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RUSSIA AND ROYALTY
Shadow That Darkens
Path of the Czars.
the
THE FEAR OF ASSASSINATION
Plots That Were Woven Around Alex
ander II. and the Bomb That Shat
tered His Body—An Infernal Machine
That Failed to Kill Alexander III.
The shadow Hint falls across the path
of the czars may extend the world
round. Wherever the ruler of all the
Russlas may happen to lie, there the
shadow of Year lies.
Once In Paris, once in the palace
gardens, Alexander II. was lirod at.
Again In the Winter Palace square
one SolorlcfC, wearing the uniform of
an ofllclnl, passed the guards one day,
and again the czar wns fired upon.
Alexander ran for the palace. Solo-
rlelT followed him and tired three
times. The czar ran In zigzags, how
ever, and so escaped. Not long after
ward two mines were laid to blow up
the imperial train. One did not ex
plode, lmt tho second wrecked the
(rain. Once more the czar escaped.
Watching eyes had saved him, their
owners having persuaded the ruler to
take another train.
Later Alexander 11. owed his life to
the fact that lie came late to a func
tion at the palace. A bomb blew clean
out a large portion of the Imperial resi
dence, but the czar was not present.
But of all the attempts on the lives
of Russia's rulers two stand out most
clearly for their amazing Ingenuity.
One tells the story of a little unpre
tentious shop In Malaja Sadovaja
street. Kobozelf, then unknown to
the police, took tho shop and set out
to impress the police, who were al
ways making sudden inspections of
premises along the thoroughfares
through which Alexander II. passed,
that he was nothing but u provision
denier. Nearly every one in that
street was a paid spy, but Kobozeff
joked with his customers, pleased his
purveyors and was most affable and
apparently harmless.
The dealer Inspired confidence, and
Ills custom increased gradually. No
wonder, for most of the parcels that
his customers were carrying away by
day contained nothing hut earth-
earth that during the night hours had
been scraped by tin* man and Ills
wife from beneath the street! it was
by such ingenious method that a tun
nel was hollowed and cleared under
tho thoroughfare and a mine laid be
neath the way the czar often passed,
nn Innocent couch upon which the
housewife slept covering the entry
the tunnel.
Yet all the work was useless. On
tlie day the scheme was to lie carried
out the czar upset all the arrange
ments by going off to lunch with tho
Grand Duchess Catherine MtchuelOYiin.
Among those who were watching on
behalf of the terrorists was a beauti
ful girl—a countess, too—named I’o-
rovskaya. It was she who, seeing the
altered arrangements, gave warning.
The czar would return to the palace
another way. Along this route four
men carrying bombs were stationed.
One threw Ills. Men and horses were
killed all around, but the czar stepped
from Ids coach unscathed. A second
man holding a bomb cauio forward
and threw it. "Tills time the effect
was awful,” says Wacltnv Gaslorow-
skl, who describes the Incident In Ills
book, "Tragic Russia." "The czar fell
ns If cut by a scythe, ills legs were
shuttered to pieces." So died the czar
who had escaped as by a miracle
many times.
Alexander 111. followed, and there
were attempts upon Ills life. The
fourth was oue of the most sensa
tional In the entire list of nihilist plots.
Ou a bright autumn day the Impe
rial train traveled at full speed on the
track well guarded by soldiers. It was
toward noon. The Imperial family
were In tho dining car. where lunch
wns about to be served. The cook and
his help were making the last prepara
tions for it when an assistant was
taken til.
The court physician attended the
man and, having stated that lie had
fever, with symptoms of some inex
pllcable ailment, decided that the man
could not remain in the Imperial train,
and ho was left at tile next station
Tho train moved forward toward
Borkl, traveling at the speed of eighty
kilometers an hour. Then tin* elec-
trtcal bell notified the cook that the
imperial family were ready for lunch
eon. A few seconds after the bell
sounded a territlc uolse was hoard
and a violent explosion changed in the
twinkling of an eye the luxurious im
perial train into a heap of broken
Iron, of wrecked cars, of inutilet
corpses, enveloped in smoko and made
all tho more harrowing by tho moan
lng and cries for help of tho wounded
Yet the czar escaped! The dining
room car that ttie nihilists had In
tended should be a grave for the czar,
his family and his suit saved hltu, for
although its roof and floor were
wrecked its sides were preserved
They inclined toward the eeutor. prop
pod each other like two cards and re
mained in that position, protecting
those who were there from belli
crushed.
The cook who had been put off tho
train had worked the whole thing. He
had placed an infernal machine iu a
cone of sugar and had faked his 111-
uess. thus getting clear away.—Phila
delphia Ledger.
Mercy turns her back to the unmerci
ful.—vjuarles.
THE MILITARY SQUARE.
A Formation Borrowed by Wallace
From the “lemings.
The greatest of nil Scottish nnniver-
surles Is that of Bannockburn, fought
Ln the year 1314. Apart from its bear
ing on the Independence of Scotland,
the battle will always have nn excep
tional Interest from the military point
of view, as Bannockburn may be said
to have been the birthplace of the
British square. "Proud Edward’s"
army mainly consisted of cavalry,
while thnt of the Scots, on the other
hand, was almost exclusively composed
foot folk armed with the spear.
of
and these Bruce threw into “schll-
troms," or oblong squares, a formation
borrowed by Wallace from tbe Flem
ings, who had employed it with suc
cess at Courtray to resist the charge of
the English cavalry’.
Hitherto the mounted mail clad
knight had carried everything before
him, but Courtray and Bannockburn
proved that he was powerless to break
resolute spear armed Infantry drawn
up In "schiltrom," or hedgehog, forma
tion, and these two buttles revolution
ised the tactics of the continent and
of our own Island. Profiting by the
lesson which had been taught them
at Bannockburn, the English applied
tho tactics of the Scots with brilliant
success at Crecy and still more nt
Agincourt. As It wns the Scots who
may be said to have originated tbe
British square nt; Bannockburn, so it
was they ngain who at. Balaklava were
the first to discard it with their “thin
red line,” and now, owing to our
changed conditions of warfare, it Is
discarded altogether.—London Chron
icle.
MOHAMMEDANS OF INDIA.
Superstition Seems to Govorn Most of
Their Actions.
Mohammedans of India are very
superstitious. No Mohammedan will
take a bath on Sunday or Tuesday
But if one bathes on Wednesday till
misfortunes and misery that are in
store for him till the next Wednesday
will be averted. As a rule, all Moham
medans bathe on Fridays before going
to perforin the jumma prayers. For
donning new clothes Saturday. Sunday
and Tuesday are regarded as bad days
If any one dons a new dress or puts
on a new clotb or allows his tailor le
cut a piece of cloth on these days, lie
will live a miserable life till that dress
or cloth gets torn or is thrown away
If a shirt is torn and if the wearer
wants to stlteb it. It must be taken off.
for If It is stitched while on the body
the person will soon die. A Mohntn
medau will never allow u burlier to
come near him on Tuesdays, for Tttes
days and Saturdays and Sundays are
bad days for shaving. If absolutely
necessary he will get himself shaved
on Saturday or Sunday, but never on
Tuesday, as his star is supposed to fall
lu blood if he does so. If one receive
money or some valuable thing, it I
taken with the right hand, for if it
Is taken with the left the person re
celvitig It ts said to forget nil nbout
It very soon or to mislay it. A di
vout Mohammedan will not start on a
journey on Wednesdany, for it is he
lleved he will never return home safe
ly If he does so. And it is said that
even a snake never ventures out
Its hole on this day.
A Snake Story.
The family were at dinner when
there came a tap at a door seldom
opened. Winning no attention. It wa
repeated and again a third time
though more softly, and then the door
was swung back and, behold, then
was a snake, knocking at the portals
of hospitality! Down upon its bead, in
conformity with the decree of tradi
tion and with Ezra's understanding of
scriptural direction, crunched a Brit
ish boot. It was a mother snake, who,
having bravely overcome her fear of
man, was seeking sustenanee, not for
herself perhaps, though she was starv
ing, but more likely for the little ones
that were found lu the grass by the
brook. Thus for once, at any rate, did
tho craftiness of the devil succumb to
tbe Instinct of motherhood.—George
B. M. Harvey in North American Re
view.
THE PRICE OF GENIUS.
What It Means to Man to Be a Pioneer
In Thought.
To bo a pioneer ln thought Is to
stand alone with nature, not for a few
minutes, but for life. The isolateness
of tbe few great inlDds of each gen
eration of men is utterly undreamed
of, for want of understanding, by
those about them. Yet think what
it Is to puss one's days ln a thought
world where the thinker roams alone;
to grapple with problems the very
terms of which are beyond ordinary
comprehension and the solution appre
ciated only in years to come; to con
template in lonely ecstasy, after still
lonelier despair, the revelation that
comes with months and more of pon
dering. When some one asked New
ton how he came to make his wonder
ful discoveries ho replied, “Simply by
always thinking about them.” Consid
er Kepler toiling year after year fruit
lessly for some ratio that should link
the planet’s motions by a general law,
calculating assiduously and putting
hypothesis after hypothesis aside as he
found it would not work until at last,
ifter almost Inconceivable toil, he hit
upon the oue that would.
(Vs if this loneliness by nature were
not enough, it must needs be accen-
unted by man, for he rises in such
enses in chorus to condemn. Consider
Darwin, in patient study, testing the
working out of natural selection and
adding fact to fact, only to have the
whole denounced as ridiculously ab
surd. Think you the denunciations of
the master while living are wholly
compensated by the plaudits after lie
Is dead? The loneliness of greatness
is the price men make the genius
pay for posthumous renown.—Perclval
Lowell ln Atlantic.
SPARED BY THE ENEMY.
A Dramatic Incident In the Career of
General de Gallifet.
It was on that fatal, day. Sept. 1,
1870, that General de Gallifet distin
guished himself by commanding the
cavalry charges intended to clear the
elevation at Illy, with the view of
opening a passage toward Flolng,
where It W’as hoped the army might re
treat. The first charge overthrew the
Eighty-third regiment of the Prussians
and penetrated among the German
troops, but the latter formed again
rapidly after tho retirement of the
French cavalry.
General Ducrot then asked If they
could renew the charge with what re
mained of the light cavalry and hus
sars, and then Gallifet answered in
the words that have become historic.
“As often as you wish, general, as
long as a man remains!” The second
charge was not so successful as the
first. Only a few men. with their gen
eral at their head, succeeded in pene
trating the first ranks of the enemy
It Is known that the king of Prussia,
who was watching the battle from the
top of the hill of Marfee, exclaimed
with admiration, "Oh, les braves gens!"
Just at this moment an astonishing
event occurred in the midst of the bat
tle. As Gallifet was returning with
a few survivors, their horses for the
most part wounded or foundered, he
passed before the Nassau regiment.
The Prussian officers ordered their
men to cease fire and even struck up
some of their guns. The French sa
luted and shouted, “Vive l’empereur!”
and tho German officers acknowledged
the salute, some of them applauding.—
Westminster Gazette.
THE COOK’S FAULT.
SCIENTIFIC FEEDING.
ilSSMSSI!
To Every Consumer of Croceiies,
Delicacies, Condiments, Elc.
If you believe in our grade of Food Products, and stand for
purity in everything you eat, you and we should be in close touch.
Are we? This store represents the ideal in groceries, superb edibles,
and everything good to eat. It has been many years since this store
was founded, on a very small capital, but a big stock of principles.
We make a rule of buying the best of everything good to eat, and
our test of satisfied customers, and the new ones being added daily,
is evidence that we are giving entire satisfaction.
We treat all alike and have strictly one price. Our cash and
credit customers, our customers who 'phone their orders, and those
who come to the store, are all shown the same courteous treatment.
We have no bargain counters nor sales at cut prices. We make
an average profit on all the lines we sell, fixing same to cover ex
penses and give us a living and a fair return on our investment.
For these reasons, if our quality of food products and our style w
of doing business meet with your approbation, we would be pleased ■■
to number you among our customers. II
Yours to please, II
■h t. swintI
T E L E P H ONE
iissmssi:
5 4
Tho “Macaroni."
The “macaroni" were exquisites or
fops who in England and France led
the fashions from 17S0 to 17S5 and
were distinguished by an immense
knot of artificial hair worn on the top
of their heads. A small cooked hat
which perched ridiculously on their
topknot, satin or brocade coats and
small clothes fitting tightly to the body
and silk stockings with ribbon garters
composed the costume of these fash
ionable gentlemen, who invariably car
ried a long walking stick with tassels
attached and frequently a bouquet tied
to the handle and eucouraged a minc
ing and affected gait and manner
There was during the war for inde
pendence a body of Maryland soldiers
wlio ou account of their showy uni
forms were called “macaroni.”
She Had Learned.
“The hardest thing to acquire, miss,”
said the dramatic teacher, "is the art
of laughing naturally without appar
ent effort.”
“Oh, I’ve got that down fine,” said
the would be soubrette. "I typewrote
for three years for a man who was al
ways telliug me funny stories about
his little boy."—Indianapolis News.
He Knew.
Mrs.—Ob. Jack! Dolly told me tbe I
most exciting secret, and made me
swear never to tell a living soul! Mr.-
Well. hurry up with it. I’m late to the
office now.—Cleveland Leader.
The care of the health of the people
Is the first duty of statesmen.—Dis
raeli
No Wonder the Bird Was Not Tender
When Served,
One of the most annoying things
about swans is that, they live to an
extremely great age and that it is
impossible for the ordinary observer
to guess what their years may be.
President Grover Cleveland once had
an amusing experience With some
swans, according to a writer in the
American Magazine. He had been iu
tbe south shooting and brought home
a number of wild swans, oue of which
he sent to each member of his cabi
net and to some other associates.
"All the hoys.” said Mr. Cleveland,
"thanked me politely for having re
membered them, but none of them
seemed to have much to say about
how they enjoyed the birds.
"Carlisle, I found, had his cooked
on a night when he wns dining out
Another, when I asked him, said he
hoped l wouldn’t mind, but he had
sent his home to his old mother. Thur-
ber didn’t mention his bird at all for
two days. Finally I asked him about
it.
“ ‘Tliurber, did you get that swan
all right?’
“ ‘Yes, sir—oh, yes, I got the swan
all right, thank you,’ and he bent over
his desk and seemed very busy.
“ ’Fine bird,’ I said.
“ ’Yes, sir, tine bird,’ and he went on
working.
“ ‘Enjoy eating him, Thurber?’
“He waited a minute, and then lie
said; ‘Well, sir, 1 guess they didn’t
cook him right at my house. They
cooked him only two days.’ And he
went on working without cracking a
smile."
Edible Flowers of India.
Many edible flowers, It appears, are
to be found iu India. One of the most
appreciated grows on a tree about
which we have very little information,
but which iu the country Itself is
named the “mliowad.” The natives
consume au enormous number of these
flowers, whose pale yellow corollae are
pulpy and thick, and they prepare
them in various ways.
When they are fresh they are put in
cakes, to which they give a sweet
flavor, but they are more especially
used for making bread after they have
been dried and reduced to flour. By
allowing them to ferment a kind of
wine is produced, and by distilling
them a brandy Is obtained of which
the Hindoos are very fond.—Vulgarisa
tion Scieutifique.
Health as a Primary Factor In Intelli
gent Living.
Health and success are so largely
dependent upon balauce, upon sym
metry of development, physical and
mental harmony, that we should do
everything possible to secure that
physical ppise which also means men
tal and moral poise. A large part of
our Ills come from one sided develop
ment caused by overstimulating some
tissue cells and starving others—over
feeding and underfeeding. Scientific
feeding, therefore, is of vast impor
tance.
Overeating and improper eating are
among the curses of the world. Think
of the people who put all sorts of iu-
compatibles into their stomachs at the
same time and then use all sorts of
nostrums to get rid of their bad ef
fects.
One of the most pathetic sights in
the world is that of a human being
struggling bard to carry out bis am
bition, yet handicapping himself by
his ignorance of physical laws.
What a pathetic figure Carlyle cut
in the world—a one sided giant who
might have been a symmetrical power,
possessor of a colossal brain largely
controlled by a dyspeptic stomach! He
was cross and ernbbed and did just
the things that he did not want to do,
things that he knew It would be bet
ter not to do, but be was the victim
of starved nerves, of exhausted brain
cells largely for want of common sense
feeling.—Orison Swett Marden in Suc
cess Magazine.
WHEN IN NEED OF
LUMBER AND PLANING
MILL STUFF
Of all kinds—Brackets, Mouldings, Columns, etc.—you will
find it to your interest to give us a call.
HOUSE BILLS A SPECIALTY
Vulcanite Roofing
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., NFWNAN, GA. : ’Phone 14.
A Dandy of 1770.
From an English newspaper printed
ln the year 1777 is the following de
scription of a dandy; “A few days ago
a macaroni made his appearance In
the assembly rooms at Whitehaven,
dressed in a mixed silk coat, pink satin
waistcoat and breeches covered with
au elegant silk net, white silk stock
ings with pink clocks, pink satin shoes
and large pearl buttons, a mushroom
colored stock covered with fine poitat
lace, hair dressed remarkably high and
stuck full of pearl pins.”
A “Mite.”
The difllculties experienced by our
forefathers in trying to reckon money
in very small proportions appear In
the various values given to a "mite”
in the sixteenth and seventeenth cen
tury books of commercial arithmetic.
The original “mite" seems to have
beep a third of a Flemish penny, but
tbe use of the word for the widow’s
coin of the New Testament made its
regular English meaning half a far
thing, and some old people may re
member applying the name to the
short lived nineteenth century coins
of that value. In those old arithmetic
books “mite” stands for various val
ues not represented by actual coins,
but obviously used in reckoning. A
work of 1700 makes it one-twelfth of
a penny, two sixteenth century books
one-sixth of a farthing, and in 1674
Jeake’s arithmetic made it as little
as one sixty-fourth of a penny.—Lon
don Chronicle.
Utter Contempt.
“I s’pose you wouldn’t marry me if
I were the only man on earth?"
"I wouldn’t even be engaged to you,”
responded the girl, “if you were the
only man at a summer resort.”—Louis
ville Courier-Journal.
And the Parson Passed On.
"And what are you here for, my
friend?" asked the visiting parson of
au inmate of a reformatory.
" ’Cause 1 can't get out, ttiuik you,”
replied the victim.—Ladies’ Home Jour
nal.
Lots of Company.
Stranger—You must find it very
lonely on these hills. Shepherd—Lone
ly! No, I don’t. Why. there was a
man an’ a 'oss passed yesterday, an’
there’s you today.—Loudon Punch.
Greatness is the ability to meet the
i unexpected.—Stowell.
Heroic Treatment.
In Guiana if a child is slow iu its
movements the parents apply an ant
to the child instead of a whip to make
it move faster. This little ant bites
more cruelly than a mosquito, and its
bite is apt to be troublesome after
ward. As you can imagine, this treat
ment does not make the child kind to
others, and the children of Guiana are
said to be particularly cruel to ani
mals. The little boys in Guiana do not
reckon tbeir age by years, but by their
ability to endure pain. Until he gets
to the point where he can let the Hucu
ant bite him without wincing he is
considered merely a baby.
Not AH His Life.
Reader Magazine.
Two gentlemen were traveling im one
of the hill counties of Kentucky not
long ago, bound on an exploration for
pitch pine. They had been driving for
two hours without encountering any
human being, when they came in sight
of a cabin in a clearing. It was very
still. The hogs lay where they had
fallen, the thin claybank mule grazed
round and ’round and one, lean, lank
man, whose garments were the color of
the claybank mule, leanod against a
tree and let time roll by.
“Wonder if he can speak,” said one
traveler to the other.
“Try him,” said his companion.
“How do you do?” said the North
erner.
“Howdy?” remarked the Southerner
languidly.
“Pleasant country.”
“Fur them what likes it.”
“Lived here all your life?”
The Southerner spat pensively in the
dust.
“Not yit,” he said.
A physician at a recent meeting of the
College of Physicians in Philadelphia
told a story illustrating the witty com
prehension of a patient of Irish nativ
ity. The physician declared that one
of his ailments the Irishman could not
understand was why, if one of his arms
refused to perform its usual functions,
the other should remain normal.
“It is the balancing power of na
ture,” explained the physician. “If
man is blind in one eye nature general
ly provides additional strength for the
remaining eye. When deafness is dis
covered in one ear the hearing of the
other ear becomes unusually acute. ”
“Now that you mention it,. Oi be-
lave ’tis so,” said the patient. “Wliin
a mon has wan short leg, th’ other leg
is generally longer.”
Sympathy.
He—It was a frightful moment when
I received your letter telling me of
the insuperable obstacle to our mar
riage. I would have shot myself, but
I bad no money to buy a revolver.
She—Dearest, if only you had let me
know.—Simplicissimus.
A Mean Friend.
“All the dust flies up ray nose.’’
“Well. Cholly, maybe the city will
pay you to parade the streets. Per
haps, instead of sweepiug, it would be
better to clean them by a vacuum proc
ess.”—Kausas City Journal.
All the Difference.
“My wife is very bad.” said a man
at '.be Bloomsbury county court.
“You mean she is very 111. 1 hope
she Is not bad,” replied the magistrate
sympathetically.—London Telegraph.
Here is the way the papers will write
up weddings ten years hence: “The
bride looked very well in a traveling
dress, but all eyes were centered upon
the groom. He wore a dark suit that fit
ted his form perfectly, and in his dain
ty gloved hands he carried a small rose.
His curly hair was beautifully done,
and a delicate odor of hair oil of the
best quality floated down the aisle as
he passed. The young people will miss
him now that he is married. He is
loved by all for his many accomplish
ments, his tender grace and his win
ning ways. The bride commands a
good salary as bookkeeper, and the
groom will miss none of the luxuiies
to which he has been accustomed. A
bevy of pretty men saw him off at the
depot.”
“Great Scott!” said the doctor to his
servant. “Has anybody called during
my two days’ absence? I left this slate
here for callers to write their names on,
and it is perfectly clean.”
“Oh, yes, sir, ” responded the servant,
cheerfully. “A lot of folks has came,
and the slate got so full o’ names that
only this mornin’ I had to rub ’em all
out to make room for more!”
foieyis omolvxauve
'■fW. _Th ou si t. a n a JWod i fccfi cm
His Conservatism Unshaken.
Washington Cor. Cleveland Plain Dealer.
“The more 1 see of that marvelous
equilibrist, Senator Allison, of Iowa,”
said “Private” John Allen, who is
here making sunshine for a few days,
“the more I am reminded of a tnan
named Gates, who used to live in my
peerless town of Tupelo.
“Gates would never take sides. He
would not commit himself. One day a
doctor and a lawyer decided to force an
opinion out of him. They got into a
quarrel, with Gates present.
“ ‘I was out hunting,’ said the doc
tor, ‘and I shot a bull buffalo. He was
sitting up in a big tree eating grapes
and I plugged him and down he fell.’
“ ‘Go along,’ broke in the lawyer.,
buffaloes do not climb trees.’
‘ ‘There was a long dispute and the
two decided to leave it to Gates. He 1
deliberated carefully.
Well,’ he said tinally, ‘as a gener
al thing buffaloes do not climb trees,,
but there’s no telling what they will
do when they are after grapes.’ ”
A gentleman from up North was
talking to a young negro boy in the
presence of 'his old father. He asked
the boy several questions and received
sensible answers to each one. Ho
turned to go, but seeing that the fami
ly was in need and remembering with
what willingness the boy answered his
questions, the gentleman said :
“Here, boy, take this dollar and get
you a chicken for your supper.”
When the gentleman was out of sight
and hearing the boy’s father called his
son and said:
‘‘Yo’ jes’ gib me dat dollar, ami
when hit gits dark yo’ go out an’ git
dat chick’n in de nat’eral way. Does
yo’ hear me?”
‘‘For ten years,” said a physician,
I have advocated apples as a cure for
drunkenness. In that time I have tried
the apple cure on some forty or fifty
drunkards, and my success has been
most gratifying. Let any man afflicted
with the love of drink eat three or
more apples daily, and the horrible
craving will gradually leave him. The
cure will be greatly helped if he
smokes as little as possible.”
Please, mumsey, just five cents,
begged Johnnie.
“But, Johnnie, it was only this morn
ing that I gave you five cents.”
“I know, mumsey, but”—putting Ins
arms around her neck—“I’m so hard on
money!”
Mother—“Is it possible, Harry, that
you have eaten all that cake witlwu
giving a thought to your sister?’
Harry—“Oh, no; I thought of her
every second. I was afraid all tn-
time that she would come before I ha
eaten it up. ”
“It’s no use for me to go^to
said little Elmer.
‘the
any more, — ,. ,,
never be able to learn how to spell.
“Why not,” asked her mother.
“Because,” answered Elmer,
teacher keeps changing words on me
all the time.”’
Her (reading) —“And so they were
married, and that was the last of
troubles.” . ,
Him (sotto voice)—‘‘Last, but not
least.” __
4 Part and parcel—a play MSS