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_ a! — . : it * + . - ~ £ Sry THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1891--SEIXTEEN PAGES, : sped on through the border village and were | his art. G— for two days bred our kodak | Written for The Evening Star. for bis femily. Congressman Haff of " armmehed, the front passenger car " T, “" N soon picking the tempting huckleberries grow- | with the cap on, and several interesting views N FIVE THOUSAND A YEAR, nsyivania has rented » mansion in the U was ty over, an’ the last car was W HEELING IN BOHEMIA ing fm an opening of Bohemian forest, | of this charscter are consequently lost’ to our * se neighborhood of the Obtneee onation. the rental N MBER TS LAST TRIP Browsed Set tas track, | bat the | two through which the zond thrended its way, up | collection. Instead of the crosses of large size | row Nations? Legislators Mdnage to Live ba poe per year, bor a mhdile care was jeet @: <a ~ Sd and down, bat generafly descending off the | or small size which throughout France; Swita- tw Coed Style, fanster hie annul salary to \dlord started. An’ Dill?” Poot Bill! Them words 0 b WASHINGTON CHEND CLES Sees . mountain range, which. forest-ciad, climbsinto | er'sad and Germany at intervals along the prrtrtnt without breaking bulk. pepcnsens Storrs | written £6r The Rveriin Star by Rodney Care, | bis was trite, he broaght ap in eternity i - po ~ - Washincton Bicyclists on Their Wai | the skies, one wouti suppose for the express | warmde cerved to remind the traveler of hit | wrerpred rife rew 10 mw ow! x secawe—rie | Of Cincinnati, who meceede nt Butterworth, WE MERE fartrso—sr Two Bore | 73< srt comruMon ar Imimod himernibie. | | every evemtug. Vietors aways welcome Purpose of formmga barrier between the two} God we find i Bohenria diminttive chapels, 2 1g. | Will occttpy the revidenice of " Dit aif that trip he seemed to know he wasn't | 910 F street derings on the Continent. at German nations. We wete now in| closed by an iron grating, before whieh the | MOS? PROMINENT MER HAVE THE MRAVEEWT BUE-| Boyne during the coming seaeou and will pay Mr otc Lae trate fo take ts fo Clitenan | pita’ So winkesmmer. The company taleed a | paonuew we. 6s (Reweey Pitts te. hemia and for Gust Hans wetead “hostinec,” | worshiper kneels. The interiors of these chap-| DESS—WHAaT LED To SILCOTY's DOWSFALL— | $5,000 rent per annum. | at alittle station not far from that great city. | purty intge sum for his wife an she's iivin' | —— & word new in onrexperience. The buildings | els are quite trstily decorated and the altar far-| THRIFT IN THE SENATE—NEX WHOFREL Easy. On reaching Wading to Congressman Vin- | There were several side tracks near the depot | Somfortable now with my wife au’ they gets | BF MUS MENKIETTA ¢ a? ~ . nishings axe kept in good order and neat and —— cont A. Taslor of Cleveland began figuring Up | and wpon one of euieihas ash Go tiles together. | ei oinefon, BG INTEREST IN AMERICANS. eclan. in} “CAS 4 CONGRESSMAN LIVE ON $5,000] Lis expenses. He ned just rented the Loring | ‘74 SBP" one am = . P 0 Gadige? Ob, well. aie, that's nothin’ mroned for The Evening Sar.) a The rain always ceases jast after we get in ® yoar?” mension on K stree! had signed « contract | "5 panting as though tired out from a company give me that while I was in ~ At ® Typical German Inn—Returned Home Under Uncle Sam's Protection—Ignorance of This Country—Reautiful Landscape— Pretty Vienna Women. Special Correspondence of The } vening Star. Vinxwa, Sept. 19, 1891. F AMERICANS ARE AS ALLY from 4 long ride through it. Wo were obliged to gotto Budweis one Saturday aftertioon to fi our depleted purses, as we had an ineuft- ‘cient supply of money for over-Sundny ex- penses elsewhere. The rain kept us close com- pany all the way and stopped only when we did. It reminded ns of otd times mi Ireland, a8 we epurred along at a snuil’s pace, the rain tering on our rubber capex and forming ittle lakes in the folds where these scant pro- fectior.« came out over the handle bar te cover There wit be in the Hones of Rrepteserite- tives. which will organize in two weeks, 161 new members, nearly orie-half the entire roll. They will have to learn, by practical expert ence, whether or not the gratitude of this countey toward ite public men is such as to Provide thom with » salaty corresponding to the position to which they have been elected. It is no rash prediction to say thet the majority ‘o this ho added the €4,000 in campaign expenses and the 91,200 it would cost hins per year for @ private secretary. | The totale for one vear just ate up his salary for his term of two mates that his hington will re- sult inn oes of $10,000 additional per year in —— THE VOLCANO IN THE long ran. My boy Frank having expressed & desire to inspect the grim iron monster I took him over to it, and the engincer, scemingly at- tracted by his Bright faceand inquiring glauce, invited him to come np into the eab. “And you, too, sir,” he said pleasantly to mé, in’ bring up the other yon: ’ Having about an honr to wait before the at rival of the train which was to bear us home | the howpife!, an’ they treated me han'some, toc for they prid all my expenses for doctoring give me besides. Going, sir?” ae T now madé a motion to leave, and, replying in the mative, I thanked him heartily (and «nb tially) for his entertaining story. The time being near at hand for the departure of our frain we returned! to the depot, and looking back Teaw that the engineer fad resumed hie pipe and wat comfortably setted in hie acenstomed seat. “Well,” said Frank, “he our armsard hands. HOSPITABLE WIEELSEN. - = Something About Fanisian Island That | ward, [ readily accepted the engineer s hospi- | certainty iv brave,” and thinking of the poss = - aia reli ee ee meee. Committed Suicide. tality and soon was seated opposite hie soiled Lilies of necident even on car thers jomrusy , pital place whore extravagance mage ome and how few engineers woald be likely ett Bude we iste At oleeeicte thes | 70s, but demands upon men in public life | Pymthe Kew rom Sum. gave such a pnt gametes sevasibnea ertas ai fo-exhibit euch courage ant Judgment ae did fo made the Auserinn portion Of car tout the | bsveincreared, expucially in the social aspect, to | 504 shaking up to the Island of Pantellaria last | and fingering to his hewrt's content the vart | {RC ‘Arrator of the story Thad just heard I have made the Austrian portiow of cur tour the | q point where the present salary iv regarded by _ j erinatrand fnted ener Sepdeglomt paneled 9 Tg nt. And just then most pleasant of all. With the assistance of week is still receiving considerable attention F ? ignorant of Europe as 9 great mass of Eu- ropeans are ignorant of the United States we ‘ought to be ashamed of ourselves Beginning with the French woman who had always un- derstood that Americans were similar to Afri- I our train came aloag and bore us safely to our cans in appearance, supplemented by the Ans- “ Budweie wheelmen we were enabled to obtain | ‘bem #8 inadequate. any Oe said Uist solet | from the Paris papers. Puntellaria lies at the agg meee i trian fraulein who said we were Americans A ROMEMIAN SHRINE. a peep into Franenberg castle, the country seat | is i their own hands; that they can vote them- | srsheast of Tonis, and the disturbance occur Paratha * a and yet white, the nnmberis legion who have | also presented changes in style of construction | of the Prince of Sahwarzonberg, sitaated on an | selves sich remuneration as they see fit, but : ident? red about a mile and a half from the west coast of the island. The sight was grand beyond de- » SONGS. METAMORIROskS x from Budwois. With th ae two facts | new to us, but some anggeations of which we | &Minence six 1 hace enchie entively 46 ve0en the faet ia that the fate of the old ie. nin Pavarin. The points of the gables | Prospect of tolerably liberal rewmrds the head | bers is still a haunting specter, and it rs An Energetic and Worldly Dance That that we spoke English, as wo said. yet were not | had seen in Bavaria. Te Totne O Heed oft Enter, while the bleorted ininntes were absent | bold Congressman who. shall’ first make the | ®ription. The went up oh, tell te abontit, plone," cried both Changed to a Chareh Hyun, Englishmen. These were sll persons of aver | and the new point adorned with x pitcacle | driving, hurried several other visitors, onr es | break for more pay for himself and his aswo- | and roared in an immense whirlpool of boiling “<a cok chia ae soqeemes) thdinn Males Mineth ‘Sens om aunt age intelligence apparently, and not igno-| or toweret: then agair » false fromt made the | Corts and ourselves throngh gsuch apurtments | ciates. water, from the center of which eame smoke “ ‘ 7 e. " their entreaties, he laid aside his pij rather Fauwases in the ordinary wemse. One Fronci-| outing of thewsbie appear x eompoand enrve. | Ws conecience would permit hin even tic WHERE THE RORDEN 18 HEAVIEST. and flames that rose far above the immense | an nncommon thing for story teller to doy f man. an innkeeper. insisted that we must be | With the anneal ee tae br Eapeane Coley ling Ween ot tho pe inceas, whore wme |. 1¢i@upon the men most prominent in the | clouds of steam. All this was aceompanied by | thought—and began i Englishmen, for he had heard a great deal of | T's niche furnished with an image the whole : legislative affairs of tho nation that the burden | what might be called mbmarino thunder of the | | “‘I teed tu rtin No. 7 then—it wax about ten | fongs which were composed in the ti ‘harles IT, whose music is in vogue : . s oat i yer | decent description originally. Henry Pur- English spoken. and he had noticed particn- | had « somewlint theatrical effect. ‘The “town falls the heaviest. Occupying positions where | londost and deepest kind, while the water be- | 7°" 880- ante de yah ENCan aeooens Lait dhe dae ot tom uh te b eth larly, im our conversation among ourselves, | pamp,” a fountain of simple character, having | there are many drafts upon their pockets, with | came black thé ashes of thé volcano. |i, okea shaft, nor had hot boxes, nor nuthin’ | brought forth many of th Put e even that our words and the accent—to use his | oniy some trifling ornamentation, rises at one social duties to fulfill that are expensive, none | Panteflaria trembled, ae woll it might, and its . t iy Of these. But since even Innguage—were precively the | same | 48 | side of a basir across which the water is con- eu. During | few lazy inbabitants were throwa into the | p.1'st kind 0 course, Ttook govl care of | Shakespeare at times descended to the level best. Me an’ Bill— Bill was the firermnn—was Of his age we need not too bitterly . intendent need | blame the musical genius (the of them come out anywhere near the lst Congres the, three men in the Homes| widest excitement of Kepresentatives who were the most conapic- int where the menon ap- ‘4 tous in the dircetion of ‘ite -affaire were | peared on to the coast of Sicily the bottom of | er” Proud of her, an’ the ety those of avowed Englishmen whom he had | ducted by a metal trough to a point where a heard. This to him was indisputable proof | platform at the foot of the basin enables even that our pretension was false. There is yet an- | the shortest locni Rebecea to fill her bucket. “ ' to compliment ne considerable about the nent | est that England ever produced) for try other Europeans f the Unit DRAWING THY FAMILY WATER SUPPLY. obliged to draw upon outside resources to | the fond poy meet and aes Merged are | way. in whieh we kep’ her. Well, we need to | earn an occasional shilling by turning out such — Ss apps - Wateh these Rebeccas as they flock in twos Speen Mesd’ sini, Makiney Eas Mae | below. tno te ae vicinity of this or tae wal “the Chicago an’ N—— accommeation. | wicked murienl cotroatiens, ome vt te hese would accept your statemen! : en! |. Maj. yand Mr. & ‘spot “ey é : tm Bese is the common language. When they have | and threes at eventide to procure the family ‘The magazine resciers were jaterested in the | the grent submarine volcano of Giulia’ appears | We'd Tan up to the city in the mornin’ an’ | early English Uallate wil. of times of per water supply. They release themselves from the etiptical buckets, which they earry on their backs, slung from their shoulders, by backing up to the ledge of the basin, where they rest their burdens while they deftly slip their arme from the straps, and ‘all without» pause in their conversation with the admiring Isaacs who have already joined them. Their gar- ments of cheap cotton prints are of all combi- 4 ieave t run’ at 5:90, jest afore the | tion. of b ocean aes articles from the pene of Messrs. Reed and | fom time to time, lifting ite cone far abovethe | Sanwa whith lel ase My home ae Be a | RT ha 0 ‘neve, undergone ee Ne oe Ee ee eles Be en ee I A ile won shen Sines eee cathe of lgemane on modern timen, eee ee en eae ent \ WE texto nT TC aE ie cen | Sth el Wen Tk gee wae Wet | poe meget On enlightenmentas to replenish the empty pocket | with terrible rumblings, witile the sea dances at rg Ag eng Cd ry tp pte books of the writers. The Speaker received « | ® furious rate. ith | Yith a short one, to let my wife know as bow | piace & D. 1255, and was charged pen the Sainy Cf $1,000 see axttmam, but ovett thle wee} | here is 6 fay sory tn constetion WM | To wes all right. Sometimes sheave Goww to | Seve ar dah a eee ae ome Ne ee ee ee eer eee ee eee ea eee ade Trice Ne, | tha dad aa Salli wits sos ter then sultan’ we l prose br tamans a ee ae torture, for White panes SUDWEMs RaTHAUs, £ Fal ns eas Porat hed Pe be easier Pen altars panna 4 vine at ued ing a — - stop in, an" see! an’ then a 8p to | a mythical crucifixion of the unfortunate lad. White to play and mate in three moves. aatio Pink skirts with bao waists, | Books and writing material Ix on the table in | two apticlon metted him 61,00; ‘al_that, his | fortes there, | Just then gl nee F Sis. ralee, bab tm thw treet aviee ec Teas Piecing ef Wal, Walt’ Cp | PROBLEW So. 45 CToumey Prottem Ne. 148 red aprons, brown Wacu elt hess Westen tale the | country woul tow upon in three . whieh sent up at honsed we'd go roun’ together an’ buy some-| the Bank,” which refers to the separation of | BY A. V. BOATRITE, Colmmbms, Ge. aprons, yellow handkerchiefs, purple handker- | Moments before left them. Notes taken on months for “seeing” quornins that have been | kilometers in circumference. When the sea | juin. pteonins moon 7 Lora Janie - “« < (Compose tor the Evening Stes. chiefs, making exch fair one. veritable rain- | "PO" woul be necosary to even Sf | invisible to previous Speakers. - In this enter- | became tolerably cool and calm thie istand was | "2 {0F teeerecsnene slongabout the anid-| tach “seme am agian ian ae pu af : “an fad Game bow. Many of the German peasant girls are | eet and walnut which” cogeel | Brive he saw @ dignified way of alti both | captured by the crew of a British pan-of-war. | aie of Febranry thet as we stopped at B— my | Shakespenre’s ““Uthello.” for there was vn [ane Black— 8 places. sine Reiie, Sons Saeey anette, FWY | eile ada callings. all. lnceataly. corrod |e on i paps si “ordain or eth They peated poe cthe fing apell which the | wite comes down to the stecion an’ says in the shape of a certain Lowric of Binckwoot, are not equal, in our estimation, to the © | by hand. the inlaid’ work on. floors, furniture | C2OUSh ahead to makes European trip, more gt , the sailors | \jonn* —- John's my “Christian n: ir. r ; - y hand: id’ work on. floors, nee cheered, oate ‘ my it secretary to Dongias, and in defanit of the fatal ees ae mae ee Saxon $e. | and door, the ri-h, heavy upholstering and bere Thre follges epee Neving: COM oc tue dune or ae otros ae Wriand be. | John, save sho, ‘I'm goin’ to the city this enanne aoe saves important a part it “is only custom, for ie the | Bangings. the great ancestral oil paintings, How >1Lts AND a'KINLEY ape nxvexnee. | 80 t0 shake, and it was soon discovered, that | 7 at Merma,!” canoe . Shakespearean tragedy this wicked man 2 ‘ all with an a C8, iG & pair of boots hb that thy BOHEMIAN HOUSE. dark-eyed German girl hesitates not to | *!! with an air only of quiet elegance, en fir. Mills tows the meats oad sents down inte the sea. Them | Lina o' glad ‘that we was’ goin to or Se ae oe ee without gaudiness or ai " . + i boats, and atcertained that you are from America the | xchange “gutea tag” with us, and even | Mithont sr pa ; : dle for the o fun together in the city. *Twa'n't no very ration followed, of which few wh ext scp isto dot2rmino thae fe i= from North | Folunteers fo. do ao, the Bohemian git! ge | “castle” i a castic only in name, but we think | hie salary. The tei ending togllation ot | esr aeeresine eta sere Dad renchied thats | cusnat day fur eight” eects, lousiwaye tor | Eetie soon soromres, 0 which few who America you come, and not from South acm ame Bes ‘spon Sie sabes kof the 48,000,000 ‘has ‘a right to be called a csetle. rebporidied the fri — legisiation on been brsdpecrababed em ght ovTbe Ree z= as makes a business of + a Martha Some of the odd transformations of songs are = “ Then comes the inevitable, | ladies, ma girl, the pride anc of | 3 a he 7 7 hat subject gave his written views an - didn’t mind the weather. ‘It was blowin’ “hat Taugage sto you speak in Ameries? | AUStria, must not be overlooked. Yer, she too | Dow’t your It is of modern co "uurrounied bys | alte. fie Became s magazine ‘contributor | Hans aaghed, but they never got shetrfortreme | hares” gi in'ts Mente Tack Natyt a pe Engiich fe ered ews re Tae oe Tile me nabedy with an air of piquancy | Drettily laid-ont’ garden and park. to which on | 804 received in the neighborhood of $1,000 for | om Pantellaria, while showed that some kind of @ storm | Missed You,” isouly a paraphrase of the femons these inquirers, too, Lave had a vague impres- | Which, while not amounting to boldness, gives | Rrettily laid-ont aya the public are. admitted | i# Work in this line. His public speeches also —+~—_—_<ee. was brewin’. Bill an’ me had won a prize | Seotcls song, “Jock o llazeldenn.” The | son that it was only Englishmen that spoke | to ser tnctsh that renders her all the more ir-| Without question. Woalt that we were | Brought him some yeturns, but there is 10 BABY WANTS A NAME. for havin’ the best - lookii more celobrated j English. Surely the; of any Engl vpie bnt the Eng: THE LITTLE BOHEMIANS Now an Feumstanee 0¢- | tanghed heartily at seeing two men | ears to them and they say, “Bat where did you | -o® = id dhet | Tiding on those ridiculous small wheels, and | Scepter lying by handy. john Anderson, My J is suspicionely like “When Jotimnie Comes March- ing Home Again,” a popular song of war times. But sometimes these resemblances to the Scotch Then we bought some toys an’ things for tne | music come about very innocently. ‘Thus a 1 ‘ Hie detabliokaaen? fatath profit column in his ledger as the rewult of his 4 fident fancies of a palace. All, indeed, that | Congressional services. ; And the People of Different Countries Have | little left, I took Murtha into a purty fine eatin us | was wanting was « throne room with crown and | _ Maj. Mckinley was no better off, in fact be Different Ways of Choosing It. house an’ treated her to « bang-wp dinner. was at the losing side of the table. ‘Tied Up | From the New York Morning Journal. few days afore, an’ it bein’ cash, an’ havin learn to speak Germai We expial i haa Glex pare with the tariff bill and the leadership of the re-| "4 iindoo baby is named when it is twelve | youngsters, an’ soon it was time to oll up No. steathepey changed into “Oft in the Stilly hat little knowledge we have acquired of Grer- | methinks that even yet wo hear their shrill} =ES Cir OF WUDWES publican sido of the House, he had practically 7 aa’ get her ready for the trip backs By tuts | nremn” 4 mn wat obtained in the public schools at | peals of laughter and shotite to ono another ae | i centered about the Kingplatz, « square apon | Po time to recoup the difference betwoon his|@4¥*oldand usoally by the mother. Some- | tte Gi ber rendy for righty thie Ce he ee Ry Se, moemns 0 tietant wil : : "down mighty thick, an’ | tive t . My God, to Thee,” thi le fronts face. and | salary and hie expenses. A colleague on the | times the father wishes for another name than | the wind was biowin’ that hard Sa you'd Chink making & foverite Lymn tons Seer’ couse where stands also the rathhaus, or city hall. | Wis and means committee, a man of wenith | that selected by the mother. In that case two | every wind bag in theheavens, liad bast loosean’ | to. wa ungodly and very — ener; The last makes no pretensions to great age, but | WHO was in Congress as pastime and who later | amps are placed over the two names, and the | wac « pourin: all ite contente on the city. It | danee, Sach ; home or u picked up in our travels | they follow at our heels through the village | which buildings with among an-speaking pé This is | streets. We never thougbt we looked so very generally sufficient and the conversation drifts | amusing, but perhaps we do, for G—— is tail White 6 prnces, ‘Whice to play and inate in eight moves. busin i i mouse r " it changes might — oc a P Hato other channel, rach topics ax the com| and long of limb, aud Tmuake up my deficiency | 2cumeantirels etn med aeeeaeent selected a rencnuination aforithad Deon ade, | same over which the lamp burns the brightest | Was @ mean-jookin’ afternoon, | aay Bill) through the unconscious r tention of atu By CLIFFORD HOWARD, Weshtaatee, Oe ne ee ote, Fes - drpbersincte # . leasing. We could not learn that there was thes Maj. ley was pressed. is the one given to the child. was the est = mat you ever | the mind, asonce happened to Mendelsohn (Composed for the Pvening Star.) railway systers and even the McKinley bill be- | of the little Bohemians of both sexes is that of | P’ Erin the bunt . He proffered him any sum that he might need. see. 1 kinder felt oncomfortable my- | while com; ‘ FF ete yor sey vem Pvening Star ) Fempenste mary ly with difficulty that | tending the flocks of geese, for the use of which | teal” in the building of it, as sometimes e fortable while composing “Elijah;” he had heard “Auld Black—1 piere. Hse ‘The major took the offer under convideration | In the Egyptian family the parents choose a | self, but cheered . happen Americans build city 3 up arter I got to work. At a we have been able ¢ the bill im the | all the villages “maiutain ponds—generally | WAhNOw “iu we Gmericaus build city halls | and gnally replied: name for their baby by lighting threo wax can- | littlo afore 5:30 I backed up t0 my train an’ wae | lar mclody ie nur ke original tne which went continental tongues. McKinley's name } within the village. Why so many geese? Eat | Sono with Budweis. He asked « Badweis “Well, Tom, I will take an advanes and give seems to have made as much trouble in| them? Yes, but not excessively. Occasionally you my note due ninety days after Congress dies; to each of these they give a name, one of — Joes ea pviendeed Bement emenorh with the words) and the melody clung to his . ¢ a mato i: re act. Europe as his bill. and we have h: xtricate | you see a flock the members of which look de- | (uaimeanes fo tell wi fraukly, but on the | aiourna. Iguess I can square myself “with | *B¢ three always belonging to some deified per- | © ca ara F eeae’ | amoty without is being aware of the fact. Robin Gray" sung to Leeves’ tune (this _popu- aaink” 6 ‘i fa banat ; repairin’ on the track. We went hammin’ | When, . “0, Res both frosa such as, “der Meckbecl” and other | eidedly scragay and ungentile. The feathers | pelter” heer in Dadwom the Domicher (ne | the world if Ponce get out of the House.” sonago. ‘Tho candio that burns the longest be- | Sivae’ the wind welpta’ oa, ear I wus tytn to | iMesh ie eee “borer of the terms almost equal elligibie. are missing from their breasts, and this tells the | picner. He said it was Pilsoner, bat that « | _1# Will not be hard to see that men of the | stows the name upon the baby. make ap time between stations; but the lisher. he used Leoves’ tune without im t NATURALIZED AMERICANS. HOE, Abe livesooce-feathet indnstrs in Bo- | great deal of Budweiser beer is suid for Dil- | °Mliber cited have to take much in glory instead | ‘The Mohammedans sometimes write desirable were long an’ the train was heavy loaded. Jt | lenst being conscions of plagiariem. When his A few people ask, “Are you native-born | Me%aia is an important one, and the flocks | 8r0t' ‘That's all. of cash for their public services. names on five slips of paper and these they | 48 snowin' now 40's you couldn't see more’n | attention was drawn to the “fact In ed the doer “ake sats a roads and every other available inch ee satviak on ee Sead i va admerm Pleco in the Koran, ‘The name upon the firat | fow foot ahead, except switch lights, an’ they | melody, but the carcfal observer will still ais- you ask?" “Ob, we have seen many who said rie maxexy vieswa arms, As we approached the immense military | The Senate, frequently designated as the | ‘lip drawn out is given to the chil "Welt, ir, Jeat a6 wo was goin’ coun’ a gentle | Gray” te cO: Reset thee Auld Movin e children of the Ainos, a people living a we was ° in “O, Rost in the Lord.” in northern Japan, do not receive their name | curve an’I was thinkin’ as how railroadin Many of the songs of the German students Bischoff-Teinitz, a town of some importance | Yer of the arms, near Schwarzenan, beyond | be compoted of members who alteroate their | iintil they are tivo years old. Iti the father | Ain't allus the pleaeautes: thing It the world, | have been stolen and reproduced in new gu. rman border, where we spent our | Budweix toward Vienna, an open two-horse | legislative duties with the plensing occupation | who then chooses the name by which the child | #n’ Bill was thinkin’ about somethin’, too, fur | on this side of the Atiuntic. “"Marylent 3 pe carriage appeared i the road coming toward | of cutting coupons from bonds, ean furnish | is afterward called. he was awful quiet. we heard «long whistle | Maryland,” for example, is note for note’ us at a good pace. The driver must have | examples equally eonspicnous. When Senator | The Chinese give their boy babies a name in | #bout four behind us, as as I contd | old German sons “0 Tannebaum,” a song in thought we were of the ordinary clay, for he | Ingalls was the presiding officer of that body | addition to their surnames. and they nrust call | Judge, allowin’ for the wind, sh was blowin’ | praise of fidelity. The simple iB 80 motioned with his whip for us ta remove our- id. receiving the $7,000 whieh goes with the | themselves by these names until they are | 90 “8 to carry any soun’ to us from that direo- | often heard in kindergarten or Sunday school selves from the enrth while he passed. His | porition his house and library were burned in | twenty years old. At that age the father gives | tion. ‘i S 7 8 “0, Come, Come Away,” ix one of the most horses were behaving all right and we simply | Kansas. To recover the loss he andertook | his son a new name, says the Cinciunati Com-| ‘There.’ rays Bitl: ‘there's the express, | popular of student songs, but in Germany it rep- } ‘ 3 took our side of the road, and as Jehu couldn't | literary work for the magazines, and hax since | mercial-Gaselle. which must have left on time. The block lights resents the merits of atiery purch called “*Cram- States army and the other ten years in the | through on former oecasions. eisithes of ten | ¥ery Well deliberately ‘run into wa he was | been more or less of w contributor. Senator | "The Chinose care so little for theie girl babies | haw blowed dow she's comin’ right onto | bambull.” Our national music it full of meta~ United States navy since the war, we found the | tion was proreunded ae ‘Are = id < obliged to turn outa little. His face was pur- | Edmunds has constantly practiced before the | that they do not Fre them a baby name. but | 0%. Iknowed somethin’ was goin’ to happen; | morphoses akin to those mentioned above, Rilipe sem ana . proprietors of good hotels, at least in part the | married Jo reepond tratl vfully in the | bie and red with rage at our “insolence," and | Supreme Court of the United States, and dur- | just call them Number One, Number ‘Iwo, | I've felt it all day. , pz, | Yankee Doodle” being old English, “The Star PROBLEM No. 47 (Tourney Problem No. 14 ar Rot mem logy ogame mloerypr| for pemnetbicbaor tar or Yow liroedl segeirey | ing his senatorini career tnade money far in ex- | Number Three, according te their birth. Feet anette ebistle blowed agin, an’ this | Spangled Banner” a jovial drinking song and!» \ poyana(X® Whatever mar be the hopes of ithe host of | “Are —— payed a ly with: | 4s we skipped by close to his wheels and ma cess of that received from the governmen of in China | time it seemed alittle nevrer. “America” the English national anthem. Even | BY 4. V. BOATRIT ataralized American citizens abroad every | drew to the security of ou private npartment | into the carriags to see what he had there that | Since leaving the House Senator Carlisle we that if you ask a Chincso father | _ “It ain't no tery pleasant feelin’ to be in | the hymnology is not exempt from these im fone knows tat it not usaal for persons to |lest we be carried before the nearest officer ucla fuss about. It couid | found thie a eonvenient way to overcomo defi- who hus both a boy anid s girl how wany chil- | ingine haulin’ x heavs accommodation train an’ | portune fesetublancer, for “Son of ‘Me Seal ta Cenagiay ar bar abone paby-melrncfmpint| Gomeeremmeep lng mam renee aaa ‘othing less than a general, possi- | ciencies, and Senator Stewart, having lost his | dren he hae he will always reply: “Only oue | kow that right behitid, comin’ along at forty- | not very far from Mozart's “Se Vuol Ballare. turn to their native land to live under the pro- | poses and sworn in willy-nilly. nes in military attire. We | millions, reinforces his sulary by his law prac- | child.” five mile an hour, is « express that can't know | and many other instances of metamorphoscs tection of their American citizenship. It is not iutieiet 06 dalenicxe er's wagon ahead, going in | tice. German parents sometimes change the namo | You're in front ‘cause the wind is blowin’ the | might be cited. but enough has been nened te medemtend to be ts geliey of our spite ot | ras vu ce an asasiaees carve with ba tha | oo aoe eotio UPTO ne ea ee | Mod. Bere WetiarpOetl, Obs 0 the most bril- | of their baby if it is ills and the Japunces are | Wrong Way for them to hear your whistle and | prove that Solomon's saying, “There is no new res emp eipen ge ane oaprang dangha conn Siesta or yran your weaith iy fabu- | Tespouse to the officious driver's gesticulation | liant and best liked men that ever satin the | said fo change the name of a child four times. | the now's too thick for them to see the red | thing ander the sun,” may be very strongly ap- Peay sph cesar aller Alport apa bomen oor cater charts for theworia | 224 ¢i8culations. Evidently the same was ex- | House, though enjoying a good law practice, it ——se0—____-= lights on the back car. I knowed my wife was | plied to music. the Unidas, ad the tine muy come. | of mankiod and Wound thom weather | Hea fh UAL WO weren't accustomed | Hat, was Almont Uankruptod Dy hi COMBO” | gow ay towetl Favatahea Hie Honse, | n, {he tinini wos runnin’, too, am my oles ane has not arrived, when it may be deemed oxpe- | appearance an we sat in the pastelmmeter soon | Sst sort of thing. ie Congress are frequently criti. | fon ths Contemporary Review. qckk sate are 2) De ee | Sromne ee dient to regard « naturalized citizen as having | body or other's guethaus #8 Sehrems Lone; | THE BLUE Daxvre, cised tor n lack of delieasy Ts appointing thet | 1 1856, Longfellow having resigned hisplace | flowin’ wuss'n over, ‘Welve gut terrace The | Str Bawin Aenea ene W a Fenounced bis citizenship when, trom his acts | Austria, writing up our journala ae wo waited | | The last day's ran brought us within sight of | Gan wows tor sosencitoee Clerkships, but if the | #* professor of modern languages and litera-| express, an’ heaven only knows where we'll hii wMih wae Sz other, circumstances, it can be determined | the coming of our midday repast, did not indi- | the bine mountains beyond the southern bank | trath were known la mene eter eee ae ote ture, Lowell was appointed his sucessor, with | bring up’ ‘In eternity, mutters an] NCR deenasran ha be hae lens abandoned ‘bie renidenee | cate wealth evens we bal Las provent or pros-| of the Danube, and after a night at Stockeran, | be found that delieney had bean sacriGced iy | leave of absence to perfect himselfin his wiadies, | tbe Wa¥ he wil it guve me a cold chill, he was Bahacnemtoreces aatchrrg ewertomtafron leith bat corona be oe fifteen miles from the center of the great Ger. | oTder that the family parse might be kept suf- #9 oncommon downcas! lew ‘orid repor other day gave a has acquired property. American citizenship | Letore meals i unheard of, Coatien, ‘hat. | We bave found in Europe. It is composed of | ial position. : 3 Ba it would go, an’ we flew along at a purty Steet. thes were born in Germany——"or Bohemia or | spending = summer holiday at tho inn at|®mp being prepared for the autumn maneu. | “millionaire elub” and popwlarly believed to “ naturalized Ameri- - Austria, as it happens. Th wh foaiemelies const | near the in the states, is indeed frequently met ‘With, | first night in Bohemia, drew from us, by artfnl and they all hope to return to. their adopted | questioning. first our natfonality,’ then the lund some day, as they say. We find none who | story of our tour, where we had traveled and | bave not returned tu fatherland better circum- | where we expected to travel before our return stanced financially than when they left. Two, | home. ‘There was nothing in thie catechising one who had served five years in the United| mach diseimilkt to what we had been put White 4 pieces. White to piay sm he thundered, “Have you no consideratia: ruts cud laces of, le i lanation of his earl pace, wi me ought not to be cheap, easily obtiined anc | lew and suspenderiows, wearing no ties, and pened legen pce th incertae ved | " dteoin ead poraaptis cope of the the story Is, perhape wot unworthy of ineet- | me cagusse ew beoponma tener amen “How is it,” was asked, “that such a busy easily retained. Some such change would re- | with thesleeves of our gray tlannelshirteslightly OTe tha ot gage g te _ im ay e1 6 ion, dd 16 io the thisth ‘of stent , ’ as how ctor | Man as yourself, Bir Edwin, can find ti move what is no doubta thorn in the side of | rolied up from the wrists, ourshoes and stock- | Jone. We looked for the blue Danube. We [ee ead ped argwg slh dete -anrg| erie ol ret peat oe yr gb em " 5 te dons : House experienced an unusual sensation in the | humor which are apt to bo naw: as ti meee Enropenn governments, so vad of theas | ings white with dust, suid oar beseches oumllariy | Mong cog ado treo tee Ciena eons |aancuncement thal Gachier fileces bed. ae-| couse igre Lavdiaan ose ante ignora “American citizens’ fal to draw their naburali- | adorned, we excited no interest in the minds of | Set! old residents about tne bine Danube and camped with their salaries. In the investign. | Party: - zation papers whenever there is anything, such | the two old fellows who, between drinks and | Wey sty they lave never seen it, Another pee. as military service. from which, ax fittaens of the United states, they are exempted even gave us an occasional glance, just as they Tage stadia’ Glee Were: cree USDER FEATHER BEDS OXLY. would look at a table or other piece of furni- i pathitact oar least to the members of the eommittes, ‘ihe | self t0 my stedica, Keeping no aocount of the | bout Atty mile anchoor new’ an’ ce Tier, | houre over again,” he said, softly. “I do not Did you ever sleep unde « feathermattress, | tre that fell within the range of their vision. | ntriloquist Creates Great Excitement | Hooks snd papers that hac been in charge of | drafte I drew from time to time. 1 apposed I | ahend, strainin’ my eyes to see anythin’ that | kuow that there is anything remarkable abuat or, rather, did you ever try to sleep under one? ‘TRE OPEN SESAME. Among Negroes on » Georgia Plantation, _ | the defaulting cashier were partially oxamired | #till had a good sum to the fore and a plewant | might come in the way, see the block signal | it,” he added modestly, “and all I can say to “ mal bth = Conversation at length lagged with them and = New » | by the committee, who soon fonnd out that | time in prospect, but I was surprised one das | was up at section house ‘No. 4, showin’ me that | You, then, is this: i ‘The Bavarian viliage inn and Bavarian custom | = Bel = A Drayton, Ga., special to the Atlanta Con-| about half the members of the House bad nt | t0 receive notice that my aceount had got down | there was a train on the track somewheres| “I make it an unfailing practice to read eee Se aneee Pam am copenenity fo | one Se eees we Oy Nekenien One Got e| cistion saya; Vincihe the plat Welk the ad’|vecen aume cc unemes Deen indebted to the | to the figure mentioned. within five mile ahead of me. Well, sir, you | literature as Troll through the country in Bare that experience. | It was at the “Gast | understand look showed that was a language | 209 on. the place of ar. W-G. Te ing, near | cashier for either salury advanced monthsahond | ‘There was nothing to do but to pack up| kin imagine my feelin's—or p'raps you can't, | the trains, Take Japanese, for illustration. Haus und Brauerei zum Lamin,” in the village | with which we were not familiar, and our in- this slecd i Senn ¥idleath aeua” or for notes that he had discownted for them. | 8nd go home, which I did. Mark the sequel. | for it was theawtulest moment of my life—I've | Now, we will assume that the train time be- of Neresheim, that this 1 2 eaantar car | agrOpitts tried Gorman witty greater cuseent, | ee nen nae whan hap tank te eins tat | In wane great ebject inwtn on Gn seoemtaam | Sotme years ellerwusd I ssotkted @ lotter from | ben in mony oband ras aoeee oe aon Gn |teme Mow York ant bee ee usual duties of the feather be e under our The fact was soon divulged, in response to the | the exploits of what they took to be a “hant” to stop me; but I also knowed he | the midst of lecturing and writing to do so f the expross bein’ behind brim, | much reading in strange tong an’ tho I never disobeyed orders afore, I did | Sit Edwin smiled. His «mile is a winning . | cal fancy knocked on the head. E. E, $, | tion that followed the methods that prevail “Thad given instruetions to my banker in | this time, for the fac that my wife's life as well | one. after the fashion of aman of the wide, puiy at their pipes. conversed together and | Pete! faucy knocked on the head. E. E, 8 | in the transaction of busiuene in ho tanger. | London to notify me when my account was re- | us the life of the other passengers was in my | Wide world. well disclosed, at | Guced to a certain sum, and then { settied my-| power was allns in my mind. We was goin’ | ‘“Ft # only tho lesson of the minutes and the a pec White Golds tnmictt. Black Paine. if Congressional lite which compet the | the bankers steting that, owing to the error of but never anythin’ like it have I felt, A| That means 12) miunter. Of these Ftry to) (a) If PxB then KtxgP. (> Can't the cbservation. Ax we prepared to settle ont-| set questions, which we can’ always, anticipate, | in a neighboring swamp. feos to hecioe ene and Gieue, "ther nokn|odieth; ital bene’ dialges Glas 6 dom on |take ahead, the express behind, an’ my wife | take the utmost advantage. I taRe acme Jay. | bevop because of hunk . selves for the night's repose we ranked this | so often have we heard them, that we wero | There are several negro tenants living on | and evidences of debt were net contined to any | #0-and-so. many pounds, which ought to have | on the train that was boun’ to «mash up any. | anese hand book of Phrases,select a few and ri mead bed formshing from its resting piace to the | ~Americaners.” Broad smiles o'erspread the | str. Redding’s place, and among ther ne | particuar class. It was not eviienee of this | been debited to the xecount otf kin«man of |How. I'm afeard I wasn’t neter much of a | peat them over and over, analyze the verbs in fluor, supposing it butasuppicmental covering, | faces of the two old men at this announcement, 2 ses she totaat Pus | nature that the committee was Aftor, and it wae | Mine, and that sam, wise pound interest, | prayin’ but I prayed then, sir, | all forms and inflections, and ia short try Game No. 20. as bad been the pillows of various sizes aud | and they moved forthwith their beer and pipes | Bined Jack, a + » tenant. . For | promptly decided not to go inte these persona: | Was subject to my order. They regretied the | wich my whole soul, an’ Ive ben a| in the few minutes at my disposal to literally Ps pom = Bont: Pete Thane eae NS, Gaz Toute. Bato and) to our table and, drawing up their chatrs, | the past week Jack had been hearing myste- | Pecgunte which would mean an unpleasant ex- | inconvenience I had suftered im shoriening my | good churchman sence. In danger, as youknow, | batn the expression, whatever it may be, inmy nan or bebold: there was nothing cise, not even seated themselves for a chat. One had a rioas and ghostly v ailing him from the | posure of the finaneial condition of many pub- | Visit. and by way of compensation they sug- | sir, a men will either lose his common sense | brain. Thus, ‘Hodg-ha Mapodge?” would sig- ‘White—Meesrs. Burrifie and You sheet and we bewailed the absence of vur tong-| brother and a som in “Chikkago,” with the | swamp, which ste 9 ighboring branch. | lic men. The attention of the eommittec was | Kevted an invextment, if E dit not neod the | intire, or think quicker'n he ever thought | nify “How do you do” I repeat the various sang iach Mowrs, Ware and tailed mackintoshes, shipped home from Faris. | accent on “Chik.” That's what he said, any- ‘ : come and | ch turned in the direcfion of reimbursoment | Money at once, whieb they thouslt would turn | betore. ‘That wae tho way with me, an® I turns of the fnew. pression until it is once and for-| yp) joutwell. I thanked thein and asked them to | thought of a sidin’ that run along by a station | ver my own. So many minnter per day 1s 80 a mow attcory eis. invest the monvy as they thought best. Well, | for « little ways, then between two platforms, | many hours per week, and in turn so many > - ina year I got x draft tor nearly £700. With | an’ stopped with » Lig bumper made o’ wood | days per month. That is ali there is to it.” y | Agentleman familiar with Silcott and his! that ’Y refurnisned my house. Now you, who | an’ strongly braced. “And you study Japanese literature from rd it of in another di- | financial operations recently disclosed the cir- | are always preaching figures and Poor Richard ‘Lill, says I, we've got to run on the sidin’ | uch fragmental beginnings as these’ in that way, but was | cumstances under which the lutter first came | and business habits, wimt do AT & GERMAS INN. | way. fraulein who had delivered oar mea | THe voice Degen calling: German village innkeepers do not always | in sn indifferent manner, such as common | take this log off of m ae negro, thinking Be sort of pecple might expect, passing the door | that some one was in distress, ran to Store otclock ia the evening cat Liv, 12 | atthe instant, witnewed the Guange of baee on | ewamap, but on getting to the place from wh | the part of the patriarchs, and, to sativiy ad came he li talk abouts zimmer. Something to driuk, or | curiosity’s promptings, entered’ the room | | tor the losers. He rashed ot jon way to that? | at S——-, if fcan make Jim hear me.’ Jim was| “Yea. And at last attain to comparative nc 1 eke perhaps som to eat,ts all it seems to them | on some ostensible errand, lingering about | again deceived, and still heard the same voice to cook his accounts, If I had kept an account and known bow it | the switchman at tho sidin’ an’ bad a litue | ®astery of the language. Not only Japanese, BA 1s. Boge you enn poss Fouare shown into to learn from the cuaversation who and | eniting him off further | “If it had not been for a certain election eon- | *t0od 1 should have apent that money, and you | house to stay in while he was tendin’ switch in | but Sanskrit, Burmese, Hindostunee anil other And white mates in twomoves. the z r. e to behad. The | what these were that the two < negro, thoroughly frightened, went to | test,” mid this gentleman, “T do nct think Sil- | Would not now be sitting in those ensy cuairs | rongh weather Bill uever sid nothin’, but | languages and dialects’ of the far east. Will ge Soe wal oo OE pet pow. vid lady who ted the affairs of the“Lamm” | old Herre should have become so in-| Mr. lic: ith bi ight | cott would have gone wrong. Silcott wav | ot be walking on a Witton carpet. No, lang | looked gloomier than ever yoo lmve a cigar, sir?” i ee FH a. 1 inn of Nereslcin Lad the common failing and | terested in them. Some mention of “Amerika” | they at the “haut.” A little after dusk | friend of the demosratie eontestant, who con- | accounts and figures!” “Bill says I agin, “I'm goin’ to crawl along — eee Forced, oie ty owe : o the shei—snmmer house we | soon furnished the ene, sud she flitted from | they heard it again und immediately went in vinced Nileott that he would surely be suecers- | This was Lowelb » ozdinary, airy way when in | the guard to the ketcher an’ yell to Jim to open How She Did tt. toescape immediate mate. (f) uate ea anight more politely call it—where a few of the | the room. to reappear shortly weuting a} pursait armed with Winchesters. - But the | ful, the Lioase at that time being demoerntic. | €00d-humored feisureand this prominent trait | the switely, an’ you shove in the throttle an’ | From the Phitsdetphia Press. the move. SessceneBasth eee ee ee eee ee hincea ing | clean apron. There was room for another next | will-w'-the-wisp again led them on a wild goose | ‘the contest was protracted und comtly, Tie | cannot be omitted in nny acecane ol his pric clup on the brakes assoon ax you fcelthe switel | “Mr. Linger!” SOLUTIONS AND SOLVERS. deer schwoners that closed with « hinged lid. | us, on the end of the bench. and hero fraalein | chase, and they could find no sign of thesource | democrat if newteh, would have. dea salary | Vato ite. But all things were in duc order. At| curve.’ Iknowed we could check the ‘Mise Mi Weatherwaz broke the silence We insisted tis ated a zimmer to schla- | placed herself, edging a word into the conver- | of the cries. | from the beginning of the Congress, and upon | bis desk he “toiled terribiy:” insorious dis- | considerable afore we rtruck the bumper, an’ to the bridal ehamber, | sation when she could. and showing in various | ‘The nogro, Jack, aut his family were by thie look out for a hole in the little ways that ahe was now qutle interested in | time so badly frightened that they began make dimly Nghted hall. A new | ns, if she had not beem previously. Ax we | ing prepar ed the room with us and G. was | exchanged eards with the “Ciikkago”’ man, she | Mr. din, in soul-rending performance | besought that she might, too, have oureards, to | licious work when she broke these words, and it has not been repaized yet. Spoken in a sharp, loud tone, the remark bronght back Mr. Linger from his reveries with the assurance that he would certainly ‘win ve- | COUre: ke Was as strenuous us any of hia Pori- | rather than smaah the train ahead an’ my train, | enrod from Siicott the money that hie” would | 4 ancestors; to the work he wax courteous | too, 1 resolved to tey the suiteh. it possible jons to leave ow neighborhood. | be entitled to when s«worti in. In this! = ee Beker Cea tee Bs a or ruspecting that it was the ma- | way al ve salen’ \ednsed inferiors, expectally considerate: to the vt "tknow, crawled along the guard pao 726 dre egy he tlre diem etn Led nd presuming. # glacier: to his family and | ingine, steadyin’ myself ae vest I could. ‘These some one who had » gradge | silcott to the contestant. Unfortunately for | 84? jerk, spenk, : iq whieh we with becoming graciousnems assented. | against him and desired to run his negroes | he cashier, his man failed to estublieh binetce , peut Ficuds, the mostderighttu! nut sunsbiny | ingines ten yeur ago had big guards, an’ sot} "4 why. ‘Mien Mine poo conten aS = mich OF Syoman, She | Such are some of thealmovtdaily expericnces of | away, lind Jack and his family go toto « cabin | [twas inpowible for the detented contestant | being that ever camo from the author of Joy.” | bel» purey Yair wurtace 10 keep my bakes on} --I'm glad of that,” replied ‘Mise Minerva as at yay Nested as mach a& 250. She was | the whechng American, coming in contact with | near bis home, and, takang his rifle, prepared | to at once make good the sums obtained from SAREE FCM or wouldn't be here now It made my bait | cho rore t0 nee bitn out. “I thought you never nad ont of t= consipem Pan 2 tM Bors punetnality itself, and ocr breakfast was on | people in nner not experienced by other | to hunt down the intrader himself. | Silcott and the latter devised the scheme of Fige on end, though. as 1 stood on the guard by | would start of your own volition, yo - Ty the table, sx at the appointed time, | travelers, and in places where bislike has never | For the past week two agents of crop culti- | tales packages of treasury notox, which were A Mistake Not Rectified. the ketcher feelin’ the wind goin’ by mo that pi Bh rc ei ° ore and the mac he Louse Knocking at! before been known. vator had been stopping with Mr. Redding, | daily counted as assets, bat which were merely | Y= Life. fast it was beatin’ the ingine,an’ my beck 3 ou us. Our arrival at the IS THE FARMING COUNTRY. and one of them volunteered to go with him: | faced with genuine notes. When, at » inter tin’ covered with snow every taimie, while » qm. eds few moments, she shook whe Bohemian hills, yellow with ripened | About dusk the sounds begun. culling the ne-| date, the indebtedness was settled, Nilcott bad couldn't see nothin’ but snow ubead, an’ thon P maas pepe a ied us | &F2 PY name and plewting with Irim to come to | Jearued how easy H was to jugalé ihe ough woe ouly about three or four foot, whieh was lit by an sone. athe erainprowicg neta er muted Us| the revenue. ‘The negro family was almost | couns and he hept it wp to ine tain Ins minute or Borsa continue boarding of the grain-growing regions of the great | thrown into convulsions of fear. but Mr. Bed- the lights o the 3 PLEASING LAXDSCAPE. northwest at home. Barley and rye seem to | ding, locating the sound in a tree standing out | OS MEMBER WHo camE OUT wat AMBAD. ‘owiteh was ‘The iow, rounded hilis of We be the staples, and it was literally the hand of | in the swamp, began to empty his repeater into | There is one shining example in the history ce poral eet potent Seas the harvester they awaited, for the work of the |it. im rapid socrendon Pecan the mee | of congressional life of a member who solved ; ing and binding is ali done by hand, a | voice wax again heard, ealling from another di- aod mewiow, present an ever-pieasing landseape, | pore fo harvesting machine being a rarity. | rection: “Jack, Ll get you before morning,” | (2, Problem of how to make ends meet satis. 4 i if He of. the express, the sprinkling of trees, both fruit and shade, | On she ride to Vienna, both in Bohemia and waut your house.”” Se a I shouted my voice several Wing an additional charm te the picture. | Austria proper, we saw literally thousands of awd knows, you kin have it; I don't want | ranged froma $700 to $800 per annum. He re- times, till awerve of the ingine Pianted forests of spruce covered the for | people, the majority women, at work in the | itany more,” shonted the negro. All efforts to | 8lved, when thrust into Congres by his sa’ knowed that Jim had heard me. miles without interruption, and as we rode | belde harvesting the grain, but not as many as | locate the sound again proved unavailing, al- | 2¢ighbors, that he would eh yy! the x " t : j H z t 4 i through their «lark. foreboding, yet refreshing | three machines. The orchards are planted | though the cultivator man was very zenlous in | tvagauces of fashionable dally to the cab, it was I didn't ri 5 shade, we could easily understand how the | his efforts to find it. him to the extent of more than $200 in excoss stood there ingine slowin’ up but | Engineer (a8 ho rou — stories of forest goblins and fairies night be ‘Obtained @ hberal quantity. A ciay of two afterward the cultivator of that sum. In short, socie! stil _gotn’ awfnt fast, an hearin’ the heavens, Bil! There's » sran on the track and = (io. hand formed and believed by @ superstitious peorls. | truit of a tree has been sold or ie otherwise | left, ani, during the day. whilo Mr. creakin’. thinkin’ what « sinner | I can’t reverse ft. tmme.’ wn A. Sf ‘The roads in both Wurtemberg and Bava especially reserved, » wisp of steaw is fast- | was telling his strango story at the village. s Thad ben, my Eifo was ‘ ¥ 3 wonld be culled good im the ctates, especially | ened to a bough and thereafter it ie an es geutloman with wom the men bad _stoppod a ‘spread out ftom the those of Wurtemberg. Something we have not | pecially offensive offense to take any fruit from or two before bad au equally strange story ewitth the danger my ‘encountered eisewhere is the marking of steep | that tree. It is am interesting diversion, how- | of how one of hie negroes had boon seared by wife was me crazy for = hills by a sign beard the top, bearing the | ever, to ride slowly along beneath 4 suecession | one of the horses of the cultivator men tel minute, meet agin soon, word '“Embemmstelle”” (meaning “locking | of cherry trees, aud as yon pnss under the | him not to be so stingy with bis corn and f D'rape, ‘in be together for” place”) beneath the painted Sgure of a wagon | branches of each reach up. seize # handful | der, but to give him thirty ears and four ever. calm now, na’ shoe. “This useful hint to teaimsters was often | of the frait, which bangs im thiek clusters, | buudies. ‘The gentleman, being provent him- waited for ‘twere somethin Siservice to ux, for it is ditficult to resist the | transfer it to your mouth, and soon to tac | self and secing that the man was a ventrilo- happened every day. temptation to ‘coast all bills, unless there be | next and the next, until you feel that you have quist enjoyed very much the excitement of “Well, sir, we stuck that buasper ats some visible warning of moro than ordinary | reeeived your equitable share of the year's negro, of twenty mile an bonr. , in Fisk in the sport. production. borhood, not believing much in the air for an’ fit ina suow ISTo atsTara. ‘The bridgesot Bohemia are often ornamented | ern Balaam’s exs eround ‘my life, but y with stone images of sainte and heroes, und, | man, after being detected, told of the fun he Up through the outskirts of tho Bavarian forest and we passed frem the dominions of the German emperor inte those of Austria. The with all deference to the tastes which selected them for immortalization in thie fashion and with all respect for their we must had been having at Mr. Redding’s place. ‘The reality and explanation eame like » HE lit Ha H Flr Austrian customs of'icials manifested no interest | that they were hard-looking set, if we dw ws and we did cot tarry to create one, but! the sculptor a due amount of credit for skill in | crowd. <