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ular mail, and hands it to a special clerk, who takes out the money, fills the order, and drops the envelope in the mail for the postman to deliver on his next round. Unstamped letters can also be posted in this very delightful box, and special delivery stamps can be secured by stating on the blank the number of letters that are to be stamped, and enclosing the money for the same in the special envelope. All unstamped matter is turned over to the clerk who has charge of the envelope department. He buys the stamps, sticks them on, and despatches the letters. This service is only rendered to people who buy their own boxes. The post-office does not undertake to furnish them, but only to give good service with them when they are purchased. * * * * * A wonderful feat of swimming has just been performed in England. A man named McNally, a champion swimmer, and a native of Boston, Mass., has attempted to swim across the English Channel from Dover, England, to Calais, France, a distance of thirty-five miles. This body of water is the most uncertain and the roughest of seas. Many people who are fine sailors and have made many voyages to Europe say they would rather cross the Atlantic than the English Channel. The reason for this is that the vast body of water which forms the North Sea, in forcing its way between the narrow straits of Dover, is driven into short cross-waves and currents, which make the sea always choppy and rough. Many swimmers have made the attempt to swim this Channel before, among them Boyton, and Captain Webb who lost his life in an attempt to swim the Niagara Rapids. No one has so far achieved success. McNally succeeded in reaching within three miles of the French coast, but he was then so exhausted that he had to be pulled into the boat and give up the attempt. He had announced that he would swim the Channel, and had been some days in Dover, swimming over a part of the course, and getting himself in training for the final effort. He started from the Dover pier, followed by a row-boat in which were two sailors, a newspaper man, and his trainer. When he started out he had no intention of taking the swim. He merely went out for exercise. The weather was so foggy that his companions urged him to turn back and exercise later in the day. He, however, kept on, and when he was about six miles from the shore the fog lifted, and wind and tide all bei
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