Evening Star Newspaper, July 30, 1892, Page 10

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)

Saget? 10 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, JULY 30. 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES. themselves in his presence lest the slong time and I eured her, and now though STORY OF A SHAD EGa. of them ehall find its way into the egg to render FLEEING FROM THE TORRENT. their conversation would offend him, she has been more than six years married a the Intter fertile. The opening referred to ts 80 ———— for they all love and admire him—we were very | has her first child. It isa boy. She waa tell-| What the Microscope Shows of the Secrets An End to the Jekyll-and-Hyde Game of s | A Thrilling Experience With « Cloudburst im unhappy. Of late years, howerer. he has been {ng me of it and was so happy she Kisred me.” of Nature. in Chicago Sky Scraper. an Arizona Canon, more tolerant, "He thinks we are we walked in I noted that the houses of the | CITRANGE THAT THE MYSTERY OF THE From the Chicago Daily Tribune. From the Ban Francisco Chronicte. Fe eee en ee ne NE, | 8D vecawe.<f 1io and being thould be oom “By George, that's another one!” | “Speaking of cloudbarsta,” said Col. Granger, clvilized . not become more ‘and more ambitious | tained in so small a thing asa single shad ogg! ‘The blonde young man with the piastered hair Bad a little personal experience fu that line ua.! under Count Tolstoi’s teaching and example. | How does it happen that this little sphere, lees end old gold mustache chuckled softly to him- | once, and never want it repeated. It was in the = in-| “No, I think not,” was the reply. They than a quarter of an inch in diameter, brings self and looked again across the way. summer of 1872. A young fellow named take advantage of his good nature, and Ieando| forth a highly elaborate vertebrate animal? = “And ehe's a better looking one than the girl —— Aiea f agence Presumably nobody will ever know. But even > ‘ys at the window!” he soliloguized, after as crit- xy do as littie ns they please and take what | to examine such an object under the microscope | [f + fy | alancramination of the new face as the na- may object, but they | and watch the germ within it develop is ike tare of the case would permit. dangers of all kinds. against which we wore am- ‘Oh, the count will not do anything to us,’ | looking with supernatural eye into the remoter | |} He was a bookkeeper in the employ of a real | ply prepared. We hada fine ontitt, well stored epee boll rere emery : J estate firm whose office wason one of the upper with provisions, and we corried good arms and ape witeonaiges y floors of a down-town sky scraper, and for ser- an abundance « m. ‘This for the eral hours each day, while the members of the | double purpose of killing game and defending firm were scouring the atreets for business or | ourselves against possible attacks of Apachs, giving exclusive “scoops” to every real estate hat time We hed been oat meportor te the city, he had the room to him- | from civilization about six weeks, and had made ps During the frequent spells of loneliness that es JUST BEFORE BATCHING. came upon hita he bad cultivated by degrees juaintance of a typewriter gi Onatting in this way wo walked over the vil- wee , small that only a single spermatozoon can pass ee », then visited the gardens where the| |. fees." : : through at one sime, and, as quickly ae one bas regiangpenps 7 Corel Re a | steadily at it until he had completed the first ae ee — Sth Ne poly vig rey | haps | Sqaaintance had begun by 0 N TE are TO LSTO I | draft, but it wae many months before it was Bors acabalong gilt 5 rae + Pe an : yg Tecembling | Smile upon her and securing COUNTESS 7 S| SRR nek veneer ge, birch trees whose. beauty reminded me ef the in Bg that of the ogx. lkewlse surrounded by granules | tre. He persevered with his smiles, howe TOLSTOI'S LITERARY METHODS. famous cryptomeria trees which line the road ba vers <a of, protoplasm. ‘Tho two nuclei approach each | 1) °pbortuntty offered. e began percep ony “Doos the count write rapidly?” I asked. dreds of peasants on to the shines at Nikko, Japen, wo found our ta other and biend into a single germ cell. With | . aby George Brown and I were prospecting in the Haschecs mountains in Arizona. It was a comparatively anknown country at that time, and filled with i ae i i i i ammu a ee E it cit Sa* = ~ TOLSTOI’S PEASANTS IN THE FIELD. } it HE i it p.and each day proapected the r¥ around it, packing our tools and water Pe i Eas calm, ‘ | some days, she returned one morning there a clom . “I donot think he can be said to produce way back to the house. estate con- 4 | rs Lag a oe alee Bey Ma dead an pty odey ser speed pp 1 ih W ! as : tains about 2,500 acres of arable land and for- said to begin. The single cell divides itself into | S*° entan clear and he A Chat With the Wife of the Great elec hectrckege icine oe tthe | et and ta woods are wid, romanc ana oa - tro, the ro into fone four inte eight, ond |° Tics baa ommms to andes 4 arac’ oi , am tifal. It was given to Tolstot's grandfather by #0 on, continually doubling, un’ very soon i ii “ Novelist About Her Husband. | pasves the world woall be much bier off if to the literary work of the count. Catherine If as a reward for his milic the little shad begins to be recognizable. The | fpeni*; .rorting, €reeting, rey ; : any af Gin waltecs of the present Ghy would | Oo covmim Wid WREtis ein Worexee: | taxy bervioes, aad thongh not a large estate for first picture represents one inside the ogr, forty | Meas an toy {ints Naka ot males to a elump of eine RIE = works a br ys Russia it isa very fine piece of property. As it Laeger HOURS AYTER IMPREGXATION. four somes fer the latter was impregnated - Thin hed been see as be ° 4 wy : met eS s. own works as long as possible an c is today Tolstot resides upon it rather as the en, in the process of propagating shad | | In the hatching jars, where the oggs are kept | o.), aur nine ween oe 5 Sasieh, Gemaenees : HIS LITERARY METHOD fects, apa rule, to baring aoe gooet of pir, family this as its owner. | He | artificially. a quantity of eggs are taken from a | Continually agitated by a flow of froch water, | Que 4%. wlile tem fre yynincrd anaie keen would sell it today if his wife would consent | from foar to ten days @lapec before the young eutly the vanguard of of the wear and tear comes in the revision ry | living female some “mil” from @ male fish is art and four ; proceed | | fishes emerge from their inciosi alee and forming north Folstoi's Wonderful Knowledge of Women | and correction. He revises his writings again prt = ooea mpertobmet pee} earths | poured upon them. This renders them fertile, opis bo ein’ abtete Khe caine peared Hoe ghee 9 an . of rain fell and How He Acquired It-The Story of | snd again, and he never corrects his own manu- | 0%; right to aoc to do this he has washed his hands, as it were, | but just how is very wonderful indeed. What pends mainly upon the temperature of the | ¥#d not seen before, and, + became blacker Aana Karenina—Tolsto!’s Manuscripts and | $°7!Pt,| wee ae have a new copy ere fa ‘aid she, “and. Meads ancy we | GEMM sabpeudiaitty Goaeeraiog Hunn tia cart truck him as being an improvement upon per. m t r — No. i. Boownand . have had for a long’ time from his writings came | devolves entirely upon her. His action in mest ‘Thereunon he sot is oun’ * we kee a aa NN Hrsg ll sors of paper. He pickup aay | fom. comedy cuted “The Frute of iia | ishing to give cp his property wes undonbt <a e igrernn tnd ge ogrcs opeahoas Sanenoden bees S - . whi mites run in o 4 VE It was a slow pr It took im so ring | thing that comes to hand when thought strikes | tion,’ which had q relinquished his jing him, her family and herself from PPLE: : process, rok him some ing and drops as large, ap- ~ i. | of ‘3 y . “ - stance th noti: whe fwct that he was there. ; saeounted Gardagy nl to 6,000 rubles, of the same sense, and as wo drove in a stance ing, the © EHOW AGL WO | cad Whe an Benes’ rane | sriiton oe croc @t.i00. Proring: Gig, presint Sumios 11 | redo Grestbkcy Garoeh We" eicoalls. Toran 1 : eee Deraed. Without, oufforing bie 2c men we must love and | the backs of envelopes, half shecte of notepaper | teomed to me tobe ashame that our peasants | the train last night I'could not but think that epi fag wage nn tea segy 9 ener sche oe : :. ate be loved by one.” This | {9mm from shor’ Jocters, and some of bis jbest | should be starving and that this moner which | of the two ahe has chonen the nobler and the Pe it bec secmed as though c ‘ while suffering from “his lonesomencs hie itably burat, and there was e : . | ell should be kept by the gov- | better part. Her life as it is can hardly be one ed feeling to » the desk that brought | rush of 5 an the sewer, tm the | pieces of paper upon which the children have | we could use 90 well dhoald be nee ey or | et ret end rots hee merifices, cheerfully |... UST MATCHED, Siypeertr iain mete cohssme anette lake Meigs cvtaneccnes heres oar a smal | For this reason it is baed ta preserve hin ineag, | in cherge of i asking them to let mo have it for | made, though they do not include the wearing | makes tho germ imide the amall spherical enve- | water. ben’ i which my husban: n his head upon his hand and look in reply to the question | °tipts, and such as we have are stored away in the famine. They replicd that I could have it | of sackcloth and ashes, are to my mind greater | lone transform i a Labesh cae ae ee ee 3 | og 3 Tit if I would promise that every bit of itshould be | than his. Tolstoi is giv: as to how he could de- | B:¢ written his mantnoript it is copied tie gine | wed for the famine, and thus I got it.” own ideas. His miele scribe just how a woman | For years I copied again and again everything | , “Has Count Tolstoi ever received any money greate if into.a creature of compli- | just ready to ‘chip the shell,” a ng UP much for his | cated structure, developing withia afew hours | carries a yolk suck full of noarishing food | on his fan thar veld wire softened the Loart giving up all for him, ® backbone, a brain, a heart, | which will remain attached to him for som | of a cab driver. ANK G. CARPENTE: intestines, &c.? The first cause back of creation | days after he is hatched until he is able to tak for our tive jaract of water. by the reote; For a long time she seemed ob! down into ¥ i: it for from his American sales?’ Insked. ‘Hundreds ———_+oo —__-___ would ae pen aap! seny tines T copied parts | of thousands of his books have been sold] HELD A GRUDGE SIXTY YEARS. wp rma ne Ba under any and all cir- | I ean manny tir nag cua - = : : : of “Wi ae fi jon and | sve ‘i oP: : ; surprised to see her lean ber head o: cumstances. Foobar int but I know that Tcopied the com-| “Yes,” replied tho countess, “there was once | Why the Commodore and the Admiral e : end Gs her apes upon him with an exaggerated nd the whole i | fi America a check for #400, and Would Not Be Introduced. It was the Countess | pleted story seven times before it wna brought | Sent tous from America a check for 4 Tolstoi who was speak- | {nto the state in which it went to the printers.” | this is the only money we have ever received for | Prom the Xow York Recorder. | : : | any of the count’s books sold outside of Russia. ‘ 3 dining r. of the count’s home at ¥ a sheet of note paper and doubled over the side | 8Ye it to the poor among my peasants. Ido | P tie 5 dit d Polyana and were in the midst of long chat | rity ahect, lenring « margin of two inches at | Bot agree with my husband about the receipts | in New York, when two silver-haired and dis- look of anguish ou her own face. perfect, and in the iangh the acquaintance was estab- | lished on @ basis of reciprocity spun oar eaten aatocme: The regular salutation between the young man ou throagh which Behind us was a solid coming with the The noise was rt : - = epewriter Girl No. 2 thus came to be dif- this wail of water about the great Russian novelist, The count | the ends of the lines. ee eens ct ne ecane Siaeecey | Hagalbed tooking gonditier: odie Xn. Baring |, osc paiucal visibly ot week. Labies eos bowl aie ef Mice ferent from that of X i é himself was far off in the interior, away from . and to spere. If we received s single hopeck | “ummow to tranmect with the navy cashier in| much of this operation the microscope will __ The same shad, immediately after hatching, ||. : a and emile at le the railroads, in company with his daughter, (about oue hal ‘a cent) from each copy of his | °h8re°. There had been not very long before | reveal. : | is shown in the third cut. It will be seen that “7 No. 1 he would wander in efuree belsind as dust takingcare of the sick aud half-starving peasants, : books that have been sold we would be very rich. | Change of officers in control of this important © begin with, a shad egg is simply a spherical | ho looks rather incomplete as yet. = the ote F desk, out of sigat of No. oom of the Ressetia, ee - 4 As itis are poor. Not poor, of course, like | financial branch of the service, and the new pay | Capsule filled with albuminous matter. The | However, in the fourth picture, which shows we bole ah mead et ~ lost ay or poor beasts te fl A Pesce en popes ayaa oe ¥ Ger Zam it por or dor eéndton iM: ofteerhaprened otto betas wit the yo | ©#™0H6 M8 Compoved ofa very thin and him cro pynts om the Ghind day afer hash lca, womlyZllwed bya wate of tor eee boetoor the Volga to Moscow "had stopped My sons have to work on. their Lregran and in| culiar relations, or, more properly, absence of diversions the blonde young 1 falling in torrents, while thet terrible over a train to pay my respects to tho . Moscow we are not rich enough to keep ® C8 | relations, between these venerable men, ‘They PS Pe = SOHN monotony of his lonely hours, and plumed him- * increasing im height and count, and with Be Hubbell, the agent 7 S oe it we bad i ab th. it| Were both retired naval officers, one an a p> LTT es self not a little, moreover, upon his powers of diy gaining on us, Iwasa the Bed Cross, had been received among our poor if we mt the count Yili. fascination. Brown and shouted to him SS SN EEE thinks it is not right. wo not foel happy | miraland the other a commodore, who had i n What it mi have led to ot - bul bat the thy ble: ‘the peasants in their homes, eaten supper SS. content and troubie in one’s family. thing of them but the paymaster who signs SEVENTEENTH DAY AFTER MATCHING. Upon tragedy, broken in upon the current of dmy mule up the sidebill, aronnd the family table, and Soest answer cr = TOLSTOI'S NEW CHRISTMAS COMEDY. their checks or gives them their money at the a marae = risa ss ingle | tae ib ecaen jilag 45s Ge aA nan existe: ve Jet ns not a \ ‘questions the countess was me bits o! “a rent membrane, perfora! y a single | ing, evidently getting quite = ne morning there was an alarm of fire close tied cad fast abons her husbobste intelieotaal hopper ar gerry ream eee ay open core TEES opegins. In ile center of the litte | though the yolk-sack has not yet disappeared. | at hand. From the court betwecs te two ser. with the mule be was life. “The count himself.” said the, ‘does not Mens Stee fas ds icua ol Ge ee eieo nes ee be is the germ nnclous of the fish that is to| On the seventeenth day after hatching, as| tions of the building only a elimree ot the tase which was cn that sou have been reading bis works, AOS mas time, two years ago, and we had a number | Sane to take tie check ee cen teat. Tt pe, is fall of spindle-shaped pollywog, | with a fair knowledge of the world and pretty look further for bisa, ‘He ts always enthusiastic while pee we ye E ——< in the — Ps scoipeneaced — | fill out the checks, and the cashier, who is an ‘apert ont which are exceedingly | good notion as to how to look out for number a —— fire —— were aye war ae when the work is finished he is diss ; ve some private theatricals as a part of their | Mul out: the ont | lively a is on! | one. rectly acrows the court two windows, pe express, train and does not want it to go to the publisher's. ra amusements, but I urged them not to do so, Per x! taining to two different offices, were rai: at the distance between tt Ho doce ‘not ike to tak dbout hintocf, and if | ‘ saying that they knew how their father looked “Pivengsvpipcisietr inte SS se the same moment and two female heads were | and me. It warn watter of self preservation, any one persists in his writings the sub- IF uke uupon wich things av foolish and that it would | be har they did not know cack, vibes einen arid — . thrust out simnitancously. _ | wrace for life with the elements. I had gob eee ee eee aN Oey aa Ne win nettere, however, | ae such a thing would be, for ell navy fellows | A Lone Posey County Female Proves the | The Absolute Power Of the King and the | , They were the heads of Typewriter Girls Noa. adel eer pom yee d= dye wl 1 spread out in width, losing and they found k comedy that he had began | X20W alll other navy fellows after they have Value of This Advice. People’s Fear of the Priests, depth, but still it seemed to i been in the service two or more years. So. he | Fro pois Shana. ecith. ONE OF TOLSTOI'S PILGRIMS, some years ago and the eldest daughter, for 4 From the Minneapolis Trittuane. From the Overland Monthly. No. 1 looked at him with a «mile and nodded. : No. 2 assumed an expression of the most ideous monster intont upon “Be Hse dialect like | Nhom the count would do anything, persunded | Aroving scribe writes from Posey county: | Reverence for royalty was one of the most | lugubrious melancholy end waved her hand mn al le-t it whould be baffled, I this,” caid seta 1 poll ag archypnasty re | him to finish itand let them ‘play He took | don't you? ‘Commodore, this Ascore of us were sitting in the shade of the | marked characteristics of the anctent religion | the usual mauner. vidchill, but the curnent was ed it and correeted and rewrote much of | 24-80. Be introduced, gentlemen. depot building waiting for the train, which was Moment by moment it came agin Wa coma ee sone nde [of th Hawaiians, Tt was formeny a crime] ,,Th¢ Blonde young man looked helplewly | gaining on sometimes on the other side of the page. detente to here, and we had quite | jibe commodore arose stiffly, and to the pay | an hour late, when a yoke of oxen attached toa | punishable with death to pass through the =o — ee seg oo, = always uses a pen in his writing, and never has | 4 number of friends in when we played it. It | bea ey een aes, which Edwin Forrest queer-looking cart turned the corner. They | king's shadow or sit higher than his head, His| He couldn't smile and nod in one direction | higher up the mountain we should be above ite far hago chncinpelrmatr er elem og | haa twenty-siz parts in i, eo you see it wae no | WUT thank you, sit, for my check. Ihave no| WF driven by a woman about fifty years of | person was sacred, and Protected by a strict | while looking melancholy in the o-ber. | to: d be safe. I thrust the towels @eup im couraged and dissatisfied. One of the greatest | pall affair. 4 rea Prought out st Tule | desire to extend my acquaintance. age, who was barcfooted and wore a man’s | system of taboo. In the royal palace the taboo | It is simply impossible. ‘Try it and see. his side and he gavea mad plunge. The water us and I felt him carried off bie i 4 P in ticular, shrinking visibly in hix elothes, feet. I grasped an overhanging buch and he ons, is exhibited I iss wand| snd fecling bis plastated his ties alowiy on | warawept uvey in the torout leaving me #us- ot Just touching the turtace of T hung to that bush for my life, and r A i: A v i had reac regrets of his life today is thas he has wasted, | | Then the admiral stretched himself his | straw hat. stick, with which the king announced his ex-| _ A# he stood there, gazing vacantly at nothing jae he calls it, much of his time in writing | Str, %e'woccow St Petersoery ed Hareh ie | fall six feet, with a stately swagger, and said to| “Git up, thar’, Buck!” she exclaimed, as she novels, and he refers to his novels as ‘that non- | ? in Si the pay laid th the off ox with dit ith A is iter gi i i . in Russia. It had a great run in St. Petersburg, | ‘2° laid the n tho of ox with a resounding | with a carved stone cap. If this stick was| end, the two typewriter girl, happily oblivious pen sense. where the emperor and all of the court and r ethatToamofirst, | whack “You, thar’, yma g t You, si it Pete, what you skittishun | lowered on the approach of a courtier he | hitherto of each other's existence, turned and the © TRE KREUTZER SOXATA. official society went to sce it, andit created o You, sir, to give me that | -ound that way fur? - esi Wo i | Whoa, now! Both of | was co " tone looked at each other! despite the strongest exertions on my part ib “Does he ever speak of the Kreutzer Sonata | burst of laughter and applause from beginaing {PCO without wasting any moro of my time! | ro stant ati Sd Say Secaglsed na TOL. tee | oahu Socbod “ak Bi agin with ep nas Vent om Loma Got ap ee ees bee eee and is he, as has been reported, writing a sequel | toend.| The emperor liked it. He said it ele- | io ntey or half an hour for wlitile service shy | , Ske turned thera up to tho platform. threw | Rees: being in disgrace. | pression of frozen scorn in their eyes, two win- awa mugen ; ahoned fae dufercaces eo the ay wad that | calls, by —for about two minutes’ work. You | 2¥N some bay taken from the cart, and came | The King’s will was absolute; but the ma- | Rows came down with a simuitancous' bung and f the storm had aie Pee it showed the diiferences in the two civiliza- | \eor'that, sir!” | 4pamong us ‘to inquire of the depot nt | jority of the Hawaiian monarchs seem to| Nos. 1 and 2 went to their work. +. to permli be ‘No, Hap hen pee 0 Tees cee ions.” Neither had been wai ing longer thal five | sbont s Darrel of salt, -aeclienys just oie? been Pd a — disposition, and . . . oy i; . E. I f phy A my ig ogee PO THE CZAR AND ToLSTOT. minutes; but no doubt it rcemed. twenty or | 42, she was waiting wround, when the smart mare made no, impropdér ‘use of their! From that time to this they have utterly the mountain so a piace tou, Suueaaane Homie ass cag or aan || “Hew does eeaperer taped Comat Tie aber aoe eine muriner, owing to the | ioe ee ere eed ie ae a eareling for a | extrome power. It was due to one of ignored him. Pec the aa, alte. te oa: " “ - use, remarked i them that the taboo desk saa “Iie considers him honest and earnest in his | Check. aiguiag elace eat ce ct kee |e ys eal if [ married at ali I'd | the women. | They were forbidden the use of |" He tries to look cheerful and unconcerned, | had begun, the whole time occupied having | beliefs and in hie life. He does not look upon | tre ina differout direction in the long eorrder, | M&ITY a Woman who could drive oxel some of the most common articles of diet, such | put he isa changed young man. teoen Bittle mere Sten I hove Golem Se the Oa- ety and life should be, and he regards fic- | 2% 88 4 revolutiorist, and he haa told the gov- | "the polite parmaster was dimafenndod ie is that meant for me?” she oe qananas and certain kinds of fish, on’ pain | “His old gold mustache, ones his pride and how pements 0 dry ennen bn oe, " bh a ernment officials that the count is an honest | ned never in all his years of cruisig—and he is valrs straight nd to Sipeee “ was prgeg @ woman to = the object of his loving care, looks discouraged, ved intoa raciug torrent, the moun- | ; “Are you a wido 2 e eating house of the men, or one of t i : In i din fe t bh | now a pay inspector, which in the navy mea: eae eee “ , forlorn and img. : loners Seoiaten tigen: ah tier te ee the ofSeinls do not like my husband: and | thirty aw ah ae tek Mee cai, Bin a widder ever, since a sawlog Bepolllepe a of the | The fire has gone from his eve and his hair, | pe ey ee thinks the world is all wrong and. he is doing they think he is entirely too liberal in Is 80r | frigid a ciimate, nor had he ever got so afoul of | T re ~ im ay years ago.’ . ser rll peng mapa ’ ried sag eed 9 its glossy smoothness all departed, has a wilted, ore afig wae (A cangp oma + aan Toes he can to help set it right. Ae for mreelf | Powe he discusses: political questiyas, with te | Seeeal combination, in whRh both aiden were | ANA tow would marry again if you hed the | sideration for some of his women, Be ep pe eed eft ey | hap PAS cama pdr goers pestants, Ho advises them ns to thelr life, and | face ee mould, “When Jim lay a dyin’ in the house | |, The work of converting the natives to Chris-| "And aa he goes abbut iis daily task, with hia micnts resolved themeclves again into Mecce amd ‘ead boctghhts Mllaw a's have urged him to | 6 little troubles in their families. but be de- | “Sohewhat more than sixty years ago, when | 2¢ told me to marry ngain if I bad a show. | tianity veda assisted by this voluntary | trousers no longer creased, the quarter of an | then disappeazed. The sun shone bright and frevrttry sorbet ay ideas, | Votes, his pen to the sctting forth his idens. | tne two oficers wore cutting their eye teeth on | Aem! It runs in onr family to love. We begin | Tenuncia _ @ old heathen system. The | inch long naila that once gave an aristocratic | clear, the torrent had rolled away and nothing po yraemical— ieenana er Nadas noel | Whether many of them ere right or not is ®| the quarter deck, they both happosed to be | Si7ly and k ey it up to the grave. What's your Porer of the priests was broken by it, though | air to ench little finger now roughly gnawed off, Was lefi to tell of the awful to Seen cpg i, toda | a cn Mees lh, ter Tous| wrt on fhe morn ick moni > tome, | inne on eta | a es se slippers on hls | ovne cf Goratnion kets behind. |B mack 0 A jowever, e fo i gots any in’. 3 " t, days’ th of beard on his fi © mount de, ove Sccomplish ‘more for’ hie use ‘thn Keng | great good, and "that ia in the stirring up the | eve built after, the last war with England. | soetuing to say epit ove afore “em al? whe | esinlly understood, when one considers that | and the general look of a person who hamt anon, told ite depth. ‘Trees uprooted. aod were th pemaitinagg ‘oe ‘ait, | Public mind to thinking of these questions. commodore was junior watch oficer. One | g, en ner you just now,” he jeeidcinid ogaead _ = the right of | anything to live for and doesn't care to have, yamagee es ee ee gy 4 boal- rae Seen aioe Sta ire ecavaraias het a toakias jarn| serene Sale acta ot the “Wrthers | “Don't, ch? Then what's tho uso of getting | Later they depended largely on the “anana’ or yes rachly a Giriation with two | oFiginal resting place ‘and left in, Its coures EE Two TOLSTOIS. ‘ . vd of the waters, write novel. He is devoting himself to phil- oaophical essays upon his peculiar ideas of what se nonsense and folly. He is now working | [ian and they must not disturb him. Many been denaded, thousands upon earth and rock had been i | me on my tiptoes about it? You man, you just | power of praying people to death to retain | typewriter girls at the same time.” | showed its power, while the desolation around ““In order to understand my husbénd and his | *¥4 I ssked the countess as to the favorite rend- | Triangles in the eyclone sensom, and the future | the same as asked me to have you and J jost'ihe | their influsnes “We aeoant of —_— | mo proved ite dostrectisemesn tee same time cheerfully and uncom-| sacks * the Countess Tolstol went om, ‘ou | ing of the novelist. Said she: “He was reading aide wile wating tae poe cee ‘son | Same as accepted you.” | disabuse the native mind, of a belief in this [OLINS. “As soon as I could safely descend from my Pitniagly softens the hard road edbemyntips y. His | Montaigne'’s Essays when he left home» few | (heforemavt, “One of lin orders lid not meet |, “Oh. no, no! I merely made some inquiries!” | particular kind of enchantment, It is not the —" place of refuge I went into the canon below which he would lay out for himself and bis | ™ast not look apon him as today. His | dave ago, and Ieaw the book lying open on bis the tae teh, Wouiohatt: aan cee | lied. Ip alone who practice it. It is believed | Geltectors Pay Prices for Them Which Are nd made a thorough search for poor Brown, The countess tmpresses ¥ lite is made up of different periods and he isa | table, where he had laid it down,” Ie will take | 180 SPProval Saas marty caer Them inquiries was about love, sir, and my j that any one can compass the destruction of an Yar Beyond Their Value. but could not find the least «ign of him. ‘The Charen he te tall, “ematkable strength of | different man now than he bas been in the past. | it up ‘in all probability when he returns, for he | {” accel ene dear | heart's thumping away like all git out! IaidT'a | enemy by a suficient exercise of will power. | suremberg Letter to Chicago Herald. | mules we had ridden had also Sarees one gharacter. | She is tall, well formed and fine | Until about ten or eleven years ago ho bad | has no time to where he is. As to his | inhendsomely, but the way was not quite eka, | marry again and I will, We are engaged. When | In fact, co strong is the popular convichon of l don't tht mys - a not a vestige of our camp Temained.” Jory ers pen rerand hay ring thc SV na ee wn, | tea" ego at ee te, He) ecetae gute) cog want | njgrant to gto” ne” ™o"| teats oan ml tie ae aon ns mor rp tf men —— cheeks are still rosy, and 7 ig whic! novels were + | devours ch, English and German 5 3| ‘Madame, you have totally misund it is sometimes sufficient merely to con- any vie hardly begun to show itecif in her lasuri. when both himeelf and his family ‘were oe | Se oe gheon and he gave bis junior a reprimand which ho 4 y Josephine, news and reads magazines. He me!” exclaimed the young man, as he turned | Vince a man that some one has determined to| Germa®y and Austria. They have absolutely aut dark hair. | Hor eves are dark, bright and | perous and happy, and when his life was full | ready imuch philosophy and he ured to reed tates ee too, | tll sorts of colors and appeared to grow small. | pray him to death. no price and absolutely no business basis, pote ful ct intelligence, and her_ face is fall of kind | of enjoyment, leisure and bard work. During | many novela. "He sald fovel feading rested his |, 24 the young officer did between | “1 suked you a fow questions out of curiosity.” |. An instance is related by one of the early | They ask one man 1.000 marks for an instra.| 1 ¥8# at Miners’ Creck in Tdabo when am ta- Bie ine clever conversationalint, and this time he was interested in everrthing that | braid, and. the samo tine ie was ou intel | {2° noe bas ore ane’ between | “WMebbs the jury will call it curiosity, oad | missionarios ‘of stunt who becasss tints er’. apr cident happened that was both amusing and she speaks English fluently with » slight Rus- | any practical man of the world is interested in. | jectual refreshment for it. He read ‘Robert Sion Between these they a RY | mebbe they won't,” she said, as ako sot her jew: | Vinced, and set the day and hour ef ine fot; | ment (having «ized him up as an American | amcomforiable. finn secant, She na womanly woman in every | He devoted himoelf "to his family, to the | Elsmere’ when ft appeared. and also the ‘Hie Tecoguston Between, th ‘etiquette. Soapre.| “They don’t allow no foolin’ round in Posey | death.’ Mr. Armstrong was revolved that the | when to the very next person who enters they "Wie ananes s GRUP” ext Go om sense of the word, and the ideals of womanhood | management tory of David Grieve,’ but he did not like the | feralonal difference of ovine cena ck te were | county. When foller goes as fur as you hey | man should not die. fie’ accordingly will gladly sell for half the amount. Such a parece best characters. are | plenty of time for writing. He slept well and | jatier novel eo well as’ the other. He considers taking in of that little ‘“*moon-raker” below rhe | it's @ hitch or damages. I'm a trembling all | «sufficient amount of chloroform end he looked at the two mountain specimens who e for her and her | had leisure for everything.” He was interested fractof the stately, sere tet below the | over like a girl nn’ my heart's a trying to jemp Y years ago was the cause of the painful scene in ® regular love or I don't know the being romsed was bo the pay office the day. — = don't leave here, young man, | but the bold ruse saved his life. eh ill this case is settled.” a peaer Ghee “But, ma'am, you see”—— jagene Wisii's Story About Wolestt. American public can form no idea of the | S*tion to hear: re rasp rece rmarsings “I don't see nuthin’, mai or damages. ESrep ger cial 's} demand that exists fcr Italian violins. Itis “Tain't got no mame yet, Me and Sally You've asked me to have you, I waid I would!" “The sun of last Sund: 7 ted simply and you will see before long | couldn't hitch on » name. years ‘You cannot always judge a book by the | Will you marry or sottle?’ Printell an sppre- where Tolstoi got the character Anna Karenina, ‘ by third and fourth-clase | “How about pootry?” said I. “Count Tolstot | cover,” said Maj. Tom Speedwell at the Laclede. | “‘How—how much?” he gasped, as he looked | “lative article upon the subject of Senator Ed-| {fst now ace worth from $250 is 6500 een | From the Detrot! | bad brought in their baby to be “*krisened.” WOW ANN KARENINA WAS WRITTEN. each, | s is fond of , and he is of miliar | “If di dude I do. I around and failed to find any 83 thy ward 0. Wolcott's career, his talente and his | bri the of Guarneris and , f, Steen ie ert coldly Ta capoctaliy likes | prejudiced. ag vaya ‘car ee por “Wall, Saginaw walt ie @125'a bar'l,” she re-| i ies. Curiously enough, today. Gees Eeeabto meee Posse eat ions Geum, onr famons post, Pushkin, and while —_— sea lied, as she glanced at a row of barrels down money are bound to have fine old violins. and | , If, | he was reading it one day I heard him exclaim | fUmerY,woars a silk hat,e stand-up collar or ear-| Tho" Tiatrorm, ©" guees the Ohee any eit hee i i and nowhere in my | that Pushkin was a most beautiful writer and | Tiessecane. When I finds man doing all those | with’ two batl's. Make it two avd Tl cell i¢ SS ee “A bim % ridiculous aur ee hanges countries an: lizes wh 7 ve ly. exce] ing man. they are not the eame,but are entirely | . c “ 4 He y,ffinned except, the young : t he was done for and got out of | of Leadville, and Wolcott expressed suspicion new creations. Some parts of Anna Karenina | , 4 ; ty: off the box by planking down the $2.50 to the | that the horses were perhaps too frisky to be are almost exact P : ‘ ‘The cart was driven arotndto the spot, | fustworthy. ‘Thereupon the friend eet about ences. The deseription $ . his ey i ry Is londed up and thon the woman pins ee renee Wolcott his ox- children and her mannet of taking care of them ay SS ip ot Grace, | came back to say to the young man: ee ee are from me, the story of Kittie’s courtship and | ry Sa “T’ve settled this case, and the salt is in the even to the manner in which the pro- | an that made cart, but I jos’ want to remark that if you hay line for Se x do} en thie way again and happen to foe ‘bo awful cunnin’ that you can't hold yourself you'. correspon: that [| 4 ONOUP OF TOLSTOI's PEASAXTS. ly raised palling of | ter go slow on )Thar's sixteen of us once had. The count has been all his life | in his children’s studies and even mastered the | "TOS: ‘Mad arotind here, an’ we alldrive yaller oxen hitched fs always studving human character | Greek ; ‘were tho to carts, an’ we all go barefoot in the summer fe always . down srhich a big mastif! was | and sigh to git married agin ‘The fog lar fgger and incidents for | and our life was full of happiness. ‘Then all st pent Bien, , with bloodshot eyes and foaming | is three bar'ls of salt anda pound of tea, but Pursued by couple of officers. He | owin’ to your youth and that thunder storm straight old lady. caught her comin’ up I've let you off easy. Good-day, He bub; good-day, all!” i it E & to nothing. He in conver- | church, humbled himself ar iff i HH i 4 = a tapestry after Wattean sation and make a note of anything that he | peasant. From the writing of fiction these were | the neck. other hangings belong- thinks may be of value in the future. | eesays, and seafon He sold for £2,840and left the room for a | another mun.’ << picked tp his fst of tpecty of the Momentand then returred with a fat luke “Them there are two Tolstois?” said I. ‘great good. and said, with Tealized £8,000. price of «Lous yellow calfskin-covered note book. It was the) “Two?” the countess. “There four to five | thity thould be EV cote end two atm ‘chairs was £1,440 and ‘ize of the average pocket diary and was filled only two; ‘was rapidly gain- ‘in the thity drewing room suiteen petit point realized . oub writing fn Rectan characters, the lettews: «very day. and you can ne what then, as Countess pe dy £1,200. A Louis XVI at of room fur- being very mull and be next. Ho is earnest and Me t ‘their gad yrote with « niture after Boucher riod grne Fy by t eens oe Se ore [Sree Sate Tete Pens: twee mado at about he oes hich hid’ ‘been | couse to give god sotas fotahed 6,700." fre screen of Gobe- roe ‘thine B tho ordetot of Heart Does ware that one re ooo wate Ingieg pies From ‘and and with ; ‘went at £200 to £480 cach. not consent to ‘Madame d'Yvon wo # i eit f ty i : } f 34 A abe | for

Other pages from this issue: