Evening Star Newspaper, July 30, 1892, Page 7

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. ; THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. ©.. SATURDAY. fULY |i. so anhanp —— hought Twas) sinually to my mother for help and advice over NEWS ABOUT GEMS angry. ‘I've ing to her.” r trousseau. = “Well, you needn't blaze up, lad. As to what “*What a terrible pity!’ she said, when she a Enterprising Miner | Ready Sacrifice Honor Atteations you said, that may have been cautious enough; | heard that Eugene a jenn, aa would mak So of the West Will Some Invade. > rte sen go font Day From Sort w only Rep oe he gee me the = master fai od ger Bae grioe Fiche me Ps ss the New York Sun. the ott Ts y what you did. ‘However, no im, at m 7 . . — bss ve wenn pet ‘mppose you're too hardened.a bache- | thinks him a realy fine perlormes ata Albers | Precious Opals From a Newly Dis- The well-drewsed young fellow witha diamond Jor to change your ways. is, of course, a ju et * scarf pin insisted upon secing the chief per- .” Trejoined. “Albert was her fiancee, I believe he sf covered Mine in Washington. had no definite information until Prejevaliky | sonally. No ordinary detective woald do him. ded consolingly, ‘it’s as well | now at the great opera in Paris, and is as uch iy | began his series of explorations. Much of the | His business was of the first importance and he 0 fe sete es dt emiama me, the | 8 Serocihe as ever wit the bablic after thirty information he obtained of these auriferous | persererod watil heatood in the presence of ravor sits in another . years. Engene x or, That was what every one was beginning to | old bachslors, and it if iho manure nt ties | WHAT AN EXPERT SAYS. | Tb: — regions was mere hearsa;,derived from natives, | the hoad of tho for nd as I watched them I felt sure of it, on | most solemn moment of our lives which GOLD IX TIBET. WANTED TO BE ARKESTED. i i Fan | mon ; aod and it has been left for Mr. Bogdanoritch to | “Well, sir, what can we do for you?" ide at least, and as to hers, I could only | us from ever trying our luck as ve a somewhat detailed account of them. He| The chief young not knowing how women show or con- | this pool.” Golden Jewels in s Meteorite—Diamonds In- | They =o wt the geologist of the Pievtzof scientific mis- | Be cdbem—onbecateretarn 4 one Ck = | that kind of thing. Sia Sa creasing in Value—Rubles Guarded by | jew: Shes, gramhoppere.and sion, which traveled in central Asin in 1889-90. | “You will favor me by being quick.” our church Fever—Novel Gem Cutting in the Ural | “isl afe tet time ago from a| 12 his geological report he describes twelve | The youth locked mysterious, drew a cbaie ne's project, and | The Thrilling Experience of the Crew of the| Mountains—Poaris More Valuable Than |_. oe regions in Khotan-Daria and the Kwen-Loun | ®!ty to the dosk and placed hits lips close te onseqnence great preparations, Steamship Petunia. ht day for such a perform-| The British steamship Petunia, Capt, Owen, Ever. tersburg, where | ou- | and Altyn-Tagh mountains where gold exists jot no lond,” he hoarsely whis : pered, the ttle who never'went | es fect cerived at Fidaacping foe Dome in considerable quantities, These mountains | An expression of mingled astonishment end se 0 sila n A oye are on the northern border of Tibet. He has | disgust swept across tho chief's face. to po aee aes taae ths being 4 Island, Newfoundland, with a cargo of pyrites | Correspondence of The Evening Star. founded by the Empresa | studied nine of these districts himsclf, and he | “What da you want?” é ive PR New Yorx, July 29, 1892. Catherine. ese artisans do certain kinds of gi a icularly intere: ti ca tt dor rT full as it contd hold, and, ow esp ore, after a perilous voyage, having been im. a Gack hak ace saok Bot fare alco tn & ives iy sting description of want to surrender my 7 . > ery i pr i i N THIS CITY Av oer. > tos the gold-bearing sandsand conglomeratesfound | The young fellow stare attraction, seats would be pl: prisoned in the ice in the northern regions of ities d cut ase | WOd They carve alt sorts of things out of | inthe Kwen-Loan ranges, He tells a aries a able corner. | the Bay of Notro Dame. From the deseription Fock crvstal, from a atatuette to the exquisite : From Ail the Year Ronnd. “ ‘She's not the girl, is she, Bersier, to bo agent looked so happy when all was ar-| given by Capt. Owen of the ice blockade it mey gem in thiscountry, was | and delicate’ shell of argonant, using for the | Ory Of the native method of separating gold <5) HAD HAD A FIRST- | long in want of ahome of her own?’ eaid my | ranged that the mere eight of hin made me al- “Tsay T want to surrender myaelf.” ri from the earth in regions where water is not ee sold the | purpose tiny rovolving disks of c: a wot ‘ | rate morning’s fishing | father, looking from her to me. He was much | most forget the bitternevs which had marred | Well be predicted that tho relief steamer Kite, ee . ‘opper and soft | obtainable. fii m charged with diamond dust. Among their The chie in the swift, shallow | &iven to jokes on the subject of marriage, but | ty life for the past two months. which has gone to the rescue of Lieut. Peary other day for @500. It mut would pubtbudlelibacs vaqaser tirlons gold most of whom are me, chief wiped bis ginsses and thought, an@ be vent rush. | *mething in his face seemed to say this ‘time | ‘Jt will be a good day for getting their affair | and party, will have a rough time working her was obtained from @/| fruits, which are admirable counterfeite of na. ~~ q ee | eam eck ected 0 Gata. ae ee a | that the joke might be earnest. Mario Darcy | settled,” said mny father to me as we walked to | way northward through the ice, and her crew newly Aiscovered mine | ture, including grapes of amethyst, cherrics of | which farmers: toed to win eoe teh eee oe | sce nant So he inquired, cssually ing about in such won- | blushed and I fancied she sighed again. I felt | church. He me affair between Eugene | may have to endure many hardships, in the state of Washing- | onyx, raspberries of rhodonite, mulberries of = Gets Se | Ons bee wetter, dzous loops and bends | so sorry for her that [ longed to comfort her. | and Marie, and I asented. wotosiy ot among the lapstinth of | You will think, perhaps, that Thad made up my |“ wasn't myself much of a singer, but I gen- | The Petunia, under a time charter, left Phila- hills which obstructed , ™ind beforehand to fallin love with hor. It | erally sat among the tenors in the south gallery | delphia about a month ago for Pilley’s Island, Y a | sounds like it. anyhow, and after that first | todo what I comid to swell the chorus. My | which isa small settlement in the northeastern j . evening I had every opportunity. She was | place was behind Marie Darcy and as Tat | part of Newfoundland, in Badger b wy proudly lundingasplen- | often with my mother, who took to her very | there I began to wonder if it were possible that reached that point in’ safety after nine days’ did speciunen from the | Kindly, and I, too, often had reasous for going | their be bal wold bo settled that vory dav | steaming and immediately began loading the i ; deep pool below the | to nrgomast Moreover, every one | ould fee! w ‘thee aud | ore for the return voyage. This work occupied ents. Very few are sold, it being only possible =, “ ay. ah th agiaiors and everything seemed to encourage me and to T had more tha period of eight days, when the Petunia sailed | tin ¢mall nodules of this procious variety of | Cconsionally to purchase a duplicate specimen OL Peanewbihe’s hia w he met in| comncaken enn © soy that Kata’ wnntes Gor make it easy for me to see her continually, and g me in that way, only ona very | for Philadelphia. hydrated quartz. Many of these are of great | of the manufacture. Journe; mel omnes fore fi mills b The f ton, near the Idaho | yellow chalcedony, white currants of rock crv®- | the betta deatehone cathe co gold LS lar nal seas tape acral Cre line, At that place, | ttland green leaves of “serpentine. The czar | elevation, and then slowly empty the contents | through the window and laughed in a knowing ich has boen called | bt* factory in the Ural and another at Peter- | to the ground. In these ropiees, oeone whats which has been called | yoft, where much things are turned ont for his | 10 ibe 8° large nd Gem City, the voleante | own private use at an expense of 660,000 an-| Being heaviet than the and, falls veticne, | torent fr 708 % find ont,” be Lofty we Focks are honeycombed | nually. Such of the articles produced as are | while the earth is blown alittle to one aide of | "We've comething elee ¢ do. Go ad with cavities that con- | not required for himsel? 7 away as pros-| the other, and in this way the gold is fairly| The young man's face fell ro = ~~ ite course. I was Just platform of rock on which T was standing, | every day my father or the burgomaster ‘used | different footing from that on’ which we were | Hardie bull the. abi i : s northeastern Tibet a party of thirty men who| The chief shook his head. | y father or tl ter nt footing re ¥ ip. left the quaint settle- | beauty and value. QUARTZ CRYSTAL BALLS. were in washing. He said that wheu Jean Baptiste, my luncheon basket over | todrop the plainest of hints as to their wishes | now going to be pla mn musing | ment when the dificuities presented the, q - engaged ing - He sai t [aprbering am insight rounda jutting crag. |e theteatice: An 00 Marie, herself, she was | until tho service lad begun and Monsieur le Cure Fie Vetus bok steucaad” apn of Badger bay | Scorer sais et pases ch cocentad bs Sloan pal cymes a regi ead | ag me) ye ead Scans Danttcl a his fine, regu- | lways pleased to see me and had plenty to say | was reading the Gospel. | and entered the Bay of Notre Dame, which was ee » ce vem, | Portant use made of the material is in the man- - bsyaeg <i on by ee hie dient. | tome, y laughed together | «Just then I saw a stranger enter the chureh | completely shut in by icebergs that had worked | George F. Kunz, the famous expert in gems, | ufacture of balla. So difficalt ia it to obta ee tfan one or two trom the Better look on sour bocksand be eure. ‘This jar features, his tall, military figure, digni- | ¢) ? ‘hour, when she had chattered ig rs : 4 exhibited to th it Nice ae t surface and the washing was of the most primi- | is an important matter. Z pe tr a Pleasant hour, and make the central aisle. their way south from the arctic regions. They | exhil Mf the mony celebeated in’ the | Sbicce that will yield perfect ball of more | tive description. "Nevertheless they extabited | "1 know withrat toni fied self-possesaion, his innate gentleness an ttle of the ways of the big city she had left | of course, there might be on such c | were of all shapes and sizes and the scene pre- | Hope opul, one of the most celebrated in the | than three inches in diameter that euch spheres | whole Tem, Hel din lumps as big as “And yoa don't wi ~~ loved to hear his simple stories of the events | behind and I had told her the small events of | stilt, [ noticed this one. He had, the | sented, as they shone in all their prismatic | world, which was recently brought to this coun- | inereaso enormously in value as they go up in} gud often pochad ang Pg an tae. St eed eas which had fallen within the limited range of his | the quiet village to which she had come, I never | gir Cf a pers ith the | jor under the powerful ri try. It formerly belonged to Henry Philip | size from that point. The Inrgest one in the | doubt,” sald Prejevaleky, “with more careful ‘3 "t aurrender myself.” experience. Ss — 2 es he come. More- | was magnificent to behold. y of the pre- | Hope, the Dutch bunker, who owned the finest | United States is slightly more than #ix and @ | working vast treaeures could be found here. I present showing.” A la bonne heure, Jean Baptiste,” I cried, = bs pti feawemm <i > A : acer : h : ss Asano! nea roux formations shot skyward hundreds | collection of precious stones ever got to-| half inches In diameter and is worth #5,000. | believe, on the whole, that Iam not over bold net bh which in these Ardennes | the dim rm pat ‘a and were seen to crumble like chalk as | gether. = liquidated the ee of | saat the difference she must see between me an ve the im-| they ground one against the other, sendit razil and took his pay in diamonds from) and most perfect one known isin the ‘i “ . ig such fine progress. ““I will | the young mon she had been used to talk to, | pression if not a person of importance he cer-| forth reports Ii othe explosion of cannons, "8 | eaae country, which originally inspired him | raults at ‘Dean den. Ite diameter is very tittle | tibet a ee oye 4 oon where I am and then continue | and T schooled myself to think that with pa | twinly fancied himself to be such, After he had | Capt.Owen’ was at his wits’ ond to know how | With his hobby. Among the Fllknown gems | grouter. easly all of the crystal balls in the | metals lying in the eell over the vast seebce ue | meen ms; this pool is in perfect condition.” | tience and perserverance on my part she would | taken his place 1 key g to get clear of the obstructions, and as ug way | ema by him was the Hope diamond, ’ a : market are offered for sale as Japanese, but | the desert land,” “T . ” : some day hear gladly that she was the one somelivereee Sool herd lig ees age che yey 2 Japanese, e desert land gneRs you're onto me. Jean Baptiste said nothing; his handsome face | woman in the world I had been waiting for till ire Bae Ait a ee moat of them are actually made in France and tec : ; | Mr. W. Mesny, in 1885, wrote of the Koko Nor | The chief nodded. 7. % ‘ip’scompany. All the time the ‘bergs | 000. Likewise the largest existing pearl, drop- | Germany, material being obtained from : dy «ay, . showed seanty assent. “You don't agree with | I was past thirty years of ago. | y. Then I pulled myself up for in- | seemed to be cloring in nearer and nearer to | #haped, which weighed over three ounces, swr- | eerZm wea Mateguger: Tee cle netted at < i exresee rece | Naren™ Geno engpthing to be me.” I went on. “Hasn't piscatory fortune | ‘Among hor other charms Marie had a won- ion. ‘The Gospel ed; we were | the steamship and her dectruction eeemed in- | mounted in the. setting by a coronet of dia-| manufacture practiced by the Japs was exceed- | 2&8" : Tt came originally from Japan. The biggest icting that in the course of time north- i r ca ie 4 red feet thick; but they di the up “Of course I know it. favored you here?” derfully beautifnl voice, and her father had | < creed. glanced at Eugene | evitable. ‘The sight, although beautiful, was|™onds. The opal referred to, though of Mex- | ingly laborious, ‘They began by chipping the 2 . ‘ wnit is Very long since Iished here,monsieur,” | *pent a heap of money in giving her fine sing- | § t His face ‘was radiant, | weir, andall on board the Petunia were much | ican origin, 1s eaid to have been emong che | ily laborious a roughly spherical chape with | S82, They only Coe eld ae ean ana] ah ean ilocly, buttoned Ms ost end ctpal | ing lessons. Now and again she would seat her- ° r | Boe dis rg BS fs Persian shrine in the se 9 “stay couple of feet of the solid rock on which gol Was a great scheme if it had only gravely. f and agi ad was bent over her book. I | frightened. . Owen dec hi naments 0} ‘ersian ine m-| bammiers, afterwards rendering it sinooth and | Sos foved in uegnew toca b Gudnadl Snemietiastn Tasked, “if one may risk the | self at the harmonium Eugene had bought for ied she looked nervous; but that I | teenth century. It represents the sun, with a! perfectly round by rolling it with @aterandsand lc cores Sen pas. pal Tenth ad ees -w mabe Se “Tee question himself and try to accompany herself in some | yndorstand, seeing that it is not a wom. o fall face carved on its surface, the rays being | {n'a trongh, thea lishing the all with emery | Sf several tacks’ weight were nos ar ae aubteuns ieee “Well, monsieur,” he began doubtfally, “it’s didn’t go, | province to be heard in church... After the first | gotten out into clear water once more. supplied by Ses gold setting. As is and finally by rubl the hand. Now the | carthed. On fhe other hand I have seen = leva, net that, ect @nk. Avoobenn Sar! an old story.” ya gave up in vexation. | fom bars, however, her giotious voice rose up| Capt. Owen's description of Pilley's Island | very common witlf Mexican opals, it is badly | European workman’ holds. the revolving | : ? —% a. Now, Jean Baptiste was great at old stories; ‘When Eugene comes back ho will accom- hae | abdee. : P bes | ie : : y| gets of gold in eastern Tibet varring from the | lary of murder, but not asavag. Tat trying ts | pany vou,’ my mother used to say. luted Oca Leu sorasinahon' i par ne cating, aad he eajerel Gikiog abort Hiasvitons | saiy fall ty esas toe seeiee oor ese Of a wheel of Sasndstone wk fect intake | S20 OF 8 Dea to that ofa zal nut and.as ia the | get popular with the young latios of the Bower |" "Hfe must play very well if he is to accom- | j sree butagiin Pitt | fo that remote spot. ‘The people of Newfound. | It is oval in shape and ite longest diameter is | qmmeter, " which goes round 100 times | STs, Cust, the gold was, almont set ow ah | memes jae Fe eg by look: == [thr thay Satepag lion “Tean't play a gery for the singers but again I lost | land, according to Capt. Owen about an inch. aminute. In this way a crystal sphere is made y : igs ing Goent aves? | or thia—or thia. Y | patience with him when he r, it was my privilege as foreigner and which he in the Koko Nor region, but the diggers did not | No, no, that would spoil it all. : ‘ fixed his eyes | determined upon rendering practicable th SUPERSTITION 48 TO OPALS. in a week which would have taken a year to pro- | 2 P = = with tho Giamend y, Jean Baptiste; why, that is them s hit,end I've had lessons at the Con- | upon her, and senrcely turned them away until | of icebergs to the conmumersof ice, and alveady | “A curictetnernne oe the value of super- | duce in the old fashion. Quartz or rockerystal ie | PTiZ* it enough to collect it,as they were unabie — Le hat is necessity to) make this epot and my | #fvatoire the last words of the mass were said. ‘Then I| at Pilley’s Island machinery is being perfected found in pockets in granite rock. As much a8| “7 Ronealot, in bie Journey across ‘Tibet in na red incor Og ‘But Eugene does play very well’ Taaid. |_| took no more notice of him; I hurried to the | for the cutting and. handling of thicive, wuich | titi said Mr. Kunz, “‘was afforded the | 915009 worth of it Ins been discorered ine 4 : spacer fob Of od se bet she would say doubtfully. and T) organ to congratulate my brother, who was | is purer and much harder than that now in use | other day by a lady who brought a set of opals single cavity. It is not the labor, but. the | there mie sonshdet abe tal a ee ee ast | cn tase, NOT Bt te Uonnty Mone, years, best of landlorda; but that is | Used to long for Eugene to come back, that she | piaying the closing voluntary ax I had neyer | While Capt. Owen was in Pilley’e sland the | here for the Purpose of selling thom. | She felt | scarcity of suitable material that makes theballs | Shout the gold thet aoatd be tone te eons | might see what a clever brother [ had, and that | P olay before. ‘The other members of | firat cargo of this kind was brought into port | obliged to part with them en account of a . The greatest deposits of rock crystal {Rely ean’ digeing eae eee com suniled gravely. he might tell mo what he thought of the beauti- it Ungered, too; they were all pleased | ina small steamboat built for the purpose, | series of misfortunes in her family which she | known in thie country’are in Garland and pte Miran fy we en te which oll ed to say so, monsieur; ful girl I was trying to win for my wife. Ab, | i gives and him. But when he had | Like many others, Capt. Owen held the opinion | feared were attributable to the gems, so no- | Montgomery counties, Ark.. where the farmers this immense region belo: rey whens dang 5 younger then, which is | Mousieur, if I could only tell you how full my k the last chord, and Tlooked about me, I'| that the ice would taste brackish, but was as- | toriously unlucky. On examining them I found employ their leisure time in hunting for it and | j."7,"HymCae seston bel 4d Ppt pon e-bing; and Land my brother Eugene were | heart was then and yet so ligiit! 2 saw that Marie had disappeared. He saw it, too, | tonished to find it as pure as any he hud ever | that they were mercly imitation. A few weeks sell $10,000 worth of it annually.” from tho nomads and other natives who are ered the two best matches in the village. | | “‘So at Inet it camo to the day of Eugono’s re- | Cvidenily, for, preming my band without a | use ago Thad in my possession three sca shells 2 See able to procare ho precious seotth, iuoer Our father, Jean Louvet, was then the land- | turn, aud I went on foot to meet him at Bouil-| word, vi and asI stayed behind | This undertaking, if found practicable, will | which had been transferred into opal. Thoir HOW MACARONI 18 MADE. told at Lob Moral noe aun one bal bce) lord of the inn where we nowreign in hisstead; | lon. where he would leave tho diligence. He | pushing in the sto: id putting away the | prove a valuable source of revenue to the New- | original limy material had been dissolved out of = = a = : had a great deal to tell me, as we walked up | Pusbi “ig sires J ailen so deeply involved in debt that be had given he i. too, the biggest a | hill and‘down through the besutifal weodiand | ™Usic, I tried to feel brave and to teach myself | foundlanders, and all the Petunia’s crew are of | the rock by which they were inclosed, and_ the in | Tt is Eaten So Much Here That a New In- | the services of his son to his princi tor, excepting Monsieur | that she must be first with him now, and that I | the opinion that, with the proper machinory, | precious snbstance was deposited by water in 7 fer. “In our house there was planty of work | 0% OUF homeward way_of Antwerp and the | should soon get used to it and fall into my new | hundreds of thousands of tousat pure ice may | place of the lime, retaining the form ‘of the dustry Has Been Started. Meer) pote domly ted is labor until and plenty of room for a couple of daughters- } — 4, stival; of = Ferrer at = a | place. Of the stranger I thought no more. be gotten and shipped south with little waste. | shells, A graduate of Harvard College bought | From the New York World. out for the mountains with a native-made pick lav. it Eugene and I had cared to go 8 w00- | oor. Of the day be bad spent ate Denals, von | _ “We wore sitting down to dinner when Eu- SEN oe Pope rofl rt ackaon! Ses baie Sieaey Bel oe The al | oi mone, lauding bois ene Ge A, at some! ida't care, J y is, E a is i gore, a = sag: | duGu Sramtans Uitdg scanethec, aad an ke cen & BIG COMBINE OF FURRIERS. —a fragment of a meteorite’ wich fell in Car. | £0°%0ns Of food-eating Americans, among whom | yaid that be should not return until be had suf- elcome. The burgomaster grum- fey hae = Tuas didn’t inter- said * i rapt him until at last he began to speak of a : 2S foxy certain beantiful soprano voice which hadtaken| . ory a eae $10,000,000 Capital. the girls used to chaff and — that | the solos in one particular mass he had heard in Hep in hei, pte A combination of furriers under the name of and a" a8 New Yorkers are conspicuous. It is nutritious, | ficient gold dust to discharge all bis debts and tienatner Muaateceners Becem: = Feed Wilke | re ene an nar ao cite Tee | algeslliSs nan (plchsia’alseipeerids cule | tamer tie eee He madoa considerable quan- because the terrestrial variety of olivine is | and amusement, pen ele g cing epee say sag ee eageng Take any quiet, woll-behaved dog and put @ Sreen, whence its name. Some of these celes-| ‘The quantity consumed in this city during | “{HPlY of shot in order to kill the game upon muzzle on him. been with Monsieur le Cure: he caught meas I | é : : hich he expected to live. So he eet out {nto agene was so wrapped up in his mus ae ra | was leaving the church and only let me go/| the George T. Treadwell Company hag been ee te ang folden plums in the | the past year, according to restaurant keepers, | the eclitude eiibeut ary exrectaion or tunugaee for carting” “there tay have bees | Maat inasor If'we could only Rave it your | whe® 1told bim that his inner and mine would effected at Newark, N. J. Tt goos into. bax. | eteorie puddiug, fell out when ie ator was | she, Piat Tesh according to restaurant keeper | a tiuman being for meny months, intending. to be getting cold.’ ness with a capital of $10,000,000. ‘The princi. | ivided into slices and have been cut as precious © Bile truth ie all thin Certainly Bagme| Gomes Ef enly come ene could sing those | OPS vist you might expectfrows Monsieur pal partice to the deal are the firma of ‘Tread. | "22 years to a remarkable extent, In view of these | devote all his time to digging fur = and kill- s : is . Some ti ter, alot oa ourehurch organ a8 no one 5 fee . aa wiydaiher.” it-as “Diamonds are in greater demand today than | facts some Americans have very sensibly taken | M§ game. Some time later, while Bon’ nd 'mnsic was his greatest pleas- erhape we could have it, Eugen; Tai ee eae eee ae ieee Te Wat | well & Co. of Albany, W. H. & BR. Burnett of | over teton in te been amend today than to manufacturing macaroni. Whether the home- | “i ascending the great Tibetan plateau south ure: that was bow it was he pers: my | thinki Marie. f the mountains, he met a native who had ro- , “<8 ecu det joke on the a6 iec wark and A. H. Ward & Co. The new com- | 1867 1,817,000 worth of them were imported i : in | » 7 eel hein head. rer — : ~_ joke on the subject, so I ate my | ny eealioacad ail tha Fwcriais tal iths es ate | tals We Goeatey 7 Dering te letter tee made product or the foreiga is preferable will | cently seen this solitary miner and reported “ ‘My dear brother,’ he replied, ‘if you only | ™¢*! sit pany Lae i rigs 1 ppear in time. Ithasat least the advantage | that he had met with fair but not great success knew! "Why, evon if we hid auch a voice at | .)Atter dinner my father uncorked a hottie of | except the North American Company, of which Leeper tiger ply pacereh Botealped thut it is entirely machine made, and no such | in his bunt for gold. our command, how about the training? 1 | Seine nee vier week D. O. Mills is president. day are obtained from mines controlled by | horrible suggestions apply to the American ur- Sonne! mountain Fyre is now not way back be ‘should stay with our | Know bow the thing ought to sound, but I mely opportunely, my | _ Por along time the other furriers have been | the De Beers Company, which owns the South | ticle as to the other. TEE innccemible, provided the perminsion of embloax and see somethin; oe the ona Heanor ithe poh nd the voice ‘We are going to | trying to induce the firm of Treadwell & Co. to | African fields. They are the only productive | \ since last October one concern in this city | teached in'a few weeks’ mor Agen K aldja, ad this Sheant that he would be away | ‘But, Eugene,’ I fold, "remember you've | ATK toute on ie gaan; ok emer: See eee rh, ei eecmea greats bees | Seren Lo ee oa eee Bartow Doe vensel| ee making moeeal Ly ‘ie “ec pee] Goa tebe Between the Human aud Chews bee iey ns Ssocte fo Seek” mare ei the | Titec Ald nol ait down with’ ux; be waltet tiga proodes tor Geng eka dressing skins in a | the company buys it imme ys. It has mgr he EASES Ses maw eemvelty csavey | Pema p se set lle dive the great event of my baci Leet — _witl {told you | neasily to and fro in ths room. superior manner. ‘The firm was old-fashioned | limit on the production and holds prices at | the idea. A visit to the factory the other day oles, ak Hie: May ie ae ee Sas ae ee in my letter, that M. Dersior’s niece has come Don't be tug fdzet, burgomaster,” went | in ite wars, however, and refused to do even | Whatever figures it pleates. In fact, it has cor- | brought to light many facts connected with tho | its, and the das is Sehertigte ae bce g—this was how it befel—in ive with him. Well, she & ‘voice just | ¥. my father. ‘Ie a that, and # mandate ing | nered the market permanently, controlling ef-| manufacture of this arficle. ‘The art of making , PTspect aheoaarn al ~ " ier | such as you describe, and she has had lessons at ;O" TY father. “I ean guess what you have ee ee ae ee p eae | " 2 i A | try to ascertain the extent of ite ibs Gane fer Mis eat seme eenaea the Brussels Conservatoire, and if you have | COmé to say. We can all gu were shipped to England, dyed there and | fectively the entire world’s supply. The stones | macaroni involves’ a somewhat intricate and | 3 2 the time is us , 3 : * had an open letter in bis hand and a look of | heard anything more beantiful than her sing-| | ric oe father to let him go once—thirty years ago—| ‘He are found ina matrix of blue clay, which is| tedious proceas—that is American macaroni, | T8ources. It is not at all im that these ‘T wish | shipped back. ‘The direct result of the forma- | ate f mountains, of which the Altyn-Tagh, : z tion of the combine, it is said, will ben redue- | Cattied up to the surface, rotted in the sun on | 1 jents, so far as the superintendent ; — ty lexity on his honest face. Sea seceeee ce mie LF Wells Degant may “fatbor, Gt: ounceana’o| tion ot the cet of Pecdnomne’ comitee Gar tea | Gao plain and Aually weet picked over. | was atfiberty to mako them known without regal —prodhmageadinennce gyn pe pee ———s my father, ‘I | qu vind epete Le cried ‘is it posetble? | CoFtain fair warbler, and-—" finished form. It is supposed that the formation of the dia-| giving away any tricks of the trade, consist of | i sae yg mage Mc rtaer sents good wie 7 re wer’ it i 5 . | activity and the resort of bundreds of miners i p ee Uys ght ae thc; Bore Louvel? +e monds was volcanic. The mines ure not inex-| farina made from the very best bard wheat | set cicome 9 it,’ said my father, | And do you think she would give hor rt Ba | een tense hela taba Rear a Mrs. Gaines! Estate settled, hausiible, but they will hold out for a jong | grown in Minnesota, Kansas and North Dakota. Legnaro pm baler ipralee fom sister,’ went on Bor-| awhile? Ihave dreamed of hearing it all once | tite as you think. and there is nothing for it | The Myra Clark es estate has finally been | time at the present rate of output. Eight hun- | ‘The grain is reduced to a farina of five wholly : : t. ; : | The elevation is too high to make the region a : i pt oes a oeshe inde iven W. | {2d fect is the deepest level which the work- | different grades and then mixed u | 5 nha married Darcy, the Confectioner, in | S€3in. and) we must pérmade Mogsicur | Dat for mic to tell yoa. You know, Txpoke bo- | eettled. “Tue city of New Orleans has given W. | Ared feet is the deepest level, Which you what | mcn quality. The combmation ed | oe lacerr ef eee aoe eee boys oe calind. \ secten’ hese ak anne piper ybp ces one een | lover she bad badin Bracschs whobed ateca vor | WW: Whitney, the trator of the estate, a | a gem of the first order looks like, here is one | the title of farinola and the n-ano has heen copy- | 20 danger of incurzing there diseases which are y nodde | chure 5 ased at wha ho had - Papeete - “a dic ss a check for 923,738, which pays this debt in full. | worth $100,000. It weighs 125 carats. The | righted. These farinas are selected with regard | COMMU In many warmer climes, confectioner, had proved Bistoat a | He Bed meract tat be a denan| Horm ape yteylecatety Sastre te | Of this $594,313 was for principal, the rest for | color, as you will observe, is an intense Iemon | to their glutinous properties, as shat is the chief ae be aie : aa PREY nas ay ee cree henl interest and costs, The estate recognizes | Yellow. ‘This isthe fest large vellow diamond | essential in the making of the jaste from wich x OF MU Like a sensible dog he will try to get it o® Suik enaaa ta a meteta tice “Wal 5 er | claims against it for legal services of £279,087 | 1 the world, and it has been likened toa sun- | the “pipe stems” are tormed. This fazinola z.’ echoed my mother; ‘and isn't| “Over our supper that evening there were a| ROW, a i o S v: with ‘a fresh cha ch | and disputes claims to the amount of $379,000, | PUTS rope oy eer me ears a gir 7 great many questions to be asked and answered. | You t The ‘etd man “ The ri 5 a ae — Se RUBIES MORE VALUABLE THAN DIAMONDS. The paste is first put through a mixer, then was a little girl, Madame Louvet, by | 8nd before nearly allhhad been said in walked | pupil “af the oi 3 of Gen. Walter Jones of Wash- ? ; * one Stak agenabis’ oak ve. but. she's big girl now, and the | the burgomaster and Marie. A scarcely ive 2 ington, $20,000; estate of Bailey Peyton of | most precious of all gems, whereas the fact is | MS cireular trough around which a two-ton| | There is no room — oe granite roller revolves. This takes out any | compared with the boy the girl has not had fair ve, but, she's « big s atgeriite cee we ed hi i an opera | Tennessee, $65,000; estate E. Sabenr, $50,000; | sass ; Boge 7 ; ake eee cae ek ie. ee tn | Decale amd” Gan chin cin eo heroes |i 1 Kot no engage- | eatato M."E. Randolph, £12,000: estate 1 w, | {het five rubles are at gpemaaiemien deat preateaotcrede oe 4 retin in the paste after | play; chat opportunities for cultivating the art at ber. She might be. married and | of the world she is cut off from.’ clicse he was nearly starving. when | Moise, €12,060; estate W. I Mills, £68,000; es | Valuable, For example, here are a rul 2 | ratled te ie lined around the tides op ously | have in her case bea fow; in his case many. she bad ha ot,” but where's | |, “I watched Eugene as he looked at Marie | about a month Se eee 5 en en cn en nie, Ne as ae seks amily, he deme | seh trough and two cone-shaped cog whecks | The reverse is the truth. If there is » branch en Aalst one (the i | shove him | kee ae oe He took the csi gpeneded eh Aig i r da: though of the tirst water, is worth only $1,000, | proceed to knead and cut the paste in pieces, | of edacation in which girls have been schooled o RS leek docet ctewe tier ths ieee peas far ‘Aitect Ghat | Whereas the ruby s x | taking out the flaky veins and giving an equally | to the negiect of every other it is precisely that Engene now in we should hnve rev of his success and Deon | thuaite, the latter dead, wuo managed the case | UPS Of mine carats that is valued at €48,000, | smooth and glutinous body throughout. From of musie. ine how eloquent | hone the wiser. The old ter ied and the | dari ys, have filed a claim for | The best rubies of the real pigeon-blood color | the grinder the paste is reudy to go to the cylin- It is among the primary subjects to which she ; : Burmah, but the production there | ders, which turn it out perfect macaroni, % ok that ber | Foungster’s fortune was sed | $130,000 for es, Which is now on | Come from A os - beauty charmed: iis eye but that the, alee oe looked at us each in turn; no one spoke, | appeal in the United States cireait court. is very small now. A British concern, the Polen eaten ese pleenep te waiye [aan apd poles d-aleeirmmaren a cold Gr baraenaisec:| | Wemeittn Mis sntid Se acnnéetion ili te ‘agood sort of lad; I've had pai ee act Burmah Ruby Company, Limited, has a con- | the interior of which resembles the interior of | leave off. Not one hour a day, but many hours a alec 4a tae pt without | Washer voice, and that he was longing to get He e to her as s00n | Three Children -Asphyxiated Under a Sink, | °¢Si0% which gives it control of the mines, but | a Gatling gun or the cylinder of @ revolver. | out of the twenty-four, are consumed by her at } = Bae é stacles hay. in the Through’ these holes run small rods, which ‘ fo faz, in his scquaintanco with her us int sho bos Toved. hiv al aisee amd | A,Se0fch for four missing children Thursday | thet? successful operation. “Chickumegg there | make te betes ieee, anginal rode, which | the piano, to way nothing of other instruments, a can work,’ I began, but the | #9 be able to brouch the groat subject. But as | seems that she him forover, if necessary | St Medford, Mags., resulted in finding them ia | iy the deadly fever which guards the gem | slowly out of the bottom of the cylinder the | While singing lessons are usually given in sup rrupted me. etre, eeee $0. relate Kis experimen of | ae 2 we c we imusi’ not grudge | @ closet dndera sink ina house in process of | deposits. Of the fifty engineers and surveyors | man operating the machine spreads it over a | plement to these. It might have been thought there was s young man her | Antwerp to the burgomaster, dwelling on the |and_ #0 sow veher a conpleet (oonsirastion, where they\ Nad: contol, apctd| Sauk stiithe. Ueginning “to @xyaure'tne, telde| clean Bosra: Gall eam a Teerveter length has | that if practice gives perfection woman would sbout who was notef your | @lorious music he had heard, winigir gy Shyam Se ee ee % sr wae. eithag | forty-eight were stricken with the miasmatie | been spun out, {tis cut up and laid aide to | have excelled her male count not only as i there wasa sand france for her troussea time during the day. The door was either plxgue from which no white man scems to | allow more to follow. ‘This is placed on drying | an executant, but as a com . But what are n Untimely ending, So the good old rambled on, because ‘ - : “ | Pulled to by thom or whut some other way, | escape, The remaining two had had it pre- | boards on an upper floor, and for ten daye it is | the facta? a stragete for lifein Brus- | have aoe one a —, I ~~ ae Cele ig ay filer peeatigess Eugene | snapping the catch and making them prisoners. | viously. Natives must be employed to do the | kept on these ‘boards, when it is ready for box. | In instrumental performance she cannot for ald wish for the girl's Soaet “ ath Onl 4) ma know, Lf adlidacateee Len suc phe fects Three of th Il bows, died from suffocation, | digging, and to prevent them from stealing the | ing and sellin @ moment com with him, while as to com- t, T come to the part that | Couldn't play as well as sing. and “every time nuy mother’s face. d the other child,a little girl, was slowly | finest stones is well-nigh impossible. he spaghvtti is made in exactly the eame | position she te wm The of wowhere. failed. Monsieur Engene, they uscd to tell me | h e ispered, ‘go i: e: i: i vi] the of art to it —— : sinking. dive 0 > .- | music from the dawu of the rand the's | ¥ou would accompany ime when you came | him. rthim you can.’ | Sinking. Had the discovery of thelr whare- or this purpose an ineredible variety of | way, the only difference being that the cylin abouts been delayed 4 little longer none of the | devices are resorted to, theleast ingenious being | der! which shape the stems are about five nothing ni Con: back. vom ae s | juartet would béon alive. to swallow the rubbies, and, where articles of | times smaller, same paste is alo made | the time the has spent over it, her failure to Then every one laughed to see the animation | g9 b 3 jus P ong | +20 —— such highly concent dvalue aro concerned, | into all sorte of thapes for using in soup, | ¢volve new harmonies or evtn new melodies is with which Eugene sprang up and went to his charch, w hich Where the Faribault Pian Failed. detection is most difficult. At the South Afri-| such as letters, stars, animals and et ee etaled? wl Weshe, Wen Gnade Somes oF Mecvee, ieee ne famous Farib plan, for which | can diamond mines the system employed for | ‘‘elbows,” or what the French ‘call “‘coudes.” been longing to sing—only are you sure you|up with lim, he was walking so fast, but|Arehbishop Ireland went to Rome to | the prevention of theft is highly elaborate. | They resemble exactly an elbow of a stove : } : : ; |The workmen are hired for certain term, | pipe. i ean play it? | when he reached er of the woods he | fight, has proved a failure at Stillwater, | TBO F . cos fapkes fashioned | Eastlake in her celebrated essay atts *"T' try,’ said Eugene modestly. _ | slaekened his Minn. “It is announced that St Michael's | Gnereed ee thelticbone na otmaperadl a ory | auctioneer Sane Sectta pein te | all by sash bee Parchologteal anal Se eee | cao eae ae ee é jParish of that city, conducted the lest | night each man is obliged to divest himself of | only difference between the mac-rcni paste and | G. H. Lowes in his “Life of Goethe ind straight.” So, ats Patho senilipcng thee Cay | % vy eteps | Yur und: tho new plan, will con- | every stitch of clothing, which is carefully | the noodle paste is the addition of the egg, re- | deed, is was settled that | father. 2 ¥ i 8 * ‘the its schools as arochiats searched before he puts iton again the next | quiring one egg to every pound of puste. ‘This will think that I was a | i irs ag ober Eugene, jus a 6 ‘The Stillwater board u | prmbin rgd ies Soy & blanket to cover | makes noodles cost 134 cents a pound more ¢ two-and-chirty if I tell was he who hud known Marie for weeks | bi 01 niract | bimself” with, jous to dismissal at the tt, io close of their contract the laborers are sub- e at porhsinotaing bs for ama ion. and in view of the | 4 that evening, m the firat; but it was only whe: i i e Se ‘tious iption that no white man | vou huve fished this "morniag | heme was abandoned. Some talk was made | Ignomistious di if the had some | I heard it with a good accompaniment that [| which has led you here. Eugene was | a go that he. Jerochiak schools | ee “the —_ eae Pani alized bh erfect he % walking y wiy no sometimes ke — s * id \ nl never be sostilland peace- | looked up at her in silence. Her face was|@ndevery now and then—my heart achos still | the city board of education has taken steps to | 13 Upot per o cis caloe: 4 Cot ‘+ additional school houses. ‘The action | Tobbery, and dealers in stolen pe , | turned oo IT could not + bets | to think of @ put his hands before his | rect two ad * i joe oe aeons | at a fave “we th hey ta gtrunge | mt grmncd hare wax ao ene i ci | oft Ilimore unc however, pecomua ee Sprinem Grong the o. 1 could not how { 4 me: of Marie's his but him ar A few crows were flying . — pea) PALS en eT nught ‘hate eaened "I | about the meadow on the other bank, Everss | 8eiools would prevent this, WHERE RUBIES ABE oBTarxzD. raged itand dwelt on it until the | ‘that he would love her, too, | thing looked unsperkably dreary. Ho went on 2 ‘The superintendent took tit when. as I came bome. with the | and what girl would listen to my wooing when | Tound tho big bend of the river the same ss cre” farinole and poem aaa it began, ev. the Lurgomaster's char-a- | Eugen» ia there to charm away her heart,” way till at lust he reached the rock. Here he ‘ i making a dough of Ina few moments assed me, and I saw Marie Darey for the 1 got up, made an excuse about the cattle, | stopped, j ‘ ing. and stood gil 4 : recent te had made a paste as hard as rubber. fire: t and went out, Iwas very thankful that I had nto the deep black pool. I dare + he 4 I ‘the “I knew she would be .though no one | not spoken of my feelings for her on our home-| Ot let him know then that Iwas behind 3 ves ad told mes», but naturally I had pic- | ward walk. He would have loved her all the| him, so I drew back behind that jut- in Mexico tured ber ae she was. Her bright chestaut hair | same, and ehe would have loved him in return, | tig ¢rag and watched him cautiously. T tin clustered ebout her fo: n dainty little | but perhaps he would have feared to win her | thought that io would probably go_ no further, wy crape preteen wrong: now he should have his fair | ud that as ho turned back I would speak to * dark and her face | chance. In all the bitterness of that moment | him. But the minutes passed and became half clear and pale erly built and | Lhad a fierce Joy in feeling that I could make ihe did not stir, At last I saw him graceful, and “ae sound of her voice was all the | this sacrifice willingly for my brother—yes, and > ais Knees, and lift his hands to his head. ontrast with our rough Walloon | for her. “My God,’ be cried aloud, little thinki This I soon bad an oJ nity of | “I thought, when next he and I were alone | could hear, ‘my God, bless her, and make her for when he bad res hile after | together, 1 ral yy; and forgive mo if it be sin to die when I Of her i 3 ‘ood up and looked first one way and pressions. She already loved our viliaga, | great fostival mass in our church, but of his e other. His face was ghastly pal she sail. having heard so much of it from her | personal iraprossions ho said no word; he was | seemed io sce it rising and floating on the water poor dear mother. She wae going to be very | waitiag begin, below, as it might have risen had I not been contented among us and not could | there.’ I sprang forward and seized his arm. She glanc she said 5 “Mon frero, cried, ‘ha : ‘He turned Hercely upon me. knew what | if iH E rl i she knew Brussels, to which I said no. “**Ab.’ cried my father, ‘it is my be tho traveler; when he

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