister of War, replyirs; to an interpellation, said the presence of the prifices in the army was unconstitutional. Negotiations for the fpnrpose of inducing the Duke of Cumberland to renounce his claim to the throne of Hanover have been ranewed. The Journal de Geneve stigmatizes the action of the police in expelling the Salva- tion Army from Switzerland as nothing less than a veritable coup (Tetat. Mr, Pamell complained in the House against the seeming intention of the Gov- ernment to relieve the distress in Ireland by the poorhouse and emigration. The jury in London in the case of the editor, proprietor and printer of the Free TAiniw, arraigned on a charge of blastphem- ous libel, disagreed, and a new trial has been ordered. At the banquet given at Cairo to the British resident officials, a colonel of the Egyptian army arose in his place and offer- ed the toast. "The dehver«nce of Egypt from the foreigners." He was removed amid excitement. Bis Things on ICartb. The largest inland sea is the Caspian, ly- ing between Europe and Asia. Its greatest length is 700 miles, and its area 180,000 square miles. Great Salt Lake, in Utah, which niaj' be properly termed an inland sea, is about 90 miles long, and has a vary- ing breadth of from 20 to 35 miles. Its sur- face is 4,200 feet above the level of the sea, where.-is the surface of the Caspian is 84 ft. below the ocean level. The biggest trees in the world are Iho mammoth trees of Cali- fornia. One of a grove in Tulare county, ac- cording to measurement made by members of the State (Jeological Survey, was shown to be 27G feet high, I'O feet in circumfer- ence at base, andf 76 feet at the point J 2 feet above the ground. Some of the trees are 376 feet high, and 34 feet in diameter. Some of the largest that have been felled indicate an age of from 2,000 to 2,500 years. The largest empire in the world is that of Great Britain, comprising 8,567,658 square miles, more than a sixth part of the land of the globe, and embracing under its rule nearly a sixth part of the population of the world. In territorial extent the United States ranks third, containing 3,580,242 squai-e miles, including Alaska in popula- tion it ranks fourth with its 50,000,000 of people. Russia ranks second, having 8,352,- 940 square miles. The ionsest tunnel in the world is that of St. (Jothard, on the line of railroad between Lucerne and Milan. The summit of the tunnel is 990 feet below the surface at Andermatt, and 6,600 feet beneath the peak of Kastlehorn of the St. Gothard group. The tunnel ii 26 1-2 feet wide, and 19 feat 10 inches from the floor to the crown of the arched roof. It is nine and one- third miles long, one and five-eighth miles longer than the ISIout (Jenis Tunnel. The most remarkable whirlpool is the maelstrom of the north-west coast of Nor- way, and southwest of Moskenwsol, the most southerly of the Lofoden isles. It was once supposed to be unfathomable, but the depth has been shown not to exceed 20 fathoms. The whirlpool is navigable under ordinary cir- cumstances, but when the wind is north-west it often attains great fury, and becomes ex- tremely dangerous. Under strong gales the maelstrom has been shown by official statis- tics to run at the rate of 26 miles an hour. The largest library is the Bibliotheque Na- tional in Paris, founded by Louis XIV. It contains 2,400,000 volumes, 400,000 pam- phlets, 175,000 manuscripts, 300,000 maps and charts, and 150,000 coins and medals. The collection of engravings exceeds 1,300,- 000, contained in some 20,000 volumes. The portraits number 100,000. The building which contains these treasures is situated on the Rue Richelieu. Its length is 540 feet, its breath 1 .30 feet. The largest library in New York, in respect of separate works, is the Astor. About 190,000 volumes are on its shelves. The largest desert is that of Sahara, a vast region of Northern Africa, extending from the Atlantic Ocean on the west to the Valley of the Nile on the east. The length from east to west is about 3,000 miles, °its average breadth about 900 miles, its are 2,- 000,000 square miles. The town of Timbuc- too, about nine miles from the Niger river, is surrounded by desert, but at a distance of a few days' journey to the northeast and north are the oases of Mabrook and Arawan. Rain falls in torrents in the Sahara at inter- vals of five, ten and twenty years. In Sum- mer the heat during the day is excessive, but the nights a^e often cold. In Winter the temperature is often below freezing point. An iimbulant Chapel. Few sites have so curious a history as that of the old chapel-of-ease which formerly stood in (vonduit street. As was incident- ally mentioned in a Chancery case recently, the land on which Conduit street.was built formed in the time of Charles II. a meadow called Conduit Mead. In the next reign, when people began to build in this part of London, there was some difficulty in finding tenants for the houses because of the dis- tance of the surburb from the parish church of St. Martin-in-the-Fieldsâ€" an obstacle, by the way, which we never heard of the mod- ern house speculator having to encounter. Thus it cameabout that a chapel-of-ease was erected in the reign of William and Mary. The structure was of wood, and ha'i pre- viously done duty as a travelling •' mass- house." So at least, says Pennant? It was built "by James II. for private mass, and was conveyed on wheels, attendant on its royal master's excursions or when he attend- ed his army. Among other places, it visit- ed Hounslow Heath, where it continued some time after the Revolution." In the course of a few years the building if it may be 80 termed â€" became ruinous, when Dr Denison, the rector of St. Martin's, obtained permission from King AVilliam to erect a chapel of brick in its place. The more sub- stantial edifice remained a proprietory chapel until 1875, when, the site having been let en a building Isase, it was converted into a tailor's shop. â- â- ^m m ..^ Aboofa«llerofClaridan, la., horsewhip- ped Dr. Reinhold on the steps of the Post- fi f^ ^^ ^^ «dled on the Mayor and wan fined $2o The Louisville ^^o«ner JolnZ suggests that instead of fining the Ck^ ler the Mayor should have bound him oT^J LATE NEWS NOTES- A prohibilaon bill ha« been defeated in the Texas Lesiialature. Hank Monk, of Carson, Nev., Horace Greeley's famous stage drirer, is dead. In the Missouri House a prohibition amend- ment was defeated by a test vote of 68 to 59. Four persons arrested in Trieste in August for sending bombs from Venice have been released. Daniel Clark sues Louise Gould at Bangor, Me., for $5,000 for breach of promise of marriage. The silver wedding festvities of the Crown Prince and Princess of Germany were celebrated Wednesday. Mr. Brewster, ConscrvatiTe, has been elected for Portarlington, over Mr. Wayne, Nationalist. The rote was 70 to 57. The new North German Lloyd steamer " Fulda " made a trial trip from Glasgow re- cently. She showed a speed of 173 knots an hour. A Malta despatch announces that the steamer "William Dickinson has been aban- doned. Thirteen of her crew are missing and fourteen saved. Three emigrants from Trieste and six other persons have been arrested in connec- tion with the throwing of bombs in Rome on Tueeday, Thirty-eight arrtsts have been made at Malaga, including an ex-mayor of the city, the charge being that of being concerned in the Socialistic propaganda. It is stated the police are giving addition- al protection to Lord Harrington, the War Secretary, because of a discovery of a plot against him. The Massachusetts House defeated by 127 to 60 a bill giving females a right to vote for city and town offices, and to hold city and town offices. In the New York Assembly a bill allow- ing betting on one authorized race track in each county on race days was defeated by 37 to 61. Wm. H. Kemble, president of the Union Railway, has been arrested and bailed, at Philadelphia charged with assaulting a re- porter who tried to interview him. Sara Bernhardt's creditors appeared in court in Paris on Wednesday. They claim that the amount realized by the sale of her jewellery was insufficient to pay the sum loaned thereon. The new steamer "Normandie," built for the General Transatlantic Line, made a trial run off the Lizard on Tuesday. She attain- ed a speed of 16f knots an hour. In the Spanish Senate on Tuesday, the Mirquis de la Vega de Armijo, Minister of Foreign Affairs, denied that negotiations are proceeding for the sale of the Island of Fernando Po to Germany. The medical firm of Kergan Kennedy recently received information from Toronto that a peysician named Dr. Michael Hillary, who for the past month has had charge of their business in that city had myteriously disappeared with a considerable amount of funds belonging to the firm. In the United States Senate the Commit- tee on Judiciary reported adversely on the bill for the restoration of citizenship to such citizens of the United States as have become naturalized citizens of Great Britain. The Senate ratified the supplemental ex- tradition treaty with Spam, the treaty with Roumania for the protection of trade marks and treaty of peace, friendship and com- merce between th« United States and Mada- gascar. Miss Margaret, daughter of Thos. Addis Emmet, and niece of Robert Emmet, the Irish patriot, died at N, Y, at the age of 90 years recently, Sae was the last of the Emmets born in Ireland. She and her father were in prison in Scotland for three years after the execution of Robert. At a meeting of the National Rifle Asso- ciation recently the Duke of Cambridge, who presided, said nothing could exceed the kindness and hospitality shown the British team during the last international match. The association looked forward with plea- sure to giving an American team a most hearty welcome at Wimbledon. Byrne, before the public prosecutor at fans, denied he was guilty of assassination He refused to reply to further questioning He IS kept a close prisoner. No visitors are allowed to see him. A Council of Ministers will decide whether he will be surrendered Byrne was arrested on a direct charge of assassination. The police at Dublin have torn down a placard extensively posted throughout GaU ^^IJ^f "â- ^"f *?°: ^•" ThI offensive placard simply demes that the person charged with Constable Lutor's murder has turned informer. There is some irritation tfu-Tl ^^ K^-" '"" °^ ^^^ police and threats are bemg made. A band of masked and armed men sun- po.ed to be members of a secret soviet? entered a farm at Puerto Serrano, An^lSa murdered the men, outraged a w^S Td destroyed everything on the place, ^Ve^al pkntations in Andalusia. havebeekpSlv destroyed by similar bands, Home I saries of the secret society who h«. „ kT" arrested, were found to ^e Turnii'^d wS fresh orders from their chief, a Sioolmil ter, who has been arrested. ^^nooimas- TheSenateChambers, Albany NY wfl.« filled with a brilliant audience to hea'rX arguments before the Senate FiZnaTc^^ mitteeon the bill for .r" j' '"^ance Com- the. natural -cene y at N aCa^'^n"" °I laying out a public^park there pl ?« "' blvman Tinhh /-„ mere. iix-Asaem« Sffi^lSe; of°Xr »d'"'"S"°'"' i was fciSs?^^4,r^3P-s:;i alleging that the noi^ L.Tla^S%^" machinery constituted a n^^""f«/^ ^« ing the court to enioin ill o!^^' "^^ P^^^ • Master in Equity K th» i^?*?*=«- ^be straining the defendan""opeiT "«*v-*-."'.y â- -â- -'"'â- pressra between 8 p. ra and « a, m., and iompeUing him to keep the windows on the Spruce street side cloBed while the machin- ery is in motien. The grand jury in the case of the Newhall House disaster in Milwankee haa made a final report. They find that the Newhall Hooae was constructed in aa suUtantial a manner as such buildings usually are: there was scarcely an hotel in the conntry as easy of egress as the Newhall; that the owners had done all that was reasonable for protect- ion and escape in case of accident; that the landlord was extremely solicitous for the welfare and safety of the guests, but did not supply sufficient men or means to alarm the guests. They say, in extenuation, that he adopted the same precautions as in hotels of like size. He was at fault in not instruct- ing help at the fire and not giving sufficient attention to the bar-room after he knew the bad habits of the tenant. They find the laws regulating the modes of egress from buildings defective. r 1 T^ •♦^ The Old Lady and tbe Conductor. A conductor with a narrow chest, red hands, and sleepy eyes lolled against the rail of a Yonge car yesterday afternoon and whistled carelessly. Presently an aged woman within the car began to wave a green cotton umbrella wildly at the conduc- tor. Then she nodded her head violently and looked over her shoulder toward Gould street, which the car was approachigg on its wrfy down town. The conductor looked at her with languid interest, and still whis- tled. Meanwhile the car rattled rapidly by Gould street. Then the woman began to utter inarticulate sounds, and looked be- seechingly at the conductor with distended eyes, raised eyebrows, and half-opened mouth. The conductor still whistled. He looked at the woman, but he wore the far away expression of a man sunk in psycho- logic thought, and seemed not to be /are of her growing frenzy. Thus things re- mained until the car arrived at Shuter street, when the woman bounded from her seat, and started for the door. After trying to harpoon three estimable citizens with her umbrella, treading on all of the more sym- pathetic corns on the way, dropping her reticule, and lunging violently she arrived at the door, and cried ' Why don't you stop the car " The conductor ceased whistling, and gradually became aware of her presence as the car passed Queen street. "Do you wish to get out madam?' he asked with a glassy smile. "Wish to get out, you stupid man 1" gas- ped the old lady "Why, of course I do. 1 wanted to get out at Gould stret." " Ah." said the conductor blandly. " If you had only said so I'd stopped the car." " Well, stupid, why don't you stop it now?" "Now? Why, certainly." and he slowly raised his hand and pullnl the bell strap. The old lady muttered and spluttered and stepped to the edge of the platform, but the diiver had decided not to stop until he reached the down town side of Adelaide street. The conductor took hold of the woman's arm to restrain her from jumping off while the car was moving. "Take your hand off me, sir, "s'ne cried hotly. "Its bad enough to be insulted without being handled." She jumped oB nervously and turned an indignant glance at the conductor as she dodged a grocery waggon and struggled toward the sidewalk. The conductor gazed after her with some interest, and then said "It's amazin' what ugly an' tantilizin' people a conductor has to deal with. It's enough to break a man's heart." re- his A Cnrloos Rat Story. The Hon. Neal Dow contributes the fol- lowing, which he calls a perfectly true story: One evening a young lady from a friend's family, living in a large, fine house, nearly a mile away, was with us, and the talk turn- ed on rats, as we heard ours galloping in the ceiling and scampering up and down the wall. The young lady said that none had ever been in their house, and she did not think there was auy point at which they could en- ter. My eldest daughter, a great wit, said: I ve aeard that, if politely invited to do so in -.vriting, rats will leave any house, and go to any other to which they may be direct- tc '^JT'^I^ *^^^ °"f« that Et your house they will find spacious quarters and an ex- cellent commissariat." At that moment, before us all, she wrote a most grandiloquent letter to the large family ot rats that had so long favored us with their presence, pointing out to them that at No. b5 1 earl street was a large, fine house which had never been favored with the residence of any of their family, -where they would find ample quarters and a fat larder. When fin- ished, she read the missive to the company, and we had a great laugh over it. As anold ^»^" •'*°°1^^!*"^° put lard upon it and S^l'*."'**'.*^^ ^*"" ^^^^^ it would pro- bably be found by those to whom it was di- rected, A few days after the young lady was at our house agaiu,and burst intp a laugh ex- ri^"'i'ha;""l,^°'^^^ ' overrun^'with we hn^ That recalled to me the fact that we had heard none in our walls. My wa^^gone"wh-, *^e ""' " *h« l-tttr h^Zh? ^.t"^^ ^^^y ^â- e'-e talking and n Sh i °"' *^l*=""ou8 affair a friend came nU h^f ""S.u^^*^ ^^i-i that two even- ings before, m the bright moonlight, he saw several rats running down Congfess str^I' s?nce butfr" ^t" troubled^ with them w?thth^J^"""'.^' how it has been redirected." *^ "'^^'^^ """ beneficiaries -^ A WUdoat B«trd« a Steamer. chS\'n*thf ,S*"!^4p I- C- Harris was an- a dl^. ^^,** "^^"s Santiago during I i^nnt^\^ f'lU-grown wildcat, which i^ lor^?«, ^^' ^°^^ '^°'â„¢ tlie river on a pa^Je ^r '7' concluded to take a free on wWch^«?r ""tl*?" °° ^^ ^heel-house, as^Jon*?,^^^'"**'°««0'netWng of on^^h- °° j*°»«l tho veesel. The boys mil ltiK'?«°l"P^' '^^ ^^^^ the^i! l"« S^th.^i'" "°"pd *^« head and hind -^a7S:nr^°° exhibition ^^w? A CONYICTS' Tl»ytrytoE8eane~^ A Placky Cuard Jail. leader and Mar2fj*^ivj A special despatch to J: D««pocA gives the folio J„,^ cent iiiutmy at the Vfi-. " Jefferson City. The f;""' turned to their 'eh^" when a preconcerted mm' ' the harness shop of jT^' Four convicts sK SV* man of the collar shop u^ *1- main quiet. FourotC.** forerilan of the harnes. v "^^^ him of his clothes. Sft ringleader, a highway "f sentence of twelve ye J partmont where the horse and set fire to a ,,„,„,, In a moment the br.ildin shops were on fire a '"V^."' t^e guards 'ran whichthe convicts cut. T '""""" of i 'S Ill- son, then made an effor't?/"' walls but though armed wit clubheM-asmetatthemaiaLsl Krurapt one of the gaarl :i him to dAsiaf irr^r^ ...^. .*â„¢5 SS clubheM-asmetatthemaii,' Krurapt, one oftl him to desist from exdtiua," further acts of mutinv K i armed, but as Johnson advL!l ringleader: "One .tef^Zf you are a dead man"' u 'â- ' awed by this exhibition of ot hesitated and was lost o„W abandoned all thought of leait' at that moment was a s'-c which in ten niinuteuvouldS convict of the State of llkZl] upon his heels he ran towards-l corner of the grounds withtiV scaliufi' the walls: but h^^" Tolin, the "dresser in" of ttf jj had run to the court-yard at ti'S^ Johnson paused and stood ij- knife and bludgeon, threate., Tolin. lolinisa smallmaa^^ Vict 13 a giant in build and the plucky guard, lookin- k eye, walked up to him mJ muzzle of a revolve- against i^^ him to walk to the blind cell i obeyed and with his surrecJ was at an end. His compmis-J under control. The revolt was hardly sf-J great volumes of smoke acTi heavenward and the citi^emr:: the penitentiary. The mili-I, and organized and citizen; J shouldered muskets ready suppress the mutiny. TlieLfJ without any further liemoB-^j convicts, some of whom, irtmii pointment at their failure nt to rush into the flamej c: buildings and were with dii:: edfrom seeking this horrible:.. As soon as it became appi-E mutiny was uusuceessfu! tae^: formed into line aud at ti;t maud 1,150 of ttie 1,-WO i marched to their ceils asd I;. remainder were trusted toti^ of controlling the tire. .So building burn that a in were seriously, perhups fiii Over fifty escaped fromtlieo of' the factories. The flame.- k to the State machine shop s:ij where the cloth worn by thecrj Then the broom factory wa; also the building occupied Geisecke Shoe Manufacturirr.! the Meysenburg J^hoe Compa' one of the maiu cell-houses.ac;-] ened for an hour, .-i single wjL; the buruiug building a;i. The guard-house oveilook:ii.j court M'as barued; but tbe Ai of volunteers r.nd couvict:K| hospital. The .Jclierson l"T ment Were on the grouad a:j| work, but the ioliowiug i-jl pletely destroyed: Stracssi- shop, collar-sliop and vxir ' §100,000 riciick s bao: §30,000 the State weava: ma?hine-8hop, .?40,000; y- Brcom Factory, .520,000. V- the State will fully amount :: which there is no insurance, f-' to private persons are alms'j The desperate aud thorB;"-] the mutinous orgauizatior_ the fact that after the rffli;: was lodged in tl:e bliud ceU the convicts mauageJ to -â- *,' they possessed and releafeu- themselves in readiness p- The desperate band maJi- ' guards, but were at onoe^; â- â- ing rifles and revolvers in^ surrender. At present m under the guard of itsrer-is-l ed by the militia and -^i citizens armed with rer liovemor Crittenden, vha " of starting for St. Louis ^^-^ broku out, postponed his "r mand. A Chinese Dinner «•' I found on Mulberry st."'J cheap Chinese wstaurartsf-' jovial Oriental whose n^'^^ •' Chinese dinner, seveo '.^ sign outside, "rileaf'-.j thoughtl, audi went in.,, L I said. "Yip-allele;..^| I surreptitiously smelt ' seemed good 1 tastejl;'^,. brought, a generous pis'*, reeking. " Go:d enong^, tackled it. He brougbt^^ good beans. He brought' He brought boiled pO; I thought, I slyly v^ I despatehed them. » j piece of pie and cheese, that, really. I "^^ them. "S-e-v-e-Dcente myself. "WhynfJJ^ "Howmucbee. ing into the Chinese l»fS " Forty-eight cen»-, c,:( " Forty-eight cen^- said seven cents. .^ji- J "That'le for '^^^ n'A Melican hungly- cants," .uWei