Evening Star Newspaper, August 20, 1892, Page 10

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ad THE -EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, AUGUST -20. CITIES’ PLAYGROUND | Sewspresses ermen The Unconventional Scenes on the Beach at Atlantic City. 1892-SIXTEEN - PAGES. THE DRIVER'S STORY. IN A HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS. How Me Was Saved From © Grinty bya |The Mel Slipped its Pulley for Seven area Girt, Months, Then Came Rack. From fork Herald One of the most remarkable cases known to “Up here in the hills it's queer about gals, | medical science in Tecent years is that of the 102" said the stage driver as we left Elko | tines and recovery of H. F. Wheeler of Brook. with « party of six young women inside who lyn, N. Y., for the past few weeks « readent of Ridgefield, Conn., the home of his uncle, C. Jounings, says the New York Sune Cases like : that of young Wheeler are not unknown in a et ~ «giles for @ cow, and get | medical annels, and in the present instance ; ow more nerve in a pinch than most any | there are dotaile ‘angalar Seanty Bathing Suits =e «mow 10 Win at Fak.” ‘on | are quite ax a aay upon imation’s Garb—The Golden Mean So Dif- ——— “Ie that the case?” Wheeler. ficult to Find—Nothing te Surprising at the | Subject of the First Sermon Preached in| «Tfound it so about four years age," bore: | BEEP. gerne te rm Bodie. x Fears, was in comparatively good health un- Seashore—Rival Attractions. plied, as he turned to face me. “Guess you til the latter part of October, 1891, when be had ain't looked at me very clus or you'd be askin’ i | whet bed “ severe attack of pneamonia, which conned ‘Special Correspondence of The Evening Star. = him to the house fora few wosks. He recov- | Thad wear ae |r anor torque ana tee | wee, ee Saree et eee oe hands mn horror. The right eye was gone, one | his inability to attend to business regularly, he Great care is observed in its manufacture to remig iA hap a tlbeeres be ne daily accounts of the day's doings at | CoPmer of the mouth cut down to the chin’ and appeased te bo oll sight wath the 10th of De- prevent an outbreak, and also to preserve the looks nowadays like a| Creede, Col., are commonplaces compared with | Bis cheeks were « mass of scars. The flesh lay | “Or that das he anatomical details of the mon who do the work. —— ; went to New York and re- The workmen and their families, who generall; bad dream, wherein|® recital of the feverish existence at Bodie | UP Tidges. and there was a horrible scar across | turned home by the elevated road. Thereafter. poeta reer tet ‘4 : during the boom. ‘Bad Man from Bodie” | live close by, carry their lives in their feminine nightmares— | during the boom. “The rom Ss ac ike | until 1 o'clock on the 20th of July, 1892, his : ‘ 5 a man, you must have igied up whole existence was a blank; what he ‘the! fat nightmares and thin | #equired a world-wide fame. The hurdy-gurdies | with a ‘buzz ‘saw! I said, ety opm the be knows only through the account« pm pony mes plecpathrd big ala they te ae F ri nightmares — stalk up never closed and were erowded at all hours. a at : no regularity ar orvier. There are no gardens | belie of one of the Russian villages never knows | Duving the day’ the men neg ie ee nate 4 and down the sands or | Magnificent saloons cropped up with plate-glass 401 Warhington avenue, Brooklyn, about | in frout of them nor behind them. They have | the delights of barber-pole stockings and her | 5g g Bes i A i i Leg i fe un au as it Pe; F i WOMEN FAT AND WOMEN THIN u BES i F eat SIAN PEASANTS AT DINNER. 100,000,000 PEAS AN] front of his shirt and exhibited even worse by his friends. He entered his father's house, es 7 ‘A leetle wnes nor that, stranger,” he re- | o'clock p.m, and ant down in the . The atin the night wondering what will apettiin the waves with | rete Gad forsidhings in salid weeds ond | suieigadateel Gebmh “1 gated lane ee wrong i were no front yards fenced off from the road and I | garters do not cost her shilling in a lifetime, iw ee | S | Sp with a griesly b'er, I'm ecare om beet te | ne ee cme srong site bien wore iy 'Y 6 - -1 Terry; Bill Withrow, since famous as a shotgun heel. Nobody ted me to thre » eras, in ti 1 himeeif, : kind in any village I’ have visited. The street | great #tep will have been made jako aj Aird 8 is pe ap At igtoracived | messenger: John eiceraet ‘Sam Pitcher, who | but the Lord was on t my side waa \to the on wy? oak te eakoee ~ not paved and the only part free from grass | make these people believe that such items as | dynamite it is different The process is con- Mmir athletes. For despite pep pony Racergeechencnnag he ‘Tell me about it. eething tant ene end te bt ‘and the physi- The Russian Common People and ais the center, where the wagons have cutruts | drawers and undershirts are among the bso- | ducted in a number of small, cheap buildings a. the correspondents who | Spent $18,000 in furnishing his bar I, | gq: Thar’ ain't much to tell. It's mostir in the |cinns who were called in could de nothing, b Lee en ete eee eee ee ee re ee tate re eran, | MeattO Softee A Wid atanes of berplibey, | ebcallh "te vilm<blemtiful analdeas cad brave | the principal saloon keepers and, consequently, | feglin’ instead of in the happenin" Look at Their Villages. j lawn of good solid turf, on which the | so small that they have not the incentives to | i marbles. Dave Nagie. the slayer of David 8. have not yet seen any sign of a sidewalk of any | Neither sex wears any underclothing, and e | °&foFe mornin, eseaped convicts and ve Nagie, yer ‘in’. ‘0 Bee, ve quieti edi The real cause of the ra The donalant! the children play and | work to satisfy them that we have, nod a namnrs | Sometimes one or more of thom are scattered | waing, whose charms are only enhanced. by | the leading citizens | Lwas drivin’ fur the hotel back thar’ that aum-| trouble was’ a mvatery, Dut. the ilmess, wos e dos nd e chi! vy a i- “dl " j i il s —f i jo the ~ \v | spon Sich'the perple meet in the evening to | wholesumimer outfit would not covt se much as Graton as veins caumahip, Dynamite is mi: | their piquant and scanty bathing suits, itre- | The camp had its daily paper, the Standard, | mer—takin’ excursion parties up to the moun: | fosth, Aingnoned ws cerebronmeningitin, = i = edited by Frank Kenyon, who afterward died in | tains and springs and trout #treams—and about | At first the case seemed hopeless. Por two . Now and th find a tree | an American farmer spends for a coat. Their mains @ fact that to the ordinary ran of man | 3 : a n RUSSIA'S VAST RESOURCES. | 80s? snd chat. Now illage streats, and under | headgear is as chespas the rest of their clothes, | B¢ building starts the others are liable to be Guatemala, and managed by John M. Dormer, every week thar d ve women or gals along. I'm | or three dave the patient was acemingly irresistible desire to accom- | and womankind, however handsome they may | subsequently secretary of state of Nevada. All| rough old chap. without kith or ki’ ard T | cin re recognizitig any member of and the men all wear caps—when they wear = | quently 3 N ° P. ‘ anything—and tho women tie up their heads in | P°07 taal care is exercised in the selection of | P%,!% the sath of civilization, the bathing | the miners and workingmen were well paid, and don't mind myin’ T was allus down on Vother | femily or blag abe te atten e wo Tae ee i a i most woefull For, wl bling was the principal diversion. Every sex till this yere calamity happened. Sorter became somewhat better, but could not apeak, How the Poorest People of the World Should Priens colored bindkerchicfe, fastening these | workmen. Aman with palpitation of the heart cetumaren priliersreeee ier ies tar | moon Bed Ser fars Maca Boek ova a ns | seman oe neat eee aa es ee A souk cube bie winin taswe aay tr Be the Richest—The Kassian Farms and Paste cate git ner areenn NG | could not get a job, as the jolts of his fluttering horn PY, they | the place contained 12,000 people there was no except how to » and they was thesort of |signs. This «tate continued for about two ; 2 SUL 4 Hussian (peasant girl ever, dreams of | organ might lead fo sensational catastrophe, | from being picturesque. | church in town, and worse than that, no sermon | critters you'd have to treat like #o much wax. | weeks, when ke begun to talk, but like am intent en ee Vt nd her entire ‘outfitat this time of the year | 40d yet their pay is no more than they would| Atlantic City, too, ism good place in which | {rut'reen preached there. Bodie had been given | I used to run a wheel over a rock on purpose to | Just Ioarning to speak, aud he did not know the ant Village Looks—The Russian Bath. . i and herentire cutfitat this foe her heals | §et for making plows. to judge of these general effects, as on its | over to the Evil One. skeer ‘em half to death, and if they axed me ng. : p Sensis of this, lundkerchiet for her head, @/ ” Housewives living near the works also use | bench 20,000 people have bathed in a single) On Tuesday, August 26, 1878, a memorable | questions or wanted to be friendly I blaffed | fami 3 : ‘ a ee € A aoe iinet bed ches almost, to. ber | Test caution and put up their winter fruit in | day. It is Philadelphia's playground, whither at event happened in the history of the camp. | ‘emoff. Now and then what they calls a ‘ Brecial Correspondence of The Evening Star. : fea alan sane ‘which, Nepaterad re and | 2 a, as the smallest jar might cause a | every recess the big c Joytatty hies, as well The boom was at its height. A few days prior | bridal couple would come along, and I felt perception, and i = ae ara . | cutlow at the neck, and which falls to below | es mops bo alg world doesn’t }as the occasional picnic preserves of towns | Russian Pete had made a big strike in the | mighty sorry for the husband fargettin’ sich plained to eon iy eet rege ad . Booker Flat was looking up and everything Ge dey Outs ms Geel een have brought to the at- | bust without being so tied. In addition to| pe Sheetal Intelintose Prop epee ons ie And just as in dreams one is not surprised at | about the camp, even to the hurdy-gurdy girls, tention of the world one these she has rag stockings reaching to the to} ught " i more distantly situated. | southern end of the Sigourney, the Booker on | baggage tied to him. Mebbe you've felt that | All’ knowindge that he ed AX her knees, sometimes being belted in at the iy : £ end now the cholera waist and sometimes left to fall over her full | ;, 4,C27eful analysis of dynamite shows that it BATHING ORDIN, 4 | oaeate hue. / j k pee ss anything that happens, or at any appearance, | “OTe % roseate 4 \ eryrepebr pian nor . of her calves and a pair of bark shoes. In| tnmade, of | some More complex and | 7 or It was early in the afternoon when a stranger y point his therefore harder to . Ut, is comparatively | however incongruous, and unlike the world of | entered the affce of the Standard and pre- gals : slow. etna a eae . , i 2 reap bala gle end PR Sede te’ waking ote stuff, | waking, so in this world of tho seashore one’s | sented his card to Mr. Dormer. It vead. . conepulan oxy of bis ai rn 7 and the #1 eres have constantly | but the trouble has been and always will be to | conventional standards seem to have vanished, 4 y nd when for the first time y the strongest slements — pom ne ri ghey iis the pictures of x | @ivine ite subsequent intentions in time to make | and any digression from the ordinary mode % y eyes. In gitti strength permitted that he should be taken to of its population. The — ae ski ax Cheer eee of tights. | Ces Felf ns remote as possible, of doing things somehow occasions no amaze- . E. M. REYNOLDS ; one abet forever. I took a party | window he did not know what the trees were; nan see ae —— Faery | ube ingredients are nitrate of soda, wood | ment, ‘stout elderly woman arrayed in| =! Of the M. E. Church : | all from the east--who were horses and carriages caused him the utmost ar. typical of the one-sev- THE RUSSIAN BATE. Pulp, sulphuric and nitric acid and glycerine | a garb that makes her look like an aged chorus enth of the world which ee ‘em’s father, up to the mountains to fish fur | tonishment, and the sight of passing people | trout. Arter awhile ther got scattered, dnd I| drew from him expressions of wonder. is i is lothes day | Oil. A mixture of the acids and oil forms nitro- | girl cast in the role of a Swiss peasant steps ms ae 5 PMaEN Cues eater Ceanntieate cay'| eivercine—-the“Sxplnuve “Gia oot aaa etd | fos beyond the water's edge and seating her-| ,,The new arrival was a stout-Luilt man of me- | was lyin’ in the shade and thinkin’ how much | Thereafter. when old friends called to ese | bee hsb peg - puly making an absorbent to contain the liquid ; self on the sand with all the artlessness of one | dium height, florid complexion and a Geter- | better it would be if thar was more jack rabbits him, though strange to him at fest, ons naturally make you think that the Russians | earthquake. Nitro-glycerine in the form of | of her own two-yearold grandchildren pro- | mined look about his large mouth | He was at- | and fewer gals. when sumthin’ growled in my | second visit he always remembered them. "He must be the dirtiest of races. Ido not find dynamite retains Be explosive powers in full, | ceeds to ingenuously sop her gray head with | tired in a loosely fitting suit of gray stuff badly | car. I knowed what it was afore I jumped up | now began to exhibit some remarkable traits, Russia. Other women may be sitting about, | them so, and it seems to me that they have been | while the absorbent facilitates handling and | walt water’ one imy't check ne ia merely | i aie to face one of the ugliest lies you sot | euch ax telling the time of day without seeing « Lonseganianpe mane barges oe — ma | spinning or sewing, and on the stepe of the | greatly dandered te regard to their uncleunli- | lessons tne liability of premature death. amused, and when # man sans sleeves, sans Hind to seo von,” said Mr. Dormer ples | eves on. He'd been wounded by some hunter | clock: infact to have locked ate dial eetia iden of the wealth of — cay | huts or in the doorways you will see old men ness, How they keep themselves so Icannot| Dynamite is not near so feverish'as nitro stockings and shoeless, with a hat thet looks | antlr. “One of the crying needs of this camp | and thar’ waa a.gr-at patch of blood on hie side. | not have helped him, for be hed mot per lesen upon millions of acres of it have never been | a1.4 shock-haired children. | See, but they are not half so dirty as the Chi- | glycerine, aud for this reason the workmen are | like a dilapidated fruit basket tied down over | i82 pastor. The Standard since it started has ; | these on the ground there may be a woman they own. The great | Vith her babies about her and with other babies Tinssian empire — 8 | tied to the branches of the trees in the oblong peeked fuil of unde-| spallow boxes which constitute the cradles of a He'd been lyin’ clus in the bushes and rocks | to read the face of aclock. Yet if asked the touched by the plough, and hundreds | aaiil eae nese, and they will 1ank in cleanliness with the | intensely polite in their demeanor toward the | his éars, walks up and down the sands with a | done its best to reform the camp. but its efforts | aiong the creck and the shouts and of time of the day be would give an immediate upon hundreds of thousands of it | ‘There is little difference in the houses of a thet very poor people of the world. They do | last named quality. short-skirted, bare-headed young woman the | have been futile. No use trying. by = | them answer, invariably within « ute or two of square miles have never been prospected. It | ‘hae ae lag They are all of one stpry and | NOt "ash as often as we do, but when they do | The nitrate of soda and wood pulp are first | only sentiment that one entertains toward the | Wants is a spiritual awakening. —Itspeople wan n A . the correct time, to the great asionixhment of 2 bn , wash they make a business of it, and clean | prepared. Equal quantities of both are thor-| pair is a vague general feeling of displeasure to be aroused to the imminent danger they are y | the family. hhae gold regions ss rich ss any in tl orient | the average hut is not imore than twenty fect | themselves with the famous Russian bath. cughly mixed in a machine like the pugmill | and disapproval, such as might be elicited by | im Tt isa dreadfully immoral place.” a te. ‘One day he asked for a board, «ignifring that nett Sate SEER GEE SOON | ents, Bis tng Wille ate heed igh tock tem | | She, cay tees don teemmainene tne copious | used in brickyards. There is no danger in this ‘ble and inbarmouious dress of one's| “I have heard so,” replied Mr. Reynolds, . _Thada gun anda knife. I allus | he wanted to make something. A board ands. ‘mining machinery. and its vast iron copper | the ground at the top where they meet the | perspiration continued for some time, department, and the man who does the work | v i For the past fow weeks I have been | go heeled for a scrimmage. but I never had one | sharp knife were given him "He did mot know Foire man Its cll regions have for long | Fidge roof of brown thatch, and this thatch isof | "These people boil themscives at least once | can think of something else at the time. This OX A SUNDAY MORNING ee See eee sfore or since. T yelled out when I saw what | the name of what i ee ee ee eee ere i 5 end | carcw ond bs cftun cightocn inches thick. It to | 0 ech ie Comm tw being chews thin sein | Eachios isrunby power which comesfromanen-| ractioularly does Atlantic City despite ite| What success? - it was and went far my revoiver. Old Eph- | his father to the window be waited for a wagon time been competing with Ponzerb i ite | put on #0 well for years, and and if they cannot get the steam they crawi | giueas far away as it is possible tolocate it from | Ti Sage Fees Pie ite | , “Not as great az T could desire. People seem | rain hauled off and broke tay right arm with | to come along then said, in his childish way: ee ee es egy Se et eg ee yond winter a great camay of tie | inte tale ovamn aasleweni eck: s sremorks. , The ongine house is placed near the | leven eburches look as if it were given over to | tobe careless of their soul's ealvation. There | Sue caf, ‘Then Leterted te rust ont Thea | Sones water ae tings dat go wound. ' of the markets of Asia. a its | houses were unroofed to gite this straw thatch , village has.a steam bath house frontier, otherwise the engineer could not get | @ worship of the heathen deity Neptune, for | are a great many families at Aurora, but Ifound | tne gals screamin’ and the next thing I knowed Do Vou mean a wheel,” his father asked, It has ali sorts of precious stones bye to its ' to the starving cattle and horses. Teawin the Population turns out every Saturday and before | an insurance policy on his life. When in proper | then the ocean god's devotees who have hurried | few devout Christians. ma Iwas down and the b’ar ontop of me. It was | Greatly pleased thathe bad found» name ae Possibilities beara Ma. There | famine districts many huts which were covered | every holy communion, confession or fast day ion the pulp is taken to the mii hither from the entire country side to pay their | “Are 3 ving to preach here? while I was lyin’ on the ground that I got oat | for what he wanted the young man answered. anal any Saakset tn ana ciannn (with bard, 3 J in which the people are | and for the time beeomes bodily clean. I ai 4 f devotions approach his shrine with unsandaled | | “Yes. Thave seen the mombers of the ex- | my knife with my left hand. The man with | "Yes a wheel, are millions of square miles = hhich have | *beltered today only by the board ceiling which | told that in the villages both sexes go into the | It is in the mixing of the nitro-glycerine | tor by the hundreds. One of the facts that @cutive committee of the Miners’ Union | the gels was from Boston, or around thar’ | ade lis wheel and to the astonishment Jands in Siberia and Asiatic Russia which have | rans across these walls of logs forming the | bath at the same time and that the men and | that the Srontest danger is incurred, and it re- | one discovers while gazing at this band of pil- | they have kindly consented to my using their | somewhat, I guess he hal gun, but he did | of all it was perfect in every way. hub, spokes maver_ been herman! 4 od gg ctr floor of the loft of the huts. The average boys and girls all bathe together. It is | quires a man with # cool head and a thorough | grims ia that the bathing thin woman has ali | ballon next Sunday evening. The object of my | jest as most any other man would-—tried to | and felloes being as well constructed as if he ‘ast grain regions of European Such lanie aa | Russian hut has one doorand two little windows | eaid that no other person but @ {tnssian could | knowledge of his business. _The mixture of | these years been slandered, everybody seeming | call was to see you about Petting out, some | run off the gals while the b’ar was busy with | had been an accomplished wheelwright. though see cttiecned ee Gaittvation, Such lands se ' at the front, with sometimes a second window | stand the experience of one of these vapor bets | acids is two-thirds sulpharic and one-third | to have conspired to asseverate that in compari- | dodgers calling attention ta, the meet me. Lenstwise, I never blamed him fur doin’ | never in his life before had he attempted such rn ae aime tee caaA | fn tha tent. "The front Goue Ww meio Uke reds | ouch aa ara token in tum satay cean ia oll the | ie. aA Ua action takes place in an under- | gon with her fat sister she was on sch occasions | “What do vou wish on the dodgers | as he did.” a thing. }, and as it is in ordinary country of the | Stable door such as is cometimes knocked up by | family bakes its bread, and I am sure no other | ground lead-lined tank us‘ far removed from but a poor pale shadow. Mr. Reynolds thought « moment and wrote: | "".-and they left you alone?” At the request of his friends be continued his 7 [eee rete Walled beans 3k this ‘the busy haunts of man as possible. It is then . .« Winhed to make, but taking 5 = z | (“I thought they had, and Old Ephraim | work and made an expross wagon ae of conducted to the glycerine house, where » mix- eee oe eee . maxicadicis Deaarabaen thonght 80, too, fur he quit lookin’ their appescensous tf Gab boon suread cutty = Psccome ; Perhaps one wouldn't select her as the em: US SEI : ture of 80 per cent oil and 20 per cent acid is " , X w . and began to feed on my carcass. Iswiped | model maker,the «prings im particular DORMANT WEALTE. made ina tank. Coid water is kept moving in | bodiment of beauty, for it must be admitted At Miners’ Union Hall, Sunday Evening, him with the knife across ‘the nose, and ashe forth general admiration. He bad shaped The bulk of this great wealth of Russia is the lead coils in the tank during the mixing | that » broom handle slightly draped and sur- Angee 31, 1878. and carved them so as to exhibit each separate Row lying dormant. Like the sleeping princess Process, and the utmost care is exercised to | mounted by that other symbol of domestic life : eratcan ef No go. n detail, and when all was completed and im the fairy Yale, it only waits the kiss of capi- aera ened —a sweeping cap—acombination which she ye eee Se eee downed me agin. Idid the best I could with wagon put together, many who mw it would tal and labor to bring it into life, and no one grag ay ist sree aei eo strongly revembles-—in’t the prettiest thing in Chareh will preach at 7:30 o'clock knife in my left hand, bat I was only a vag in place ean tell how soon these giants of material pro- Eouble for” himelf. "At the proper: tne the | {28 World, but i, ot least, looks as well as Bubyect—"‘And He aaid uatothem, follow ? | Re het someboly, win ‘eat pana clams om Recsrteedl Seer meet. eel micarets dra ot tne sinker nim | ARERTat specimen of “Spee Jelly 4h . a trembling about in the tide, and which npon me, and I will make you fishers of men.” called out: r ° | & the innate cussedness of the acids is chemically , ' 'm here, and I've got your gun! Hold | wood. as in ber own territories the labor necessar; ~ > sory a! nearer inspection proves to be a fat woman in- rkusiaxp daatertaies 6 ; your gi for the work, and if this was used aright there OS Nas. Impbaried to the heretofore harmloss glycerine. | cased in a bathing suit. The golden mean here, |; S!NSERSANDCHRISTIANS CORDIALLY: | yp and letme get a abot. By this time the young man had so far re- ‘would be no land so rich upon the face of the , % earth today. Admi 3 A i snd Gibcult 30 “seats hares ne es I nowed the bar waa dead, fur be sited Zight | Sate bite the Semeeys ware ie tenet Dotkumeed ae on eel i : expelling the Oxygen | tore ne tiony on too a | mg : down on my legs. It was half an hourarter | that « change of air with quiet would be of ata fairestimate every man and woman in a i 4 - spe a keds A quivallis Un aor in nor stout nor too , for, however! That subject won't dra . = country was worth $300 as one of the elements | : = ae Aitspete se, coattuntian ‘de ue | Sdmirable proportions, an Amazon in@| mer, prompily and empl. aed | that afore [ cum too and found one gal holdin’ | benefit both to his body and his mind. His of that country’s wealth. At this rate the S i= a gira ritiice te the 7 lost pebgltl ut short skirt isn't pleasing. And then her hair | won't have « corporal « gua! Tou mast | ™Y head in her lap and the other 5] in’ wa- | phyuician had decided that the patient would be try of Russia are worth thirty billions of Z ” ponent Barkeley in the memory of man, as | must be matarally curly, so that when 4 peeps | preach on ec i gsi in | a yyiey — : — uy ae e oy nt — enough to stand to Russia, and when once waked up to ee ip we out from under her cap'the sea air and water | Prearh of he ? i | keered silly, ‘their possibilities they will make the Russian | — = Pony ayes og 3 the now nitro-glyce- | instoad of straightening it out like so many | Stee eee » sons ping that apPoels | gals was doin’ the right thing. boots of modern progress. As if 7 * o taal itional twist of grace Given all this witha , fu iy Rowever, the peasantry of fuscia are mors A HARVEST GANG. mixture, In, oe peperating oom the stuff pretty face and a becoming costume one can pater torched in the scrimmage. Nextly, that Boston gal asleep than Russia's material resources. I am | tans in cool tanks, whare, the explosive, risse | Tory well afford to save over the bathing orm | aa GZ had the pluck to come out of the crowd and | phssician called on him about impressed every day more and more | our farmers. and it leads not into the living | person would care to utilize the bakeoven for waa es cand js Tun | mer girl, but otherwise not, and. this pec Pmaekd “ans . Lastly, while Old Ephraim was ete See a See Mm Come and to Corking pone Matt ghgiF Non room of the hat, but into a little store room of | this purpose. T bsur that In the winter the | Sawdust, to. the mixing derartment, while the | PSA siemens sceroely atiect the ses acca. “he ? eith d a A pad pote IY A litle, "They are the ‘wonder | cabin, “suns “ME forme onc.end of the pea ant colt aay ake out from the | Acid i conducted to the regaining works. sak wee Given) rT || See ee | cum up and shoved the muzalo agin his bead | get well! smong the laborers of the world. Surrounded | TUE LIVING ROOM. conceive to be possible, for in the country vil- |. BY some chemical process the sulphuric ia ; 2 by the wealth of Croesus, endowed with the : Ps in his | 24 fired the hull six bullets into his brain.| On Saturday, July 9, the patient was . . flooring but | lages of Japan a man will come naked from the | %P&rated from the refuse of the nitric acid | One can correctly gauge the time that per- | He evidi ighing the matter in his oe @ naa Pa muscles of Hercules, born with the germs of | . Tis Foom is usually without any flooring but | S 2 y was 5 ‘em right here in an old terbacker | to this village, to the home of his uncle, ©. H. ’ hot bath into the cold winter air and walk home , 882 can be used again. There is no particalar | sons have been at Atiantic Ci bserving nd it took him very few moments to de-| box, jest ax they war' dug out. and I kin show | Jennings. “After being here «few dave bo ‘man’s best intelligence, they live, labor and die | that of the ground. You may = the be ‘en* | with his clothes under his arm. [Saco ara lacspecnplae ay poetry ne | the degree of attention which they bestow on | “4S. ES ye bit head and claws ina bar room at Elko. | called hia mother to him and ssid, “Mamma, Without knowing their power or appreciating | OF other animals belonging to the family in it, s ething oi ¢ said, ; 2 i | ‘ the shells as they stroll the beach. If they have the fact that they might be better and richer and some of the farming tools of the establish- | XO MODERN CORVENIEKCES. | be remembered | ‘hat gai wasn't but eighteen years old and she next week, Wednesday, me do get well | Just come they will pick up everything in t Then he took than they are. Simple and ignorant, these one | ment stand about its walls. In the center of | Of course villages of this nature have no san- }* pencil again and wrote. | wore glasses and had gold in her teeth, and shape of a shell, sometiines even small clam aud “This is what il have on thowe dodgers, "he | when we started out that day I wouldn't hey hundred millions of strong, able-bodied, well- | one side of it is n door reacbed by one or two | itary arrangements whitever. There are no " oyster shells. By the next day they have become | remarked as he handed over what he had written: | traded rabbit pelt fur two gals like her. Sercloped people are intellectually asleep. They | low steps and leading into the house proper | street lamps or water works, and the women of Mes long becd | somewhat Bling: aud motlting. meoee | 6...-<25s:0scssesetecceck Coeccmscibvcnscaceeos vel are men with the minds of children, who under | and forming the en‘: to the room that is in with a lo the family draw the water from the well of the | OF ptty uted bl i a eae Sane vony temnpbecy commamen,” | a ; aa. Our best Americans. ee andy leer cat cook ead Tite ned wines | Russian girl of such a peasunt village ever sees | ini e Gud RAR Canoe GSM Gd Hike Cemstoeink | * se since. I tried to thank the gal for what she ing violently and trembling Hike leaf. she Peasant Russia is by far the most interesting | it is embered that fully half of the i r rayed star fish is the very | . | did. but I was so bit and clawed and chawed | hastened to his bed, whereupon he sat up and feature of modern Russia today. The peasants Russia is made up of bitter winter when th : : ; they will look at, 4 | wee up thet T couldn't get the words out eke plainly and in his own natural speech ussia of todas -!d ort and ” i bo . a veges “ % \ sorry fur the acci- | * G60 villngee weaken oe Sand: ak their £00,- days arechort and belt ye. yo tee cadre pg f into which the yellowish, TEE STOCT WOMAN GETTING STOUTER. 2 jdent and sorry she didn't get tome sooner,! His mother asked him if he did not know greet Eeseian cuit. Abed teas tae Seenene ie ie aaamae ie s -hoveled witha w. scoop. it is a little oda | . aud that was all, except that it took me a year | where he was. alike, and when you have visited one Hussian | you living room of thie bind shabT vcitgd | x t Atin’ fannel er the mouth of the bod, 7 should flock to the sea-hore in the | m : to get well.” | _ “Yes, of course,” he said, “Tam in grandma's Village you have toagreat extent seen the | ina village near Petroffckoi ry " i the horn of the funnel ranning throagh « hole r “ baatuclk oy you never heard from her since?” | room. How did I get here’ Whole Russian empire. The Russian peasant | great black plain of Russi % on Packer takes a paper car- + ; do, seeing themselves growin and Not Get you know,” he replied, as be wiggied | For an hour he asked questions in @ dazed never has « home outside of a village. He isn | as rich as the valley of the Nile re 4 ‘ tridge in his lef: dand « it over the fiigh italy eealthiy. a0 weaneet : 2 Tr son St eround in ‘an uneasy way, “when I got up I | way as to what had happened to him. He then Social animal, and in the thousands of miles ne aa {horn of the funnel below. Then he fills. se sae ye ; = — : a “d be glad to gita few relics wanted to know if it was cold weather, as the Which Lhave traveled through the differen it 4 ? 2 d WOOKRE | on a maalanchely or ee z | hereabonts, and so got together | last thing he remembered was coming bome on f European Russia during the past few lands. This hut of which I speak is that of a % ' : . f hand, the stuff 2 gain of a ponnd a day és aie 28 ioe ney stones and minerals and petri- | the 14th day of December. weeks I have not seen a single house standing by | well-to-do peasant. It is if anything better | | dg ae me ed d t " ak you are 5 4 Injun curiosities and sent ‘em just where he had dropped it . itelf in the fields. In looking over a Russian | than the average. Ita living room. was not P bee Aes Se the Spvk nd at hy cartciige | cecetann oa y lav She 0 . his whole sickness being to him « per- landscape roa tee no fences marking off the | more than ten by twelve fee size and one $ We | Topi aabriigpe te etne esd chaps somata ack © : — r i “| Desceerabenenton ab peek ben ene Saas eirey hay ateias Petes na benl | Temeth of Gis space wan taken wp tha great \ | ordinary. valoon catsag weighs half a 3 : | “Come, now—what else? You are keeping ber 14, 1891, to July 20, 1802, seven months and y bay ‘eeping sentinel | chimney, which formed the oven, the cooking Pl) ” When finish 3 i z tr i i | a i " Watch. as it were, over the fields = Foy lone | stove and the heating arrangement of the hut. . Kons niches y packed . . ec i ‘six days, is lost. He is still at his uncle's home house on the western prairies of America, This chimney was fully six feet wide and about GOING NOME FROM WORK. owt patcabeers Agena bier dag a i houses r * i You won't laugh at me: nd takes great nieasnre in showing to callers Seperated by miles from any similar | eight feet long. and its froat,in which were | for chipment. Sometimes. however, i a r . 7 | his wagon, which he bas no recollection of bav- a washboard nor has any ideas of washing | impatient and doesn't wait to be shipped tell the boys that I'm soft in the ing made. machines or patent wringors. She does not mite is not so easily exp sed iatedion and: kicks to | dree - Got Rich | even kuow what wash tub is, and. the clothes eople think. "Tt placed on an | Tate tone ith tn ores ote eres int vi have been in your eamp but ER sy | stream, aud standing in hor bar legrin Tee | Sea Petey et setae, thrown inte | Saban, Ohio, the dente of ahaa To ne oe a dul of fumbling sueck tn taetessn er] . Theos coald Sandly hove tote &.guesier ose an, an er ba | e and or dumped ove ; » Ohio, tic | * = : yawn re momen ; | water she pounds the dirt ou! of them with a | it will uot cxplode. someting. If wtrucl City is the lowest of any place in the coma T have been deeply impressed with | after a deal of fumbling about in the bosom of ‘The : tee | ot es, ' (vou are not wappo-ed to reiiect meanwhile that | the of your mines and she enormity of his flannel shirt he brought outa parcel wrapped | trast between two men who had been chums at "1 | p Fi ss make an effort to go home to do it,) that it has nienanced, ouraged. The ane- | 2 s | 2 ie ee Bas eee a | cap are nsoherPove? and a fase and percussion | ten inches lees rain in a year tht a watering | ments of the ‘people of Bodie are gambling, | complished itand held’ ups photograph the | wrinkles on his brow and was round-<houldered ‘nk “4 i |from long hours spent overadesk. He was bene drinking and caron-ing. vpical “Boston ‘here are practically no 4 to wash, and as tric ed at a _and | Place down the coast and six inches les than | rir “ ae ' trudging slowly homeward. 4 }to table Wen and ‘napkins. they are ‘tnhowrd | gmail hole mado in the dynamite, into wbiel Ae | ian Another rectt all of whic thrilling stenc | gambler! Eetheps you neve hove taough of gradging bande att aera nat | "Tee second wes wall dressed, and shen, be for dinwer, The main diab fred fat thle is eae tee {he “emt or Pa inle yo legee ments are reinforced by a feminine old inbab- | :his before. Pass your saloons at any hour of | ber again, and ('m nuthin’ but a | 4 fin ashy Dati eed eae the eg Around as 8 | word with an expert ast=unomer to locate vanr | Htant entering, as you read, and with the em- | {he day or night and soe SS rox cee nititenacer ee a He eon fi yeaih Pasian and about the longih of a dager | possible remains, licht the other ond of the fase, | Pbasis which 200 pounds of personality natur-/ who have loct al oth ned sor at | of mo! I've carried it far three years, and I'l | Sud chatrn, onch Satie o tig Serene coe anes, | COMBS a nent, dying exclamation and roti in | $I Vanda to, ©, nemark, enraring yon that she | eptionsty trying to appease their hunger at | of ml, I've cazsied ft fur these rears, | Wullnld Gries astauch an Sosofete Colcrreoc: | 2n7 aasized direction, Atlantic City just ninetoen sears ago. to all of | lies have lost all hope and hang about these | me that's goin’ to be laid in hi 5 ipa ont ee ee | places in their despair. busum and be kivered in with Sou, the Saamae eee oat arte QUAL FO THE .OccastoN, Torney hes not Gectengod in uu inverse rate | Uhave advertioed that f would tell you thie And by aod by, after we ¥ | ing he i a mil two in silence, his hand went up in | mouth : How an Old Lady Abashed a Burglar by | * ber guin in weight, evening how to win at faro. I mean ina or up . A RICH PEABANT'S MENU. iritual way. Let as assume, hearers, suspicious way to bis eye aud he said: J Her Nonchalance. remaster | that the world is the larout and the church ie | x about gals, ain't it? Jest hear There are no knives and forks to be seen on | From Yonth's Componion, On the wall of this same writing room hangs | the ~ eve | the envekeeper. ‘The king represents our Lord | them angels inside is enjoyin’ | the table and plates and cups and saucers are | ‘Roceptions of the common kind may be'| y . | and the jack the devil. Do you want everlast- —— tee |Mmissing. I went with the Countess Tolstoi | guided by a manual of etiquette, but when the | Joining it depends similar deline: tions of neigh- ing happiness? Do you want eternal life? If | through one of her villages on the Tolstoi | question is one of secdiiaga Wore the ora- | boring const cities. You have never heard of patra abil we Cie ge fd eM estate at Xasnia Polyana,and in one of the | cies are dumb, und the prised, unwilling them, to be sure, but that isdue to inland igno- | king to ia copay and infinite Ay ELDERS houses which we visited we found — ig serpeteed, ats rence. You mentally revolve that the following | YOUr for wl ¢ last turn is made and ™ dinner. tess must act for Rerself. “Aunt” Lucy | day you will become acquainted with one, at | casekeeper makes it jack. king—for you have — = 7 of the richest Tatts, who lives in n lonely farm house on the least, of these interesting towns, which you | W024 cFown ia She Sneveky Sjeniom. secs ‘ae Rabitation. is absent. You see no one | holes for fuel and an oven. rose from the floor | her estate, and what do you think was their | Falmouth rou near Portland, Me., originated a | forthwith proceed to select by reason of its eye Te eee ee local musical hall when the wire suddenly broke Norking alone in the ‘felds without it be here to {the ceiling. | penn’ At was cabbage soup and rye bread. | method that others might vory well adopt. Tho parks depicted and broad meandering avenues. | eee eee, Tor ee th a aie Tin. It | and ahe fell from a giddy height right on the and re a shepherd or a short-ekirted maiden In the side faci: the room, leaving about The family were aroun le al nex! i; = Watching the cattle. The people work in gangs twof-et for the chime . of them in all.” Bach bad | Method presupposes presence of mind, courage have 7 Hy BE te ; VILLAGE that you have lost eternally! . . there was cut out there were about ten town is ee hee) of from half « dozen to hundred, and their under the ceiling a ledge about three feet high | one of these wooden spoons and | And truthfulness, but these exercised the resalt | that you #9 | ening Wind to dbét thle tetany eon Mife im their villages and in the flelds is a social and of the depth of the siece This wWerinnen scooping out the soup ata great rate, thould be satisfactory, as in her case. She tolls | large a Sees ee Se rears ‘ite Brea Common interest which they have in the top of the stove, and it formed, I was told, | had no butter and 20 meat, and the Russian | the story briet, brisk, decided way: ‘the lands belonging to the village ties them to- the bed of the family in the winter time. This | peasants see but Ii ither. ‘Iaace 'n Ruth 'n the young ones had gone to gether in other ways and they are more closely family included several married sone ond week, | Waterville to spend the 'n left me all sole Sesociated with one another than any other peo- danghters, and it had in addition to the old | and thelr slone—all but this dra That ple of the world. folks about twelve chudren and grandchildren. | bread, wit sald right by me, enme's it most ATYPICAL RUSSIAN VILLAGE. saaetin on ane "ieee, of) sai kK I have visited many of these villages within the } ied tous olor ak past month. Let me tell you how they look. | pitted together upon the log the day time. The whole » Riding through the country on the railroad you ‘hem | tne so't I went to bed at and they | below in | Fi al HE «What ye want?’ says L “an Thala Tone,” says T, ‘a Tanghed, ‘Me bario’ eliver is sui “Beemed to kind e' discourage bi “ Bay, xg ‘inteh the door when leave!” 'N x A } orgy went 1 seo ‘Up my piller ‘a turned |.) RIVAL ATTRACTIONS, “+N he didn’t take nothin’.” : - +02 In the Gloaming. - ats ay if Ee stacks running irregularly for a mile ene direction. Each of these collections of hay stacks is « Russian village, H | i H if fT i tf i 3f £ FFs F é H BE Fe i li i il EE | iat E f if 4 a wes you ough te gel shaved

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