Evening Star Newspaper, January 31, 1891, Page 11

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ee i lo THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D:C, SATURDAY, JANUARY 81, 1891-SIXTEEN PAGES. gled through the camp amid shower of mild a Wiel “4 ‘haff. Thev were on their way to Cook City, I = ai KIPLING Ny} TRAV ELS. on ogee that ray — ‘Preparing Maire noah Piaget om — | ingly, with long spurs, hooded stirrups, slouch . = hats, far weather cloth cag oie Bog ‘THE VARIETIES THAT FLOURIQN BEST HERE—THE Intoxicated by Deep Dranghts of the | pistci butt just easy to hand. ADVANTAGES OF CAREFUL PRUXINO—TRERS Yellowstone Wonders. Ove Experience of Digging for Gold tn ths ‘Sierras Was All He Wanted. From the New York Heraid. “Yoo,” observed s young lawyer friend of mine yesterday, “I have been « gold miner in my time and T hed sbout all T wanted of it in that one experience, 1 can assure you. “You see,” he went on, “I was possessed with the idea when I left college, some five years ago, that I'd like to gointogold mining asa business. First Pd learn the practical part of | it, then I'd locate some valuable claim some- where and take things easy afterward, merely taking out enough gold to pay my running ex- penses. Sounds well, doesn't it? “Well, I hada couple of hundred dollars saved up, and with this I bought an outfit of rough clothing and a ticket for the west. With- out going into details, I found myself, some | two weeks afterward, in Grizzly Flat, « mining = -i® camp in El Dorado ‘county, California. The z, | morey was about one, too, and as Thad no ORLD’S FAIR. |\"iavrasieatowee ton—The Streets and an Electric Car. NE PLEASANT DAY NOT LONG AGO ‘Uncle Remus concluded that he would take aide onthe electric car. He had been en- “The cowboy's goin’ under before long,” said ” paneer Bs - y friend. *% sere = a PLANTED TOO CLOSE ame hi * settled he'll have to go. But be’s mighty useful now, | OTHER crrims. What would we do without the cowboy?" regret WHAT COWBOYS ARE GOOD FOR. a sic Maa = PARKING “As how?” said I, and the eamp laughed. oonmiaten exe gp a — “He has the money. We have the skill. He | time to the taking of a censusof the trees | planted in the streets and reservations of Wash- | comes in winter to play poker at the military | P sate oped chong of Jant —| posts. We y poker—a few. When he's lost 2annem Contrasied Vivid Word Painting—| Pov one) we wave him drink ud let him go- | PUblished in an interesting and instructive pehire Girl—American Caval- | sometimes we get the wrong man.” volume. SpuenentGawtege. loom meta Negrete Of course the number of trees planted since who turned up, ci an arm wad qupel ples Gears eee” a charge is known, | was the post that was cleaned out when that | Ut there is the natural growth ‘account | d Cancasian removed himself, for, and then hundreds of trees bave died or carter who brought his team and a friend ote'opey and destinies ‘Ge e a by accident and other causes. into the Yellowstone Park without due thought. eni the Metecion, °E dew’s a ne — Levies cahaacdls hia tacks was Presently they came upon a few of the na:ural | with no cowboy unless he's a litte bit ee is | his smile betrayed his anxiety. He fombled Deanties of the place and that carter turned his | first.” thought will appear of but little use. Such | about in his pockets until he founds quarter, ‘ ns: Ere I d Igathered from more than | not the case, however. It is not only proposed team into bis friend's team, howling: | 1 ee which he proffered to the motor man. “Get out of this, Jim. All hell's alight under | Pundred am he felt abeckately peo Sa SF naga ‘Don't be in a hurry, old man,” eaid that In point of fact, he had his own private opin- ion, fortified by an abundant supply of super- stition, in regard to the whole matter. Never- theless he decided to make a little excursion on the car. He saw other people riding and what they did he could do. ‘So the old man wns on hand when the car came down to the starting point, where there isa wait of five minutes. He watched the con- @uctor reverse the contrivance that connects the motor with the overhead wire, and then be ‘Written for The Evening Star. NCE UPON A TIME THERE WAS A THE GOVERNMENT BUILDING AT THE W UNCLE SAM AT THE FAIR to work whether I wished to or not. “I met a mine boss up there who agreed, in 5 | consideration of a gold piece —the inst our noses.” And they call the place hell's | his revolver. ee re eee fren ny? ie conductor ‘ill| que Building Designed for owalng the | “untin6, 20 that eccording te their modified | “MTT uae pagoda-chaped tower in the | MCR, had. to give me a job ax helper in one Ralf ease to this dey to witness if the carter |, “in England, I understand,” quoth the Iim- pv caeeh orem aie tuteresting | “*Tanser,” oni Uncle Remus On deter Goverament’s Exhibits. gg AaBinemend a b sroatad in-| middle will be a great rotunda, the exhibits of I started cat for my new field of labora. It was . | : = : gland & ma: line, whar muels, I hatter money STAR THIS EVENING GIVES building various departments of ment be- the dead of winter and bitter cold. The snow re a 0b aa wip Seating i Se aren't allowed to play with no firearms. He's | points. Han, wher dey got musts, I hatter gf de mousy aves 4900-| Gaon te a “ee : evens ot to be taught ail that when he enlists. I band, Tom, and the good little mares, came to Sian't ment Sono teaching how to shoot hell's half sere, which is about sixty acres in | straight, ‘fore I served Uncle Sam. And that's | ion that it ean do. ite oy | ee | Lots better ef exten: said, “Would like | just where itis. But you was talking about wed sensh Settee ‘ waggin tongue sticki a See ncae” see eues “Cacediah non, ana: Penn Races Senmciip meat © learning what varieties flourish best in this cli- | some mauels er sumpi'n, grouped around it. Fannily enough, this was about two feet deep on the level and of the building designed for the ac- | 4 ‘the pe dary eae ; wes WHAT VARIETIES FLOURISH BEST. Dish yer ain't de eame kind er kyar. Hit look | —— "7°. : annex | attempt to restrict the government's ground through this we bad to tramp » distance of half this means the commission is of the opin- : better ef | Commodation of the United States govern- 8 Of the navy. army and fish commission, | is made merely for the purpose of intrelvesr le ; By mighty blank out dar. I'd feel lots e t's exhibition atthe Chicago fair. It is the | &c., which will need retty water inlet from the lake, A combina io ap first publication of the design and is printed | Secupaner. The big war ship in which the| tion of “beauty and utility hae been | certatuiy . Ret im the cage there, a we wiies out there,” said the naval e housed will itself require | most happily attained in the edifice as “the toss,’ pomtite ten emer | xplaine i some peculiarities of | mate, the relative beauty and value of the differ- ‘Why, if we had m it »” Sait exclusively in Tue Sram The design, made . ‘the fish sialon Yeuab hie 4 > - © boss,” pointing to « box-like wus- $f you do we shall report you to the park au- | oat pole with out crackest erack | ent trees and those that live longest. Much of | motor man with » jrential air, “they | onder the direction of Supervising Architect ae pag = —— Nhich will be nearly square, covering | pended over « hole in the ground. With some . i muldn’t last frre minutes. We'd ran over ‘em. thorities.” cat I grieve to say the camp roared. this is already known, but itis to a great extent | Tow ‘thems into giblete.” ‘There was a plain, blistered and peeled and!“ “em over swampy ground. Let ‘em|® matter of opinion, and without the Weeoe hear ant! areleaed Unole Remus, | the government board, which has charge of | £428 and munitions of war. s _ - | run around a bit an’ work the starch out of ‘em | nothing definive is known. It will be at least a | | <a ta pectionion’ | Unis ban’ Paps a | The $1,000,008 | haa abominable, and it was given over to the sport. |<)" then, Almighty, if we wouldn't plug em at | Year before the volume can be to tho | solemnly, ee wheeid a vat up with this its | estimated as the expense of ‘the show to be | ig plug After a pause, the old man continued: dndeukito se ie Sr posed to put up pense sh | fags and spoutings of devils who threw mud | tase I'd eat their horses” printer, and as it is proposed ing it com- Hood ie do etait what make dish yer kyar are e precisely as repre- immediately to | made by the government. In the annexes, as ‘aud steam and dirt at each other with whoops| But suppose they engaged in the open,” | plete in department no haste will be aes i Sian ‘iat what snake “de | uted, in all probability. hay in ned, will be houred, among other thing ‘and halloos and bellowing curses. | said 1. é 3 go re Sanaa ~ The only thing in the way is 8 discussion | Chicago on the sul seigtaritt ciietied, eee Hee aortas cervice and the saliary hou The places smelt of the refuse of the pit, and | “Engaged in hades! Not if there was 9 tree | | T — nance a Ae the | ‘The very same,” said the man. which has arisen within the past few days be- ‘bo made for the space or ly allotted, which | service,and these annexes are expected to afford eer ne oe ee, sa | Tank within twenty miles. ‘They coukin's on- | Totes PS ook of Lan nail Sam| “Ain't you shectd?” asked Uncie Remus. | tween the government boss and the conten. |S Be ad tlt a a entrSea iy | 0e/000 sdditional foot of Goor apace, Buch, ot oma of the pines in our nostrils throughout | gage in the open. regular winter 3 Siow’? wall the macher-snon: “eo laee ne 1 the object of the board will be accom by | all events, are the plans formed by the go Gentlemen, the officers, hare you ever se-| at this season of the year they aro busily en- don’t singe the hair on my head Tain’ afraid.” | nial commission in charge of the fair. At the | this conference and it may be taken | ment board, and it ix not likely that the cen- LA OUT LIKE OLLENDORT. riously considered the existence on earth, sub- gaged in pruning such trees as need such atten- oa since ee claimed the old Took- | 18st moment the commissioners have made a | for granted that the ‘be _con-' tennial commission will upset them. ‘This Yellowstone Park is laid out like Ollen- | #equent to the vear 1864, of cavalry, who, by | tion. Contrary to the impression, of n grent | ,. °NItth Sine. Samiringly. Then, after a little Gorf—in exercises of progressive difficulty. mea prmmen higeg Neernys el von oe ioe perhaps better than al- | Pause: “Bose, does on beep de truck in dat ar EARNING MONEY WITH ¥FLOWERS.|THE BROTHERHOOD OF ST. PAUL'S. Hell's half acre was a prelude to ten o: twelve | as 1 moved over to the hotel and and pie oe Aca most any other variety, thrive under pruning churn dar?” indicating the brass cylinder con- ee Firenmas boing in the, forest: sad white of | unearfvede pit pool of burnisgest water ringed | leved of thelr superfluous branches. = forest: saw wh e ? Bs steam beyond theve and yet other whiffs break | with jet black sand, all the gound neer by being TREES TOO CLOSE TOGETHER. eee ae er ot nee, one —some SUB-| «Flower culture in a small way can he made | From the London Telegraph. : ing through the misty green hille in the far | pure white. But mirae when they sr-| “tt is pity,” said Superintendent Smith of | ENused the motor ‘man to look at himn more | t© Pay even by an amateur who chooses to pur-| It is now announced that the bishop of Lon-| Campbell Hardy, a jeweler from Boston, is at distence; ve trampled on sulphur in crystals | rive at the rate of twenty » das. the Botanical Gardens tos Stax reporter yee- | closely and the look was followed by a pleasant | sue it in a painstaking and intelligent way,” | don has sanctioned the formation of a lay | the 4 Pacific and 7 in bis on the head of the drill. I remem- and euifed things much worse then any cal A HENRY JAMES MAIDEN. terday, ‘that all or nearly all of the trees | smile, which wna at once n recognition of and a | said a young woman toa writer for Tax Sram. | “Brotherhood of St. Paul's,” to work within | srartnenes ot the beta nanny ree in his | ber only secing @ thousand stars and then all geeeain tee cl the novelty, | There was a maiden—a very little maiden—| planted on the streets of Washington cannot be tribute to the old negro’s attitude of respectful | «<pive years ago I bought o little farm near | the Metropolitan diocese and to be controlled eee 4 wiped ia Tiser Basie tea | ee scepuniteniaili Giles came upon e really po place, where Tom | who had just stepped out of one of James praned, for it would make a great change in |". ‘on? said the motor man, “we keep it in | Anacostia, called it ‘Rose Acres’ and started in | by a warden, who will be under the jurisdic- years ago. Mr. Hardy made the money that my arm inasling. The blow had glanced and dey Lag —_ play cay | novels. She owned a delightful mother and an | ba a reap —— —— de | here,” touching the upright’cylinder with his | merely for amusement's sake with a few rose | tion of the bishop himself. is to bee! gave him a start in life when a packman. He * hammer had descended on forearm on ty green. fiel , slow. | in lant o “ | ‘Yor luck; "t broken,” Sana ‘with line bean, oll the Somers of the | omy ae cee iis ee soo Faeaae Pipey ‘Were put too close together and | °° “and when we want any we just turn it | bushes and some other plants. I love flowers | subwarden and a chaplain, whild the rest of | traveled through all the far western states, but m're in luck; your erm im't ould main entrance resem- went. somewhat the Arc de Trtumpbe at Paris. | Down, dagm, until it ecomed almostas if we ‘the | 150, feet of fi dt havin Windrim, has been approved and accepted by | army wants room ouside for a display of big | ornamen ial fact with e mtte oie ng a0 | misgivings I got aboard and then down we ais- | The building is to cost $400,000,. hed the ceuter of the earth. It was crawl on my hands and kuees through « nar- damp passageway until we reached the of the drift. “Here, Jim,’ eaid the my hand and felte thick, slimy P aga the wall. Small streams water ed from above down the back of my neck. | There was no gold in sight, either; no Aladdin IT WAS A CLOSE CALL. meenbog odin 4 taining the machinery for turning on and sbut-| Here is an Industry Worth While for | The Mew Order of Monks Established Within | tow » Packman Escaped Being Marderea hoped to see. It was e elect: i ic current. ‘Women to Pursue. | jere, young feller, git a bold on this drill, | will yer?" And as I instinctively obeyed Jim P to strike. Whish! and down came tis oeramer From the Chicago Tribune. | 7 . % 4 agen S| the mine boss, and then headded, with evident summer growing to the very edge of the crag ote r ‘ | as the years go on this is becoming more and | °% ike ‘sit ’n a | Tearly and the labor expended upon them was | the community are to be divided into brothers, | the most exciting time he had, he says, was in te: ‘Ray, you's mer. 1 think bine. Wan our ret glimpee of the gevser | tighe lived it’ New Hampshire” Accordingly, | ore ‘evident in the erowded appearance of | ,_,Samelike yon Tnole Hemun "TOM" | well repaid by the pleasure of it; butafter | probationers and “serving brothers.” ‘Tho | New Mexico schon tacdhdar booseteneaeien? basins. The y had pulled up close to» | she had dragged them up to Al 1,” aug; - a and to the | some of the rows, Pruning is the only remedy | “«Yog,” said the motor man, “somewhat simi-|® while I found that it would produce money | duty of the “brothers” will be to lead “a dis-| “One day when much fatigued and bu rough, broken, blistered cone of spelter stuff | Yosemite valiey, and was now returning lei- | for this state of affairs, but as I before re- | yyrjyo also. So I planted more and more, until at | ciplined, ‘devotional, common life, | yas eed Detween ton aud twonty feet high. There was | surely via the Yellowstone just in time for the | Marked only ceriain varieties can be treated in | sometimes,” seid Uncle Remus, “de beer present I have between three and fonr thon- | from secular pursuits and wholly dedievted 20 trouble im thet place—moaning, splashing, | tail end of the summer season at Saratogn. this manner. \ Je there is a | Set sech s head on ‘er dat she'll fly out en few | cand rose bushes of the choicest varieties. A | th of the church” Sorgling and the clank of machinery. A spurt | “We had met once or twice before in the park ‘Among large class of people there is | in over you. Do dat truck do dat away?” ps ed a of boiling water jumped into the air and awash | gn] bad been amazed and amused at ber erit- | VeTy decided pe ion to pruning trees, and | \t¢ aint never done it et,” replied the | killed gardener told me the other that my | the of water 1 as ical commendation of the wonders that she | time and again Ihave been called a butcher. I removed swiftly. The old lady from Chicago | sw. From that very resolute little mouth [| Of course a tree after it hus been trimmed is W Wicked waste,” said her | received a lecture on American literature, the | HOt very handsome in winter, but then the itn husband. I think they call it the Riverside | ature and inwardness of Washington society, | proved appearance the eneuing summer more Geyser. Ite spout was torn and ragged like the | the precise value of Cable’s works a8 compared | tar compensates for this. The majority of of when a shell hes burst there. | with Uncle Kemns Harris, and a few other | People do not understand that unless certain madly for # moment or two and | things that had nothing whatever to do with | ¥arieties of trees are pruned their life will be “Hie was probably right.” At any rate I man- Istopped for dinner at what appeared to be a | “fod to work ms way 0 | pioneer’s cabin.” he began. “The house was | 7. ful you. “No, rec? ne tore gall in connection with | miles from any other habitation. I had about | other cdo of taiting tn taime, ce it T oon clergy. The warden will be sp- | $800 worth of stock and $1,200 in money. 7% motor man, “and when it does I want to be | collection of hybrid perpetunls is probably the | pointed by the bishop, to whom alone he will | When I entered the house Ifound the eces- ——— plumb away from here.” finest in this country. On tho’ da¥ before last | fs to bea man of about sixty, his twenty be eo Decoration day I picked and 000 roses | be sible “in all things lawful.” He will Memestet: Gor Recthgeeien, aloose in de elements sed Uncle Memon dey | 0% my own place. z Ermumertiy, and’ho wil tabs onto’ thet the | prorcoce of ev obd man concsd'ms'to saceees | "car deoee arene os dhguahe ta Caltforada Must be enough un it in dat churn dar ter | “1m extravagantly fond of roses, but violets munity, an . eare. that egg See wel pee par pee Tg ang page aoe bert ako thunder endutin’ awhole summer.” are more prpftable. On the day before Obrist- | Shy obearved: Bie will “encourage” oF, | piace two minates after Tonterad ie, Or cc | Tomerday,” sald tho old Californian. “hat d non . ued their life will be | “The motor man made no reply to ope 2 cents | ‘ise, and, if necessary, admonish the brothers.” | the men and women wanted to see what had |*U%s good—like old times. It makes me wae sail crept over the steaming line~ | gevsers, but were altogether pleasant. shostened vale Gua de.” Thiet omnes response to s signal from the conductor he | (Portis Dice then bet thee never Deite | His decision will be final, unless a majority of | for sale, and the women purchssed about £3 , homesick. ‘The west const has been getting Bion te month, “You | Now an English maiden who had stumbled | will grow yellow an The: is caused by | struck the gong sharply with Bis foot, causing lose than l cent apiece” To rraise theme is onng | the ‘brothers bring tho matter before ‘the | worth of goods. ‘The old man, whose, name | too blamed stylish aince it got railroads, and : ph pete 2 Fa ath: | 08.8 dust-grimed, lime-washed, sun-peeled, col- bg of moisture. | The roots are interfered | Uncle Remus t0 dodge as if he had been shot ney. T have 890 glass sashes undee chick! tke | bishop. Otherwise they must individually and | was Moody, was purticular to ask me whom 1 | good shaking up will do it good, set it right, on, up that miraculous valley. On | tless wanderer come from and going. $8004: | near the deeply buried curbstonee tut on one |S" *0med.on the current and started the car. | fol", Litom all winter lone, Te May Thavee | Al 8 body follow strictly “the rales regulating | hed lest cen, and to learn whether. or not I b i | remind it of old times. Why, when I first went i A negro girl sitting opposite Uncle Remus put studies, devotions, meals, habits and con- | had any friends in the country. Afterward I ‘bb of us were hills from a thousand oF | her and her father brandishing his umbrella, | side the roots of most of them are bunched all | 2 .8\0 St her shawl in her month and tit- | !ot of fresh ground plowed and prepared, and thi eine: fuaad oat bo widhed 0 tenn 2 hd be | Ott there in the «pring of “W) we thought no bundred fect high, wooded from crest to | have regarded him as a dissolute adventurer—a | together and have not a good chance to| tren" "rhs oli man tarsed on bes fiercely and | in it I plant all my violets, taken nd Pg ye eens bene i hme. | more of having the roof rattled down over our iff t E 4 i in B 3 -4 ri opr a the sashes for the purpose. Then I simply take | * “say the daily prayer for the brotherhood | missed if he made away with me. | heads nights than Boston foiks think of wad- Of steam in the air, misshapen lumps | PéT#0® to be disregarded. 3 malities coe S*iwhar yo’ manners, gal? Ts dat, de way yo* | UP the fashos and cover the newly planted vio- | 0B Fisin ee ee ree Tey ee oo Laat natore Lent down to dinner I happened | ing around in aiush and much up to their @f lime, mist-like preadamite monsters, still AMERICAN VERSUS ENGLISH MANNERS. i “toll or tewtin’ & Zcm- | lets with them and the work is done. In Octo- | Sdmitted as probationers for six months, See eae aig Tinitow and I saw the son £0 | knees. This docen’t seem to have been much of turquome Bine, stretches of blue corn | Not #0 those delightfal people from New| , Mr- Smith hes fustretarned from an extended | mammy Varn you—come giggtin’ in de com-| 12> “as, begin to bloom snd continous all a etteagy Selmer tama bree mehaneatuentensy angler bond. His! ofa shake, yet it wasa bigger one than Cali- @ river that coiled on iteelf twenty ‘They were good enough to treat | ae ee ee ei Ce race ee the | De Lord knows I ain't doin’ nothin’, aia | trough the winter, so that Tean pick them | eer At the expiration of that year they may | stenlthy manner put me on my guard and I! fornia hae had. for more than, twenty Years, sage epics acer of strange colors and | pimp it sounds almost ineredible—asa human | ‘00K occasion to examine the trees on the | aye giri‘ewisting’ herself around on tho sent | CTE%Y day and send the fowers to market: “al |fenew, for. another, and, at the end of the | sok, good care iat my un mas wathin each |The last big “one wae the year’ thet the ‘rab Mige Si parine, staring white. ing. possibly respectable, probably not in | rete are at ee ant, 1 | ri des settin’ here ten'in’ to my own business; | 811 yoagtt Fa the Senter Maries See wees | for hve years or indefinitely adopt the plan of |I quickly swallowed u cup of coice and took a |7aurowd ‘was finished wcrose the: —~ =~ Mig pools as thee gh es bet eee | immediate need of financial kesistance. Papa | COMPare in any way with our own trees,” he | I wa'n't sayin’ a blessod word to nobody.” 0. They are made to multiply by dividnig the | Saaual renewal. ‘The brothers will contribute | few monthfals of bread’ and slipped what 1| ;&8t bie shake came as if California was abak- Five On one 'particslariy imneciat looking | tuiked pleamatly aad to the point ihe litte | ould 00 the eporter, cout, 1 noticed that in| wWvho you grinnia’ an gigelin’ at den?” | ois, oo-thet ‘astugle: Platt taken Up it the | 1 the expenses of the community in propor- | could into my pocket. ‘Then I ‘prepared. to ing bande wi ‘There have been mothing ‘mrech td pudaie sie farnod her back for s moment | maids strove taliaully: with the sceeat of hes | eH city Ivisited the authoritice were awaken-| asked Uncle Herman severelss “You'll bo | 702 ig will supply ascore or more Tell he | tion to their means, the amount of contribu: | leave. But little quivers ‘since tat time—sothin Bebind hers twenty-foot columa | birth and that of her reading. and mamma | Mf 4 the value of, trece on the streets, not | agwine on dat away some er deze odd-come- | PTiNe will mpply nscore oF more. 1 sell MY | tion dO ye arranged by the warden, and not in | ''* But you must see the blooded stock 1 Pit, little quivers Pgh oy rose hera twenty-foot columa | birth and th ther reading, and mam ‘ealy ac amiuneae 4a Gn beach of the thorough- | shorts an’ you'll break yo" puckerin’ string. | “0wers by sending them to the florists in Wash | tion fo be arranged, by the warden, and notin | | “But. y¢ FOU go, eid Moody “Trobetiy 1 | Rholesome, nothing w counting, nothing sod steam. Then she squealed and | smiled benignly in the background. Balance | ¢™y, 84 adluncts to the beanty of the thorongh- | shorts, an’ you'll brenk yo), ington or very often in New York. Prices are | 82 nade known to tho other members | have before you go,’ said Moody. “Probably I | to make inan stop. and think of his soul. that “she never thought it would ha’ | this with a story of a young English idiot I met —— ee es | entre pint ae the con-| bigher in New York, eo that it usually pays to .e community; thus rich members and theit | can trade one of the animals fora silver wat 4 the old man chewed his tobacco | mooning about inside his high collar, attended | *8°?**. ey can never we anything like ister,” said the gtrl, turning to the con- ill i live in every respect on | “But Iknew if Lever went into that barn T | {yi/ 70%, back in the old days earthquakes took oorer brethren 5 gon * a valet. He condescended to tell me thar | the variety to be found here, for the streets are | ductor. “I wish you'd please, sir, make dis col | €*}fe88 them on. ke ~~ a tee ft ‘ * There is always a market for flowers and | %erms of equality. In summer they will rise at | would never come out of it alive, eo Inde | jus, Pisce Of, misionaries, ‘fhey were youcan't be too careful who you talk to in | feo narrow and wide thoroughfares are, neces: | cred man lemme ‘lone. I ain't doin’ a blessed | there is nover any dificulty in. disposing of | & bee morning prayer at se matGand |some weak excuse and started down the road, Ss onying to anges ‘on “See bad grown all too close to « hot | these parts,” and stalked on fearing, I suppose, | tiete ure a number of varieties that ave adlapted ~Horet” exelatned the conductor. He spoke | tem. Any florist is glad to buy them if fuey pani ae va oy ead =" = serpy —y¥ soamwan fo god of fall x into | Lvcenene quag of mon ee chili sage Agen thy le ihn termed gtr | erst muna for hewn chat, hata | retrace weaaoir tbe hasta eet | ao eee, ceatamebecomtueton, He eke | rc gsad ern i ime, conan: htt | nom are willbe smn ad imme willbe | mat mas mrach enraged i my not falling to | fut 8 len eeu ay to bares ae # tree would doin « night- | Tara barbarian (I took occasion to tell imso), | ity'as it grows straight and tall without any | mas dodged. agein, and this ime ho dung be Hii Locos ty, Now York are delivered epciy | Chavwea frees 3 to © “Evensong” wil tabs |e otter toe tera. I hemmmioed to esen | en! Se eee one eats lean, for he comported himself after the manner of | 7 - a \. the next morning. I expressed some thither : x | the ground would go loose your feet; and left came the trumpetings of | the head hunters and hunted of Assem who aro | "ide, #P¥ecding branches. We are going to| right arm above his head, asf to defend bim- | originally on speculation and I got immediate | piace at 50 and supper at 6 after which comes | and went into s groves litte further down the | there was any glassarcund it would shiver and teat play. If the long-baired mam- | at perpetual feud one wita another. Fe nearer Seether ae em enve the aubry pitt’ the epportantty | TMS Preising their quality and asking for | Saree houre Of tego WO eS ed eae | road and 1 stood, where I could see what was | rail. Then the men would look white “round the science primers (he that was etched DORE-LIRE MUD. gros few Row growing nicely. ‘The | “Jes look’ at dat of man!” she cried. “I| m0 jue rioiets must be plcked always in | “wt -reation,” and one evening in the week will | Son Some out each armed. wich «ride Tucy | ee fi aeke ned oe a theta sasha | Sesmine uyalel pater eo mi | ne pap rT eds: | Peon ete a | tn perme”, ment" Soup aie, renin nrg toe | radi won not as onthe | nu analog “rn Saige new wonders. He p p after afew po ; ang : into town in the evening for shipment - | water in it, a ™ A moon-faced trooper of German extraction | at a clump of brushwood where an army was | tay Tlentinge Tinads Boia net eke Dat tomenhar gPenie, ing this siniled himself, | “sary greatest success is with sweet of iis Curious thet nothing is enid in the rules | further ‘down the sond. I'am certain they | ore quict to. the gume, if it eame om eb all Berar ;ras park, so carefully patrolled—came | drowning. Icould hear the sick gasps and | some of the magnificent silver birches in this | As the comtieter Sas giving him his cl Thich moss people do not ges’ along very well | Toast will ben matter for, we suppose, the dis- | Gown es pamcd: But made up my aed eo | ere wae e ttle yt BB tlorm us that as yet we bad not seen an¥ | thumps of the men going under, but when I | latter city and all through the country. This |a peculiar groaning toted a frees with in this latitude, I Ret the very finest | “tion of the warden whe will probs 4 | Sool te a in f going the wer Tin, | California, on one of those excursions heres the real geysers; thai they were all » mile or | broke through the brushwool the hosts had |is one of the most besutifal of tress. ‘The | motor wrdecroate theca possible send to begin with. Mrom. June. $0 | toss "5 owith hood | tended. ment in the, opposite direction’ pam. | ¥ ,J«2t™ ago, Dut it wasa poor third-rate, ol Bs Bian re Bogor FO there were only pools of ‘pink, black | fazous birch eances of the Indians sre made | "''-lea.™ seat teas emus, somewhat anx- | August I pick very nearly 4,000 sweet-pea blos- gg ring rg ac ne —— good-for-nothing little quiver—didu't even P ing the house in the woods so the women | . and white lime thick as turbid hokey.’ They | from its bark. But it is one of the few varieties ‘wharbonts is all dat seonin’? Hig | oms daily and they sell for 50 centsa hundred ng ie woods so the women | shake down any plaster. Folks didn't use to cf mourned for steam power wasted. the whitening stump of a middle- re if gE FEE, jit f {Et Hl: ‘TEE TROOPER's sTORT. shot up a pat of mud every minute or two, choking in the effort. It was an uncanny sight. America is a free country, but the citizens | ‘Then we clinked through sulphur in cubes and look down on the soldier. Thad to entertain | T¥stals. There wasa waterfall of boiling water, have none of him; so we loafed along together, mow across baif rotten pine logs sunk in swampy ground, anon over the ringing geyser formation, pounding through river sand @r brushivg knee deep through long grass. “and why did you enlist?” said 1° ‘The moon-faced one's face begun to work. I thought he would have « fit, but he told me a | Un¢ in food. 'd then a road across a level park hotly con- tested by the beavers. Every winter they build adam and flood the low-lying land; every sum- mer that dam is torn up by the government, and for half a mile you must plow axle deep in water, the willows brushing in to the buggy and little water ways branching off right and left. ‘The road is the main stream—just lixe the Bolan Jf you tara up a byway, there ia no more of you. And the beavers work the that cannot be transplanted to this climate. I ve tried three separate times to transplant it e and each time the attempt has been un- successful. But there are not many varieties that will not grow here, and today there is flourishing in this city over fifty varieties of trees, nearly all of them doing as well as if the were growing in their native climes. This the natural meeting place for the trees of the world it would seem and the magnolia of the south flourishes side by side with the linden of the north. ADVANTAGE OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. oun’ like de win’ blowin’ thoo a knot ho'e.” “It's the current,” said the conductor. “Yasser!” exclaimed Uncle Remus. “Dat what I‘lowed hit wuz. Hit blawlin’ down dar lik iteer calf lef’ outin de rain. She ain't [abr-2 ter bus’ loose en t’ar up nothin’, is she, 08: “Not right now, I reckon,” replied the con- oer tisfactory to the old was very unsatisfa 10 the old negro, particularly as the zooning and groaning sound continued to grow louder. He looked out of the window, first on ono side and then on the sb that they are really the most profitable of ty flowers. ‘They requiro but little care. A nt the seeds in the ing in open grow Sout four inches dee seis poy ‘et pints | dal the earth fs kept billed up around them. hen posts are stuck in along the rows with strings arranged 40 that the vines aro trained upon them. Last year I one-sixteenth of an acre set out with sweet and it brought in a clear 2200 from the of the blooms. “another flower I am very successful with is the single dablia, which is very much hand- somer than the double dahlia, you know. I would not sec me. { kept close to the road and when about half a mile from Mood I saw two trappers walking in my direc- tion. They looked like honest fellows and I confided my suspicions to them. The first comment one of the men made was: ‘Ialways believed that old wretch was on | murderer.’ As I was not in search of advent- ure I declined to return to Moody's house and in the trapper’s presence demand an ¢x- tion. ANI asked was their protection lor a mile or two. For an old silver watch they consented to accompany me, and we started. Idid not suspect Moody or his son plaster their houses. They boarded ‘em up or sealed ‘em with cloth and let it go at that bot it seems that vesterday there was a grand sbak- ing up, and plaster crumbled and fell. Good Lord!’ I wish I'd been there. Td give » good deal to see the mountains teeter and feel She ground go the way it used to in the spring ——+e- —__ Feminine Reasoning. Frow the Denver Republican's New York Letter. They are always in the right, aren't they, these women who blind their various wrong- - lant the bulbs, which I propagate myself, the “There are many interesting things about | ther, and then rose and seized the hand strap | fist'o¢ May, ar pilots’ Gaga to Gower story instead—such a nice tale of a naughty trees not generally known,” continued Mr. | S248eve ite jerk. Seeing that the car kept on, | wt Of May, ant th ‘Axigust keeping on until : 5 I em Be were within « mile of me, but when I sud: nesses into their own sweet, feminine selves? little girl who wrote pretty love letters to two | “88 into next year's walked out from a little clamp of trees a bullet | «why do you try your eyes,” said a “‘senaible” ; t 5 Uncle Remus gave th re violent tug, hizzing past me and lodged in the trank seis men at once. She was a simple village wife, Po haargpson go amapian Smith, “Now, hero are two magnolia tand-| nd then another and another, | frost, T manage to, keep them going for samme | Of Bt Pas and do pats Otabickory.“{ jumped back into thicket of | Woman to a fluttering litle furry and feathery but s wicked “family novelette” countess | Only “Larry” could have managed that ing side by side in the Botanical Gardens. Both| “Ef she's a runnin’ away,” he exclaimed, | t! ti elles cold ni te the Ps as of the pepe po 4 ‘and ‘Yield obedience ‘underbrush and was almost scared to death. 1 | creature, “with that spotted veil?” gouldn't have accomplished her ends better. | school feast tent on the lonely hillside. came from the same place originally, yet you | “des say de word en I'll t'ar up de flo’ but I'li | 48! Paar? nigh thei over the free | to the warden of the brotherhood in alll things ‘out my revolver, however, and prepared to | ‘But you don't wear any veil at all, do you?” She drove one man, nearly wild with the pretty | Need I say that he was an Irishman? His| will ‘notice that ume tive one is green and | git out'n here.” frosty spell. aftor hick thete is ‘denally'a eres | lawful, so help me God.” Sctend myself. Tlsy there about fre minutos | “Not very often.” © Sethe prea Segre pr Sy supplies were at their lowest ebb. A seven- | healthy. the other looks faded and sick. The | , Seeing the old man’s predicament, the con-| fon cf duit warm weather, 20 that frejuentiy | _AFe monasteries or brotherhoods practicable | Suddenly there was another loud report not | “And your boots have thick soles and low end came west to forget the trickery. Pee prmmaeciny bs the back hovel an| first tree can boast of an ocean trip, havin Autor alled the bell and the ear stopped. my dabfing are blooming Doautifully up'te the | ®™0ng us today? Some signsof the times scem | far from me. ‘The shot was immediately fol-| heels?” ‘Moonface was that man. nouneed that the beer was following. the beef, | Visited France, where it spent some time, and | “Dat what make I say what I does,” ex- | MY dahlias are blooming P to favor this reaction. The writings of John | lowed by another and then I heard one of the| "Yes, but—" OoBLIX BATH TURS. Pegg pete te a | i | was then sent back here. ‘It seems that foreign | claimed Uncle Remus, with some show of indig-|Nd,0f November 9 s0 | Ruskin, perhaps the most influential voice of | trappers, who bad taken up positions near_me| “You don't carry any muff, I suppose?” We rounded and limped over a low spur of | glamour of his voluble apes ore we laet | travel did it good. The other came. directly | bation, aa he sbnitied toward the door. “I'm | yy. SY, %0 make d ope blowing another be, | the day, is one long trampet blast against those | as soon as the first shot was fired, say: ‘Ithink | “No, I couldn't walk with mg arms in any Bill and came out upon @ field of aching | leacended, and the tent with the sade tgertla | from South Carolina and, while it is alive, it is | Swine ier tell you all good-bye. You kin set dar My violeteare flowering from thelast ofSep- | WHO see in railways, factories, and free trade | they are done for.’ such cramped position; but how do—" sion aunel ; ia Nae oa eee eats | not nearly so much so as its brother.” en listen at de interruptions gwine on in de in- | Sins, MY rinietearefowering trom thelastof Sep- | the consummation of all that is beautiful and | \ “iy trapper friends called me from my bid- | "And in summer ‘Y@p don't use a parasol?” —w ge sheets, twisted into | i — palace, (Poa or geoor licaci "ot | .The parking commission think a great deal | truls er dish yer kyar, but I'm gwine, 1 am. I qnithcgh Mh pation Gan Supomat with | 800d. We find, moreover, that our most suc- | ing ace, and lying behind a fallen tree were | “Parasols are nuisances; but who told——" Heats, riven with sents and diamonds and | of Delmonioo ond we the abashed reel Water | of the in oak and. they would like to see | done foun’ oit long ergo dat no ‘spectable nig- Gablins in the fall and violete again antil spring, | cessfal, la y are aa closely | the bodies of Moody and his son. ‘The old man | “And ‘ou have a pocket where you can get Srory dinection™ ‘Tha wre than half a mile im | frat discovered E bad’ paid 8 skillgage fr | more of, them growing in Washington, but for | fer ain't got no business gwine whar whito | ‘*blias i penetra thas aay, Seay: at: linked together by ers and strict | was shot through the temple when he was look: | at it, and you don't your purse in your every direction. The first mound that I en- -t! me om no etior | various reasons they do not make a good street | folks feard to resk dar muels. I wish you iy way of growing ipline as any order of the old church. The | ing over the log for me, and the so1 hand, and you wouldn't use face for Seemeeet, hetnand to. 9, qublin. who, was | Benes best, Meseies ond bom, beten:the other | Dare celse tered oak ways afe-| mighty woll!” Jot. Cmaxpuen Hannis. | “lowers doce not make necessary Siuy large in | poetry of Wordsworth, 00, is day by day more anything, and you don't wear « yellow garter in bis tub. rd him kick, pull a | band J 4 “ ot a shoulde: and you aren't afraid of - joe suffalo?” vorite tree with Thomas Jefferson and many of cmt pordlbeds ofa and he perpetually retire- nor a r cape, and you aren't ore and Pal ned ars aah; crack is | actor we, and for me, alone, would: he bees | te Oaks now growing in. the mall sprung from How to Suppress Trampery. Sato usn un toon tae ot Ma Teen ment and urged mento find happiness “far | his . Both mouse, and youcan indorse a check, and— eiee ae cancel door with a towel; then | Tone it, Everybody clae felt that tan. Gaoa | acorns brought here from Virginia. Fermis- | Philip Koster inthe Ohicaro Evening Poet * | hinve to keep anyway for other purposes. ‘There | from the crowd.” Then our men of | reached them. We then returned to the house, | “But jou never saw me until yesterday — ei vaan eee, cod ee en ee, | task go wits Laxey! Tocanaty £00 the ecivHlene of Penny cae | _, A Possible remedy for the tramp nuisance | is» great deal in the proper packing of flowers | light and leading have told us thet our charity | but finding it empty, Se Ne ee ee ee oe oes oh pacer sight til another goblin arrived. “I was watch- | , “AB now you'll all goan’ wash, your pocket- | reemiry for the privilege of planting a num-| might, I believe, be obtained by copying the | for market. For example, violets must be | must be organized wig Em] lao ae Sees Mee pine Played with ings solitary spring well within the line of handkerchiefs in that beautiful” hot “spring tment asa ort of taemoria to | German method of treatment. In America I/ pisced in bunches in pasteboard boxes, with | Shepcor nol money slone, buetime and stought, | der the building, digging « grare “my grave. | ow cue anew the woods, catching at a pine branch even, | Found the corner.” said he. eaety Dee se monn find the lorable—I use the word de- | W8xed paper folded loosely around them. They | 4aily q * = Savage jas Frightened. 1] Y 4 it financier, who has no monument here | 11 same depl use the many tendencies of the unite to make | place. That old wretch and his son had killed | prom the London Daily News. Ree racer aas of onesihe elds and not more | aoc every. day int TO Ce eae bat ian fis | in Washington. ‘Mr: Windoun, hse the request | plorable in relation to the ultimately beneficial | "™™t,20t be ang tcty aero t ners pee £0, 2° | Dractical and scoeptabie tke beviral of brother: | Every stranger who ind visited thes pert ef the Prince Biernarck lately, im epeaking on Rast stood up a plume of spun glam, inceniensre | nothing” And be waved us large hand under advisement and if the requisite pormis-| results—methods obtain as in England. .In| my own flowergrowing enterprise se only ina church which seems ready to bor- | country for years. There was no ond of ex- superb, against the sky. pret amar the commission will plant the | either country idleness receives from the char- | begun thus far; some day I hope to become a | POW from Rome some of the splendor of it arts, "as Bo vanse of fatigme on ial, He goes off every sixty-five minutes to the | ‘listance in the air. and dale r plays for five minutes and sends up a| *Yeball! I could have clutched the far column of water 150 feet high. By the time | ™0WY peaks by putting out my hand. ‘have looked at all the othe Never was stich maddening air. werving of charity and a soo F geysers he will) Wily we should have washed pocket handker- | Co™mence in earnest and the planting of young | \¥°"°, ‘only hope of lite is ‘charity. Those Lae Gr de leche oawe wondered at the B. | chiefs Larry y alone knows. Tt appeared to be @ jetentcehangtvac ville Seeger ph ki ate not clase as recall uragern idle- ¥ th ie bi Gores sort of religious rit commission e | in the numer- | ness. fer to army of , Bie ob tes Tarte (oak ak nay Bes | "Tn gliste valley evxkung Stik gayly painted | ous subdivisions that have sprang up about the | well aware of the fect that the poor A complain’ commonly made ageieet oar | not decreasing, says the Ladier’ Homo Soursal. likes turban), aud at many, many other gey- | TOCKS ran a stream of velvet brown and pink city in the last fow years, but sa no apy afford them shelter and food to pass fashionable girls is that they use slang border- | A girl needs to know how to spell and puncta- iis eiacaceliaae of an American | 8 85 quite recovered. Then, however, sers, hot holes and springs. Some of them | Water. It was hot—hotter than tue hand could | tion accom to plant the work | ters in, and without obliging | wrod ptlon 9 ing on actual profanity. A maiden with brown | ate a letter, besides being able to correct one Expericace wailed edi | the open downs, while he put the tent to rig iy on citement when the nows of the ghastly finds in Aiiae sinies toe, and before | left the coun- to oe itable institutions @ positive encouragement. | millionaire by selling violets and sweet pease. | rs and much of rh BT mee ‘the THE SPRING WORK. This I have concluded not simply from obser- | At all events there is money in the business, | tested by ailapted’ ba hehe a Biel cecal shapar| Pagan pom orton ror alent areeaeed | oy rey oaepama le alae d correction mdi fee of no inst course | go ’ spring of the parking will | thore are subjects de RLS SESS. 35 ‘The Demand for Stenographers. Feminine Profanity. ‘The demand for good, careful and accurate From the New York Sun. stenographers and typewriters is z i! i Hi ul | panied the power ing w and the execution was determined Fabled, some hissed. some went off spasmod- | Dine and it colored the boulders in ite course. | will be confined to the city proper. About | Such men are seldom known to reform. ‘They | eyes and a roay mouth crept close to. bashfal | that is wrong grammatically. She must be por- Miner in Mexico. a Pacha, who was « friend of Dr. ‘There was the maiden from New Hampshire, | 2,000 young trees will be planted during the | become instead more and more confirmed ; Hkin's, had instructed him most on Co Reeammdbmmmimteminied COLE ay ap errrmrny | merely pan Be ke nto | po #5 | young man ata reception, and said: sessed of that rare and priceless q From the Chicago Tribane. jelkin's sccurately papa, mamma, the ring the giauiess to swear and spit and | Soman who chewed gum and all the reat of | part sycamores ‘This. ts the ‘hardiost tree a “If you'll never let on, I'll tell something.” | common sense. She must be observing and she | “‘No, sir; I have no use for Mexico,” said | “Pout the state of affairs in Uj I i the was the rt of King Mtesa and had revealed thrash it, We went over to Old Faithful, | tem gravely bending overa washboard and | growing in this climate and it lives between 200 | however, the situation bas been etal ‘The young man blushed and promised never | should have an average amount of intelligence. | Miner B.N. Drazal. “It was ten years ago sn important one ge , ies who, by reason of his faithfulness, has benches |%ap- Mysterious virtues layin that queer | und 300 It is besides this one of the | changing, until now such a being as a tramp is | to break the confidence reposed in him. No prodigy is reqt when I purchesed a strip of land near Sonora, | Mtosa's powder store was hidden. Dr. Felkin to him, whence you may” comfortabiy | stream. Tt turned the linen beat and least tronblowotne of shade freee, The | one ofthe great rarities ofthe empire. Tu 1882 | we, i cannot | Mexico, forty miles from the mouth of the St. | remembered this at the right moment and es a ny | five : va distinetivel there was established called Wil- ts Pedro miles from Cananara. resort threatened Killed oe alle pmengl phe ee FY Then we lay on the grassand laughed with sued te kuous et MenrAthencan seis tk helmsburg.e labor colony.” And so successful | *"Y¢hing goes very wrong with me I swear. Boies waren hile is 00, for che in almost | « Semi erune be would bring down o tach of light — ofa ware in scave. heer bling of being alive. This have I known | the fact that Socrates taught under ite branches | was it that others in different parts of the| The young man attempted to observe that | It 1s hart to Say ‘Ayoung woman, for in- |, 1he and was good mining property, and I ii, Dowder store. Mises replied ‘Then came the preliminary gouts, then a roar | 0¢¢ in Jupan, once on the banks of the Colum- | at Athens. country were estal and have proved | swearing, in oung lady, was naughty, Sones, will t $10 or $12 © week where a | KH°W if it were worked right I could make a | «Teli me where it is.” Whereupon Dr. end rush and that glittering column of | Di, what time the salmon came in and “Cali- —————— lessings to everybody except the viciously in- but he made a failure of it,and hiscompanion | young’ man of the same caliber will | 00d many thousand dollars. I had $3,000| whispered in his ear: “It is concealed under diamonds rose, quiv ‘moment and stood | fFuia” howled, and once again in the Yellow- A Wonderfal Transformation. digent. For them the jails are good enough. | went on talking, Fecelve from | 915 "to, €30.. Perhaps: there | when Tatarted to work, and with part of tis | Four harem.” Sicas turued pale and allowed still for a minute. Then it broke and the rest | Stone by the light of the eyes of the maiden | From the St. Louls Republic. At these labor ‘to which all candidates | “ (, is an indefinable among em- mining implements, &e. and his to live. The “light- ‘was sconfased snarl of water not thirty feet | frm New Hampshire. our little pools lay at | yr ag a that in the | OF iimates of trampiom are sent, the benef. ‘More girls swear than you think. I just that they cannot exact so much from a powder, Se. | ning ‘maker's increased when next hight All the young ladies not more’ than | MY elbow, one was of black water tepid), one ‘on record in medical literature ciaries are com; to work. For know any quantity of them that are positively | P’ fons can from @ man. A man will | © *ighteen months I worked alone at the | day's flash of lightning to strike near twenty—in the tourist band remarked that it °lear water (cold), one clear water (hot), one | Yes 1581 a poor old man residing in Tarentum, | they are email sum, none when get provoked. My chum | he often ‘todos ‘deal of miscel- | ™ine, drilled s tunnel 600 feet long through | the harem. . weg “elegant,” and betook themselves to | fed water (boiling). My newly washed Land- | near Naples, was the subject of a marvelous | which, however, they receive ‘until the | ifignon is really terrible sometimes. Tvoldher | Davee awed ‘With shorthand | hard rock, and finally struck what I was look- Writing Weir ares in the Bottom of shallow | Hetckicf covered them all and we two marveled change when at the age of nearly ninety years. cost, of ett, i | 1 *ogas the other day that I would have to stop going | and typewriting, which would never be im-| ing for—an areenica ledge of silver. I had A Whistling Well. ye conics Mi chin posed of and now and waft kin | Stari Det Wis god and In ply. Aid| with her cho din refrain rom mrtg bd | Poged en wemAa a nn mas Thantagving and | _ Great Valley, Caternagee conaty, - ege that “Hattie,” “Sadie,” "Mamie," “Nophic™ ‘ : ss bad tho 1 4 clean. |The amount of money | "0 cp $00 | room for those who will take the trouble to bitefineem. | WAP Anais, basen inten and soforth have taken out their haicpine and |, /‘ousht of all that I had’ not seen-the | strong and plump; the wrinkles recei the beneficiaries after the deduc- | OF bursts button of her but the CX | properly equip themselves for the work. ‘The asthe “whistling well.” Itison the farm of scrawled in the face of Old Faithfol. | £oFost of petrified trees with amethyst crystals | irom bis face and the white hairs bi | tion is fo 1s, of course; not large. But itis | Pressed herself most trigh Set See eee ate for the needs of the av- carpe Col. Wesley Flint and wes dug by the colonel’s saan anefibadeiad im their black hearts; the great Yellowstone | hed his completion beens fhonkene botany Apa goa pe en ery ery et Sue star woh Rt theta ain mee erage gira grand in exces of thas ald for Ok pork in 10 | fathér forty-five years ago, to the depth of ne ae dace seg ans phil tae |S i Sf a er pameg | toeoay eeh masesoton ab [tye egg Set apo not ea oo Ai3) appeased _evariny bepamrmanndeercabegtere and most of all of that mysterious hoodoo | oue hundredth year, ieupporting eee ticle Meats ag fhe point off my hum ‘nail today, asd when | Where the Watch Mace Got Its come.” | “Scee tine afer o cioong curses ef ctr ens Terandan Tb wars veltering hot day aise | pefeors ep sak GN te heen tee et wae <= tng, fanned again Inlo's fame and therefor TGC jut et out goad” sa | 2S ee Rete 3 ny bngow; [Dal ten | noticed rushing in and ‘out of the wall anda we stood somewhat higher level of | clk so that the scared hunter finds in Death | pom ine Pree riche ee a er cmp De exo en oa an teed overt Een hee > i Peak thorities of the are constantly in re- | Managed to ask. bored in it, was fitted over it. this bole Bias seg FER ies pice a ara: | Gulch pled cactanes of the dead, whom no | Ts bc eeatactel wall down te Del Nocte, | uo? ot ppliatlons or lp sad he mest wield ‘Ob, Gov sna Uubett on lacks and watches iasee of tho rele was fastened: winch chanted it fame Demrees Soars trans Simenered tani heed noises, the bérd and beast and devil socks, ee Sow of gyuians i working admirably and what is more sated Shea, fortes ihe might get's it rightly an. would be IV, soon found to be « reli cate mete, the roed and flung themselves actons the coum. | l'animoatt va w body of land has wens chosen beat . i tprioe pedaling he hewpe. hie rt of ehe retogn road Yankeo, Jim and Diana | °OO',04 stan Lule men, but thie Ne mioest | end, feria y's warning hrc ot te whine os : ‘acon a kin went pig fashion and his horve cow fashion, | the train patwed an iustant botors their deor, | water. It is effervescent, very palatable. and | P&T hen, the tlorm pemed and clear westher I was free of that camp in tive minutes—free to | and at Livi whom should Isee again | extremely healthful. Nor is this all. The force = ‘with the y have the | bat Tom the driver. Son cts tae from the depths oe ee end wes eecipped and punch the horse mowingly | | “I've dove with the Yellowstone and castonal lump of native allver or « gold nugget. | Pom {ela the story by lis changed tone. ‘The Whious fm the ribs. One of the men had been in the | to go back east somewhere,” said he. “Your ‘The frogal Stemer bes ploced 9, seok of wire | | Melle Stealf bas long boon worn out, coll fend be told me how cows. that understand of the pr distance ‘currents of air. ty 2 stron of Sete, hee wedi Sap

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