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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C5) SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1891-SIXTEEN PAGES. ON THE SWITCHBACK, Siri sericea sewer ett (THEATRICAL GOSSIP. (SSeraresteses sees | A BIT OF ROMANCE. DESIGNS POR THE COINS. | Patterns Decided Upon by the Director of e actress down, and the rest of red, and said that she must get to her dress- rq up to the mines by m who and scampered up the moun- room. She looked from one face to another, rode ‘lown with the loaded train on a car pro-| tain side. By this time we reached the finally her eyes settled upon the stage the Mint. — TER merlin : ‘ “ S ea ided for th ial ym modatior A the -, wh . The ve x € a WILVER CHANGE OF NEW DPSIGN WILL Coasting for Miles Down a Mountain | railroat ‘wos the cinta coinnoaek ina stig | Homestretch, & portion of the road three miles | am, 5 Difference Between the Lady | ware tll broedshoutdercd anteai How an Indian Girl Became the Wife £5 cose gnglsta the potknt of eae poe * in use for quite a number of years, but was eo ot on a Railway Car. finally abandoned for the better facilities| Patterns for the quarters, « fifty-cent pieces, as they to be bean practi- accepted by the Treasury Department handsome young fellow, and the slight nervous Actress and the Actress Lady, | smile that” hovered over his face’ when the Rich Coffee Plan’ and | Setress looked upon him indieated that be wos ofa ad ter. an admirer of hers. She itted her gaze to BEHIND THE FOOTLIGHTS. | poten %thelooked at him, and presently she “I presume you are very strong and athletic, afforded by steam. After its discontinuance 7 for the purpose of ea wee Setzed “7 into its present use i iten IN THE LEHIGH VALLEY. | tional trick on the opposite ride of the mone tain, thereby making a complete circuit of the mountain. THE SEQUEL OF A STORY. terday medallions represeuting the f ror are you not?” she said sweetly. * . . ‘The Region Where Anthracite Coal Was Dis-| It was « day early in June that we found our- ome of the Fecaltarities of Stage Life—Fisle |" think 0," replied Une riage manager. The Man Who Seemed Least Interested Tarns a Se wei covered—Pieturesque Combinations of Steep | *¢l¥es climbing a marvelously steep and wind- De Wolf's Fatlure and Blanch Walsh's Suc- | , ‘I wish-—" went on the actress, and then| Outto Bethe Mere of the Donenement The Plaster of parix and each tweive i = . = sax” | ing street in Mauch Chunk on our way to the Highs cal aa che hesitated. diameter. being caste fr was fountains, Narrow Gorges and Swift-Run-| depot of the switchback railroad, The ascent coee— ry Dressing | “I could carry you,” whispered the young | S*prise of the Narrator and One of the fore he gave us in detail his produced by the engraving atthe Phila ning Rivers—Miles of Kolling Mills. was not accomplished without the exercise of a Roome—Fainting in Public Places. man, blushing. Listeners at the Result. Teaching the country. He | del; " large degree of unwonted labor and the lees of “Well,” rejoined the actress, also blushing, spoke of his wife, to whom he had been married | st ee considerable breath, and aswe came puff, “I must get to. my. dressing room-s0, ——__. Dut ashort time, and we inquired whether ha | _T'ttission toexamine them was only ivem ‘Witten for The Reeaies Stax: and panting to the top of the street we coul ‘Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. think—yes, I think I'll let you.” Correspondence of The Eveying Star. had made another trip to the «tates or whether | °° Condition thet descript Shateror OT THE LEAST INTERESTING PEAT. | “tne? uterine how the Mauch Chunkers New Yous, Oct. 9, 1001. | Sra"ae? unger bl not hesitate. He Sux Juax nm. Nonrs (Garrrows), | #he had been so brave as tocome ont alone. | should be given in print of the designs. All Gre of = visit to Mauch Chunk is the ride | chmbing hills. Most of ‘their atreeta are as LIE DE WOLF HAS MADE THE WEEK'S | worg g child and proceeded up toottsin Nrcanagva, September 15, 1891. book iin oe Tee bah een | Ot canbe ond thet they through the Lehigh valley, with ite incongruous | steep and rugged as when they were nothing flurry in New York theatricals. She has Every one stared in wonder, muttered various | RYVENING AFTER EVENING THE SMOK- | native, though Sot ct he, weeee acta ake HR | are very bea been for years or ever since the advent of Mrs. | remarks and laughed aloud at the strange ing room of the steamship Aguan had been | is the most beautiful girl Tever saw in my life, | te obverse Potter on the professional stage the leading | spectacle. When the third floor was reached | crowded, and on our fifth dar out from New | besides being the best. She was but a poor in- | i* 8 novel amateur actress in that self-assertive and often | [)0,*ige manager put down = Sn eee | York we seemed to have exhausted every sub- | dian girl when I first saw her, who work ridiculous clique of society, the four hundred. ‘once more on hand te wecines ta: | Jeet of conversation thet could attrnet interest. peotoceg genni Poy mg = ang ap The De Wolfs were almost painfully modish, | service, but this time the actress lad other | Most of the passengers bound for Nicaragua | fie te nature's own child,” ‘he anid’ but, as often happens in our imitation aristoc-| tights on and she managed the journey alone. | were greatly interested in that country and |ing, as we thought, sether ridicule racy, they were not rich. Therefore, when the | Now there isa great deal of gossip about the | were attentive toany remarks concerning it. | bis enthusiasm, “as guileless as head of the family died, Elsie resolved to go on | *ctfess and the young stage manager. ‘The fact | the regular stage. Some of her swell friends | is, they dine together every night and so there | N= Hendricks, who had lived in the tropics for | ®ild flower and as as si provided the money to maintain her in Paris 7 ie rome azn in belgie |s0me ary aly reed an icone wich | lg cenareapnng th, ey } one episode of the staircase drew them closer to- | €xcited interest among all of us, perhaps from ; e South Bethlehem where | ®™mMmer street cars to be seen in this city, THE HOMESTRETCR. for a year, where she might get dramatic train- | gether than they would have got in the line | the graphic manner in which it was told, as| visit se we could make, Tite we gladly ace - fame gliding around the corner of a neighbor- | in length and as straight asan arrow. It lay | ing from the best experts. of conventional events. reverse, which, like : more than mountain paths traversed by the ne ee ay ek pres | as aad WE Gatinals, ontastiecaan institutions of civilization with the pristine | streets run along the mountain ties te Slories of nature. Beginning with the small | tiers, enabling the small boys of one street ¢ity of Easton, at which point the Lehigh river |to drop stones from their back fences empties into the Delaware, the traveler finds ae = frome Shes = * i at the - Bineelt pending threngh © cvantry ix_ which | (a.Jod our iishets in advance: {4 eon formally every town, village and habitation is marked | with a printed inflexible rule, and took our by the smoke of furnaces and the rumble and | chances of having a pleasant and safe journey oar of machinery. For a distance of nearly | and receiving the worth of our dollars Be- two miles he is passing the famous rolling milla | fore long an open car, resembling one of the and ordnance work! though not of the upper class, and she | others and a cordance wi viting us both to his hacienda for as long vane glean cited well as the facts of the occurrence. cepted and joined him on the next morning on | be pes ealps has aps Fraction pare pyiey along stopped in front of the platform through the heart of, the woods. forming ‘| ‘Well, ahe has made her professional debut at 4 GooD FAINTER. Seopa sep is ed Bsaar vec enc beg ——— tore few dayr’ ‘outing. Icouid not | on so large a scale tiiat it was y navy are : x . magnificent vista, through whic! car ss magi oer - A wonder at his enthusiasm entering bis " Bear the thump of the greatest of all with a velocity that caused. the wind to whistle | tHe heroine of Sardou’s “Thermidor,” and her | | Just at the most impressive moment of & | yeare ago.” he began, “when leaw © beestifal sis teaen ae weaen hansen te steam hammers in the world, as, with its weight of 150 tons, it fotges the immense shields for the protection of Uncle Sam’s war vessels. A few miles beyond are the rolling mills at Allentown, from which city may be the exquisite tineness newl; bom Pocahontas herself could . yearns and shriek and bring tears to the eyes and sent | failure is so complete and decisive that her | #eTious play, which was having w first repre- | Indian girl standing on the deck of the steamer | ner Emde home, for Pocabont type of Indian | fF the coins the trees whirling past in dizzy rapidity. career as a ralaried actress may be set down as | “entation at a fashionable theater. a young | with a face so forlorn and hopeless that she at- | womanhood than wes the ‘Her ‘Lhelend ‘hat | quantity of ¢ ee nas ine car slowed up, and ere, we hed beginning and ending with her presenten- | man ot striking beauty of countenance and | t-ass04 my attention. Turning to the capteia | acted as her tater ws Exgliah sed be epoke bis time to regain our breath and rolease the hold ~ = P elegance of dress fainted away in one of the | Tacted Ms * in thie rect of thao mig | S660 With @uomey. Who hed bess apt in on our hats we fougd ourselves at the depot | S*8ement. As many of the four hundred as | orchestra chairs and created a great commotion | I sid: ‘Thave seldom in this part of the world wax with » ceria all que jon, melung them i | : learning to read and write English, he told us, | m thoroaghly by Sabecerorry ben dprbentbiag oe and the car ready to once more make its cir- | have come back to town from Lenox, which ii | among the people surrounding her. Her com. | seen so sad a face as that. sosd Sear hanagunas eaahan Gagan et aaa ieee siting in eee uciena dae ee ee cuitous journey of eighteen miles over the | the place of their annual residence in Septem- | panion, a big stout woman of midille age, | “‘An’ maybe if you were ansln jan gatan’| The house had been furnished in exquisite | rial a harder con» color renders Sve terther up the river. while beyond are pect C.H. | ber und October, go to the theater where. she | caught her in her arms and, turning toa gen: | hada walked nigh’ s thousand mite ue maent style, most unusual for an hacienda, as the | it easier for the see What ae is pro- | seomglenart nado nae Gueeecen ————-+e0______ is acting and applaud her with generous sym- | tlenmn sitting in the row behind her, asked if Four feller an’ foun’ him married, you wouldn't | owners usually live in the cities, only visiting | ducing. Next, out the mixture into guillewe succession shops. mille ‘and furnaces THE GREAT METHODIST CONFERENCE. | Bethy, but, truth to tell, her performance | he would aid her in getting her daughter out of | feel just jolly yourself,” was the retort. the estate during the coffee-picking season, the Cold water » I. knensed at ena os a ee ane aaa ma see pocze alia loesn't give the faintest or re indica-| the theater. The gentleman, who was alone, | “fhe answer and an abundance of time on | expensive furnishings having been imported like dough a were mingled ant nals with Gociment,_incement rumble of Purposes of the Gathering—The Men Who | tion of inborn or acquired facility as fasetly, offered his services, and, leaning | my hands made me determined to know the | from the states. There wes a wellelocked | ina bomey he drew ona ‘ 4 a “4 mal ‘y ir. Hendricks. **There is seld seen a for ooks al and within it bail a disk of the thickns In the midst of all this noisy and humdram When the late pope summoned the mem-| as we have Iately had in New York theatricals, | for him, half lifted and half dragged. er out | 0 erect, Spee co modestly proud ands | Indian wife edapeinengs segmecianar eta) |< —s industry the romantic Lehigh river monmelers orable ecumenical council in Rome it was for a | and to the fiasco of the FaIest ,indylike and | to the ‘isle, where, with the assistance of | countenance so noble in expression as then be- | A surprise was 1m waitneg for un, for by On this cuted on a large senle a pany Se spies definite purpose. What is the definite purpose | Wéll-intentioned Miss De Wolf is the more pro- | the ushers, he carried her with very little | fore me, We were so near the rapide of Castilio | by a little girl baby was brought in and we | relief model of the fa ators into - Some < Se — | of the ecumenical Methodist conference? It ie | BOURCed by contrast. trouble quickly out of the theater. After | that I could haye no further word with the Proceeded to please its parents by praising it. | The work was dc Peo Booms Siasiag oh bids and cock ont the not to declare any dogma or to adopt any DIFFERENT IN THE DRAWING ROOM. Moment the audience rettled itself into place | captain. More slowly the steamer neared the | We asked what name hal been gives the new. | boxwood, but it is eunlight pdm 5 the shadows of great forests be e again, and the play, which had been procced- | oid town of a hundred houses and huts, work- | comer. and wi : ; policy of administration, nor is it either for Riarinag heer iahigar ceria er mg in an Uncertain way,once more commanded | ing its way pho pte seething neon oy | 5h Gos sanene ae ae ome ee “: consolidation or confederation. It is simply to re, rel y attention. the dangerous rocks that showed themselves | seemed odd that a boy's name should follow it, discuss questions which are of common in- | °*P¢Tt, is that the good breeding and educated | “-That'girl has got more nerve than any one | here and there above the ru ing waters. The | and we inquired how it happened that such was ! terest to all Methodists as Christians, to | Mtellectuality of Miss De Wolf prove of no ap- | in New York,” said man sitting with a friend | old Spanish fort came into fall view as we mother seemed confused, but pokey Aryersgar ye mies tian, 10 preciable value in her venture. Ever since | in one of the back rows. He was asked to ex- | rounded a bend in the river and reminiscences plained that it was the name of st the unity of Methodism, to en- | childhood she has been a lady in a social circle | plain what he meant by this remark. “Why, | of the place were exchanged. forit washere that | one of the mcther's playmates when she w: Joy a personal social communion and to | which, although subjected to irreverent jest | she works that fainting act every six months. and wooded islets, and now glittering like a id lake beneath the radiance of a summer's ‘sun, it flows babbling and purling, winding in ont among the hillsand mountains which here rise precipitately from its edge in great walls of rocks and overshadow its sparkling Waters and there slopeaway inan irregular suc- better than an in- at his to be held. Ir heating a Meni’ Sa! (Gel ae a sake pasdragmes ple cor a ey ‘ad Teun tic naan Kg Serco Neleonthe famous Lord Nelson—lost a battle pap ng I given him this as pamceneteres ‘wma: tna n raw closer the o mominational 01 aricature, still embodies @ large | Yo | er OU when attacking the fort, garrisoned by a scant reason for wish for that particular om Cie instane eer ertcnea Wane Ge cakes meen cs fellowship. In other words, it is of the same | *mount of real American gentility. Your cor- | Well, he’s the victim. Dumber of native soldicrs, commanded, so the | mame —— __ When the original Seek autem: Gateseast duesees acm’ Nokes oa TOILE Tele of ewrrennace. general character as the Pan-Presbyterian | T@#pondent has hud more than one occasion to| This was all rery mysterious. The speaker | story runs, by the aged mother of the com-| When Hendricks and I met alone after that | i this way an electroty faerie a en merging into the deep| After waiting a sufficient time to allow the | CoUncil, which is designed to brin together in | Observe her in a grand drawing room, where | was asked to get down to clear statemen: mandante, who had been killed early in the | his first question was whether I remembered | metal. The plaster images shown by ¢ eernlean of distanc e they loom up like mighty | passengers to take their seats and work them. | CORference all the churches of Spa pe etree otal or ger don sonte feu cont euagacheret tt cee HOW TRE SCHEME 18 WORKED. bo a on. i ——— of ~ ar = had told Myles ay hy we | rector of the mint were merely reproductions - 4 i i a Sa prea: a . no ersion being that it was the | were fellow voyagers and in which the young | of such electrotypes Prom the ctectrateres Rerriers egninat the horizon. Creeping 19 | ssives up into a proper degree of expectancy a | ia" Late al Cee terial system, and 08 | oers!” Novertnclecs, om the there abe is min, | ‘The old woman,” sald he, “is the girl's | Commandante’s young daughter that defeated | southerner was ef greet mated os ey phn ge nae poe leer Barrow way along the river side is the ol s solemn individual with dirty hands turned the | met recently in London and in which was rep. | {ally awkward, as mechanical in movement asa | MAnager or property mother, as you might call | the great Nelson. “Well,” he said, “this is the heroine of that | process. A machine « it with ioteteely Norm se ay! Gagramnagpee pecree anon | Wheel which regulated the brakes and the car | resented the Congregationalam of the woah, | jointed doll and suggesting in no way thatshe | her, She has a dozen different ways of at- MOTHER AND DAUGHTER. story, im the conclusion of which our friend | more accuracy than human hands conli. ‘The the slow, mournful note of the boatman's horn, | Moved slowly forward on the beginning of one | The movement toward an expression of Chris-| ¥#® lady accustomed to suavity, smoothness | tracting attention to the girl ‘The beauty | “The brown, time-colored masonry of the | showed such an interest. The uame of the | contrivance ts on the sume prt Pasa “pan signalling the lazy lock keeper, is wafted over | of the most novel rides to be had in any part of | tian unity, which was begun whom the ern: | 24 What we regard as aristocratic airs. trips sometimes when she steps from © horse | tort a rare and picture Jic of the Span. | {low who — 80 unworthy of her conf- | tograph” for drawing. While a blunt point i= (he water in postical suggestivencss of the | the world. The sole motive power is gravity, | gelical alliance was organized, and which is| 4 FOOTLIGRT QUEEN FROM THE SIXTH WARD. | car and spr: er ankle. Whenever she does | ee se rnay | dence was Roberto, for whom her child is now| geided by the hand over evers onbee and Primitive daytehen the eoeal afforded the | atd the inetant. the brakes were relensed the | Sunnifested in alweet grery city “or town of | It happens that at another theater we have | it there is sure to be @ fine-looking man close ish conquerers in Central America, vanished | named. 2 E. Kj sinnosity “of the medailion, another point Gnly means of transportation. car moved forward of its own accord down a-| considerable size in the country in Young | the rather re lendent revival of “Amy Rob- | *t hand. and the property mother turns and | from my vision when I heard # subdued sob $69 ———— tipped with a diamond and rapidly revolving — deep, curving grade until it reached the bot-| Men's Christian Associations, has in Presby- ” i Sopts" amt | asks him if he will kindly assist her daughter | almost at my side. Looking around I found CAUGHT ON A STEAMS! maws away the surface of a steel disk . Y i . y- dramatization of Scott's f , : be king fo be ¥ tom of the mountain and arrived at the foot of | terian, Congregational and Methodist alliances | ®t” ® dramatization famous novel, | toa hansom. Once the girl pretended to be zi the Indian girl who had attracted my atten- Mount Pisgah. The possibility of riding up | taken a denominational form, and it is not un- | in which Queen Elizabeth is a character. | cisely the ‘size of the coin that is to be. The shot while dining at a fashionable restaurant, | tion weeping on the arms of an old and feeble | AX English Eloping Couple Who Were Bound | mechanism i» vo arranged the diamond this precipitous incline was at first not only | likely that the example will be followed by the | Blanch Walsh is the actress to whom the role | and another time she screamed on the street | woman who had step} aboard the steamer | for America. | point grinds out ona sinall scale an exnet re- somewhat appalling, »but incomprehensible. | Baptists. This movement is a signal illustra- | Of this famous biped assigned. She repre- | aud gasped out that her heart was stifling her j#s it touched the wharf. ‘Nina mia, nina! An exciting scene was witnessed Thursday at | Production of the medallion. | Whatever The plane seemed to be about as steep | tion of the tendency in the last quarter of a|%3ts the grand airs and impressive deport- | and she was dying. The mother was there on | mia’ (my child, my child), I heard the’ elder | , board the White Star Line | %T*6 in the latter bec as it was pomible for it to be century toward a coming together of the va-| Ment of feminine majesty, without touch of | both occasions and the —bewutiful girl | utter feebly, nnd teyned tolewre the ton PES premarin pie F ne | the diminish without being actually perpendicular, and | rious divisions of evangelical Protestention. exaggerative caricature, but in @ way which | was assisted to a carriage b; | steamer Teutoni the means of gai not be by grav ® good-| There are some things in this world that are which left Liverpool on } 6 Hee summit could surely | It has required nearly » year to complete ar- | might easily convince an observer that she was | looking stranger, whose services were in- | gucred ‘even to the imerrerene ae is surely | Wednesday for New York. When the Teutonic cequcerdsenslenge Presently, however, in | rangements for the conference. This work hus | Recessarily a born and bred lady. The fact is | vited by the old - rs Of course, this little copy in steel is in relief, ; cat. She fainted to- | heartless who is not touched by the sorrows of | dropped anchor at Queenstown in order to take . “ 4 obedience to a signal from below, the engines | been conduc.ed by an executive committee di- | that Mies Walsh is a daughter of one of our low- | night, and the good-looking man behind her is | the weak and poor. The bent "orm of the old | mail and oi on board a gentleman of | lik® the medallion—in fact,» cameo. The die at the top were set ir motion, and an instant | vided into two sectious—the eastern eection | down politicians, known xs “Fatty Walsh,” a | probably driving home with her now in a cab. Indian mother, clothed in rags, was supported | C1eri, eR Aes s, | must be an intaglio. T the cameo, later we were being drawn slowly upward by | representing the churches of Great Britain, | keeper of tough saloons and disreputable gamb- | Jt is Possible to catch some choice game by | by the younger and strouger ‘as they sobbed | ‘leFical appearance was seen on thecompany’s which is of hard metal, is laid upon a piece eee Eiko Sat iron bands, resembling | Europe and Australia, and the western section | ing houses in the sixth ward, which includes | such methods as that. Beauty in. distress, you | together. I now noticed that they blocked | tender asshe approached the steamship. He the two are squeezed to leather belting. which ran over small pulleys | consisting of representatives of the Methodist | the once infamous Five Points, Chatham Square | know. and the eminently respectable mother | . ae in the center of the track. Had there been no | branches in America. The program and the |#2d the very worst portion of the Bowery. Pefeleecticel pecially the narrow passageway between the railings | seemed to be in a state of considerable excite- and the t qi racted with excitement. A gentleman | of the stairs and the smokestack and I with- ; ic, ask en apa packs to the seats in the car the incline would | rules for the government of the conference | “Fatty” has been fora long.long time one ofour | feels bound to see the dibled pair. eafely | drow te the Serdar encene of say acusl, arom | aa . emudngrttsainp carton “= rid jem meting eee tase Cece many times uflicient to ‘havo slid | were first drafted, and then passed back and | tYPicaltough Kast Sidecitizens His daughter | home, and as he does #0 he observes how won. | whith thee ened ree! escape. So I re- haber Shae, ferries ene leer ania frag a dayton dey each of us from his seat, and even as it was the | forth across the Atlantic between the two sec- ‘beers Jrith no possible asso- | dertully lovely the daughter is. He accepts | mained quietly endeavoring to pay no atten. | *Tiption he furnished to everybody, right and Positions we were obliged to assume were any- | tions, receiving at every transit alterations and people, nor with any | the invitation to go ii o1 y pressed perfectly in It only remains pering and the die H all ready for use. Lach “blank” of silver as 4,0 The apartmenta into | tion to the couple, yet unable to keep from | left, with the result that he was soon placed in | #* ica abbas tho taiehoa came ae thing but comfortable. For a distance of 2,322 | amendments until a final agreement was | {#cilities of becoming “a lady” in the re-| which he is ushered aro lusarigan The girl | hearing every ecu@ll that came from their di. | Communication with a young couple, We] Do ceasbiieden te ans tee fect. or almost half a mile, we were obliged to | reached. Working under this difficulty, and | #tricted and conventional sense of the term. Of | has recovered from her fainting spell, and is | rection. seemed dreadfully frightened and ashamed | Si yn fie usted! neg retind ogo sueen cuusx. suffer the mortification of fecling that our | being enabled to compare views only by corre- | COUrse, she received ir education, and she | immensely interesting in her weak, ‘clinging | "In quaint Indian Spanish the girl was telling | When confronted by him. No sooner did be | Git'fhr the obverse of the coin who ton the At Manch Chunk the traveler is readily able | feet were higher tha our heads, in addition spontience, it is not, strange that nearly a year | May havehad nosympathy or affiliation with her | condition. What o lovely little houschold it is. | her mother her vorroe, aie ee spoke in an | catch — of the young Indy than he seized | \.swvit” is the «lie for the reverse’ Tietwoen the = * iy to the foreboding that something might | has been required to adjust all differences of | tough neighbors; but the fact remains that to be sure, and what a goddess graces it. undertone, and so distinct that every word | ber viol ently by the arm, her from of mm receives in au instant to comprehend the aptness of the appellation, | give way and hurl us headlong to the| views and ‘to secure @ satisfactory result. | 18 # product of the worst ward in all NewYork. |'The chances are. that ‘that exceedingly could be heard. Lean only repeat the story in| ber companion, at whose head he hurled a may trepetede, wideds mason th ood ton “the Switzerland of America.” Behind him | bottom of this fearful hill. But the view that Among the men on this side of the water who | Nevertheless, she is able to depict the charac- | humane and respectable stranger will find the | ¢ general way, as I then gathered it and as1| bower of abuse, and then literally by force ype gee deg inagy ieod, s~ 3 1 fowers the steep, cone-shaped! hill, Bear moun- | met our gaze upon emerging from the engine | have given the most time and attention to this | tT of Queen Elizabeth without afiaw in its lady. seperate extremely delightful. Now, is he | afterward learned it from some native passen- | dtagged the young lady down the steamer's actually worth at present market sates for tain, about whose base tho reilroad winds its | honse at the summit far more than compen- | delicate class are Bishop Joun F. Hurst of | like impressivenese. There you have two sin-| rich? ‘Thet is seow found out. Of course he | gers on board who had been acquainted with ie and on board the tender. | silver. : tine length and whose dark image is dis-| sated us for the embarrassment and trepida- | Washington, the Rev. John W.Hamilton, D.D., | Sular_— illustratic of the fact that / culls again and again. The daughter likes to the young Indian girl, In her mountain home | ,, The clerical gentleman was the Rev. Bartley Mo as the ine ma now in tho hands ly reflected in the swe »>ing river, which at | tion experienced in climbing up. of East Boston, and the Rev. James M. King, | Stccess on wage ree aptrise | have Mim. You now see. I hope, the little |in Choutales she had grown up under the eare | Ellis of Wigan, Lancashire, near Preston, nd | of the director of the mint hive beon tally ap. thie point whirls and eddiesin turbulentrapids. | There are few places in the world where so | D. D., of this city. Bishop Huret has served | from nothi else than natural aptness, | game. But doesn't it just take cheek to carry | of her mother, seeing only the faces of those of | the young lady was bis daughter, Harriet Ellis, . nile ‘On the opposite side of the stream rises another | much of the truly sublime and picturesque is | as chairman to both the executi i and program | developed by purely theatrical training. Miss | out? ‘Think of breaking up « play and creating her native villane, She Lad nlealived the play Fidge of the mountains no less imposing than | so lavishly, wonderfully and magnificently dis- | committees, and will deliver the addrere of wel, DeWolt, an exponent of the best deportment of | such a scene in that style. Now, wouldn't a | jute of her chirione wen thay hed beentoos ite lofty neighbor. Its dense, somber forest ps of Mount Pisgah. | come to the delegates at Washington. Drs.Ham- | the “four hundred” in private life, might as ic Iooks | ‘y proved they will be at once returned to Phila- who had eloped with a young mau named Ar- ETO fe 7 thur Mottram. ‘The captaitof the eutome, | 20lPhia and reproduced in the shape of dies ved as from the sum: , § This will not require many weeks, and #0 it y woman that woud do that do anything? | stant companions. Growing older she became | Upon being made aware of the facts in the case ae one nos sihae a vaew dor anaes somone tte, bane ee gene tings | Seeming to lie directly below, ata distance of | ilton and King have together conducted the | Well have been a washerwoman for’all indica-| Heavens, but thie New York is a tough place” |& mush-soaght bensty of the msighbeckenh, | inter no objection to the removal of bis jy Ue pe acento | ee hye hcwmem struggling along its base and seeming to start | nearly a thousand feet, is the shining, spark- | correspondence with the British brethren, and | tion that she gives of good breeding, while 200 the cane hat of her mother being the point to | Rassonger. especially as the young lady did not | 5. circalsting throughout the co suddenly from the dark wall of the moun- | ling Lehigh river, twisting in and out among | have held the laboring oars. Much of the suc- | Miss Walsh, s daughter of the sixth ward's Kept His Seecrt to the Last. which many of the young men of the town | Geny, the truth of the allegations made, and change. One will 1 find more satu fain and to terminate as suddenly at | its dark hills like a silvery thread, while along | cess of the conference will be due to their ef. | “Fatty,” is a footlight queen. id only sob in reply to questions put to her. ‘ the foot of an adjacent hill. A nar-| its shores creep the long coal trains with their | forte . ; WRECKED BY HOT WEATHER. f Allen and Dorothy Jares, washanged at four |t@. ® close; but the favored Fow street, with the river on one side | toy-like ears. and occasionally may be heard| Among the more notable men elected to wrecl i i bs f spaprlie had =n fe end its hotel, stores, dwellings and church on the shrill whistle of a locomotive faintly echoing represent foreign constituencies are the Rev. sone aes terme an ~ . i tae faction in spending thes is to be derived from squa At Omaha, Neb., Ed. Neal, the murderer | guided their steps when the = drew | coul ful coms that ol erto | Mottram also landed, amid the jeers of Felicita | Passeugers. Jering silver pieces A * the present unlovely designs No models wild “ : minutes after noon yesterday. The murderer's | reserved her smiles im. Her es [lie peg ep the other agninst the almost perpendicular side | in the valley, and the dull, dreamy hum of the|T. B. Stephenson, D.D., president of the | “Upbine after @ storm with half the joy that | real name is unknown and on the scaffold. he daily life was filled with the _ little | Written for The Evening Star. piooe that iseshangneand. Se. Koth Lames Gretaight of Mench Check whose waccntot his | busy town ‘below. As far as the eye can | Wesleyan Methodist "conference of Great | the theatrical managers have felt during this | refused to disclose his identity, although he | 2¢Hy | life | was grinding corn, helping her Selfiama, to wait a while and find out how his iret effort Sretsight of Mauch Chank.whose queer-sound- | reach—to a distance of nearly sixty miles—| Britain, position of the highest honor, ear. | Week's cool weather after the Preceding two | confessed his crime. mother make tortillas or bringing water from ae takes with the p pame—derived from the language of the | meadows and hills,planes and mountain ridges, | rying with it special privileges and respon. | Weeks of unseasonable beat. ‘The published ES pe the brook near by. The exercise of the latter “When self the wavering balance holds RNIN I signifying Bear mountain—seems fully | with their farms and forests, their towns and | abilities; the lev. William “arthur, ‘sePos: | news of the collapses of many travdingccse | Alvin R Danton, the Penman, Dend. : zs erherrincoe mpegs senor T SILVER COINS. ng ont wilver coins from work, carrying water jars on the tad, as well but with an even greater title to | panies indicates the financial ruin caused by the women of “Me rarely right eajames.” The process of turn Alvin R. Dunton, prof f shi all other burdens, _ bat with an oven greater title to apie ergo a vin BR, Dunton, professor of penmanship, | as all other burdens, g in with its singular appearance. Ap- | streams, stretch gradual blending of | preside: iy overshadowing mountain has been | form an‘i shade u: the re: in they sink into the great . 1 | Central America that erect carriage which is —— the raw material ix a very interesting one. At fo its further possible growth and | mountains which loom up ir. fold upon fold in | scholarly acquirementa, in his lovely persoral | more adequate idea of the damage ws irperred | 124 At ea Gt ee a ak dhe |Muuin bethed sniomg. the poorer Chuesn ond How many can soself-deny the mint the metal arrives directly from the bas compelled it to be content with its one | the hazy distance and finally meet, mingle and | character, and in the spiritual enrichment | today by the superintendent of a telegraph | ine years. Mr. Danton was the author of the perbaps the cause of their rather ungraceful Self-preference, or self-restrict mines through the United State street and its few houses. In reality, however, | melt away in the soft azure of the sky. Thich his “-Tongae of Fire’ and other writings | office in the upper Broadway region of the the- | Dunton arstem of penmanship. He was cham- | step, often giving them a shambling pate. But ‘The self applause of selfish I Itis first dissolved ina big t this is but © small portion of the town, for | have given his numerous readers. He hes | strical business. pion of the world at middle age. and had few nestled between the folds of the mountain the as she was about entering womanhood her ‘That they remain self-derelict? acid, precipitated f the reputation of being a strong and earnest “I can’t, in business honor, give particulars,” | €quals with the pen even at an advanced age. n L in a pune state at | laymate had reached a man’s years, and, what looks like so much plaster of paris. Pressed Rajor portion of this unique place is hidden | preacher, He was invited to deliver the ser- | he said, “but I can tell you that never in all my | He has taught in nearly every state in the [fi i0ost unusual for one reared’ iu his locality, What one of us can self-arraign keke Shu vound ff my Be from the gaze of the outside world behind the | mon at the opening of the conference. It | telegraphic services have I known of the wires | Union. became restless for a change and took the tirst Self-reverence and self-esteem? |room to be melted in black lead crucibles high rid; which border the river's | will be @ disappointment to many to learn | having a greater number of frantic appeals for a opportunity to effect it. Once away he soon Or self-approval self-restrain among hot coals. Incidentally to the melting edge. ‘There in the very heart of | that though he is in this count: nd will | mouey than during the past ten days. It seems A Dead Whale at Ocean City. forgot the charms of his old playmate, though ‘Til! self-hood spurns a selfish dreamt 10 per cent of copper is mixed with at, such ‘the mountains lies a busy, thriving town, with attend the conference, he feels that hisstrength | *# though most of the traveling theatrical com-| A dead whale measuring seventy-five feet in | they had understood that some day they would being the proportion of that baser metal iu all _—, Roo and i ronarpe = Eoestrlg is hardly equal to the delivery of the discourse, Longe fied — — hee Abts length and fifteen feet across the tail has been | go up to the little Catholic church together, Self-seeking loves self-loving praise, | United States cou “ millionaire coal road ‘kings. Mauch Yee Arthur begin to lel the ‘weight 2¢ tems | season ad hed coukied on remonesatns base | ce up on the beach at Ocean Cis, Ma. Thin sack jucuah planners te ueseckang ioe aeees elcenfinad eieernpansid Thich tt comes out in the shapes of trate Chank, like ‘near towns in the Lehigh He was a member of the first ecumenical con- | ness at a time of the year when, generally, peo- | monstrous fish, which apparently has been | tgok much pleasure fresh flovers, dally yg er tee irene | Shoes betcha, pended past bey Ghonsemeene valley, owes its origin, prosperity and wealth ference, and charmed those who attended it by | ple are hungry for siage shows. Well, the hot | dend but a few ‘days, lice high and dry at low | Prourut tothe scrsive af wom nen’ own, crn promees teen describe . into thick strips, which to the discovery of anthracite coal in the vicin- the case with which he acted as interpreter for | Weather scorched them awfully. Every night | Water. and is the curiosity of the town and sur-| Colentinr. ‘The church» and the servies A sclf-suficient self-made view | are rolle and thinner unui they are tain. both Italian and French speakers. messages from companies on tour come in here | rounding country. It has been viewed by hun-! Sivavs brought to her mind the marriage serv. Of self-indulging arrogance, | of precisely the thickness of the coins required, THE ASCENT OF MT. JEFFERSON. Ore of = best known Englishmen in the en < a Paes Bee calling | dreds of people. ice, that mystery hich meant so, mach to the ‘Without self-knowledge will pursue Then the strips are pawed beneath punches, ee = ged for quick remittances of money. UTA Indian —meant a iy thin, Si ~ | which rapidly punch 4 of them disks that The car remained stationary for a few mo-| 7 Hhen’ Price: Hupues, the leone ot ey ciel nee insight inco the realities of Prices For Pennsylvania Tobacco. Ibove and: beycadl any ceremony, though te a destined to be picces of money. Fach punch ments in order that we might feast our eyes | known as the ‘“Forward Movement” in Lon- | theatricals as would astound the public. Why,| At Lancaster, Pa. tobacco buyers are in ceremony always Drought it vividly to her Self-righteousness with self is pleased, ents ont 100 dc es every minute upon this grand scene, the solemnity and sub- | don, and the editor of the London Methodist. | #0me of the most popular and ordinarily pros-| the field. in large numbers and numer-| mind. Her quaint hope was to have the church ‘And self-life is not self-eubdued; ‘The blanks thus made are washed and then limity of which were only marred by the gruff | The “Forward Movement” is described as an | Perous of the stage ventures which in cool | 3114 sales arc being made at from 20 to 30 cents, | bells ring from morning till night on that day, For self-exulting mind is ecized , | milled, the latter process simply giving to P energetic effort to establith Christian socialism | September would have earned profits have been with the bang of fireworks adding to the din. * every coin its raised edge. Next they are tones of a stout gentleman in the rear of the | CY init m | compelled to draw upon their proprietors, and even higher figures are being given for ex- ‘th, , With self-deceit—self-hurtiug food! anal ter baie Raye 3 Se ence ee maertoah, 0 expla | Sree theese peop Seles ek | ae oat bene eeaes elcome, | oPtualy fie crepe ESS ye eta Cee ee ates nec arenn Lanny Dome OU | ceccatn Gams oomtallg-ce Wall an eetlgine ie: | Mi prowptonss ease greet aioe her tr coo 2 cit ab ae caeeien Gavin Right self-respect will not eelf-wrong— ‘nae ay . various points of supposed interest. Serviees arehela in. halls, and fin von different with the majority. Sometimes as Army of the Tennessee Banquet. GOING TO HER RECREANT LOVER. But self-opinion may be blind; ‘rhe brakes being released we ret off on our ieoneet tie poet The saovemant hes many asa dozen telegrams are exchanged ina| It was worth facing cannon and bayonets to| “Put it was different with him whom she Self-sacrificing deeds prolong ‘ FIGHTY COINS A MINUTE. ele cok een gine CaO | ad thi fe dM, @: SUANoeatL Gussoee tae | MnGte Righl' between ihe Denker lets "ted sae |e ic participant Thursday might in the | was linking with these scenes and who was al- ‘The commendations of mankind. Finally, on coming out of the oven, they are Faster and faster sped the car. impelled by the | Hughes is in great demand asa preacher and | Manager away off somewhere on the road—the banquet closing the meeting of the Army of the | ways her chief thought after he left their stirred with scoops in a chemical bath, from rr e ker, aud will be heerd in Sensty ell one telegraphing, in manifest desperation, that 4 high ‘Whe: air, £1 it ckimaned tha foe of | cities besides Washington. ny BT ON | he can'tget a ‘thow ‘tothe next town ules | Tennetece at Chicago, | Gen. Grenville M- recivice and gave usa glimpes of ‘the valies | _ The Wesleyan conference in France chose ite | money is wired to him, and the other fighting | Dodge. the successor of Gen. Sherman an: Jar bel vrumbling through the woods | Président, M. Lellevre, D. D., as a delegate, | Off the necessity to the uttermost. Iu some it | president of the society; Gen. Nelson A. M nd ian = ae ea Eling ph oars ire is the most distinguished Wesleyan in | stances the all but stranded party telegraphs in | Gen. Walter Q. Gresham and others hardly less | But the young girl could never believe him —Svaven f. Borsa. ‘the foot of some rocky cliff, dashing irstaround | France. From Australia comes a large dele- | forlorn hope to friends not’ concerned i the | celebrated in military annals were conspicuous | other than abe was, and soit happened while ‘Weshington, D. C., October, iol ‘cues and ao ype aunien ts gation, including among its laymen no less @ | Venture at all, = asa tramp will grab at the | guests, while such notables as Henry Watter- wondering that he should never come back to quick and bewildering succession the views of | PeFseuage than. Chief Justice 8. J. Way of | lapel of an old acquaintance Self-government seaaii home. He had soon forgotten her, soon made grep rgenecemen which they are shoveled inte a record which he would have been heartily Patpeensinies sxapansaneniyear yay sawdust | cylinder fall of | ceiluloid p j ashamed of bad he been capable of shame. ‘Self-worshipers are never just | | ooking white and just Like so many poker chips jen. igns. The dies strike 7 Disa Ld ul prin g both sides a! id pour into | son, aoe Medill and James Whitcomb Reilly | her she heard that he was sick in San Juan, Probably Fatal Elevator Disaster. coins a minute, printing both sides at rn rf - the same time corrty gating the his ear the woeful tale of bad luck.” marked the importance of the occasion. Gen. | with no one to nurse him. Her first thought | An accident occurred at the Shelbyville, Ind., | St © “ 6 pa eeprom peep ge ogee re] eT mer rt Ld glare sURNTeAL on Tun FITeae? Horace Porter sponded to ntonst to tie mem: | was to go to him, but then her native instinct | catinee ear erates eT Tad | packinn whee ote y dispore of ome only be com wit- | English Weel . 4 ja: | FY fGrant. Gen. Noble, Seerctary of the Inte- | told her he should have come to her long ago. | —* = 4 = tyne dg Arcee gy ln ne nessed it whi 2 ‘anor Sag pera p ro (Ch dle One of our ablest and richest managers said: | °:3," discussed “The Rewards of Patriotism.” | Her mother would not allow the girl to leave | Will probably result in the death of three men. while they receive another, dropping ne com * i tes ‘gins into boxes beneath. a ; i og wi s§ performed with marvelous celerity ible existence of the hard coal, which ionow used | 501; 20s fee of another plane, thet cf Genk | it may bo said that thoes who ove, tint fercles | shows, ‘The weakest have succumbed, Tha| TiS Right Hon. Sir James Fergusson, con-| {ath roud toward San Ubalde, fo deep was the | the elevator to descend it gave way and fell | Firis whi thins wocbine of rechonuy the pieocs everywhere and with which we are all familiar, | Jefferson, the steepness of which is only | delegates in Washington will see the chief men |is bad for the wenkest, of course, but it meeyilits, bak pen slecied ta woctbaeesk Make ee Ripe pa gir ening metre) md Be mang ooh © Ge men and 8 | at the rate of $3,000 a minut was known to only afew mineralogists, {The | equaled by thatot Mount Pisga pilie extreme bap pate a creel PERE ea tat ores tots a bene las chester, England, by a voteof 4,058 to a vote of | basket she carried a little store of cheese and ribly crashed. Mr. Thayer iss brother of Mr. ee man hunter, David Ginter, who dwelt in the | visws incline tre were able te bance enjoy the | Odist church in spade (there are but few con-|clesr to good entertainments. ‘The yetly 8,908 for ©. P. Scott, the liberal candidate. octilies ad she ed exheente tas a food long Gates Tanger ot ee ne oe eek ees came ae nit re i gregations not em! within it) Dr. A. Car- | met us things, when emiarrassed by the |) aacehiane ma reac! 4 % yy orkto: ied from New =a Levmag-ethnen | opto | eosmiet ck can soanetueel chee Cesena ck at | woue ied Up maaalisned: Teeter i | cecieceaoaty ae receipts of this hot spell, : heketeaas sie es ee ae York ‘Thursday afternoon for Valparaiso, Bis rae at was the only habitation for muiles | brake wheel and volunteered information rela- | #0l¢ general superintendent of the church. He | have obtained the nocesairy additional capital | There's nothing more pure in heaven, assis omens ox Connectiont’s Gubernsteris! Dispate. | Chili. ‘The trip will probably occupy sround, and the light in its windows was his | tive to the height of the mountain, the length | 8*¥@ up the title of bishop when his church | without much dificulty. If the original back- | AN4 nothing on earth more mild, |” Paps yore age A At New Haven, Conn., Judge Thayer yester-| ¢o-+0-fve to fifty ix fitted for Kuiding star on his rotarn at night from hie | of the plane and the size of the engine required | tered into the compact which made all Meth- | ere bave weakened, shrewd men with money | Mote full ofthe light that is all dvine, vide reporting mifegy ty nec ade day assigned the quo warranto cases of Mor-| 4 4p, 7 fi iu Wearisome wanderings through tke forests. | to dray the car odist bodies in one, but he retains the | have stood ready to take their places. But the : tu tna kihey ‘where tro lake emptite tate tke | rl age, Bulkeley for « beating on Tesstay, Os- | bo Sts Island, which Com home one evening across the moun-| “After, reaching the summit the car moved | emential duties of the episcopate in bis present feed ata el Te cathe arr porpayp meme red Herd thire she stopped etlcSantivoenees | tober 38. Is ls andecetord bp the come sod | ease eae conan eh ine Come {aig his foot struck a large Diack stone, and on | forward eee ee eee a cain at | Tan! Geiisnah ‘sucak Sal “Weabbuaiina, tia | eiateal catia oee e ‘dropping | With the peace of God ou the dear, smooth brow, | starting for San Juan, she, secured her pasange | court that he will reserve the case at that time | It was learned yesterday afvernoun, that: toe Ly overed a number of a mile, when we top; a quaint min- And the love of Christin the eyes. to her destination daring three days floated the supreme court. Yorktown left with twenty-five men short. k stones lying meer the roots | ing town of Summit Hi proms hy ade § pore agers ohio pitssad poly Wren evel weoplt er apere Bina down stream, great bundles of rubber | = of : a ‘1 i i Core: will ben lace | ever before known thus early in a season.” ‘The sinless lips, halt l, it —_ mayen ony ee Kote with hm and several dagen erred | ante iataig Pie Dat Uae ae | ogee vieg of ike Clectve apbeoatet |" te cee seen sne Niu oath anata tha Sin Sonn she tepented here anthers bis tas FIFTY YEARS HENCE were recep neighboringsettlement, where they | ered coal just 100 years ago, ite chief feature of | American, Methodism. The entire boards of | ‘The dressing rooms in one of the principal ‘AYE She tans Spot enams oo wee to sine, a learning where he lived, end there she west ; <eESS were me tne Fone Col. Weiss, who | interest now is the burning coal mines, which | bishops of the Methodist Episcopal church and | geaters of the city are away up three long | ii te gold of the sunny hair. filled with anxiety. If he eared nothing for z ~— he zal them to the inspection of several | were accidentally set on fire in 1832 and have | the Methodist church south have ed © | o nttic one, smile and bless me! i iat least feigned politeness t¢ pretend ‘ia ists and scientists at Philadelphia, | been burning ever since, notwithstanding that delegates, though some of them Sights of stairs and the artists that play in that | ° Foreomehow=1 Know bet why— pri a aa and the result was that Ginter was offered a | thousands of dollars have been, spent in en- | Will doubtless not be able to attend. Feur of | house are loud in their denunciation of it on | I feel in my soul, when childrenemile, Rong tae. grat Slagper est shine ie large sum of money to point out the spot where | deavoring to put the fire out. The effects of | the five distinctively colored churehes are Epie- | this account. A comic opera company has| That aligels are passing by. guuia Gaenyihing tor bes the “stones had been found. ‘Thus was s | this sonttasoul heat nre-nctioesble foveetes cc | copal and Bishops are-aiy asasee Gane ae: | been there of late and the Girls have been in | + rect that the gates of heaven “'She began her return journey as soon poor, unknown, ignorant hunter the discoverer | the surface above the mines, the ground being | Kates. colored churches havesome strong | misery over the necessity of climbing those ‘Are neurer than I knew, possible, and at Castillo met her old. mother, Of what has since bezome of incalculable bene-| seared nad sed endl ths tec babad gnd notable men. Bishop D. A. Payne, now | stairs three or four times ofa night. At the | Thar the light and the hope of that sweeter world, ry followed her from her home in Chon- fit to mankind and civilization, the source of very |, is no mean scholar; Bisho) Tamer first performance of the company an incident | Like the dawn, are breaking through. tales oiny the greatest bardahipe enormous fortunes and a most essential factor | the surface and in’ some Ninstances rises | is @ and vigorous writer; Bishop Ar. occurred that created great excitement among ~_Envnet W. Suveruery, | (000 cy to dad her dasghtes ips in the im. the existence of great and vital indus-| above it to a thickness of thirty-five | Nett, Bishop Hood and Bishop Harris are dis- | the members of the company and made RR BAS Aa EE 5 “That is all there was to the story. the tries. But the finding of thie valuable | fect. Many odd and useful articles ure | tinguished for their administrative abilities ed eT oee, One of the jay! we eruaaisings plane club. Will you | s sign gist whem Lloptaighhot alee, mineral was not at’ once uetive | made from coal by the miners and are vold at a | 4nd Dr. J. C. Price has a wide reputation as an | ing singers in the troupe is a tall, béautifully | join 7 the lake. A few months liter I was out of the Of beneficial results, for when the atterupt | sunail store et, Gace al Whhntiee ata. | orator. made young woman, who aj fa the opera | ““Cheerfully! What pianist do you propose : ‘was made to use it for fuel it had the unhapny Men of various countries and different races | dressed in very startling and handsome tignts, | to club iret?*——-Puek ‘his point one ef. the Mstenaes 2 effect of putting the fire out. and thue it exes will help to give theeonference an ecungenical | The young lady is autocratic, im and, Friend—S0 you were one of the guests of pele) one at ie bes of the| '7% eiedone preemntpery Senos an 95 character. and the enterprise of the American | they say, slightly firtations. ‘On the frat night | the Skyscrape ‘Hotel when it burned down’ | smoking room to yawn, and | * imto the market. One man, who succeeded in prods will give ite 2 wider currency | of the piacosbe wore a fine pair of new silk | Wore any lives leat?” abe of tote ot kee ing s few tona of it in Philadelphia, was ar- than those of the conference in 1681 ob-| tights of the heaviest and firmest kind, When| Tra “Only one. He, poor fellow, lost intended to basse op commant, ponon senor al comers po tained by the aid of London journalism. he cance down frame baw pape hole oe et eet ee ent by Ge Eevee | Emagen, ant bed Daanane of ates and nearly all of it that had been brought down | homeward tri ji descending grade Byres rammed S = < 4 remarked that from the ‘mosmtaine in the Suticipation of ita of sat aina Geka he eee Ne Treaty, Betwoss Germany and Belgium, the nat not meant | nikt!air Rend sever co think of marrying pF pene ply being burned in stoves and furnaces ious tion ® public meeting yesterds; burgo- oa him. is himeelt.”” were torn place of wood was broken up and used for | Thistide was oven more delightfal than the | mecter bf Bruseele wid’ thet he woe soe in hesimply cannot | | Belle—“Yes; but, then that is such « small the bees or hevsine making sidewalks. Hestunately, Groagh the Qutcoming trip had been, and we dashed down be alpen py d in them.’ for the ac- | BAttet, Fou know.” — Boston difioulty, nee w, roper mountain at it (to _ 4 2 Ses earners | met ey ec meceate creas |, i mtn enwfomm Se ea before long and ts of it were then | fairl és change Loy Saga She Well, know everybody must have STORE WOREED oF Pps wo pope bam fod fe cane mp eda, even a couple of the river on large rafts or y viet intociened she gzclumed, looking «Re Tuffer is realy engaged to Miss Bond?” pened THE ORIGINAL SWITCHBACK. Soenerng st Fe TS “I should my s0. Love at first sight, I pre- | visiting Managua, the center of the coffee re- For the purpose of conveying the coal from | Utterly devoid of *""2No; not till second sight. _You see, the frst si Tite’ sequathtenze on beard the ; the mines to the river a railroad was bailt on | they shamble “off an nasove. time ho,eew her be dife't kuow ake was an | Aenarieke, my of that trip be rain for one o' them cheap machines Yo the mountain side for « distance of nine miles. | man at the brake became impatient and gave suggested that she have bor | heiress.""—Detroit Free Press. ‘come itself.”