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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY’ 13, 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES : There is plenty of the best in the latter ia in Iuck. While others are fighting for (Spee ogee ag I Love and the Dramatieta, Peter Robertson. in the San Frape.sco Chronicle. “Gentlemen,” vaid the weedy man as he came ‘th an air of dignified intoxication, “I kise xing you" band.” Heaven knows that I did not attend that fight by His coat was buttoned at the waist with one eT TPS 2 Written for The Evening Star. fesae ns Eetsetraneatea| THE SOCIAL WHIRL. |sios acrid titan "wt pe ced that ihe ‘entire up} ee of [ag wad eves 0 let pase ing fhonght pa aren on repel E: ex : | fo the people whose business it ls to walt upon hanstless cou! boda” Bo tnanty enn the eveeeshs | Ball. Boom Gayeties of a Washing-| them. ict tem ons col wet aight vemon rivers that one can go by water to almost any as ber that, while they are dancing in doors, poor} My wife disliked dogs, and so, althongh I had is that it shocked me. Capt. Kelly can | button, his shirt Was effusive in front, and bis section of the country, and natural harbors are ton W: cabbie is blowing his fingers 10h warm out- , it | testify how I rebuked him. Bat from that hour frequent along tho coast. The fact in Uruguay inter. side and the horees are contracting, plourisy | SI"@¥8 owned dogs as a boy and young man, i Waistcoat noglige. 4 my usefulness in my ch ceased. - was five years after we were married before we | cous heard my explosion rey — oun to Alebeme?” had adog. That dog was. fox terrier rejoic- | thoroughly understood the matter and #ymees| "Ye% seh. It tea ve'y pretty play; e pale ing in thename of Tip. Our Irish handmaiden | thized me. Yet I realized that I no longer | ™<p7'% valid d'eana, eab. 3 made our little boy laugh by saying that Tip | Stood where I stood before I owned Tip. I had Fe you ever been south? > “You, muh. I have be fallen. There a pon Was short for Tipperary. At first my wife ob- | ‘lion. There was Bellet tn thp bearers | quently ax an actor. jected to keeping the dog. and nowas I look | firemen, that 1 was a ‘sporting character.” I * back on my rise and fallas the owner of a fox | had to give up ty chorsh, and, now, though I gee terrier I rogret that she did not have her way. | 8m in a presbytery.a thousand milcs eway. Tip came tous from afriend,a member of |®™ haunted by the fear that the story of may my congregation, wis weut tomakes long sia | Sshting dog may follow and blast me oven here. ie almost» peningula, having an Atlantic. wea —_— 1 eaves. Really "a ind-hearted person rd of 120 miles, a southern shore line on the ought to leave on.a bad night at the hour for Rio de ia Plata ‘of 235 miles and a western | THE SEASON AT ITS HEIGHT. | (sit the carriage or cab has been ordered. skore line along the Uruguay river of 270 miles, | - You can’t be very quiet just now in Washing- while on the north, separating it from Brazil, ton, and that isthe rath. “If you are “in the ara Perivers: Chuy, Yaguaron and Duareim |The Airy Nothings That Ealiven Drawing | switn” there are dances, and casting to take and Lake Hirim, leaving a land “frontier” of | groom Entert eh part in. If you are a politician there is the ouly 450 miles from the Rio Cuareim to the bar ac Ean Donen, | Premnene & patitianeslng On of tus Onphoekt of the Chay on the Atlantic coast. ‘The Iio| Conversation for Different Occasions—The In either case there is excitement and bustle Negro and its big ailluent, the Yi, intersects the || Begiuning and End of the Gay Season—In | and time does not bang heavy on the haods of Seenty (diagonally, and there are numerous} Former Years—Early Morning Scenes and | tho resident of Washington, other streams of wnpronounceable names but tah, since the wa’. “You have the dinieet, T notice.” E dT are resolved to flee the| a in Europe. The dog hed cost him €40 and yet | If so. my wife and I ar “Certain peculiarities of the southern dislec® great local importance. ; Sounds. 4 REMARKABLE HISTORY OF BYMNS.| he thought so much of him that he could sot | CoUntTy and go to the mission fields im China or | ,)<*riai® Pee’ me in certain stages of intesi- yell, old, Piscer, washings, from which the —_——— bear the idea of selling the animal, but tearfully | Siam. cation. But, as I was saying, that is where the muits and the viceroys of Spain used to ge Thirty Thousand Considered—The | handed hi to to lov Se Ree «A Great mistake lies.” such fabulous quantities of ‘gold and silver,| ‘Written for The Evening Star. owen Peder Years. and cherish him. ‘fe did war ‘tefl us that Tip A Plain-Spoken Catifornin Foie, “What mistake?” [rave all long since exhausted, or their localities EASONSOF THE YEAR | prom the New York Bun. had any objectionable traits, but elaborated his | From the San Francis.0 Chronicle!" be "HabIt |, AOOUt love. The dramatists never do get | have been obliterated and forgotten. During come and go gradually, | “‘A'remarkablo history of hymnology, come | S™4tines and alectiouate disposition, “Iie was | A great ees Cerne ; at the truth, | ‘They aiwove make the right man & hundred years of almost epntinuous warfare, g Q a oF ki - intaining that most of the characters and | fall in love with tn + cluding the long struggle’ for independence bat the social season | piled after a laborious research of twenty | tiger sot fee oe oF ne aEeE kind of fox tor- | of maintaining that most of - yoo nd subsequent revolutions, the people were comes rapidly, tiers, not far removed from the bull, I fancy. | incidents of Bret Harte’s stories have no other mercilessly robbed of their wealth, and many love with the wrong and | years, by John Julian, vicar of Wincobank, has | He had a Diack nose, a brown ear and a black vice versa. You sit i ir i foundation than the novelists imagination, when it is at its height | just been published in London and is exciting | spot the size of a dollar between his thoullers. : ie and ack There gold or iver might Fe: ontamned. wore stops suddenly — gues | the wonder and admiration of the religions Then of Fp cg pny em aplin preceded neamemgonyr ped [A exactly what the persecuted until they revealed ihe secret OF out like anextinguished | world. It is said to be a triumph of typography | Sifter ens nye eBposible not to love him with | judges and other public charac couples will be in hey may have ‘i v died to conceal it; and so such pains were THE NATIONAL HIPPODROME. taken to hide all trace of nature's store houses that in many cases after the lapse of afew when a miscalculation is made or the tug bobs | yenrs the descendants of the original owners URUGU AY’S C APIT AT away too soon—that an unfortunate voyager | could not find them. Within the inst quarter £ L +4 14. | gets ducking. but there are always plenty of | coutury, however, new mineral deposits of ex- — _ hand to _ — out, — we — a richness have — Sores = cheerfully asaure that few have en | and the report of a recent logical commis- a More than 2,000,000 words, or about 1,000 coi- a er Sharks? Well, ves, it was reluct-| sfon appointed by the poreenment 10 oeemine pleasure will then stop Novel Methods of Landing Passen-| antiy admitted thet tees eto that ie eet, ; of the Ss itten by the j tis admitted th : : these Fevources reads like @ tale of the Arabian | and taken breath and look about them to see | Sivtor himself, Era Ieee in Tee book. tee waters and they have been known to . | ap off | Nz what bas happened. been revised in proof from fi ten times. gers at Montevideo. unwary arms and legs. ‘Therefore one cannot RAPID INCREASE OF POPULATION. But now everything is happening. Are you | Every hymn with » history bas a special article be too careful about keeping out of their Way. | Within the last decade the population of Uru- having a good time? If you are not enjoying | devoted to it, and there are biographies of all aaa : Sop eect ten ee aerone emi gd: ae much from natural causes | yourgelf then, in heaven's name, stay at home | te known writers of hymns, from the eurliest THE RICHEST AND SMALLEST} Whenail the passengers have been thus trans- as from immigration, the birth rate averaging | ana don't go to parties and balls. There is| jigious thought. cents the youngest curate ferred. the luggage is pitched in after them, | forty-five per thousand and the death rate only one object in going to them. You are not | who has added to the store of esered ‘some, | then away you steam, packed like sardines in| twenty-seven. It is enthusiastically claimed | there under compulsion and nobody wants to Hymnology in various: countries, tongues and Of the South American Republies—Its Wealth | the sweltering, sea-sickly, rocking little tug, | by resident foreigners that. this 1s not only the | se you unless you are in a good humor and | denominations is treated under separate head- Consists Principally in Cattle and Sheep— | till it suddeniy bumps up against the impene- | healthiest Yam on the face of the globe, but | want to be amused and toamuse others. There ings. agape ame —Liv. | {rable crush of small craft of every descrip-| that guod living is cheaper here thananywhere | ly an old, society, piloropher ic Washington | "A review of the book in an Englisa newspa- n ce fion—scows, rafts, barges, tenders, produce | else. The best of beef. mutton and pork can who explained all this to the writer for Te | per says that “not the least interesting of the Ang Is Cheap and the Climate Good. boats, pleasure yachts, fishing yawls—in solid | be had for 4 cents per pound; fish, 8 to 5 cents; Srar the other d: He said it often amused | many conclusions to be drawn from the work is ducks, chickens and partridges from 10 to 15] him to hear people complain that the conver- | the discovery of the wide range of hymn writ- cents per bird and vegetables of all kinds are | sation one heard in society was co frivolous. @ pursuit. It will, for example, be a rev- correspondingly cheap. With a [ae gpomeaar te BALL ROOM CONVERSATION. to many who know Sir Nathaniel Bar- pry me le pa apaoemrenil Crane “Why,” said he, “there isa place and time one of the greatest authorities on naval candle in fect. It is| as well as of erudition. Mr. Julian or his as- reaching its highest | sistant, Mr. Mearns, in collecting material for i the work either visited most of the great li- culminate in the last | braries of Europe or communicated with the * week before Lent. | librarians. They have consulted 10,000 manu- The weary votaries of | scripts and annotated about 30,000 hymns. all his cunning tric! id soon Mrs. Hobinson— } down as apocryphal in character. lots of trouble before they get there, but you that is, my wife—thought as much of himas| But there isa jadge still oceupring the bench | an tell thut harmony of ceewuee which ts 80 Sid T. Ho was such a woriderful dog. At the | up ir the northern part of the state wuo ex- | noticeably absent trém the real thing, and se table he would sit on hishauaches and beg, au: emplifies in himself the oddest of Harte’scron- beneficently ed by the playwright. if that did not attract attention ke would| tions He is, of course, a pioneer, and has seen | Now, let us the seedy man lounged {ump UP itt? Vacant chair and | all sorte of experiences. while his judgments | beck in his chair and swung Las lett leg over peut the performance. He trotted aiter our | from the bench are characterized by a'whole- | his right. a Uttle boy and obeyed his slightest word in | some justice and common sence that are iedeod | “ilold on. Another? Tay that wou our admiration. ‘Then he at last | refreshing. But he is a queer genius for ull h, certainly. We'll need it Now, letus foneluded that he would sleepin noother room | that He was trying a case during mnideummor this question of love. Why should but ours. At first he kad insisted on sleeping | of last year, and a number of San Franciscans tant to one? How can love for one ona bear rng it our modest parlor, but once | were present in the courtroom. It wera hot Imet a clever woman once thank the bear skin happened to beaway so he came | day—such a day of intense Siaring heat as is | you, Jobn; here is to her—I meta clever woman upstairs, jumped ona Pillow by theside of our | only possible in a valley among the mountains, | © We talked of love.” bed and there we found him in the morning. | where the influence cf the coast breeze cannot hem |" 4 tie eight after that he slept on the chair at | penetrate. it was a divorce case and many | “I said, gentlemen, we talked of love. My the Lead of our bed. T adies were in attendance. As the day wore on | heart is dead.” (Ihe seedy man sbed a dranken it grew hotter and hotter. ‘The judze became | tear.) *We talked of love.” zoeee t more and more uneasy and hitched around in| ‘Have you ever loved? Lasked. re to make Tip a comfortable bed. | his seat uncomfortably. He threw open bis he answere: And when I was away she said she had | duster and twitched at his collar several umes, one love more than once?” es much confidence in Tip as in ail| Finally he appeared to reach a desperate te- man. I am in agreat cim- the burglar alarms and policemen that | solve. Clearing his throat, he looked apologeti- @ answered. ‘Iam fond of were ever invented. What wonder~that you | cally at the ladies und said: adore @ man who loves chem and Brow to lovea dog that eats with youat the| “By , ladies, you'll have to excuse me, talk about them. I am interested in elec- table and that is so mindful of the propricties | but I tell you what it is—it S80 iufernaliy itw and L enjoy a moonlight walk witha as never to drop a morsel of food upon the car- | hot here that Pll have to take off this | young man who knows ail about it, {like pot, a dog that thinks so much of you that he | collar,” and suiting the action to the word be | prize From The Star's Traveling Commissioner. Mostevipro, Uavovar. E FLATTERED OUR- y s, atu a third gentleman is welcome, . construction to find that he is the author of | even insists on sleeping on a chairat the head tore it off. because he goes to all the ser Cfage of ten bushels to each man, woman and | for everything, and ball rooms are not lecture | hiiny liynine which heve found acceptance at| of your bed? By and by mny wile and I came | "Late in the afternoon the lawyers became in- | lam ccntimental and 1 have selves, after our mani- child in the country. ‘The leegest export is | hails or class rooms. I would as goon think of any rate among his Baptist friends. * * *| to think a great deal of our dog. volved ina wrangle over motion and the | reads poetry to me once or twice @ Wi fold and varied expe- wool, valued at €6,000,000 per annum. agri going into a candy store and asking for a beef- | A matter worth remark ts the limitation of the} “You'd really think Mr. and Mrs. Robinson | judge left his chair and began pacing back and| ** ‘And you love th v riences in South Amer- Shout the, sama ist in quantity, valued at cteak'as I would expect to find political econ- | ephervs in Jhich certain hymns find currency. | thought as much of their dog as they do of | forth across the platiorm, Finaliy be stopped, | ** “At ty I n't endure the prize ; ~ about the same figures, and hides third, of | Omy discussed between dances ata german. I} Considerations of geography, as well as theo-| their own flesh and blood,” was the extromo | faced the disputants aud said: | fight you night, of cours ican ports, that nothing qhich not lees than $3,500,000 worth are| surhose the man whois able. to, discuss the | logical temper, determine ‘the choice. The | way in which one of the neighbors put it ‘By gentlemen, I'm tired of your | end the chap horses is a bore when more remaiued to be shipped every year. Then comes whi - forly labor question or the tariff’ intelligently is a | tendency is, of course, toward comprehensive- |" But Tip was not always angelic, He had one infernal wrangling. I'm going home.” | feel like discuss wetr Bat I couldn’ learned in the line of Sericultarsl eesgorey One million, and other | more Intellectual being than the ‘one. who | ness, each school borrowing in succession from | fault. He would fight. He preferred figiting | “Well, but, your honor won't you decile the | 1 ‘Seageuta’ cailtiads hoon, pone ae onctae more thay | rattles away about new “figures” in the ger- | the treasury of other schools. But the distine- | te. ea ing. Never was a game cock bait motion that I have been j : ?” aaid one of doubled during the last ten years and continue | @2 and has a full fund of gossiping jokes to | tion is still marked. In America, for instance, ~ _ 0 a 1 is a ; | pugnasious. He never saw auother dog that | the counsel. of transit from ships ‘: relate, but the labor question and the tariff | subjective, contemplative, farm soar 1¢ did_ uot offer a battle, and the bigger the| “Oh, to with your motion! There'll be toshore. Those south- | .*X@LISHMAN'S RESIDENCE NEAR MONTEVIDEO. | to increase like compound interest. heless | SFC 8 Much out of place in a ball room as a | verse holds tho place which is givenin England | other dog the more le wanted te fight. It was | time enough for that in the morning. Court» eee 0 Sears St cmtie doen, Gatcontin- |e oat Gromeaily Saoen, lout hevertheleet | Uoidusah would boos the counter of a candy | end in Geranay te cote cha meee an notloug before all the dogs on our suburban | adjourned,” and with his crook-handled cone Tibing ern ports where vessels | tally line Montevideo's water front. There is no true, that the famous Leibig's extract of beef, | store.” Ho proceeded to give an imaginary | tinctly expressions of worship. jn | Street Were cowed. When they saw Tip coming | on bis arm his honor made a bee line for the | 1 fiua in men. come up to a civilized | getting through the crush nor around it ner | in such Se ee aud elsewhere | conversation, which ran thus: yin the ‘getimation of Mr. Julian a hymn is | their tails would drop despondently und. they | nearest “errigat piace.” cient variety © pier and discharge their | under 1t;so, perforce,you must go overit on your | a8 & tonic, xe ey = cee hone tans. He—“Oh, Miss Blank, how glad I’am to see | any copy of verses that has been included ina| would ruu. But around the corner in the — man who was gers over a gang plank are rareas angels’ | OW tWolegsand trust your luggage to the wait- . in Jars whicl sisiae We hemist, | YOU,, Thave such an excellent joke to tell | hymn book or designed or adapted for con- butcher shop was onc dog that was worthy of would be pertect, L onpsan + ® gang pl 7 1g swarm of yelling, fighting cargadores. Pick-| Dr. Leibig, the celebrated Antwerp chemist, you.” gregational singing. The total number satis- | his steel. hat was an English brindie bull, would feel like Nisits. Asa rale anchor is cast three or four | ing your way from boat to boat, with nervous Fe- | invented the extract about fifty years ago, bué She—‘Oh, do tell me. | Let's sit over here in | fying this criterion 13, Mr. Julian estimates, | five times as large as ‘lip. Time and tac Three or four men were admiring the ease | ¥*uted him to be poetic ald marry as miles from land, the ladder-like stairs are let| membrance of sharks ben: ath, you may be | in 1866 an English company purcnased the pro- | #6 corncr whore we will not be interrupted. | pot less than 400.000; and it is curious to learn | again they met in desperate coutlict. Tip was | with which the driv gia | many as 1 liked it would be happiness, Do you down outsite from the upper deck, and shore- | compelled to make some alarming leaps over | cess and removed the Teeter seed from ae ust pUcss what it’s about?” that, following the order of languages, the | never winpped, although he was never the ene the bere nee, Of & beer wagon was | think,’ ahe asked anxiously, ‘there will be scene Boing people descen i to row boats that come | ¥**ry chasms. or occasionally to walk over an oo Keres Ame Dantes 2 iittie Oh, Tam dying with curiosity. Is it | greatest number have been composed in 'Ger- | victor. Those were drawn battles, Atter ther | handling the kegs, lifting them from the vebicle | liberty for women in cay dancing over the billows for that purpose eo aprry ml aie 7 of = Longa —_ plsce way up on the Graguay river ‘The poston buttons?” man. English hymns come next, then Latin | he would come limping home bloody, dirty, | to the idewalk with a dexterity that was almost | ‘I doubt it,’ I said sadly. oe - mi "| whe your trembling feet are safe on ot y or. Even that experience is bad en: Dt f guess again.” and finaily Greek. The comparative barren- Then it must be cotton ties and bag- | ness of the Romance and Slavonic languages is to be explained, no doubt, by the hold which “A woman never rty except when she can't have it— ything else.” agh in the terra firma youare so utterly “unstrung” astobe | Euglish company has lately been putting up Usual rouch seas, for one must spring off the | glad of the enforced delay in the custom house, | extensive buildings for the purpose of canning | _; stairs at tue precise instant when the tiny boat | where you must await the convenience of petty | meats and the works are in charge of Chicago | ye _soyy torn and wretched. He would come to the marvelous. back door and then plaintively endure the | - necessary washing and scrubbing in the laun- |.) “AP that man, strange to say,” anid one of <3 - “Now, gentlemen, what is love? ; wrong again.” fixed ritual and traditional forms have on the} dry. After these dreadful battles it would | te group, “never drinks beer, ‘ been many demnitions, but nor is tossed near on the crest of a wave, and hay- | oflicials to be searched asa possible smuggler, | men. Fanniz B. Warp. She—“O8, do tell. What is it about?” Greek and Koman churches. The very earli- fe me half an hour to muke him presentabie | _ They looked the beer driver over again. He | the sutijcct ing successfully peformed that feat. be rowed | and are ready to vow that you will end your P + r ey He—“Well, then, in Montevideo if getting out of it is as THE EMPEROR'S DILEMMA, She—“Tin plat olt a matter as getting in. ——— Natay throng’ the s: my own part | sometimes 's about tin plate. est hymns, such as ‘My Soul Doth Magnify the ! How very interest e | Lord’ and the quotations in the episties, were, wetted to the skin, or 1g. Hav t they actuaily got the factory started? There | of course, in Greek, and 170 years elapsed be- jo be fished out again— te body. ject. F and then ho would spend a week recuperati was indeed @ magnificent specimen of brawn | doubt if tuat o These fights troubled me greatly. but {| and muscle. He was fully six feet high and could not stop them. Even when Tip went | ¥eighed 200 pounds. is not accurate which holds Jove to be simpiy an intense desire for some- lly we had intended going direct from | An Event in China Shows That Ma Ju-Lung big! ‘ thing. quenched ‘by possession. Sometimes . 8 is really notliing that I so adore as tin plate.” | fore the voice of sacred song found expression | walking with me he would fight in spite of ait j tow say he never drinks beer?” said an- | the ubject lias suficiont veri ~ to land on the | Patagonia and its neighboring islands to the Had Enemies as Well as Frien Now, let, ue imagine the beginning of a con-| in a secoad tongue. ‘Chat was Syriac. Then | J could do. other. charm to revive the desire. But be it w 2 backs of men, at Guatemaia on mules, at Costa | Argentine Republic, that country lying Sexe ielll 4 coruukag: wadileustonn tanec tice ta China, | Versation on thoroughly frivolous matters. followed two more centuries till that long and| ‘Things went from bad to worse, for after a yataak known to touch it except as you see | or wit you will, if ithas not that power the love Rica in wazous, at Molieaco (Peru) in a barrel, | regular course of travel around the continent, bd transac He—"Oh, how d'ye do? Are you happy?” still unclosed eyele of Latin hymn writing began, | time Tip succeeded in chewine ey ane wt the | bim now—onlyin unbroken packages. | never comes back. ‘he lover tells the aweet- end a bundredt times on rocky coasts where the | but when we came to purchase tickets for Buenos | in which the emperor took part, is recorded in She—“No; I'm never happy.” to which our modern collections still owe the > ‘erous for other means we | Ayres it was discovered that not one of the| three recent issues of the Pekin Gazelle. A i forefeet of the butcher's bull dog and the ani-| ,, The inquirer was a prohititionist, Here was 1 up aud swung out by cranes, | many steamers making regular trips from the mal had to be killed. ‘Then Tip felt himself to | t¥® man he had been jooking for—a perfect | E t heart he is always the sume, will always be the ‘Of course not. Clever people never | most melodious and passionate of their lyrics. ; same. Clusped in his arms, th : short time ago Ma Ju-Lung, at one time com- | are. 1c is pleasing to an English churchman to kuow | be an unquestioned champion. He wos toro specimen of physical health, handling beer | the man she will ne like cattle. seated on a platform or in a rough | western side of South America to ports on the mander-in-chief in Yunnan, died at his na She—“Are you happy?” that when the seabof silence was taken from | arrogant and more beiligerent than ever, | °V€TY a going So — out of saloons, and yet | that is where the mistal box or tub—spuu round and round in midair | eastern call at the principal port of Argentina. Place. Many citizens in the province drew up| He—“Asa clam.” the young tongues of the west the strain of | though when in the house he was a pattern of | Dover jizinking the beverage. He desired to | wif, gentlemen, I could only love a women —*C) rT x "t | prayer and praise was first outpoured in ear]; &n elaborate memorial to the emperor, setting | 1ite'ciame T penton toraee rad I don't | prayer and pr - 4 out the great deeds that public benefactor had He. mm I'm an oyster.” aiany lovers of sacred music may be sur- performed, and praying that suitable honors ‘But oysters are dumb, and you talk a prised, after reading Mr. Julian's book, to be bestowed upon his memory. The memorial- I. earn the origin of their vorite hymns. ‘The 2 P ‘Yes, but oysters are happy and you | various modifications of “Rock of Ages” are ists said that it was he who put down the great like them and 1 met happy and med like te traced irom the time of the first appearance of Mohammedan rebellion in Yunnan about | therefore I'm an oyster. single verse in tho Gospel Maguzine of 1775 twenty yeare ago. | “First and last," the paper | ‘They laugh and go dancing around. They | dows to the Intest variant Provably fow peo- Joao of ee ennnTumental in ‘killing over | have talked nonsonee, but itis « great den | ple aroaware that “Guide Us, Ob, Thou Grest 10,000 of the enemy and in his own, person | harder to talk nonsense brightly than it ia to | Jehovah,” is @ translation of’ Welah original Practically decided the fate of Yunnan.” quietness, affection and the domestic virtues, | Ake the acquaintance of this man. ‘hen it 6 happened that there moved into our | ,,““This gentleman,” said the probibitionist to neighborhood gentleman who liked hanting | {he driver, “says you never drink beer. Is and who kept several very valuable Irish set- “Yen thet’ - tera. Sly wife wrote me of his coming when 1} , | ¢® that's 80; not a drop of beer for me. Was away on ministerial business. ‘Then came | 4 long pause. “I alwa; whisky. Seba tirttere reteess = huce Then He Dropped the Subject. met when I was a young wana charming girl. ‘The owner was exceedingly angry and threat- | From the Chicago Daily Tribune. She was many-sided. She had refined and ened to arrest me for harboring a vicious dog. | | “Ten thousand dollars for « dog!” he ex-| varied tastes.” Evepy day she necine “Vicious,” my wife wrote, who was always different. Trust me, the woman who bolds the husband holds him as she held the sweetheart, by ever showing some charm.” ‘You seem to know all about it.” ‘I know something, perhaps. I loved om myself,” and the seedy man wept again." iin ia the mile of thy lat century SMe | toys Sein he eerie he detent moa |climed as be looked up from his wewspaper | true new ig, ik the tneeta of the dhamond. talk about the tariff stupidly. written in the middle of the last century. Mr. | loving dog in the world-—ouly he will ight | 14 fe were wedded. Buili she scemed to develop da-reply to thls memorial the emperor iraed Sues aa eine eas Julian presents to us sixteen versions of | “Then Tip made an atiack ou suothen og the | DO 70 believe any one ever paid any such a decree ordering that ie highest honors tha! ss a % ‘i ” new attractions forme. One happy year we See passed together, and then——” ‘She died?” No. She ran away with another man. She could be paid to one of the deceased com-| But to return to the subject of the season— monammer nee ca re mander’s rank be given to him, including the | allusion not being made to winter or spring, | Of the “Dies Irm” the numbers arer Inca. sce ote Lgeisekee the (ges of Yunnan. | but to the season when parties are at their | mon = 19; is fms a =, Be if @ imperial historian also w: .0| height in Washington. It i eat deal ensier | 0n€ of these has been separately noted and al i Sompile & record of his brilliant exploit to say whew the’ toasca onde Len wien Grin: | have bem cxitcaliy Outtereds ike biograph- Afterward enother memorial came to the em-| sins.” It always used. to be an accepted fact | ical sketches of hymn writers and translators — a tigned the document denounced the general | at the reception by the President on January | 87@ not all complimentary. ven paionet = z = = 3 rithout gloves. MONTEVIDEO CARTS. ja-round terme, ‘They auld that in ‘hin. out ete a IO ore leer tym, iueluding the benutifal and oem ie was a loafing, good-for-nothing fellow, ear y rld 5| popular “Where High the Heavenly Tem asthe clumsy apparatus slowly performed its | All of them discharge their passengers for | Whom nobody could abide. When the rebel fron the latise ret fe lol Stands.” aud assed. them off as original cou work, and finally dumped. with a duli tt Buenos Avres.at Montevideo, on the northern | lion occurred he sold himself to the rebels. In | Yow fur society muy be affected by the White | positions. It was found that he bad unblush- pon some waiting scow or raft or tender. But | shore of the Rio de la Plata, leaving them to | their service he proved himself a monster of 5 Irish setters and the policeman on the beat | PT . called and told my wife that the opnes at the |, “I'm sure I don't know, James,” she ro- setters would kill Tip onsight and thatshe had | turned, without stopping her needlework even better lock him up. We had no place where | fora moment. “Does the paper say that much | bad varicty enough for several hucbende, And she could coop him and in desperation she sent | was paid: how, gentlemen, you know the secret of my ad- him to a dog iancicr to board at the rate of a “Xes, there's an article on valuable dogs and | miration for widows I may have variety dollar'aweck When I came home this was| it speaks of one that was sold for $10,000. I | enough for « second husband. “Dut to resume, the state of affairs, It was a question of hav-| don't believe it.” Love, as treated by the dramatists, is badly ing no neighbors or of having iip, and aswe| ‘It may be true, James,” she said, quietly. | trea With a broken heart a woman is a could not afford to live at enmity with every | “Some of these blooded animale bring fancy | tragedy, with one husband she is « drama, one around us we sorrowfully resolved to dis-| prices, and there's no particular reason why | With two husbands she makes a comedy. with pose of Tip. My wife thought there would be | the t should lie abcut it.” three husbands she becomes a farce aud with ho dificulty in selling dog that cost $40, but | “I kn ow that, Maria; but just think of it— | four husbands she reaches iarce-comedy. Kou House depends largely upon the President for | 14sly appropriated the hymns. They were | we found he could not be sold because I did | just try to grasp the magnitude of that sum in | can't makea heroine of a strong play out of we looked ror no such trouble at Montevideo, | make their own way across the mouth of that | cruelty, and once caused the Massacre Of | the time being. + | really written by a dead friend, whose manu- | not have his pedigree. Buying and selling | your “weak, feminine mind. You don't | Woman who bas been married three times. ‘The = rich A splendid capital of prosperous | mighty river by one of the many local steamers | 40,000 persons in a captured city. Finally the % raga: Guna rae scripts Logan had obtained under pretext of a 4s basso often been described as | that are constantly plying to and fro. There- | hard-pressed viceroy bribed him to desert the : ve : desire to serve his memory, in South America. Judge, then, | fore, being in Uruguay and having had quite | rebels and enter the imperial service asa gen-| | There is always, by the way, a set of old- ——___ ro —_— ef the utter demoralization of unprepared | enough of its landing facilities to last alife. | eral. ‘He rode ina yellow chair, and in all | fashioned people who deplore the degene raey Storles of Judges, feminine nerves when we found here the very | time, we have decided, to remain I g enough | things did as he pleased.” Even after that he | of modern times and sigh for the sood old Frou the San Francisco Exa.iner. Moret method of landing we had yet encoun- | to see whatever is of interest in this emall fe. | Was treacherous. to the emperor, and he,ex- : aes eiules eas aes are such different things at tl Meau-| seem to realize it Ten thousand dollars | Ordinary human mind im an audience will ad- while I had to pay his Loard, which was an ex-|for a dog Way, Maria! that’s more than [| mit the possibility of a woman loving twice, pensive luxury, as I am not’ a rich man—tfew | am wort but sbe can't do it any more without being Ministers are. Then it was that» newspaper | | “I kuow it, James, but some are worth more | laughed at. Yet I douvt if there is u woman friend —— send Tip to the captain | than others.” living = _ ~~ half a Some different ‘ ‘ daye when the White House was “exciusive"”—| Ex-Judge Rearden says that all lawyershave | of one of the fire companies. Tis fireman | She went calmly on with her sewing, while | men in her lifetime well enough to have mare tered, compared to which the man-back transit | public before doubling back on our course to | posed the capital toa rebel attack in revenge iti “e ive” - i e liked blooded dogs, and would give ‘Tip a hi he fumed and sputtered fi * ried them all. The trouble is diwt all men and a Camperhe ‘and the barrel of Moliende ace | bane ieguame aaa for being compelled to ride in a green char. | (he efinition of “exclusive” being a houso- | hearie of mercy until they become judges. Ia Bs, 8 p a home | he and sputtered for a moment and then Blessings. Everybody made an unusnally eare- where it would be convenient for me to run in | dropped the subject, especially the weak, | Women can love, but very few can entertain LA BANDA ORIENTAL. often and see him. That was the way in which | feminine mind part of it. one another for # lifetime. The best wusband fal toilet on the morning that we were due in the superior court, during the brief term he La Banda Oriental (the “enstern strip”), as | 46, and his later services did not in the least | "At 2 i Sal tailed on at ornare ross poe rome es unwashed” did not invade its precincts’ and | fVed, he always refused criminal cages, be- Tp went to live with the firemen. coast and the best wife are the best com jonte , expecting to skip, dryshod, overa| 7 c atone for his atrocious crimes. a Preisdsite, he o pause ite sa cthierof the young iiuii was sure 6a le distinguished himself the first day by get- How the Plunger Was Fooled. me. Itis ali very well that George a8 0 plank into the city. and emerged smiling | this country is generally known among South |" The signers of the document said that thos ae ietatpena trie re Geass ronal ang Ghowikiie gray balratentar mer | tag wale toeicoen Gob eee hilitgs pepesteos | ttsee testcase clever and so bright that Mary is bound to be his state room in answer to the welcome | Americans, was once a part of Argentine, | who had recommended him for po.thuron of this kind have forgotten, if they eter | aged bonust Judgo Rearden says that on two | rate. Capt Kelly told me that was a great| A rounder is telling a good story about how a | Lappy Wi Bat ater he go i ashore." But to our astonish- | the latter country being then called La Banda | honors were nothing but a lot of small traders, knew, that the ‘great unwashed” — fre- | occasions he saw Judge Levy weaken under the | record. Ihe Lip kilicd a powoned rat and | noted jockey gave a big plunger a hard throw | ™"re¢. expects Mary to entertain him, too, ment there = Jus neither dock nor pier in sight: | Occidental (the “western strip”), both names packers Ceniee rao biger ese they |quented — the White House just, as | cflect of an old western bonnet trembling with | nearly died. The fSremen nursed hin back to | gown last year The Sob eissgside ned | 22 Melt have found out while they were courte tuccoed palaces of the capital zlcamed dim | having reference to the dividang river, whi th, | feared that the tens of thousands of innocent i stufie the first ti in a case of | life and strength, and he became much attached ‘aga’ ascortals ing e had nothing im the distance, and even the stair-like ladder | by the way, is the Parana, tho mamve “Iileae ci | souls whom ho had sent to bedes wena reer | much, if mot more, in old times| stuffed roses, The first time wae ie aware ‘a her. He was so em and to his new home T ve | that the wife of the jockey bad received in-| vain he couldn't see auything but bis own shy ducing his ‘convaloosence ana ean greatly | structions from her husbuad howto bet, and, | ability, winets she kept tellmg him about. moved by the way in which the poor dog | Setting an introduction to the lady, he became | Hence, gentlemen, parting aud pain. ‘The wagged his stuinp of a tail. After that I did |#80rt of chaperon, always afterward occupy-| divorce court was ¢staciished ‘to relieve not see Tip for six weeks, vacation taking me | ing an adjoining scat in the grand stand, Fre- | exhausted uaiure ana give love @. iresh from the city. When I returned I dropped in | quently the plunger spoiled the odds for the | start. Love is a ‘lire, ‘but you have te at the “Wour's” and found Capt, Kelly jubilant | Jockey+ aud his backers, 9o the latter, after | keep putidug fresh chijy on it to heep tt going. Tip. ascertaining the souree of the leak, set ‘about | Ii you dou twomebods else will Ab, me! ‘The ” 4 to set things straight again. Woman sits by the ashes growing gray of @ lick Sets eee Meee Mery ieee aed One day the runner hastened to the stand | whose warmth and light have nearly gone, and When he called Tip to me I saw by his scars | ud told the jockey’s wife her husband said put |a new lover comes aloug with « lutie bundle of and scratches that he had evidently had « fight | $200 oncertain ‘horse. Knowing her usual | shavings and start the whole business again. very recently. form of betting the plunger was aware the sum | And just as often gs the fire goes out if the man “He has been fighting again?” I asked. named was a large sum for her to hazard, and | coucs with the shavings it will blaze upatrenb, “You bet, and he just ate the other dog up.” | When she seut the money to the ring he fol- | Geutlemen,” aud and I felt a thrill of deiight that ‘Tip had’ beon | lowed and literally smothered the bookmakers | began waling up dis the victor. That wasa balm to smooth one's | With bills on that particular performer. When < feelings, arrowed by his battered appearance. | the race was over, however, that corner of the | but that the object may be varied ad hibitum, “It was a big white bull,” Capt. ‘Kelly pro- | stand was very quiet, ns the good thing failed | If we were compelled to love one woman what . i to get a place. The jockey in question rode the | # terrible thing lute would be. If we could orly ceeded, “‘and tise fight was back iere in the box beg erpe ely rnd Femained in statu quo. life boa. What did it mea: ed up under the es would be than “they do today. Everybo: p-| grand larceny, and the old lady who called lata’ belonging properly only to its broad | «ble to close their eyes for indignation. ‘They, member the pi Bie hice lator Nee ters asked the judge for a pass to the Episcopai ‘stuary. Next to the Amazon and the Missis- | therefore, asked for a revocation of the decree, of Thomas Jefferson lounging on a sofa und |Home. She said that Eee son Fred had de- RATHER DIFFICULT FoR LaDIE®. sippi itis the largest river on the western | 8iving honor to the spirit of the deceased Ma. | Peceiving anybody who came to him with the | clared his intention to steal because he couldn't SAre you ready, ladies?” said the ever-gal- | hemisphere, and its mouth is 120 miles across, | | Here Teh be tek eect ampere. Tha | Cothaatty of s evuniry goationes sitting on | “get work,” and whatever he had stolen was Jant captain; and thereupon we were escorted | MTaisht ax a line can Ue drawn between Monte: pee ee tetet rip hp his porch entertaining ‘his neighbors ona Sun-| {or her sake and because he “couldn't get ideo and Buenos yres. vs that ne “ e id his vii of a ae to the end of the ship that looms up highest | Cabot christened it the “lio of Silver™ Gena decree extricating himself from his difficulty. ae peCpla, Laas cany oF lene Se voy. said Rearden, “when the old woman qhove the water—whether it be “fore” or “aft” | where about the year 1520) it was by no'means | He said that the vestowal of such a high dis-| Tia? are how called “swella It is doubtful | finished her story Levy was crying as bitterly Jam not sailor enough to tell you. Away down | on account of the purity of its coffee-colored | tinction as the erection of a memorial temple if the White Honse has ever been more thor-| as she, and the young crim:nal went to the below & screaming, tossing, rocking litte tug | waters, but. because, having stolen enormous | should only be granted where the popular feel- oughly democratic in its style than it was under | house of correction with the smallest sentence edvantetl and receded, the plaything of the | quantities of treasure from the coast Indians, | ing was unanimous in its favor, and, as praise the second President who lived in it he could get. billows, and straight down the steamers aide | the insatiable Spaniards believed that by fol- | and blame seemed to be equally apportioned in aca oaks ae “Next year the same fellow came up onen dangled a ladder of tarred ropes lowing up the course of the stream they would | the present instance, he ordered that the pre- ee a ee ee hee robbery, and the ancient the ‘top, but swinging Lo find still richer regions in the interior. ‘The | vious decree, as far asit related to the temple, | Andrew Jacksou, too, was not fond of stiff: Indy turned up as usual with 6 full set of tears, he: river is salt about twelve miles above Monte- | should be cancelled. Ma's doings in the fesh | ness. He used to storm about his stu thun- | She shed them freely, but the judge was familiar ascending and | video, and its turbid yellow tide does not mix | ®t recorded by the historian, but his Ehost | dering out denunciation agamst the United | with her tactics, and the young man went over descending. like caricatures of Jacob's angels, | readily with the ocean. but may be distinctly | will have to do without votive offerings, which, | statvs Bank, blowing clouds of tobsoco smoke | to San Quentin. and marveled their temerity. For a mo-| trace 'y out into the Atlantic @ hundred | it 18 to be presumed, would be particuly agree- from & corncob pipe, and often his principal] ‘The old lady was very ungrateful, for she ment nobody -pereeived the connection be- miles of, more. Uruguay, the ald Indian able to it, gectant wali aiold dressing gown. ‘The old- | rose in her might and cried: tween the « . the ladder and the tug, and | name of the region, nm mai — ++ —____ F 2 wi ry ‘used kina then it dawned uponus like a biowon the head. | the. legalized ‘ttle’ of thie emelkns ‘The Mathematician, fashioned people who long for the good old Y, Judge, you to have « stall. It was tough, but Tip chewed up one of his everyday clothes | say “love you once ina lifetime life would ‘ * i; s ug. Atisennobling to lov ; ! times of exciusiveness would have been shocked | heart!" the bull's foot and that Kinder knocked him | "alked up to where his wife was, seated, and | nut be worth living. — b nn tay <-. = to clamber over the /of South American republics and 80 apy ers apes Lenpat beet state, if they had seen the throng of people who were | Judge Rearden tells thisstory of Judge Lake, | ou! : —— M Piccsn ll of —— — a a bo hetero 4 ie Ste ane “yi ba art rma 2 tn relly hese | a peng ben! SS eo —_ ‘What can't he evulveand whet mayateries aolve, constantly admitted to lunch in the White | who appears to have been another Jeffries in| ‘Then I told how Tip had vanquished the | *™ounting mann dollars, - ‘s swaying t eir sto] piace. | itants are comm 5] ir ad end cling there above the briny deep til “ jae” oh Rot another sect nore House dining room during “Old Hickory’s” | hi ity toward prisoners. On ® certain i that | South American neighbors as “‘Orientals”—with | iy ich Bot another soul cares? tt pas ebt ena | seraton thes the Bobbing tug bobved near enough, then drop | the accent very strongly on the “tala” Though end trust to Providence. Though it seemed | least in area, let nobody imagine that Uruguay hat to walk a pirate’s plark could not be more | is of lesser importance nologous lines and qucer syinbols and signs, | reign. Not that Jackson himself was not oné | oceasion when the clerk in his court called off enuse, polygon, bow denis fo ~ _— coaray, oe — he wanted to | the first name on the docket; ly aoe pe we aud as many rhomboids | be, but let a ody in the White House | burglar of sixt; eight years: forward to than other southern He deals with a serious face. _— we reee himself biden with artificial (Sekieipry sf mater What he for ti i forms. en it comes to good manners the| “Prisoner at the bar,” “you Ae aprthegis new may tke epeate ee ™® | Preridents ‘of recent ‘altace angers ihe |, ,"Pelsouer at the bar,” sald the Judge, “you Equations and such, well. it jast beats the Dutch |as the men who filled the office in | theft many times. I hesitate to be severe, but *s dog b; his wife two crisp $100 bills to make good eutlemen, when you look into the thing ses Lapras | Bow beautiral it iy even in, that, insigniteas Lheard of Tips exploits. “I did not like it that | ‘The plunger tumbled to the dose given him, | detail of concentrating on one at a tis the firemen should make » protessional fighter | 4 since that time there has been a vacant | ‘Lake a soothing drink, wou't ou! of him and mildly protested. But what was I | 8Atin the ladies’ stand. Thank you; 1 bad forgotten. But after all todo? The dog virtually passed out of m:; everything is a changing ideal. The woman at hands and Capt. Kelly was taking most e: ny Aine baton: thiriy wonders wiy at twenty she married the ther suitor lent care of him. Ihad not absolutely given ~ mau she did when she sees how the of ‘How fast he can figure them out, the beginning of the government. Gen. | in justice to publis morals I find it my duty to | Tip away, but 1 had told the captain ther Lo a et ES Sr tees eae ke en Percentage and fractions are not hig attractions, | Washington was ‘a swell,’ it is truco, but wes feutence you to confinement in state prison for | could have him for two years at least. Then I] When naught seems set aside lor you Us tate pebeemertenong Le 3 fello eee Sm are a oe be more of one than President Arthur? James | the term of fifty years, and when you emerge to find that the firem ‘To do; while others have far richer dowers, thought a fool. Whe man at Delights this logrithinical sagen ome Madison had benignant, calm manners, but | from its walls may you be a better man!” ite a sporting character. ‘Ihe mere sowner- at twenty-two ahe thoaght o . Yere bis manners any more captivating than| “Excuse me, judge,” said the clerk, ‘‘you got He cannot more learn from theleaves he may tura, | Gen. Garfield's? ‘The -Amorican People don't | the wrong man—you forgot—it was young versed in the science is he; choose their Presidents because they are good | Hayes you were going to send up for fift; But one, a a Fe dr Scholarly mood | bowers and scrapers, but the mistake is in sup. ere: That old fellow there ‘won’ last two No rules can he find in or out of his mina, Dosing, Sey ever wers chosen on this prineinis, egeay SttaPC ea Somers | yg ER nS a Working e Jemnonstr @ beginning formally o season in ee ten rs ca) | Wialitgten iuny; Nowetie Ney genessliy ola i With days brimful of hope, and work, and an who bi Was to them poet pcs Full to the brim. sha hai ing ee loved him ten years beiure eine ce hw ‘The angels, watching from their homes above, ged her ideal, too. Aud so the world goes like the idea | “Can see how sad the waiting is; how sore. —_, Be deor’otd ‘Siechornyt It has not But if the waiting is not all in vain, changed since you sat at your old table at forty ont note who wait fare serving truly, too; Fears dipping your now a te gercon wise. h they need not mind tl € hameless pain, here's to Galuan, God rest woul ‘But think it is the part they are todo, eo ey yes fifty years also, and you may as well let —_—+oo—___ things. “still, gendemen, gh douk ae on hose r to be the White House reception on January 1. | the other mattef stand. When a man of sixty| It #0 happened soon after this thatI led the we have ioved. The -y sii who won om ‘Then follow the’ cabinet receptions and the | edd hasn't learned enough to avoid being | noo jer meeting of the Y. M.C. A. As hentisaponen fe Seek Se ot : PO lye ei a a season ia in full blast. Tt isn't very long after | fous ect, he's mock octen ry ag ate ena ieee ‘convention in town bet Sor thet iuppy tomembeancs. Ge Sted ‘Mamma!” called the pretty seventeen-year- |“; hardly more than two months, but a great +e. many of the visiting brethren were in attend- jbiy, bebaved shametully, but the of the new-mown bey, the sumucr sunset deal can happen in two months. ‘Two i we waited and watched for her, still belong to old girl from her room, “mamma, may I wear | who are oing to make each other hap; The ance. Going to church from. the meeting I my embroidered black silk stockings?’ miserable for life may meet during these two | From the Sun Francisco arch the “Four's.” Capt. Kelly was sitting pare pra ttle in Outside and he greeted ie!" We would have forgotten ‘dem Lut for f : . ogee ley , ; | An ingentous little instrament called the gar- | : $e. Ti Sem ove Suc Serres Wrest ahi al 3 ae edd Pee mpc agent re pppoe tr | Sel | Ra rare eer favented,which, at-| sea ton ae ake foe fe of ea Weare | An amusing story, demonstrating the power | uot gate, test lone Mute scar abi = male: natural and quiet way, but they see each other. ‘8 garter, registers the dis-|am to let Tip kill the rats there” of imagination, comes from an English cathe- | by cruelty or charge of later years. | The spe ia atepare tara felomis and comet mecomet they become] tance she walks each day? The physical culture | Ido net know what wicked impulse made me | dral town. For many years balls denen de. | weme” we tmanbood go back, but I did want to see how ‘ip killed | vout old ladies have been in the habit of going rat. My ride and my interest in my in fine weather or in foul to the early morning ‘toreed service in the cold minster. a. Jang: MONTEVIDEO MILKMEN. ‘;Cortainly, dear. Pat on your handsomest | The philosopher who has been quoted be-| Guin: “Wamen Goan for al enae oe angi 2 = ie — | pair. fore says that the season is a good institution sports, and just now walking is the fad. ‘The Barrowing, there wes no help “for— republics. On the contrary, though it has an| ‘Are you crazy, Mary?” asked the father, | for matrimonial purposes. Women appear in | heroine of hour is the woman who has nothing ‘to be d. wi, MOUDt |, the | aren of only 73,135 square miles (being a trifle | suddenly looking up. “Don's you know thut | the most attractive form and won have on their | walked the greatest number of miles @ day. deck rail and get outside on those | larger than England)’ with = total population | there is nearly a foot of snow and slush on the Hitherto it has been impossible to determine le ropes, with as little display of hosiery | of only 300,000, it is one of the richeet dad mon: | atrects” toa nicety the distance covered in a given eo circumstances will permit ina breezy day at | prosperous. There is not an acre of a ro- | Yes, Joseph.” time, as when & day is spent in the dorks i Poor hays ennas JO eyes | ductive soll in ite whole extent and iya| “Weil, sro yon trying to bankrupt me buy- thon cling for dear life w ihe ship lurc per. and it is the only country—at least ing stocki down ‘as usual, till somebody sboute | this side of the world -chere Arora! Gold is | No, Jonepl Y" Then you let go, expecting to fall | at discount. Whereas in Mexico, Peru, Chile, omizing of water or into the interior of a | Argentine, Brazil and all the rest of them one| “Certairily. You're a man, Josepb, and don’t shark as Jonah was gobbled, and presently find | receives a round premium on Uncle | Understand these things. Gowns cost more Zourreif an ondisnidied heap on the slippery | Samuel's guiden coins, varying im amount | than Stockings, and Iam anxious to keep her of the little tug. Then gather up your | according to the times, but irte fror in the siusb.” | al ~ | ski | oy remains = Lemp oe bg eer your ae in a ee you pay heavy See os mm Srvesing iy your tears, ii more | privilege o! your twenty-dollar ‘Tornado strovg- than the Pieces turned into the Coin of that countey® Poe Oe en Some Ge Sanam = donde pow tg J while ITS PRINCIPAL SOURCE OF WEaLTh. The tornado whirls at » rate variously esti- a Seed eeeiecan tn Bay wk a At present Uruguay's principal source of | mated from 500 to 2,000 miles an hour. Though Record got into trouble by pale ephemeral and diminutive, it has vast; heading over a marriage bette a be trusted to was Avery and the Phoephate descent for themselves, pea z it i f a E