Evening Star Newspaper, December 12, 1891, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

— - , 4 : THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES. T bring down or otherwise cripple his game, be Sertetate te wue ea ae|THAT FRIEND OF SYLVIA'S. [Rees eercane tos WRITTEN FOR THE EVENING stam BY | PT oe tne greater pert of diancr GRANT ALLEN. opinion of the young man rose steadily, s surely. le aes sad nod whee dag “realty gnee™ feed tardy ad that Lallnde to the members ° of our iti aristocracy. ie a OHAPTER L friend of his, one Sir Howard Fitzgibbon. who chane is WIFE WINTERS ABROAD, 1 NEVER | fo Aden! | Rim Hep! Tre ang ea Th eee der Musters, in hi i ded. uncle, im Hugh! It’s dit 's_ preposter- interesting book called "At Home With tho | MI ~ lala acd paceregis ant E I knew, was married | ous! If you choose to associate with the mob, Patagonians,” says that the Indian law of secompany her. Asa h mere! is the herd. the scum of society, the dregs of the dividing the game is as follows: The man who | disapprove of the continent. I dislike tho ways, y imagi le, the ignoble vulgar, brutish pro- balls the ostrich leaves it for the other who has | tho fuod, the drainage, the morals. I particu- | mi letariate, the riff-raff, the rout, the reg-tag and been chasing with him to take charge of ‘until| larly dislike the French language. Ido not be, when, just as the anlad th sais may do os fike; but dont't id of ¢ hunt. us e¢ feathors an 0 tr me body from the head to the breastbone and one | *Petk bere dabentlinta greet ae per tongue revelol Shagieun Suaters Of Si econs teresting from the concealment of the cere- Jeg belongs to the captor, the remainder to his | "F0ng, but it appears to me that the subjects | +270 antecedents. ry, canny, Dabammmenh wei Gemnethe’ on, assistant. for which alone the French language is adapted | -*You were speaking of Sussex,” I said to him | tute of taste, or sense, or oducation, ot feel- 5 fears once | strongly Enoch Arden like features fers which COOKING TRE BIRD. @ trivial and commonplace. I object to a | with a very gracions nod. “‘Do you belong. to | ing; an ,underbred, nob, and I SechGl on $e | seses ° by bao = Ei talki -| the count own ancestors, 1@ | 8) im. rou know r man ies Ole iba eepepels cbpy geen ba pce bby entre bebe taeem Lene] fe eo Oli ragga ted sole hg ile Dirge sideways at bor arm was hee waist, oF | aoderene (lle h restiecte cieoenths tomtaeen ing the ostrich is plucked, the wing feathers | sense, about the gardener T dow't desive | With William the Conqueror, were originally | head, I went over to the’ door, Iwill admit, in | somethag very like it apartments ot $i6% West Sth strest, where a being carefully ticd together with a piece of | of the carpenter For my part I don't desire | Sussex people.” perhaps a somewhat excited and heated con-| “Papa mreasonable,” Sylvia was sob- | “lommercial-Gamtie ceporter sought her yer- sinew. The bird ie then laid on its back and |t0ssy that the shoemsker's daughter bas the | "Oh, yes: I'm a Sussex man,” he answered, | dition, x camo up: “so dread‘ally unres- | terday, and after mounting two dights of elaine occasional!y sweep the country with the fury | 4'awn; the legs are carefully skinned down and | coat of the tall man with the red whiskers, nor | looking up and twirling his mustache a little | | Syivia rose as I went and stood up to her fuil | sonable. He woulda’ . ‘allow me even to explain. | an4 rapping upon the door it was opened by e , ; case ene ee Ct onving the akin, The car-| doce it interest me to earn that the washer-| to bide a smile, I'fancied. "I played for the | height im her long silk train and (pretiy cven- | And, Hagh dear, ue ‘called ou all the dread-|Foung woman, below the mediam height, of ie UNTIN & OST RICHES, Sinn tek pamperen be cer eae otc | Sane le Cuan soperaied tote barton oh ihe teak, woman's husband loves. the niece of the good |SUntY once. I come from & Guns on tas’ fuga T wont deny that ‘he looked bean- | fulest names in the English dictionary NIL . é Hi - slight build, with a mass of flaxen hair, which su * Downs called ‘Ighfield.' ‘iful, and queenly, indignant. Her nos tongue sub |} tr, i interesting face. Intro- ne Oe ee ae ee coe netias. So nligan aaed {rome the lowes | sitmonger. Iregard eush tittie-tate aboet | 2 could hardly believe ‘my eyes. My cheeks | trile quiverta >” pom 4 ‘Dastneen the visitor es- focks aad herds to Los Sorranos, the dense | stones laid in between the sections; and then it | the lower orders as unmanly and undignified. — td a = deen ae, # - na ee cy Py - quested an interview. sa Princ § : is tied up like d by the skin of the | But these are, apparently, the staple of con-| horror. That » person who murder illed puss “I love’ him, 5. “Certainly,” ehe replied, as every ie Principal Industry in One Dis-| torests that Gpteinpeentclens oes soe lege, eit @anail Cone threas ‘hrotgh ‘tokeep | sorsstion in tho trons Leguage ‘Thaxeters: qucen'e English Uke thet—an ignoramas 8 bim!, And aay what you will, Imean to marry | | He lifted her band to bis ips before my very } color lott ue cliecks and Lips: [She ted the . . (CNTING OSTRICHES. i jaced i 4 ., ‘ian, # man of straw—sh A along sl ited to trict of Patagonia. The principal “industry” of Patagonia—it | bersot the fire tea ence fn nearly done | !Zepent, To not dosire to learn it thrust himself forward for my Silvia's hand;| I shut the door behind me with perbaps| ‘My darling,” he said, in bis soft, low yoico, | UO"s the dimly lighted ball tn 4 4 00% th a lofty ceiling, and the floor i My wife, how is unfortunately an in-| why, i, <— 1 It terous! || some littl fe to put too] very winsome and seductive, “dou't let this | 0 cb ch a term be applied to the slovenly | light blaze is kindled 10 perfectly roast the ¥ . . why, it was shameful! was preposterous le unnecessary force—not at 4 ° easy-treading carpet, on habits of Indians —is Hanting guanacos and | most ouside, ‘Duciey doe Perectly Foust the of the hums frame, bat it mw nspeseery | ,,S0me seconds passed before 1 could find | fine = point upon ik, “in fact I believe Torry you for a moment at wll "It didn't mat-| we ou arranged, as if suv DEXTROUS FLYING THE BOLAS | ostriches, for the skins of ae former and ae it Bante be estes turned, that all parts igre ee see eer Heir Splints id —, ae ~~ -y meee epee off in high dudgeon to pant the. to oye poy LA od ge] santos an manbor of cocking chateoes feathers of the latter are jued articles of | may thoroughly baked. When taken from _ se r times cover las. In one en room — commerce, and the flesh of both serves for | the fre the top partis cut off and the stones | She calls herself » poitrinaire, which, Tunder- | 2604 09, emphasis: bei with your father about mere : — ring angry ificent upright 0, while , tand. is French for lungy ‘I rogret to say | “yea cmd th any place called misunderstanding I'll exj it all tobim | pee P food. For us time never hangs heavy in Punta | removed, when broth and meat will be found | & thats = fasn taware there was any pl CHAPTER Iv. there, scattered around in. ‘The Wey the Big Binis Ave Coptured—How | Arenas, notwithstanding the dearth of what is | delicious, "The pasty euiber wrouta fen | ike Ton the: Fooach: Lana ee netive | Highfield in Sasso by handing Bim mycard. ‘That's the only wa; They Are Cooked for Food—Interesting | generally considered “good society” and how- | the meat “ rst soppin, ki in th fe smiled once more, quite asuperior sort of = IWeextremely natural. You know, you your-| gtcriiittle teines iedbeesee ne at nome first sopping chunks of it iu the | trent of Eur ype. On the contrary, being itegpatied Isit o ’ g | other little things indicating Which sel: b a ind t 7 t - smile that made mo positively angr; ‘necessary for mo to say that I Gidn't get | self went wrong at first about it. ‘Little aera Soa piles aad ple rma for there 2 ne ood conten he aiseet lostia fete pales lungy, she spends every winter on the Riviera | «J said ‘Ighfeld," » he replied. Ties on the | more than forty winks sleep the whole night?| He drew a card from his pockct as he spoke |” is Known. . 4 Through « portiere half pulled back could 3. . n for the sake of the climate. On these expe- border f ts.” I've lived thi all life | 1 and glanced at it carelessl, I could stand it ostrich hunters to be interviewed, people who | divided, tidbits being given to each, not for- ji 4 orders of Hant Eve live jere all my think not. Any man who happens to have %, be seen « little bed room, almost hidden in the itave becn brought ap, aa it were, among those | getting the waiting women and children. When pecdmpanior bee sires Iva. “I de | Md J ought to know. anit an altogether chatming daughter, a girl on | 5p longer, I burst forth ‘from ambush and | shadows, and only lighted up by the fitel Or shat Lives th paroaiteg ‘Rent the, bent years the breast and head part are to be cooked the | Rovony it” Sylvia. iealgirl, inlecd, that ang |, "You've lived there all your life,” I an- whom he has lavished money, who has all the | “govered myself openiy. | flicker of the low-burning fire. Compared to From The Star's Traveling Commissioner. of their lives in pursuing them. Our interest | bones are not extracted, but the wings are At aon “lof. Her education | ered 4 ui wet voice. | Pasteboard, sir!” Tanja, iamy | the cold. and noise without it was e perfess Poxva Antxas, Patadost- | in the subject never flags, and evening after | turned inside out, the broast eavity filled with povraimy gepllnh= *Findred” pounds, and T | q.“¥e%, indeed, so T should think, But High- | accomplishments which fit a young woman to — voice. picture of ease and comfort. At her invitation JHEN YOU SIT DOWN TO READ THIS evening we sit at the fect (figurately speaking) | heated stones and then tied up. ‘The gizaara, | °° acer t it, Sylvia ‘is tall, lnand- | #¢l4 is’ spot haven't the honor to know.” I | shine in society, to be the pecial admiration of ughed and handed it across to me. the reporter seated humsel{ in # willow rocker, V will a the favor to have | of scrizzied American, who hailed originally | which is large enough to Afi both hands. is | SBall never al’ dignified ttractive | M#Pitated the word with all the strength in my | select circle, the leader in every charitable Tstared at it in surprise. Impossible! | In-| and site sat facing him. She was deathly sasamplatesl pel mdenypecmmrsomiartarie pabol orenigiy or-tooep. hirer af. ro carefully cooked by the insertion of ahot stone. | #0m¢, graceful, dignified, a very attractive | power, eo as to. onfurce kg not | association, a young woman eminently desery. | ¢fedible! It bore on its face the words, “Mr. | “vcr reaetta jus, itm She, was death before you a map of rip —. eid pe more than thirty years and has come to | The sbi he. too, are sucked and the tripe do- aking palatable ‘shoe looks “eal auoves — expect every one,” Tadded, ‘to have lived ing to have hee jiaris apples: alte Soma Soar are han _—_ fees _ —— one expecting painful news, while her Angers pr ees eee pains ee pesca ontcich lore; I wish f could reprediane he yon | ieneies” 024 the hungry doge zot the little that | Sveryinch a lady. Iti the desire of my heart | ®t dighield. nal as the beautiful and accomplished daughter u were tightly laced together we if abe wore mak- ‘ 4 is “I beg your parden,” the young man. said, pobapptiog emerge peor rear ties Club, St. James’ : ing ® great effort to su all vimbie signe & better is not easily come-at-able. I want to| his funny drawl and way-down-east expres- a ay maxelon) ae® stl) tate Poulin, | iug accoes towaclls aus Gi 6 male aed eminent London merchan xcuse me,” I said, gasping, “am Ito un- ‘axxiz B. Warp. r ; - tion. Onan eascl to the right rested ‘ ought to be married, to a person of rank or ice | Worthistan, will know how I felt. derstand that hg of ie conttiern continent between the Bie, He- | somcered Stern OC Oe mais, Mee T Mare) cscers Gxisiaisin Ga iier Bamana na [t™t to Dole Is is my donre that Sylvia | Titiage of ‘Ightield~— Tove aia tanks likes philosopher. Well, I | “go my ancestors decided for ma,” the young | Cr°", Fointing to the picture her visitor gro and the Strait of Magellan—a vast territory. tabaling Canaes of ex box. should But whee I aay that Lincan e great deat |. Lbis was more than I could endure. Flesh ht. It ig this: The man who can shave | ™&2 said, bowing. said: “Is that the likeness of your husband?” nearly 1,000 miles long and 430 miles across in the 66]/TIS SURPRISING HOW DISCOURTEOUS rare jut when I say that I mean a g1 = bleod = aS, 4 grew hot ia the = emit neatly and smoothly can think like em Lapa pas ® Place called Ifleld, equally i i and no doubt very red, for I am perhaps a trii f Sores ata uma gag nalign Fe re ee Eto cen with hots Ine cake Noe of eernig ake | Howe and Tam choloric by nature. Twas aware | Philosopher. 80 the Mimiwing ‘the eeg.| He bent his head slightly agai ‘Charles O. Hall of the firm of the Hall Sate \ ty pagename. amici ape OR Physician to a writer for Tux Stan. “In my | foc with her. This cuts me off entirely from | that people around us were looking at bit ama | Lf g F tuat de-| gm sauire of the Little village,” he an-| and Lock Company,” eed bar tone ae miles, it is larger 4 ree the pleasures of their society during half the | p1"* P' 4 i tain aside, let in @ flood of that de-| swered molestl otal ares of 350,C00 square - é own office they are continually disputing un- ts T would like to be | S8Rling. Tt was peinfal to mo to think the | vious linke ‘which cerries tach at ntalig ly with kind of defiance, while s faint flush shrrapelabrers Speman miro ; reasonably over the question of precedence. | hear, 40 ano watch over. Sylvin atl guard hes | 28" oho whole heteh aoe eee Feothd | bali to the tired hearts of the iovalide whe | «pS%P % moment.” exclaimed, takon abeck. | Color appeared tn her face poatpedyr phar yedis negpediepreactrbpr! ~~ Only sesterday something oceurred which was | like from the advances of the 9 ignoblaplebeian sue everybody keow quite'wall fo nen soniee grapm ‘0 this part of the world. Then I Began Piped ahi Gage La Sou mas get te | Then you are Mrs, Ola Bell Ball, the snoret or ernie tac aetna _ - merely repetition of what has happened | oF the interested fortune bunter. (For I need | Particular attention 40 my own deughies, ¥ | %2 8 , oan | lived?” nm.” * la Soma lippremntpae ari or SYS wes many siaea Selice: ‘The tone of my ceosten pany Ay pec ee eke eel tat him short ‘with & wave of ray band and with iS i wee epee a He started and laughed again, Now, Mra. Hall, teli me the story of your almost as complete a terra incognita as when ‘ 4 snk spaaeMPtbe has naxt (siti dedi tus te Alan et * | profound dignity. eyed @ curious coincidence !" be cried in his | marriage to Mr. Hall, and why it is that he ! SS , but it is eminently respectable, and, I will even ” tly: “but | barbsand prickles, and, as my keen-edgee She! jleasant, “al * - Magelian touched its shores, just three hun- pe Ps eedig mayen rp or edaeen xeuse me," I said, somewhat curtly: “but | seid razor glided’ carsesively aren oe ebony, | musical voice—he was really « very | never told his family of his wedded life and = “ =r a x in the waiting room engaged ina dispute as | add, lucrative.) Dusiness, the sordid affairs of | ¢, s5c38° ™ sakes if Sourwill alle seeks oxy 8 pasingly gentlemanly young man and extremely hand- | iy he hus kept it all rears. pein wane et aeons or int anemeeertnes 5 to who was first. They referred the question | the oil market, detain me in the efty from day | so, } think wo had better not continins tho daz, | | thought what a fool I'd been to get angry with 4 y anien haat aD It is only at Christmas that I can ever my darling Sylvia. She's a flower of the parent | S@¢ “Mrs. Fortune's husband, I happened | “My maiden name was Anderson, and I wae ; Done higher than 10,000, and _prob- . to me for arbitration, but Iam too wise in my : cussion any further. It is embarrassing for : : i to remark, lives in “I street in'an American | born in iowa. When quite « ebild own soy iit the fatior number would come neat 2 generation to got into a scrape of that sort. | 8°! tray for a fortnight at Pipes Maria | mo and unpleasant for you. tell you the peer et : he strects there ‘are lettered, you | mother died, and my Taiber, who wes.e baptist prs yore ip lpm oe mb So I did what] always do under such cireum-| wns, ]. will admit, the Molten “rT pkueed, with burning checks, for in the heat | Ju#¢ 80 Lam smoothing” myself down this very |X2°¥—A street, B street, C street and eo’ forth | minister: aeioned cnaroch tier hen tee 0 i ie : durable. It isa period when one prefers to be I , tages, for many more barren and forbidding stances and said: na down to XY, Z streets, and Col. Fortune's left this country and traveled in Euro; t itish | Of My indignation I'd forgotten the fellow'sre- | Serigurly. “T titnk “Ieve told eee rahe | house is in L street, You thouglit I tacant Hes | Wie eee removed to Cincinnetl sevtiows are denecly inhabited; aed most of Pedy bon pln Lae be acetate wt ea ene vont buttons ot may herct: | sbected name even. pny we Al gr nena Fee ide TeMly Understand how the | Here be marriod the second time, and it is this ; - - re] & tle t r n yourselves. t ny heart, | "PLT 5 cious; : ‘ maar wae eon pom suntignent ts wes cnptamanh; clans ot eageree 5 “then I turned to the person who was third | butTam over sixty aud I here. & digestion, |, “MY uame is "Ampton,” he enid, looking | Wt delice wonder the people of this country | "0X5 misled you. pmother wh me who is now soil or climate. and escorted her into my private office, where- | Plum pudding is an institution that I can now | *°%#Fd me with grave politeness. are not to be compared to us Englishmen: they e second more,” I cried, ~— There | Wien not quite sixteen years of ; u ‘This was really more than human endurance | T° 20t to U ‘Top | WA one mystery still. “And ut the | ried tos young man ‘whose name Observe how the eastern shore is broken by SEEKING SHELTER. upon the two disputants both went away in a in the abstract only. z coald stand. My cheeks burned like fire, my | Con's Delp it the weather makes them so. | T00 | are "'"Tne ‘are that ran acrom the bitke Cahier | ia, Songh So ey Siuthe was OBk, a succession of bss and inlets, and what noble itehoub aft. November, as it happened, Mrs. Worthis- | cars tingled. ach cndiiae Wl cule euybody's dieped- | (nse Youaurtent on of that—you remem- | reckioss and dissipated and at the end of 6 streams flow into them—the mighty Itio Negro | qi” the frst place itshould be ee rages hat | “<Ceually this sort of trouble comes about | tan and Sylvia were sopping at the Antibes, ®| «To tell you the truth, Mr. Hampton,” I | *2- : : if ana | PeF—in the smoking room.” twelve month of unbappy wedded life we (“Binck river”), the Chupat or “Chabut, ol pe istinct eee Yast os gees peed through misunderstanding of one of the most spot, 1 must allow, between | sia, in ns low a voico sa f could compass, so} _ At last I had snisbed pregee gaa “Oh, the heir!’ he replied, smi g und | arated, bo gsing sunt tant eomumiee sep- is often eallod. and its greatest tributary, the | range, toutived ‘within, cerisin Mime. ‘Thus | OFdinary rales relating to precedence. A lady . undeniably healthy and with | as not to put him to needless shame before the en eee they |{Witling his mustache as before. “Ves, the | Alter awe I applica tore divers Bete Senegal: the Santa Craz, which runs through a | the great strutheTo ‘thes, which mere’ marie | will come im, find a number of patients wait- iews on the whole Riviera. Sylvia | oly godlety ae ote ee aes the | and Sy : ppose i i ‘i iful of daughters and the te J ley f e to fifty miles wide and 1,400 4 Y | ing and go out again. Later she will return the most dutiful of d mafor the Due de | Esterel’s property, and everybody | He hewspaper mau, and I had learned feet Below the level of the plain, til it jome’th seu pusnpun tabsaneronaaaneon ancien and expect, quite a8 « matter of course, to beet of correspondents and he wrote 40 me tates ghould, receive my advances coldly and indit cals the hee Core oe Laan rere body | Ho was a mamevaper man. and I ed learned larger Rio Chico near the Port de Sta Cruz, | ¢1 pix Darwinii, in- | Fe*tme the’ piace in respect to turn w y ; ir. Hampton's face was rather red now, | /°F' inks such a precious lot of himself on the | south. and numerous smaller streams unnamed and | Higercun tena pray Of dhe straite is | Would havo had if she had remained. She Teen ci haseele’ anid bar masher: Hather | though Lsew a surt of suppressed exiaeeeet —-= poccintncanr gpl {> pace up | St7eneth of his prospects. He happened to be | “I met and loved Charley Hall. I thought Unknown, except bya fow migratory Indians, | not found pe ee Pambansa Roemer | erwhy. dese herelen hock sgn Reteliwharu anciker off fos guste van aton decent, aime time, which was positively in- | 304 down the white eanded walks bat if bend thought I menet iar, QUE gpeperchase. You | we both loved. We were married in Chisagn, who occasionally pitch their moving toldas ‘i @ Z a ; : jecen! “ {| thought I meant hare. I understand your mis- of hie friends, and at his earm ailng the tenkn, bee how the weuers aide joo j Gre eg lg a Picked “Such a claim inevitably gives rise to con- | tain young man of the name Of fismpton. It] “Excuse mo,” he began once more,still bland, | 306 my best to keep my face from growing conception. $request we all agreod to keep ie sosok, lined with coun islands that crowd one | formiy “gray. while those of the south’ have | tention. [never interfere. My policy is al- | began to strike mo after a while that Sylvia 0 d fectly calm, per- | “5 : t f but peremptory. “Yon mistaki piretg 2 preety en eee But the harbitrary gent?" I went on, push- f bis father, another around the point of the great penin-| brownish feathers tipped with white. Both | ¥a¥s to let them fight it out. was seeing a good deal too much of this un- said "Ampion. ‘on mistake me entirely. I) sectiy at ease. Suddenly a tall and elegantly ry ge P’ He was afraid for bis father, who was then ing bin bard this time. “I don't bear malice, | living, and other members of the family to a be ill assert with that women, | known young man. It was Mr. Hampton this, : dressed young man confronted me. road | ty = 5 8 sula. with narrow deepsea fords between— | puild the rudest kinds of nests—merely a shal-| ‘I will assert with confidence that women, y s Human nature is frail. Itis the last straw | shoulders, blond board. tation hole tptnenc: | but you called me a barbitrary gout you re-]findit out. He brought me back to Cincin- f a % although nominally of the gentler sex, are not | Mr. Hampton that, Mr. Hampton the other , | shoulders, blond beard, button-hole bouquet | muyspers ; yorel Ey zlnexk-taeleray sedi polaety beak: ca. sericea te Re “ot nearly so courteous in theif trentment of one | thing, till'T. was really alarmed about her ac- | that breake the camel's back. I lost my tem-| ond general appearance told me that he was a | ™¢mber. ati, and finally he established me in this «uite Sur mother fons meticklor foc the parlky Of | Sbouid refuse to be contorted?” Supers they heir'sa young Frenchman, who's to inherit | was brough to trial came the news of bis death. 5 “A quotation from Thackeray,” he answered, | of rooms. ji x intance with Mr. Hampton. ‘Yesterday “ ‘oung Englishman. I suddenly recollected | with ah, “It'ea well i. . ceut Cordillera. wrenched apart in some remote ‘The females are evidently the laziest of | *"°ther as men are. The reason for it, I think, | quai 1 ‘Yes,I know you said ‘Ampton, " : with a broad smile. “It’s a well-known phrase. “One day my sister came tome age by one of those stapenduous ebanges | Birds, for one nest serves for soraral’ of toate | is that mem are afraid to. treat each other with | we Went for 1S, delightful pienie among the | swored with warmth, “And {fey Hompton, having seen Mat be ae nang eyee ab and | Jeates de In Pluche sayeit™ pale and ‘excited. ‘She auld: “Ola, Which writers lightly term s “convulsion of | who all deposit their eggs init and then go | Ustespect, You may remember the itoey ct | pine “woods neer (Golfo yuan-— Mr- Hampton | Yon eauss forgive ae if Ekave tont ooo tat fie teen Dee Tstared at him and paused. It all broke | husband is alive; 1 bave seen dim. natare.” gadding about, leaving their husbands to hatch tenderfoot in a new city out west who re- | he Kind and so very attentive to mother | £8 public table on so delicate a subject, but a Mr. Worthistan of Worthi & Co., Lon- | MPO" me with a buret. on the street today.’ Two DisTINcT REGIONS. the chicks There are usually from thirty | M&tked that he had never seen such polite peo- | and kind and 89 very attentive to mol man who does not know how to pronounce his ; Te 3 e ee i “Xouare a gentleman of property,” I saia| “The horror of it all did not dawn upon me ; his life before. The reply was: Attentive to Maria! Was be, ther ' , don, I believe,” he remarked, stretching out | 41,40" perty,” I ; d The interior of Patagonia naturally divides | to forty eggs in a nest, and as ‘Why, pied lg ‘the fact lo that when one| cul That's” the way with these for- mort disgusting, ‘wort fin Sys his vigorous English palm and giving mea Tacld Hil "fon cate educated at Oxtord. You nga it Otberwive choald hovel falles itself into two regionsas unequal in size as dis-| cach ¢8& is about female fo,'e | man knows that another man carries a pistol | tune hunters. They ‘know that to be | fy P most cordial grip. ate don't drop your H's. And Sylvia is in Jove | dead or become «raving meuiac. At thattise finct in general features. That narrow strip | Cover ther, ‘Tha period of focabation ave. | and is dead on the shot he finds it healthy not | polite and attentive vo mamma is the very way But before I could finish my sentence by ad-| ‘“Tb€ ame, at your service,” said I. with you.” My child, my child’ don't ary! Son lacy besten ban tae on fest of the Cor ilers: inclnding the mountains caus tienty-too Gaby: endl 4 tne eat atte to daimperite | Everzbady here goes loaded | of making up, to « daughter who happensto be | cing for the society of gontiomen® Sylvie | g lS mame is John Puddleforg of Paddleford sre hot aes te Joa we Rmegagy Goma ag themselves and all the jslands, is now claimed | Tale bird equate patients mm the nest day | ®24 it pays best civil.’ is, 2 had seized my arm nervously i eaene maamerican phos) Sylvin dung-hesself upon me with» torrent | fo and, feartul that when he learned of the d. though good for nothing agri- ; bal “Take notice when you ride on the street car | a lovely little miling boat and took mother and | ®&d y P phates, 75 Leadenhall street, London. » | of tears. » and, cece sicnd ssh ela Shes et [ngs woes ne ares ea le Hee | dn spr hig dn rreohed™ 2e0Gr 320" See Ea Sepuaton” | TSon ane, stp ld ting aha eid, bog-| Sutil eas skh beta ane ees ib id ilver, not to so much cot mr en, 4 c x : ; Bs . cette peer sind nplaellenprt betes an ns ieoatis Gisheroe, ttle o none to their own sez. ‘They spread | hins’” Oho! Mr. Hampton, sit, so there yous | 27°’ sealig' 2 foexplain. ‘The fact i, his | 1:56? “Delighted to meek you Mr: Pedaierord. | S106 Me round the neck toun unpleasant de | other sue wae, dead, T Pleaded 5 ; i name's r : 1i1 tried to expiain, but you wouldn't let | to remove me out of the city until 1 reeo’ d ce i he id themselves over the seats so as to prevent | little game. Well, at least, thought I to m: “4 a aa A ‘Thanks,’ returned the young man. bowing at ent hy te Pacis thet ts locguet river; rniag mest the Beek Or cre atta engi ete them 8 | others from sitting down, the oxcuse belag that | salf, before Jong Fil fast ruin across and have a | won't be tateriere itt beeen Tez lOM 4T have the honar of knowing rout By od Mahe on eed ans | cmclentiy to bear up ender i ly thi il ts ; Z they sre anxious not ‘to have their dresses | good round iook at you. bes r | charming daughter, but—" and here Mr. Puddlo- . = trinding to the coast. There are several acuive | NeAiher is fine he sath LrsTott, RUE OF two | crushed by crowding, and f they have children | ‘Sern weck before Christmas, I observed to mayeclle ste raneto manage my conversatia | ford camo tos dewd halt and colecot ar con | Kind, he's quite ze mit come Rack shite Kuwacey. Voleanoes among its mountains, the largest of | Something ta cat Ae a poe oe eee ee ans St | permit them to wipe. their feet ail over | Jowles, my confidential clerks "Ger nee to” wall indeed withous soa. Whee ee wars | what. while his people learne. ° cette the Ialand of | fonuee andl steals or Saeco erie he canna io" | the next neighbor.’ In tho ‘shops they | tinental Dredshaw" this twacnine Jones ol y Mean- eccred, Minchinmadiva. opp 51 i, marriage, but they disowned me and refused i f h Jowle ntance Suddenly the whole truth broke in upon my : Ps 8,000 feet high. |The mean tempera-| Biv absence he Laowe if the ite g beens | notoriously lack considerateness “for ‘the | look me up = good train for the Riviera, ce Poninet tor plac went | mind like a flash of lightning. - Young Puddle. Sigg fo zeceive mevand thing advantage of their re ture of thi- region is 35 degrees Fahr. both | Dis sbsence he knows i 0 bounds; he wili | clerks, crowd one another _outrage-|_ directly, sir,” Jowles answered me | Wine card ‘will ford was in love with Sylvia, but hesitated to seein ie nok ie hon. toon tee winter and summer, for the weather seldom | S@4 then his rage knows no bounds; he gualy and refuse to await their turns for atton- | at oned (capital servant, Jowles, kuowehis place | "6,04 will your” ou speak because his father and’ he were dealers ee ee m I regained f dam; eteating cbilttuces, | Om Ga remaining cone to ploces and dence | sn “Om ‘board of sleeping care they are .” Ludgate "lll or Victoria, sir?” , which, urse, | in bone dust and American phosphates. Here | "#U8Y- strength an and cawe buck ty, Which is more trying to'man aud beast thes 4 | 0und the debris like a lunatic. apt to exhibit the utmost indifference to each} Now, if there's a habitof the populace which | **8 Yery proper, and Mr Hampton turned i deen oe. he retused to see me, giving the excuse that 1 ~ i ty : genuine modesty for you. I felt like clasp- Alaska’s Show at the Fair. eater degree of cold in dryer atmosphere. OSTRICH E608 48 FOOD. oes e omalerhs wo or, three (cocupring, te | Keunnot endure it's the barberoas prssties of | for wit, pan tecey ta jres grace, unis BOE: | Dew Ne veungman ‘e Sayr breaks Dees desk Alaska is going to have an exiibit of tts own | "uid, bo Mone, now that our marriage wad Loa this lies in the fact that western | After the hatching period the females Jay | washing quarters by the hour, to the exclusion | misplacing the aspirate. I never rete 1 | began explaiuing something volubiy to her in | #84 phosphates! Who dares say that dealing at the world’s fair in Chi It will & se be But then, be aight a Finds prevail, and these. heavily surcharged | their eggs promiscuouslf about the plains. | of the rest. It would not be a bad iden, I should | even in menial or an underling. French, a3 her own languag>. I don't deny he seemed to | 2 bone dust and phosphates is not quite as a ieago. nates | has ek, Seen, Ro mee hens eruie-Semane ‘with moisture drawn from the limitless wastes} The natives call these “huatchos.” and the | imagine, to introduce in the training of little | I observed, I neither know nor desire to learn, talk it like anative. He had all the foreign airs | ROble a calling as buying and selling palm oil? | among other things a very complete collection a chia against the cold, hizh | women and children spend a good deal of time | 8irls a slightly more vigorous discipline re- | but I insist upon the purity of our native lan. 1 i *| illustrating the arts and industries of the | quivered and a big tear glistened on her cheek. of the Pactti : um and graces, that young man had, but, as 1{| Why the hand of Providence had brough = inhi “: od sbdelnndl o.Glvones besss wag tot ie Tuountain wall and fall matimost perpetual rain, | bunting them. ‘They keep fresh for half a’year | Specting the consideration which ther ‘ought to . Ibis with me « perfect passion. hinted before, I regard an ability to speak the | Sbout this meeting: The materials which our | natives. Ivory carvings from whale and w ; Np eee sleet or snow. In spite of the cold this eternal (fren caengte for Batagonian aaa ane a w for their fellow-beings in petticoats.’ Be tick mana pererely, rate ay fare: Idngnages of forciguors an dest 2 thebalance, | tWo houses dealt in had a genuine affinity | rus teeth, furs, costumes, canoes and numer. | and be ix now living in Buti don't know mpness has produced forests of tropical | being equal to eight or ten hen’s eggs, is con- —— . d foreach other. The bone dnst had soaked | ous other things of interest will be displayed. | what business he is engaged in.” ; ompared with a correct 2c : loxuriance, gn whose depth jaguars lurk and | sidered the fair quota for one person's dinner. You, after twenty years in my service, should | ©°™P ha correct and graceful pronun k. We were| There will be a mining show represer: “And has Mr. Hali calied upon you since be fierce pumas (mountain lions) and the shy | The Darwinii ostriches are extremely shy,and| CHRISTMAS GIFTS FROM JAPAN. | ‘ill be unable to say Ludgate Hill correctly. Seapie ot Out own belovedand beentifulmether |p ie Pete cue So eek ve the gold and sliver productions of Alaska, ‘he | larned you were divoreed?” 4 ° fi = om el i, it in . ae ee ¥< iat eth “ds ii — ‘i fi it 7 eri€s of ‘nele Sam's arctic provi wil “He time theep' _peculise | to. South. America mile | menernricy ‘argu raably acute it i8 BY 20] custous Novelties tm Crockery nnd Oxher | YOU Pronunciation o vethe ungencetul dion |, After Fa Sais as ey eae a the eum at etek oy ine pai Gale teow a Fea: | alee Raven Sapeemet ples eee mae Lea face to face on the street, but we ~ jonat svele aud sun oo} pedorsyetr 3 i- Ware From a Far-Off Land. of Bow Bells. mee to your own room | 178 room enjoying my cigar and staring ds to be a very rich firm, and as for the | Seals, walrus and other marine beasts of that | speak. it was in August. Shortly aes Nae some marca — an (oid ban cour Matiag th soe ‘tis | (NE FINDS A GOOD MANY DELIGHTFUL | in the office, sit,and say Ludgate Hill’ to your- | Plan ni acronhe hor at pepe = fanior motmbe:, who. stood in may presence, he | region srill ba, included in the assemblage of | went home to my parents, bat ot the of “Argentine Patagonia,” which comprises | A!tican cousin. One of these is that he scoots novelties in the Japaneso shops for this is Saree tale ee ner. ‘Iwo or three of his friends sat giggling | ¥a# & Young fellow of most gallant bearing.’ It | curiosities, and the methods and weapons b y | my attorneys I returned and again m: ~ . Here I will remain untid about four-fifths of the whole countrg reckoned | **%! in a straight line when pursed, and al- here. Christmas. For exampie, individual teapots < : and | which they are xilled will be " tthe wind ifhe can. Aware of th Jowles went off like « lamb (capital subordi- | ®TOund him. He was telling them the story of | Seemed to me that I had never scen « band- | wi gin o a Tae ways against the wind a. is les wen . " - fellow. Why, Hampton was nowhere. | of thoso waters will be illustrated by stuffed of it all.” ‘i ; 5 “ ounted paper cliase or hare and hounds, in | SMe f cetrant imens from th hat ‘all’ do you mean?” by square sches from the Andes east- | hain: the Patagonians ch: pack, | Are the latest fad to go with individual sugar | nate, Jowles). and in half au hour or lew ve- | "mounted paper How could Sylvia’ ‘esiate sm tmoment e's | specimens from the prent nares of sts | rand nd te commonly spoken | rst placing some of their party m_ seabaniet | bowls and cream Jugs: Inthe miknlo's empure tarned with the “‘Bradahaw” snd the caratally | SE0% oo. toc avi fey, tien Pete Sh eEO | whisre abo should plane her ailsetiong eupe-] species te the euudie Reh, ehicn tie noma: | “Geanias maak have eoeapeel plaing}sthougis most of :t | the direction which he is likely to take. Ther things for the table run to the diminutive, and | conned remark: NB» y 5 to te wpame. The true} then gallop tuli tilt up to the line of tight and mpas bexin away ap nortl near the Kio de| either intercept the ostrich altogether or Plata aud end not far vclow the Kio Negro. | “hopple” it with a pair of bolas. South of this the whole country is @ succession of stony steppe L = : : E cially when I came to coax, to plead, to call | for a light with a wick stick through it. | the proposition my attorneys made it is thoroughly Japanese to have separnto |. "sin leaves Ludgate Hill at 10:10 tomorrow, | "ed ov Beene eee at ie by othe Pet names which we had invented Ga part ot the exhints win | suticiont ee wy =X receptacles for everything. Individual butter t so much effort about it, Jowles, gust, [could stand it no longer. I rose and der picbeaaone tem meter totem” |pmp, whith hes quite un caren ane bh eau nr Nay pon g dishes and salt collars were only introduced ndingly, with un encouraging smil bbe = Rolo to Eo ies _~ With th thoughts in my mind I mado a | museum in San Francisco. Most of the objects | door was opened ® messenger @ very few years ago and the fashion in fo much effort about it But you} tie. Y returned thipugh te emetieg Cann | jump for Puddleford, Just asa wrecked enilor | contained in thus cellection have beoe gathered ) and said: “La thie Mra, Haul?” that direction has so steadily progressed that | mean it well, and, at any raie, that's a distinct £0. Ub $.0ur cWn'saloa aul ee 3 semet tee Feachios out for a fe may. 1 weang band, —eqend — by pong he ompley of es. before tong cach guest at ® dinner’ may eC by 10:30 the next morning I was whirling | #82 Hampton assaulted my ears once more | 1 called him “My dear Puddleford,” I told him great rading museum isl: marshes. The cd with carth of a pale ing masse® @f porphyry and : : t the bone dust “and palm oil | will be transported ‘practically entire te CL, Seem Fe find himacif provided with his own private por-| away, post haste, through tie county of ert | M2 EL oe grep mye ed Pe rea lero agrestis many Poly as ee ee . i served. Such a result would | on my way south to ine; ect the man Hampton. | Hive i ‘Ich street,” he was remarking to era, the ighest ‘¢ reaching an alti- s i ture and that it wus bigh time for our thoughts, afford an interesting illustration of the manner friend. 1 shuddered and passed on This was too, too horrible. ‘That a creature like that | CWF feelings, our—but I could vay nomore, a y impreg- in which high civilization sometimes meets bar- renttee AE theald, venture to aspire to my beautiful ria] eee? out: “Speak, my dear Pud- Odencomiame ies rous stall darism, inasmuch as fourth-rate boardin; Sylv n aspirant without an aspirate! It | dieford. ae is She glanced at the mud on her [nha gel meptcconee phy albarteaye Che el detpated the method de| Ileft London paralyzed with for and suow, | ilied tas sith Tndignation, oe a I was going to say, sir,” he resumed, Faining white erest. houses long ago anticipa' method de- : “this feliow, this "Ugh "Ampton, sir"— And this Was the wail as she wielded her broom: is poiso: scribed by giving to each person « simultane-| found Antibes sailing CHAPTER IIL But [ let him get no further. | This delicious extrem: ~ Gab of everything, @ general rule I c ° . sais allusion to Hampton's vulgar habit of = “OU fe ta Re aye ae ingly warm ‘a winter. joa ag rst shy fe aa Bad but I will admit ¢! a it ing is h's caused me to burst out into a fit of beauty wi » and riches will grown with tall grass so rank and coarse as to re- Bia - longer is it the fashion to | Gf Brancs has Gortadued ventaase. Whap I reached our own sitting Toom a pain- Log immoderato laughter. [should bave top- | And icasures they dwindle, snd prices they semble rnshes; alternated by patches o x table in sets. On the contrary, every dozen apenbetcs rnd ee ful sight met my gaze unexpectedly. Maria | Sieg over if young Puddleford hadn't encircled Pe es seeks brush wood. me iter than the se tes or cups or kancers or what not should | As soon asI got there I saw at a glance I| was seated on the sofa, with her eyes as redas| me with his strong arms; and there we stood nothing could wish it to developments may be 3 of solid salt ofte: exhibit as riuch variation in d: 3 possi- ] wasa't a minute too svon to ches a lobster, and Sylvia was leaning across hor, | for several moments, holding each other up “There's too much of worrtment goes to « bonnet; | *° leer by pationt waiting, ick and covering aa are ble. Not oniy should their ern ion vary, | Hampton. 2 7 with her head on her mother’s shoulder, dis-| While we laughed and laughed until w There's too much ironing to a shirt; will uns bear Square, while to west the d but their shapes also. ‘The ning of this.) name. It was Mr. lis n » Mr. A sobbing vi . red in the face and quite out of breath. ‘There's nothing that pays for the time jou waste the ‘landscape is broken by basaltic of course, was the n piece should . ¢ fy | solved in tears an sobbing violently. “Ugh 'Ampton! ‘Ugh ‘Ampton!” I repeated, on it: Fidges—the home of hawks and eagies. The make a different picture. At first it was merely “Ob, papa, papa!” she cried, in a pet as Ten-| gurgling and chuckling and giggling until i¢ | There's nothing that lasts but trouble and air. great Andean condor here crosses the conti- | ® question of ornamentation, but now it has via the girl blusie ly. I made | tored, “how could you? Haw could you? You've | almost seemed as if must expire from my | “In March tt ls mud; slush for the first and only gone much further. The Japanese have ap- | mental note of that. licr blush spoke volumes. | been so dreadfully cruel! So dreadfully rude! | own excessive jollit ‘The midsummer breezes dain to build his c 3 upon bare plied the conception indefinite! that the / She was decply in love, it was ciear, with the | Td know how Hugh will ever beable to| But at last I quieted down a bit and gave | In fall the leaves Mtter; in frocks overh: ind streams, as well as — — chery ware of every man Hampton. ee i, ‘ s ieaea meotanias eae young ee state his case. ‘The wall paper rots and om cliffs that front the sew Ie is accompanied ply bewilderi Pes “Shall I see tho fellow tonight, Maria?” "I exclaimed, bewildered. “Hugh!;” ~Go on, my dear boy, go ured big, black turkey buzzard, and 5 ‘After-dinner coffee eu i a fad }Tasked at inst in my severest voico, for was| Hugh! Who is be?" And where havo I wect penresly. “Kom lowe oxo ter 83 “There are worms in the cherries and slugs im the also by two species of polyborus or eagle vul- a Justat present. The proper thing is to heve| anxious to observe him and report upon his| Hush, pray? And wher here? cae gone or | what you want mo to do is to get" And ante in the sugar, and mico in the plem, tures, Known in local parlance as “‘carranchas’ OSTRICH’S SKELETON. as many styles of them as one can afford, every | chances at the catlicst possible moment said to [ingh that Hugh has got any right on | out of the wa; ‘The rubbish of splders no mortal and “chiniangoes.” The latter weapon is peculiarly Patagonian | cup and saucer being different from the resi. hy, of course, Norman,” my wife replied | earth to forgive me for?” a body knows hew many centu- Earn. there is no difficulty in necomplishing ith i ‘He'll to table d’hote. “He Sylvia looked it i tor it of tears. SEES ae WAS OXCE THE BED OF THE OCRAY. and in use nobody knows - + y with a amil (c'll come ie d’hote. ylvia looked up at me in a torrent of a - Ties before the coming of white men; yet noth-| this. In one shop Tux Stan writer found | x delightful young isae you kao utifal girl, my Sylvia, even when she's| “Oh, don’ Tes tmceping at six and dusting at seven; Soeite witue Hint A thie couiitcy as 1555 utter bas aver ison, devised Sectnatng | aealy GettaasanGet ie aces ont Fane soma tad geatioataatest 7 pas: regal atch syle yictuale at eight and dishes at nine; uce sea bottom. for everywhere marine sheels | the shy creatures of the plains, and the to match ench coffee cup are another novelty | "tim !"T replied, “handsome and gentl. Rhy yom quarreled with him #0 nt dinner,” |" ““Well, you manta Ween 3 oe are found, aud other evidences that the ocean | iards and Guachos, away up in Chile Ar. | and will be expected at teas this winter. manly, ie he? Ah, yes! I dare say. I know | she sobbed out. “You put him down so dread- re mat Pose Tolled over it. Far inland the remains of | gentine, have adopted ite use. ‘To make pair| Ono advantage of buying Japanese ware is the wort, Some peggarly young fellow, no| fully. And the worst of it is, papa, Hugh was forsil ousters are mot—the giant armadillo | of bolas take two stones of Unequal size—one | that it is so much cheaper than similar Pro- | doubt, who spend all he |B bog drossing well, | quite in tho right, only he was & great deal too Glsptodon) and colossal inylodous and me-| about as large as a goose egg, the other as a | ducts of equal beauty. Xo one upon looking | in order to make an impression on some other | Such of gentleman to make » scene in the | lor weathers coast it one wuundred miles of the | hen's egg—and grind them perfectly emooth by | over the goods displayed in such shop can | man ydanghie, ‘Iara ond gentlemanly.’ sallo-a-manger by explaining to you when you southern coast is one vast deposit of tertiary | rubbing one against the other. Cover fail to wonder at the inexpensivoness of many | {5 he? ‘Thm disgraceful young upstart! Ili | were so violent.” strate, underlying a whii ceous sub- | with a bit of guanaco of the most exquisite objects offered for sale. | teach him how to be handsome. Tl soon take | I stovd aghast with horror. Had _it come to till it looks somethis To understand this one must realize that 25 | s+ ont of him!” this, then? She called him outright by his In surprising e tagonia | cut two stout thongs, each about four fect lon, terse fh pay for a skilled workman ell, but Norman, dear,” my wife began, | Christiun name? I could hardly believe my the eastern siie is dry attach one end of cach toa ball and knot the | in the of temples. The people over there | «1 assure you really he's the very nicest young | ears, ‘The girl was wrecking hor life. Mfuling west winds, having Leen drained by | other end of the thongs together so that when |are at prevent imitating most delightfully | ."™"S, “Do you men to say, Sylvia,” I began moisture. Travelers who | the strings are at full stretch the balls will be at | the shapes of Royal Worcester and Dresden |"? cut her short at once. I drew myselt up to | sternly, “that the yon call Hugh isa——’ ries declare that portions | least eight feet apart. That is all there is of | vases, &c. Apprentices do much of the work my tallest elevation. Five feet six is not per-| She broke meoff with « short hysterical little iarity te the devorts | itand the bolas are then ready for usc. But|in the factories, at embroilory especially | haps in iteclf a commanding height, I admit, | ta Pi igwathern Atrica—the resemblance being | the difficulty commences when the novice at- | Thus the purchaser in this coustry is able to | fabs aye my soul that when I draw myself | “Ys Mr. *Ampton,” she answered in # con- heightened by the presence of ostriches, two | tempts to dle them, for dexterity comes {uite a handsome screen cover embroidered | yy to it and hold my chin erect I look aa im- | vulsive sort of giggle. “Mr 'Ampton of ‘Igh-| could hat species of which may always be seen scudding | only with long practice. ‘Every Patagonian has posing @ persoti as any of my equals. field.” over the Patagonian plains like ships under the cradle, for the bolas is ‘0 the avernge @j ot a word, Maris,” I said, waving my left} -‘Svivia,” I said with dignity, drawing my- sail. Others compare this to “bad lands” of Vy his childhood as the is of | cover is entirely satisfactory, and it is only | hand toward her with a commanding air. “I'll | self up once more, “this is most unbecoming, the Colorado and the “barren grounds” of the | the ‘in, and to display skill in its pecopuiond es inferior when if is compared side | not hear » word about him. I won't be preju- | most unseemly, most irreverent. That you Hudson's Lay Company and others (generally | management has been the pride of his youth; | by side with similar products turned ont by the | diced. I hate prejudice. I'm going to inspect | should call this max by bis Christian name to thove who have no: been here) to the Peruvian | so that it is no wonder he becomes so proaicient artists with the sume materials, which | the young mau myself. by-and-by, and’ seo my face is bad enough in ell conscience, but Sesett of Atncame and even to Saiara,Gobs,Kal- | that he ean project the balls an incredible dis-| sell for @10 exch. It should be mentioned, by | Wik J mine eens I'm some judgo of ebar- i i Mee Sa tee steppes of Kaurezm. M.Guinnard, | tance with unerring accuracy of aim, in such a | the way, that the correct thing is to serve tea | neter, T hope and believe, and it) he's really s the noted Frencis scientist, w plored) this | way that the thong will wind around the logs f | im individual sets on six-sided Turkish tatles. | fortune haater, as I take hing to toe TH teen Fears ago, declares | the unlucky object struck, whether Another fod this yenr is for little Japanese | snd it out. Iie won't itapose upoe mo, 86 ie nearly so much sterile | or bird, with force enough to bury in the | dolls, the bodies of which are inclosed in sachet | no use his trying it.” E ; that nearly all of it is | fleab. heads sticking out, Three | “dfaria has livedy with mo quite lon; enough susceptible of cultivation, and at least three- Ow 70 7EROW THB seLas. bags may be made to reprosent the three | to know that when I saya thing I mean of it is extraordizarily fertile. How-| ‘The method of throwi: nimal with the | S20e6: nine of them will do for the muses end | it No paitering with Worthistan & Co. at ever that may be. it has never been cultivated c wing on mi lg y neler ap hence on| home or abroad’ Sho didnt attompt to cons stall, except in ihe immediate neighborbood | bolas has been thusgraphically described: Ornamental «; tinuo der abortive remarks in Mr. ipton’s of Punta Arenas; but there are a few estancias | tight hand only is used, and e more realis favor. Sho held her tongue like a wise woman, ranches), especially near the ltio Negro, where | thongs at their of union, portieres is for she knows when to be silent. | amen Sy pg There are deep | between the ends. The balls are I wont down to table d'hote. The man valleys, too, which the dreaded pamperos can-| in @ circular motion around Hampton ant exactly opposite me.” I looked at pot penetrate. furrowed by mountain torrents | when sucicient centrifugal him ‘in point of it I starcd him out of snd dotted with picturesque lakes blackened | obtained the is launched countenance. I won't deny that at first sight siderably mollified. He cor- Fe 3 FO fat 3 os By iF E fl i EE F t a E E i E if 9 ‘i ¥ by wild duck that are as tame as barnyard | to be cm fowls, having’ never learned the fear of man. | calcula’ jon, in which ‘The plague of eastern Patagonia ia the pam-| bear a part, an. ee eee gonian F Ba FE Fek ee F ba

Other pages from this issue: