Evening Star Newspaper, August 27, 1892, Page 9

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. - i Gy THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D. ©. SATURDAY, AUGUST 27. 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES. was the fever took possession of First boy—“‘Old Johnson kept you in. I h » 1 1 no! 4 ot been published, on each mi e the THE UTE MARRIAGE DANCE. of her husband, 4 sstuirgcrmaveittes TO PLEASE CHILDREN. szecermieaaiye."S. 5. FARM MORTGAGES. |sexerseeseersne at Saris ace aaa ™p p r Roc Dp rl er — UP PIKE’S PEAK.: gene BG ea - F Sacre once addressed myself to the proprietor of the ton’s a dandy good feller. Ineo h ard Sato t o crags | on Ind! ‘aidens Offer Love Potions owe = — from a hotel (2 for room. | He waid he could give me | Now, why ie Ryder @ sneak and Johnson roscet veral countics in Obio the average and Choose Their Husbands. master, get for food only what he and the 1 . = ascot. I coneluded that no better could be ob- ht Templar’s Pilgrimage te E g Caan at one et tee tee ames | Am Inquiry as to How This Can Best | a, #04, flow onydor mar, not pas. Interesting Facts Brought About in annual interest on each farm is $97, or | not much less than in Kansas, the state that | 4% INTERESTINO SsPRINO-TIMR CEREMONI— leave, yet still she searches for that love-weed with as much ardor ae though it was to bring A Eni Id a dusk: led ‘Pas coulis is tas Eycac dade net ats moienge eer ea sencens ot if] exTIxo 1x THE woons ror “rove” wEED— | ber a wedded life of unalloyed joy and bia, i a = cold a dusky minion of the proprietor . int. The troul it Ryder not oad a EVERY TEAR A LEAP YEAR—MARRIAGE TIES roa he Sumit and Bac way toone of the I already men- Be Accomplished. Ktir methods of warfare—at leart the boys| the Census Office Investigations. | annual interest per farm is only €53. HOETS LUCK AT MONTE CARLO. ees Within it were a dozen cots. The bed | i think he does not—and Johnson does. It seems CONTRAST BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH. en en ee ee ee - im Consisted of regs and two he er to be inevitable that warfare should exist be- nke the. were ATMOSPHERIC 5 | rfare el ‘The most striking contrast of all is between QTOT ONLY DOES THE OLD FAMILIAR | A Story That Comes in a Roundabout Way or two lodgers the = . ies « teache . be i} " nd of go and I found tut they hal gore to| AN OLD BACHELOR'S’ STORY. | teen the tescher and his Pup one aacther | A RICH STATISTICAL FIELD. | the north and eonth. Inthe north the mort, N quotation, “In the spring the young man’s Through Chicage. ved with their boots on as w retaining their | and do as little injury as possible. The best Sage is often the first thought of aman who sets fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love,” apply to Prom the Chicaro Mail. veceoats, Tay down and drew the blankets | way fora teacher to please children who are out to own real estate or to carry on some | the youths of the Caucasian race, but also to| “There has been » story going the rounds in me, but it was still too cold to sleep. | He Never Tried to Please a Child but Once— | under him is for him to always be fair, and if | Most Real Estate Mortgage Indebtedness undertaking, and a greater or less amount of our red b the Indians ‘Their manner | @eeast that I think you have not heard,” eal * soon other lodgers came in and nearly all| ‘The Literature That Attracts Children Does | he — his scholars to be straightforward he | Incurred to Secure the Purchase Money of success generally follows; but in the south, of avowing this love may be out of rele - | one of the actors tn a local theater Inst evening, io ima caken. Tues mot tons before one | Not Change—-Women Can Please Them |™ust be so himeclf. He mast never show | moa) estate Improvementa—Ite Relation to Se Neogringrg ecallcdiny pMlapicatadsersheonbaargato es "sant 11 | a0 be returned to bis pocket a letter bearing © : that docsn't| Better Than Men, and yet mast show an interest in all, He ought | O47 Developmente—North and South Con- | oreferred, because agricultural land has t00 | is as sincere according te thely standard of the | X™ York postmark. Has he been | preference for one boy or girl over another, antain, dsiaking or has hi ; to havea great brain, a large heart, keen per-| trasted. iow ‘© productiveness and little or no sale on | moral obligations, and itinvariably leads to the ‘ou will remember that ‘Old Hoss’ William ‘The Trip Up was Made on the Railroad—Thi Peculiar Sens! sperlenced AN on Top A Glorious Sanrise—The Tedi Walk Down the with his ste a — of —— and i c= ae short, i =e In lool ing owe the figures for | matrimonial altar Hoey haa been «pe 4 portion of his sum- peateun ad akan WRIT! ateacher should bea model man. When par e south and the north the hastily popular z mee, weg j a It was the effect of the atmosphere. | Sram started out the | ents stop and consider the enormans and far- ‘Wetften foe The Rventne Bier. conclusion will be that southern farmers are in | , Tb® Utes hare some very interesting custome | Ter vacation in Europe, and be Inely returned, t grew sore as I tried to fill my Iu | reaching influence that teachers have over chil- much happier circumstances than the northern for facilitating matrimony. They believe in Ae = “* " ae became replete te other day to find out | 37or ‘they ought to. be willing to pay them al- ME CHMBUG (ORFION | =) wostera tuasnern Donvaae wine ton or thon [aac “marrying and i * and | Monte Carlo gold besides his other souvenirs of j yor other 1 did net| how to please children. | most any salary. ‘The truth’ ia. that the men investigation of mort 7 ; pelican hep atl ae ndige: farms are mortgaged; while, if the truth were quite often th the old world. Tho other evening Hoey told geges and farm and | known, this is a0 because the southern farmers | Sonics loners eee? for the wealth of | 1 story of his good fortune at Mente Carle 40 | He met an old pechelor | who ought to be teachers seldom are able to af home proprietorship, | cannot mortgage their farms, since creditors | POmes, blankets or government income of the about sixty years old, | ford it. They can make more money at alios and Inat night I tr: srope aroun in the ¢ for | e ‘1 | oni & party of friends, among them my correspond- suffered ing th ected to find, but did not i i any other profession. will uot take farm security until they have ex- | *Titor, Just like thetr white sisters, . E afer ran bea serene are who lives by eee — = the supervision | Dinsted crops, fart sled cad eae 1] One of the customs peculiar to the Ute tribe | Gent. This is the way he tells it,” and the “ hh Hd, though shaking with th becuase he i& too excms BRAMWELLIANA. Mr. George K. | property as securition, | ts called the “tea dance,” In the apring, when | ®°ter proceeded to read from the letter be hed Bem os ae cers would retch and gr: to live with anybody sr Holmes, is, so far as the| "So far as the popular abuso of the mortgage | ratare is Sahaiing tudes bap cues ‘and | Ju#t received ns follows tade—I was ne: ». Teor d to tr: else, and he asked him | Some of the Sayings of = Great English collection of statistics | is conceraed the sum of the census investiga- | her now apperal “We left London, five of us, June 8. There Id der of 1 frozen with cold and recusinder of the 1 what his general giowa Judge. is concerned, nearly | tion is that a mortgage debt incurred by aman ‘Re leaf bud is just opening, the maiden | was “illy’ Mann. ‘Jimmy’ Powers, “Charley” i actalcannne : | ryssis i i | wanders up and down the Utah prairie and hill | Evans and Max Rieiman, esult of my efforts t tor to the summit sais of of children. Mr. Edward Manson of the Middle Temple deal of the statistical | the wealth that he has borrowed ehould be | im@at this time of the year, called the “love | aronnd for a + nd Mann suggested that we fill them with the light seek, Gus tan told ae he felt “Children!” be cried, | has collected a number of good things said by . work of the inquiry has | owned by him free from obligation to repay; but re recced bears a name which, translated, means | go to Monte Carlo. Charley went broke almost air, but it te new over), were growing blind, ui y “they aro the greatest tuisances under | the Inte Lord Bramwell, and they have been| 2 been tabulated. An ex-/ ince ho has not saved his wealth, it is his good “love weed.” nit and I have gained an dirty. most every o, with @ heaven. They wake you up in the morning | published in a neat brochure by Messrs. Clowes 2) amination and analvei | fortune to beable to, obiain the use of ttend | 2. serine to pngplope toch ogg ight ggg 7 yee Pleag my at was as instructive as it was = Paes others | and ruin your eleep, and if you laugh or talk at | & Sons, The httle work is entitled “Bram- | of the statistics already obtained and of the | OY, wing it make it return amg | j : te tep of Bie sp ne The railroad to t which he is under obligation to pay the lender, af clover. Up and down the prairie, by the | plaving the three, bat the bail somehow didn't while leaving him some surplus in a large ma. | brookside, between the rocks, never a nook or p in the three pocket, Iso said that in that nde it | Right you wake them up and thoy yell and their | welliana, or Wit and Wisdom of Lord’ Bram- | bulletins put out by the consus office leads to It is nine : 3 to boil a po! parents get mad. Talk about the trouble | well.” There is an excellent photograph of his | and warrants some interesting deductions and | jority of instances. "The just comparison is not | CTANNY butis searched over in quest of the got broke and unged me to ge t women canso in the world, why, it tsn't half as | lordship as a frontispiece and underneath isthe | conclusions respecting the subject of home and | between the condition of the morgtagor as wach | Precious eg Og Bongo wowed fey be | Lshod around tn uy elotheg the siky in the east begn pach aa the trouble caused by children, Tm a following quotation from the speech he made | farm ownership and mortgage incumbrance in | 2 his condition Uae te a bs tee an |akaomaieren tne tell be alee <n je lleteanins ee Uschulor, Utell son, and Til never be anything | at the banquet on his retirement: “If I had| this country. The labor involved inthis. in- | BTOBET ef Ges masgtnnee endban conBion en | Betas Gosh as Gen Gur of hur oun beled P on the table, and oS h was intended to mark the very summit ot | $3 cer {know 8 good twenty wives ‘and ‘be a | %22 choice whether to bo a groat judge or @/ quiry will never be comprehended outside of | it would have been edie tet hekocck. Ths | mountains, she reture toler wiek-icap, : t : p. That paid sensing is elk. ave teal nti It was covered with | Brigham Young or a Bluebeard with all my good judge, I would prefer the latter. the census office itself. Many hundreds of ce mortgaze has been abused just as commercial A Love DRAvauT, ‘eices alee toe ailegl ae on Of course Lord Bramwell, as everybody | special agents have been employed in every | credits have been abused; but, atthe same time,| Did not Rebecca give Isaac to drink and he 4 vt “ ity inthe United States, hundreds upon | both mort 1d commercial credits are con- A the writer, “you were doubtless | knows, had no sympathy with Henry George or | COUntY a Ps tages an nn loved her? child yourself” fe aeheal sk ist tages id, “what an | hUndreds of clerks have been employed in the | ducive to the interest of the people and mere tora, tacked and pinned to the in the wood. In the dim li; a it was a strange- kis provisions mont signal station at ‘? © it on three,’ said Evans, Why shoutd not our copper-skinned |, and T did, <tr _—— ane * i if ‘ oie aad mane coin Reon sister, through instinct if not knowledge, give teame up again, and that's God's trath, f the Pike's Penk and Mant- Tunwrcus cards looking like so Te aay Headed F aeaeroee 1, mar bat it] acquaintance with the Creator's desigas is| containing the corttos ta oe es | forbid that masenIAahy OC SPAM | + cheseen & love draught dist s ths poh ecee heet man eee seed. Te comb ect | wieeor nes sdravored ally liteto Ure it down.” | Rad thisin how be vowed the naffonizelon | e424" gH Bes Been found that during tho| "The vast amount of statisti that wil be de ho dclivere hr trouve’ fo the ad mgs, | =f nono gusting sel wa gat out Tee aed ne indicated tat a Young gir hrindredth part of those peo- de who wa! to ride tothe summit. At all jours of the day or night long lines stood in ticket window in the hope of b t, but only a few wi to please a child “he answered. “Children 1 ten years 1880 to 1889 the real estate mort-| rived from this tooete = who by its power, aided by their incantations, | night I geve £10,000to Max Bleimanand ordered of land proposal: gages made in the United States numbered | pase out of the hands of the pol y¢ have won man hnichands. and, confident in their | him not to give mo a cont tll we got to Parle. I Tals | don't ploace mo and I don't try to please: thems | nga N° 208! jt to confiscate ea snd raise the 9,000,000, but theso aro not all existing mort- | considered by social scientists. match-making ability, the maidens leave ail to | took the bs ee nnd went back. | tb to | but a good many years ago L thought I was in| for all ib hbighesbectey ity Betis the Fis oped gages. as has often been erroneously stated. In | tion is so novel that it opens up @ new field in | them. put the whole . £2,250, on the red. i regard to is is ii 01 All the familiar haunts of t! mache are de- | Up rhe can I got even mor i that made [Pes with a widow and CR ea But so would confiscating chattels be s fine Savage bp eel arene report | social science and will throw a vast amount of familiar haunts of the yo lels me. 1g) mh money an O'Keefe was buried there. It further | tated that she had been killed by raounti 1576. The remainder of the story was 1 conjecture, A GLORIOUS SUNRISE. u iety of particulars | light upon some of the questions that have not | *erted for afew days. No more merry b 500, tr h thing for all but chattel owners and the confis- | and fa the incalculable | yet emerged heer’ back broncho races or wrestlings or dancing and | “It was too eacy,and I escaped. ‘They alll tranged for excarsions up| It was not long befure the eastern sky indi-| “How did you go about it?” he was asked. | cation of labor would be a splendid thing for | 204,:0.¢ ee le | yet emerged from abstract theories, singing around the brash fires, ‘The girs are | congratulated ee hand, and this class were ca risiadl oli thes at HOW KE TRIED TO PLEASE THE Ror, all but the laborer.” 2 FEE ST Tt has also been ascertained for nearly all of busy preparing new dresses and ornaments. gave Max €4.000 and the next afternoon, I fg rte following reference to private property | the 12,690,152 families of the United States| HONG KONG'S BOAT DWELLERS. | Some mle buckekin dresses with yoke and t is also characteristic: whether each one: owned or hired the farm or sleeves beaded in beautiful figures, all fringed | S. was a big Russian in my 4 he aurora | some day. He didn’t want to at all, but his have no superstitious reverence for the | home it occupies, and, if owned, whether it is | How Hundreds of Thousands Live in Float-| and belled from neck to Ankle eo that woh kon secing me play the realis began to shoot up from a certain point three engines ee running a few min- dneat fifty-two pas- at number of those of my sojourn on the mou. “Well, I patted him on the cheek and asked At a few minutes to 5 o'clock bright rays him if he dida’t want to take a walk with me like those which characterize z : institution of separate or private property. | subject to incumbrance; and f’ 80, et hes i makes music wherever she goes.” Others bay | previous nfkit that he got up and insisted on applied for @ ride horizon, gradually becomin mosey fold bien tony Pe Ait die and | took | show me that its abolition would be for tho | been recerved in a prinefpal proportion of cases ioe bright calico and promise some “white squaw” | my taking his snat. t opened. Thinaction St Wt Rorizon, gradually becom one walk—no more. | I didn's know what to say general good and I would vote for it, letting | as to the amount of incumbrance, the rate of | "0m the Philadelphia Public Ledeer. ap lot fish” for the making. One dress re-|* he would play as T did, butthat was = now and then, but only fora moment, | ¢p0m oF wnat to do with him. Tied him by own the present posssstors gently ‘sgociatiem | Fest borne by it, tho reason why it was in- Fore the most interesting sights around | quires only an hour's work, a itis all fone | all right. ugh, I put the 500 on the I finally a silvery lining showed itself upon | ‘2? sh . | _ AWhile of socialism he remarked: ‘Socialism | curred, and also the value of f h long Kong is the river population and its city | piece, shirtlike, with an opening in the top| red aud he leaned over, ae and pat £50 0m the ces, "Thos established male reat Of the sapUNLCTS oe Oa cban | his trunk, but Tthink T would have been leon | will necordeeetiy eo ety lie jue of the farm or home, | Hong Kong Pop’ pening i 1 low shoul i not be opened to start, and then ouly of tickets should be soid to ats in the car. Five hours necessary to make the round trip, conse- iy bat two or ihree trips # day could be and left it; he did the same, [ i : Ben ror} w re as | There are also many details of information in| of boats. This ing city is ated to | large’ enough to admit the head. The sleeves | same. I wor Taking inseelf pleasant, Lvasan the polny of | Grandmother!y protection in all shapes he ab-| rogard to each ownes anid In Seger eke net sia Sectors and po fobmerapang Pyar givbanpeatag tempt vnagan | fend, mosphere and eo silvery bright was tho Making msself pleasant, T was on the point of | horred: of each hiring family. When tabulated thi sed der teteeaed often revealing arms worthy of sculptors! “Then I pnt €100 between the two zeros, T ight growing mo extensive. | T remembered that, chil‘ren are uot allowed t0 | aq Bt" besides this, T look upon all thoserules, | description will disclose, among other things | F°°sDize no other home than those boats and | Chien "Spang. arms. perfume their bodies | wor 2. That rave mo $1,700, or 17 for he silver gave place toa There | drink cuethang. T would. have offered: hive | P@Uations and provisions (0. g., watchman at | to what extent the colored people have become | Whose lives are spent from birth upon the river; | with some native herb or cheap perfume ob- | Russian won about $4,000 an/ was none of the haze and mist which one but Ididn't know whether | [¢¥el crossing) which are made to take care of | owners of farms and homes; how far ownership | in fact, they are not Permitted to know any | tained from the trader, and their work of | wa! kiss me. . sees from points at or near ihe sea level: Chittren eat those things. | Finally be began to | Pople when they ehould take care of them-| is invested in wives; at what ‘age ownership has | other habitation. These boat homes are of dif- | Preparation isdone. The boys, where are they? | “My whiskers interfered and I objected. T [aU wag bright and clear. Down upon the | ee se anther. T eanted te Rand pierce | selves a8 positively mischievous.'"—Stubley v. | more gonerally bees acorined chet ee ae ferent sizes and of various shapes, the larger | Waiting for the girls. made two or three other bets on the three, and A MOOSLIGUT TRIP. was still quite dark. ‘The electric | £5", Witeman ned have hie tuk er | LN. W. Ry Co. (L. R. 1, Ex. 18.) cumstances of unmarried persons are such as to mate = ap se jako at eves saienbeds tein altogether Icleaned up $23,000. Beesuse of the rush it was decided to inaugu- | j, at Colorado Springs bur = er Patt called aback tan aad natok tes Lord Bramwell always wished it to be un-| Jead considerably to ownership; whether the | 2UMber being eampans or slipper boats, about The is cialis th tae fter the |, “Im telling the truth, an Prove it rate moonlight trips. It wason one of these | the darkest night, while at Denver, | where, but I cailed a back instead and told the | derstood that he never cared for popular ap-| irish or Germans have been more successful in | twenty fect long, with movable telescopic roofs Serene Rigas et Shp wee Sena aN by Brown Bros. with whom I deposited €20,- that T avcended tho mountain. Some of the | tive miles north, it was evident | Gait and went off alone im the heck, creating 2 | Pitse. ; becoming owners, and #0 with the Italians, the | of bamboo covering them for about one-half !0v¢ eed is found an immense home-male 999 in Landon, CRS ARC et lamps had not been extingni | aetasbanse>” ° On one occasion some observation in mcharge | Swedes, &c.; whether the Germans have ac-| thelr length. As small as these boats are they | @72m calls the youth of both sexes to the mar-| Lote bout winning, The reacon for this was coon man- | the fiames from furnaces at Pueblo, “But how did his mother take it? Did she We could the better study the scenery |‘? the southward, shot u in?” along tho For one-third of the distance believe itto be the sun, so clear was @ car was not t toa jury was received with applause. The | quired ‘a longer or shorter residence in this | riage hall. This drum was formerly the section . No. Ssuite me. Pathe coctioe er be Page’ a moment and then said quietly: | country than the Irishman has before owning | "0t OBly sccommodate one family, but fre-|°"S ‘holiow troe with deer akin eteetched | In Mr Hosy'otio mone bie @lsmend emmmeal, ned the scene. I hever gave her a chance, my dear fellow, | _LTecail thore words; I must have been saving | his farm or home, and #0 with, people of other | ently that of one of the sons, space being tightly over it, i creme hia ah ee 6 rpie ieee) " Now an empty cheese box cov- | a 3. ‘ 7 te ' . : dear f something foolish.""—(27 Law sournal, p. $17.) | nativi The tabulation will disclose to what | ¢Conomized in the most ingenious manner, and, | cred with light ekin takes its place. The hall ~ eee deep gorse rith surroundings te romante as | Bouniains surrounding. ‘Then, as thelr crests, | LW cured of any weakness I may havo hod | "Ana here isan instance of “laconic law: | Sativa, citizonship of the foreiga born is | in decided contrast to tho dwellings on shore, | teclf is some lange now wicleicup. wot made of ‘iis tis aiaens Race ‘ at mena aa ae ary bet is with the tallest, one after another | Chabrance. in the shane fof that equealinig bras Bramwell, B. (exhorting the related to their ownership, and establish a com- | they are kept scrupulously clean. ‘deer skin dressed and whitened,” bat of heavy ESE aco! fe ete hed at the clinb | Were bathed in sunshine, it could be seen how | waaeontething: altopether too coloteal fos at | meee parison between tho sexes in the ownership of | A great majority of the men go on shore dur-| white ducking. It is brightly lighted by the s, neenneaie a pga pe ‘at the baseof the | ™uch higher than all ite fell ered the | Crainary mortal to endure, and I never went| _i#0neF (interrupting)—‘How much? farms and homes and the dependence of owner- | ing the day for employment, leaving the wives | moon and stars shining through the open door- | Baron Stanley". Little Palace on Wheels Ir A eak. The mountains in the west, not eo high es : Bramwell, B.—‘Nine months.” ship upon the various occupations of the peo- | and children to work the oars and ply the trade the large fire in the middl Which He Will Visit Chicago, one pees pe ene Ske sage Shenson I ctsad, scen emerged ee ee eae = of boatmen, and it must be said they do it with up, over which is brewing the “love te PE Retasn am, $y Sion, ag Attractive «spot es | from chadow, the little Iukes glistening here | *° Please a child.” wily daty is to pass upon you the sentence of | This is the richest field for statistical work in | reat satisfaction to those who have need of No chaphrous ate needed here. oo the eldete ©] the eysuy hacen. Sie Grebe ath te see Gare Journey. 08 ' and there on the mountains like mirrors, we ro | CHILDREN'S KERN PERCEPTIONS. death, and that is my only duty."—(6, Sol. ©. social science that any government has ever | Water carriage. The mother of the family is | outside and proceed with the music ae ee ee andrede of people camping | ivsed by the sunshine—cvery Of course men of this kind ought never to | 61.) before entered. It calls for as much labor as | found froquently rowing with one baby strapped | hath charms to soothe the savage | hibit himself and his people in brilliant style at Se hae ieee te canal w. And still the people of the pl have anything to do with children. No man| , There are several references_among the ex-| was involved in any United States census pre-| to her back, while alongside of her is tho next | breast.” not only when thresened with war, | Chicago during the world’s fair. As befitting his heir war down, Many bad beilt | Bot yetseen the sun. It scemed along time | “i thes Kes Tikes Th tracts to political economy. | “or nearly two- | vious to that of 1850, and in this respect is not | in age learning to row and preparing to add to. but when Cupid is dangerously near, and the | recognized position among the Romany chil- ieair way down. Many bad built |b fore the deepest valleys below were il can please them unless he likes them. They are | thirds of # century, il, 1 have been try- | exceeded by any census previous to that of 1870. | the resources of the family. The children of clamor these fausiciuna produce is perhaps bet. | dean, ths highontintorun of Go eentenellh > the air wus stifling and | _ It Was exactly 5 o'clock when the sun first ap- | hypocrites often themsclves, but they detect | ing to learn something about it,” buthe did not | Tho unin for chock description has been ob-| the family, many of whom are babies, play |ter appreciated by them than it would be by | wig rg snare pagers bearable it was certamly n | peered. It would be close to noon before the | h¥pocriey in others at once, and they can never | say that he succeeded, although at another time | tained sronor numerous that the printing of | around the boats as carelessly as though they | most of us. The principal instrument is alarge | Tile with his family in a van, y son aa ag ain would leave the summit to go ¢ P le who are doing it for some | he remarked ; about seventy millions blanks has been neces- | were in a nursery on shore, and to prevent box slatted with tin, over which is fastened the | which has never before been heard of among Tt the pose cence ie thereat wore inh | the mountain, Twas anxious to catch the 9:30 | teltich purpose. The truth is, children are the | ‘Political economy has been called a dismal |“ rs, all of them to be handied at least a few | cident from drowning umong the very young deer skin. Against this the Indian masicians | those people. It has beon specially built for Se eee nen ences Stn | ia Gree Maglace Win Danveri sal cemctinad FE ca atl TE you douet | Science. Ithas been called inhuman and wn-| times and a large proportion of them many | bors they have float attached to their ‘waists | place their fiddle, consisting of «otek at him in this city, Se ae tan: | ta well Geum hg elgnulnie sie Gates As of their own, and if you don’t] feeling. The same epithets might as well be | times, in the shape of a sinall picce of bamboo, so that | pinion wood having maw-like indentations in| "sumer seth ta eens eal tebe one aes rasp? praia ater | knew, would be a difficuit one, but the air was ow them woe unto you. A man who is too applied to Euclid’s elements or to a treatise on RRIKGe Tacmueerine aeeree if they fall over and drop into the river they | one side, this rubbed with a smaller cir- eee ‘or more alf the w PI LY INTERESTIN 2 e [thought 1 little hard work just then | tmuch dressed or too conceited in his bearing | baking or brewing : i i | May becasily fished out again. Since girl| cular piece of like wood. A grating and | ®boutas much likes gipsy as a diamond does Fegeee te rack was le | eed cases to Enop ens earen seu oak. feat | may G0 wafely azacrg teen. butjustlet hint pest| eit inas opinion on cheap law: Highly interesting and useful: resalts will | babies are not considered of very couch import-| busing moles, ks produeet, tai’ce aiceen | tke charoeal, Me hes cotemuheneh ene gn iH beg ipa pre were sround me and snow ref by a lot of boys and he will geta most unmerci-| “High costs are a good thing in_ stopping a| come from this investigation in regard to the | ance in Chinn it is rather a matter of indiffer- , ig made and most perfect time is kept. | able money, much of which is represented in « 8 to the westward, | ful amount of guying. ¥ are perfectly fear-| grea: deal of improper litigation. Yes, so they | affairs of the people within a domain never be- | ence as to whether they drown or not. They chant or sing in time with — thi aa pees: ademuation, too, and would just are, but they ulso stop a great deal of proper | fore entered by the census office. There has| The boate composing this floating city are all | musie, but no one Ine ewer bene able i oben | diamond pin ws large as a quarter dollar, being wnon the ice and sustained rather | 88 soon take fun of a Senator or a millionaire | litigation. he moored closely together, each with its ap-| the words of the song. Ask an Indian who un- | ® “luster of twelve superb diamonds, and a gold ses, aa Ifell upon the cog railway, | ®# of a coal heaver. Many men who don't stop | And here ts one on. tho deceased wife's sister | ben much popular assumption that mortgage pointed anchorage, forming long water lanes or | derstands interpreting the councils, ““Does your | Watch whose ease {the thermometers at the summit house | to think are careless of their popularity with | question: “The most enormous paradox in the | indebtedness is forced upon debtors and that streets, through which the traffic of the c old. Tes sunshine from mountai ; nT the Lovee cad of tha atest {hes | Once, when not careful in picking my way, I lees in the ® 0 ors snd th song mean this or that’ and if he is gracions | rubies and sapphires it tei 38 degrees Fahrenheit. I had been | ors, but wise men give attention to the sub- | wortd to say that the right way for a man and | they have had a sort of Hobson's choice, with | munity takes place, 'Thev bave their mane | enough to answer at all. he will say “Mavise” | Wife is @ perfect brunctte of @ pure or those who wanted sablan bégtae disor {este Regsicent Garkeld, it Til be remem-| woman to live together without scandal is that | the terrors of | the mortgage as one alternative | regulations, which are strictly enforced by river | (marke se) ar, “Yee all beat eee Mens = coffee as a means of pro- jaca P tee | bered, acknowledged that he was afraid of boys. | they should not be able to marry.” In view of | Aud some misfortune otherwise to be suffered | police, as must necessarily be the case with have attempted to gain the air, but when it is e wagon was built to excel anything exe pid air. It was just after ABIG ATTEMPT > a | He ki jnen, but he never could tell what a | a recent decision regarding literary piracy the | 8* the other. The census ofiice investigated this | fuch a large population, and every condition of | played on the piano or organ it is not distin- | isting among the gipsies, and to accomplish racterizing | It was the biggest attempt at pedestrienism T might not turn out tobe. “I know not | following is interesting.” in all Parts of the country and enough has | jifeon shore has a similar condition on the | fuichable. this $1,200 was expended. The exterior is — a ting above saad 8 are buttoned up under his ‘Suppose an author wrote @ book of travels | already been published completely to dispel | water, To supply the necessi i v Have any of you ever heard a charivari in | brilliant in color, designing and painting. It ee cline upon a tie anchored in the rocks my | jacket,” was the way he put it, and be was | and incidentally deseribed the composition of | these popular notions. It is now demonstrated | have floating ‘stores and market boats for the some old-fashioned country place? The borne, | has «il graceful proportions, ee ee oe severely jarred. Before I had gone | always very polite to boys. As he was a good | some favorite id then the writer of a | that the making of a real estate mortgage is just | sale of meats, fish and vegetables, and almost | belle. 1 tling of cans and pans, though more | quaint littl 4 handsome furnish- a s down I was gind to rest frequently, deal of a boy himeelf he was popular with them. | evokery manual copied the description, that | 88 Voluntary an act in almost all casesas the act | Sy rything that « household requires is brovght | discordant, are almost as pleasant as this Indian | ings. The interior is a comfortable and inter- nthe east. bins that time | and by the time got to Manitou, ten miles LITRRATURE FOR CHILDREN, would not be piracy.—Bradbury v. Hotten (L. | of # san who begins a business undertaking, | from boat to boat in these water streets by ped- | dance music. esting litle house. The body of the wagon is wasas brightly lighted as 9, ammit, it was with difficu!ty that I) 4 titerary man who was questioned on this| B. 8 Ex. 3). the result depending chiefly upon his judgment | qiers and tradesmen. Then there are floating | cnx work nee eleven feet long by seven feet wide. The in- electric lights. The air | ¢), thout making very awkward at- |. 7 Genre fessed that | , Among Lord Bramwell’s references to brother | 274 foresight, as well as upon his equiyment | kitchens connected with other boats known as 2 ‘ terior is finished in choice quartered oak. The ie eee te reBEeT tempt... The journey consumed a little more | SUbicet of how to please childven confessed that | ndves we huve the followiug about Chief Jus- | for success. Reference to the bulletins that | gower boats, which are not floating conserva. | Atound one side of the great circular wick-i- | ceiling is_panelied oak with cherry moldings, es of the earth's | 4). four hours. Many did it in less time, but | he could no more write a book or astory that | tice Cockbucns have been issued by the census office shows that, | tories, as their names might imply. but restaa- | Up sit the young men of the tribe in all the | cedike filer inof otined maple, Somewhat sypohitege sage was greater. It was surprising how | would please children than he could fly. He hhief Justice Cockburn, indeed, who liked a | Senerally speaking, from two-thirds to nine-| rantsand dining halls, gorgeously fitted up with | gi of new shirts, leggins, gee strings and | less than half of the interior is bracketed off »le essayed to walk to the summit and | faid be had read many books that are popular | page of the Times daily devoted to him and his | tenths of real estate mortgage indebtedness es led adornments of many kinds, handsome | beautifully bew ovenain T asabed. In the front part of the wagon is a nm Tstarted down [ieft half « hun-) with children and wondered where their charm | performances, picked out of the gencral lists | W## incurred to secure the purchase money of | Wood carvings, embroidered silken hangings manec'y various rainbow tints iecrwiar [bens table hinged to the wall and with wee rople grouped around bentires trying to | lay hid. | Tho children never tire of certain | cases which would afford him that gratification, | Fetl estate and to pay for real extate improve- | and brilliant illuminations. ‘These ure for the usual source, the trader's store—their hair | There are three windows on eac and » warm, and before I reached the lower end | books, and certain other books that grown-up | but no other chief ever did.” ments, the chief item of which consists of new | purpose of giving dinner parties, and are used | braided ant perfumed with the same precious | three in the back of the wagon. These are theline of railway Lmct hundreds of men | people would suppose to be more interesting to| And here is a story he told of Brother | buildings. Even in the older parts of the coun- | }y the wealthier “Chintmea. to entertein there liquid that the muidens like and ornamented | French plate, on by twenty-four inches, boys and girls, determined on| them they won't have anything to do with. | Maul try the real estate movement is _s0 active that | friends. During the intervals between the | fh feathers drawn from tail or wings of hawk, With waluat frames and brass clasps, The ug the mountain. M: | Aboxe all do thes despise books that pretend | ‘Drink—ves, drink! I mean by that drink | these proportions hold good. When to these | courses the guests are regaled. with the per. eagle or rooster and colored with like paint folding doors behind the driver's seat are tedby the wayside. Qne young lady had | to be written simply to afford amusement, but | which cheers, and, if you. take too much, in- | PUrpores of indebtedness are added bu: ness | formances of a number of handsumely attired that bedaubs their own skin and hair ir | Claborate. Within, white d grained in "yn when within rifle shot of the sui-| have hidden on every page some species of | ebriates—drink as Mr. Justice Maule under- | PUrpoves and the purchase of various articles “sing-cong”’ girls, the professional lyric artists | neck and body--often down to the waist—and | imitation of oak makes a pretty effect, and her escort had the, op and | teaching. This is jike giving a disagreeable pill | stood it when he was asked by the bailiff, who | Of personal propetty, such as farm stock of China, who deiight the ears of the CI arms are covered with jewelry of native ma-|@bout the four French plate windows im ld} of which | a coating of sugar andl asking child to ead it. tad ‘orn to give the jurymen ‘no meat or on froree Dorceee tedaasiooe te SS guests, but toa European the sounds gi terial or of bear teeth, shells or wampum, 5 The front of oping. On the train back fo Denver | He will be attracted by the sugar, but he will | drink,’ whether he might give the jurymen | real estate age indeht i by these sirens are torturing to the extreme. ins ees ri 5 . Leanna aes badd nace detect the medicine soon. You'can't fool a| wome water. “Well,” aaid the Judge, ‘it is mot | for. ‘The percentage of the debt incurred for edi | i Ths ‘hesves eoces te be gnaing Sate spase the trees dis- above the timber anks and paiches of moss assy sward were all It locked as clit re and stones . for, very little Mat d anfwhere. It led the engineers to build that uch a bed. ELOW. ; e Shooting in among theso river lanes is the | themagh th je Pick reg ms ‘ Lit presented itself before fore. Tho husband was eas! ghia, Tf yon are giviag him a “lewon book” | meat and I should uot call it’ drink—yes, you | thee purpowes in generally fro 85 to 95 per | river doctor in his etanll: boat, and eulliag at: Sar qush tee wreaths of cigaretie and campfire | we of i Particular eare was taken with it. Above and around us he wife not many vears his junior. he will find it out, and he will not read it, ex- | ma - ner The real necessi that are discovered tention to his whereaboats by ringing a bell, the crea t of pretty girls opposite them, | the driver's seat. It can be folded out of g peacefully and the stars | Ther kad started up the mountain at 9 O'clock | cept under compulsion. ‘To please children in peel eee Se in these statistics are expenses cen’ port sight OF | that those requiring hia services can readily | clothed in their chermi wns made after no| Within the wagon. There is «heavy brown the lay before, mtending only to go a short | print, just as in everyday intercourse, requires GOOD OLD WHALING DAYS sickness and food, to replace losses i find him, and in like manner travels the barber, | Parisian stele, vet Sa tonmaneing rset ‘The dashboard is very high, and cor- easy stages they reached the | that ‘you should have a thorongh sympathy aie farming and various other items which are in- | why hava be . his services being in | which ‘half conceala and half reveals” the | Texpondingly low is the hood of the wagon. p o'elock Ym the evening. At 5 they | with them in short, should be somewhat of @| As Remembered by an Ancient Mariner of | ‘luded in the description of farm and family | Continual demand. ‘The priests are hot econ | bracelet-decked arm, the plump ornamented | There isa silver-plated dash rail, light silver- nd arrived at the hotel in | child yourself. And while this subject is up it *Sconset. Gxpences. ‘The proportion of the indebtedness | jeft out in this community, for, although there | neck amd the soud figure and slender waist, | Plated scroll irons on the sides of the body of is well to call attention to a curious circum- | From the Fitchbure Sentinel. : due to these cases is rarély as great as 5 per | ix little space usually allotted in each boat for a | ‘Tho skirt is short ‘enough to #how to advan. | the wagon, silver-plated hub band: The literature for children hardly ever | 4 number of fishermen were telling atorios of | “Tt #nd generally ranges from 1 to 2 per cent. | shrine, there i+ quite an umount of public tage the shapely little foot encased in beaded You who read this article were | 4°; ly dave in the quaint little village of | o¢utvins cntablished the voluntary character | worship necessitating the service of a priest, | moccasin, the trim ankle above it, and often- | up on the same poetry and prose that | their early dave in the quain| porn. bs indebtedness, the census statistics | guch as marringe ceremonies, burials, £e - | times a dainty bitof brown skin,asstockingsare | sh. hand carved, with grapevine designing. Your grasidfather, “He went to sleep in | Siasconset. ‘There wore a number of summer | next establish the fact that the purposes of this | seuuently they Las P not fachionable with them. ‘They bave'their | The rear of the wagon is dazzling. T cnildhood with Mother Goose in his tors in the room and they seemed to enjoy | indebtedness are, for the most part, legitimate; | ail the paraphernalia of their faith. | faces and finger tips painted with a single | Some fine wood carving above the the yarns which were being spun immensely. | (het ft, is incirred for the purpose of se-| But of all the odd boats in this motley group | color red. This red dee wes formerle seat | The belt panel is ears Finally an old, dried-up man, with a purple wen | Hrisés which are generally undertaken Ly senel: | PETA the most singular are those in which | can still be, obtained from a wand stone found | Colors. merrily . but a1 of ard admonished us that ion of affairs was there ore vivid the light h for us to crashed as . The hea wous Lhat heard : ader clouda and | } © summit to the foothi es down, but one house akeeping the railroad in repair, lsbitation L stopped to ree if [ coffee. It was a typi apartment served remaining one was used as ears, and Jacl , the ‘valian ated from that and : lake cells | they rear ducks and geese, many of ¢ | there, which, when placed in water, oon col ning room and railway ste stories and Hans Christian Anderse: on his neck and a handful of white chin whis- vring to support themselves | tain geist ce rar hee Prapeenonrg —— pave ———- _— a r w. jountain Dew. T soon hw he had a glorious time with the Arabian Nights | kers, said and their families and to aceamulate property | The ducks are sent out usually twice « day. to ‘ungumonish” (the storekeeper) to furnish | either ride of the wagon. x oe Twas seized with | p., It was not served in the style of aad Kobinwon Crusoe, Grown people bave| “Tali about the whaling days in Siasconset, | for rainy day: thut is to say, these statistics | fecd along the marshes and mud. fields by. the such a névessity. The red on check, chin and | side panel is an oil painting of the world’s fair be pe ebat | Delmonico, but everything wasclean and shole- | schools of aflected writers with affected follow- | why. I can remember when the whales wero | “atTrant. the conclusion that indebtedness, if | shore and they are recalled by a signal from a ight that it beautities and does | Kovernment building. the whole surrounded by roan o heavy and I | some ver saw whiter bread than the ioun- | er# and these schools keep changing, but there |<, thick around here that it was n common | CRi<?ed into with moderation and judgment, is | Whistle. At sound the feeding instantly | not distigure, while that on the fingers serves | gold scroll work. The panels between the coal round me tui, wife set before me. | are no schools in children’s literature. A good | ®°' Sree: = aaaes | 8.800d thing, and that the development of the | ceases, and they return totheir respective boats | to call attention to a small hand, with tapering | Windows contain oil paintings of « Spanish — affected. worthy of mention was seen along | child's book pleases generation upou, generation | thing for them to crewl up on the shore like | United States has been promoted beyond cal- with a promptness that is simply astonishing. | fingers and filbert-shaped nails,” soldier and lady, a dancing gipsy girl, e Span- Two or three miles down from the | of children, and the man who writes’ one ought | turtles to «un themselves.” culation by means of ‘ake the marvelous | ‘The latest arrival is always taken up and given a sania ea ish dancer and hunter. On the other side : specimens of a st: fo We Milling to Hie down and die content with | “How long ago was that?" asked an anxious | frowth of Chicago. for instance. From 1860 to | a beating with the bamboo, and on the nest re < the lower panel has a scene in the highlands in be y similar to that ¢ his life's work, for his name wili live. Who | pyetander. 1589 the real estate mortgage debt incurred | cal} that duck is invariably the first to come on| With these western beauties every year may | Oj) window panels above, a deer,= « t 'd thet Hans Christian Andersen wrote eo forty ya replied the old yearly in Cook county, in which Chicago is | hoard, thus showing the Wbnderful efficiency of | bea leap year,and the maiden who has long Spanish lady and gentleman, « landscape anda b 5 whew i 8? He did, however, and | ...°%! in th bs pp hay piel aa ii iu them’ | situated, increased about five times, unt the bamboo in pe Sdn punctuality. admired at a distance some lithe-limbed, fleet- | scout on horseback. = hver, consequently ok chipmunks of extra | they are very good, bat the whole world knows a > curre’ e existing mm el i le ¥ il ip the ed out On on - ~ Nhgughitat’ oset Seen: eee y van bend ares as ai at as Soe Duckling and | hem tap a whale and by the time the oil was | in that county is $161 per capita, while in. the | several Domt Passing silently by. crowded with her tailor position and dip the tin eup in the w sp. Thoughtful ones a at killed the girl burie/ at the | Big Hans and Little Hans. ‘The man that thor. out of him there didn't seem to be skin enough | ginte of Illinois outeide of rook county it ie | Mourners: in the center the coffin, covered Jove potion and pass it to her desired, He | nickeled brass Dutchmen w the body : i i ith a heavy pall and trimmed with green | may accept or reject If be does the latter on | of the wagon. Fifty gilt . peering bought mackintoshes and anything else | Summit 4¢ ee | oughly pleases one gene f children is not | left to cover base ball. But now they are | ¢73, ‘The increase in the population in that | + The i 7 n | may accep! at Sad to ite tee saat am rene | ae mo ctr ental | catving a poate tincy, bat, han ritioer | kindst mon-axplosive: county daring the last decade ‘was 96.19 por | Pranches. ‘This is one occasion when mem- | account of having another sweetheart he, of | from all parts wagon beauty. . y into the little on. 1 : OWI eae a t p f this colony takes to the land. Duri boa brother to her. Allthe What do you mean by non-explosive?” | cent, against a general increase of 24.86 for the | Ber y eS er : PPT ELE EB getseier aa Be had the bees |e Suny. Lome penn th conc | Maley wav tar, Ow ted | man chor btre bse chee CloAnETre SMOKING. en COT i I ase - of a city whose growth in population y % ry i a —_—__ loon ta pastel eden small | A® matters go ordinarily women can please Rent Spaneprast aS nly slightly greater than ‘that of the whole Bh he pepe jpn Fed a ey a cr ——— Farting eyes, and 00, | 0, mses ts on tho Modine to Gamay ng the ascent in this way, At/| Children better than mencan. Children when ee Tepl pane! scare = country, the percentage a the decade being | down upon the latter as an alien caste, and 2 , | rae ; | ed the flask et : 1 he riders woakd have been dashed | they are Wart xun to tho mother ‘satber than £0 | i510 used tolbo.so fall oc elt tant Heyou ute | 27 28, creaky, the existing (debt per capita | marriages between the two classes are unknown. ipice hundreds of feet high were | the father. ‘They tell hee their troublos and | Wick in one of thers aud Reset etd eee reas whet Nevertheless, in opite of thelr peculiar, sur- mules a ope paren af aa of Get eeu at when | almost six months.” one COmENy, aU rit cs daa veand thrive to the iv readers of Tur Srak | they tell eir likes and dislikes. ‘Che father ecame MORTGAGE INDEBTEDNESS AND CITY DEVELOP- comfor fe tthere were no sidesnadics em- | forgets, too, when he ridicules the children that | gato crgne > Spey tones ro trail has not been abandoned | something of solid worth, standing the fact that a rail ‘uletice ica esiaioa avatars taeae) served asa station at e, around which a ed and ehook with cold. My imy i i Iw emtum for ¢ suit of winter j i ee Toms int dasa telezrapt many and on the increase in France, which ts the more strange, as French cigarettes are no- 0 ENT. begins. rode according to the fashion | they are pretty guod at ridiculing themselves. | CHRUEL | . A. R. Encampment, Washington. they re- They make fun of everybody who doesn't bap- | gtor anit ands a See ae In rapidity of growth Chicago has been out-| & A. he e | pen to have the benefit of their especial friend- | We had the whale or of one hanging up | done by Kansas City, and if no census of popu- (AFTER GIBBONS—SOME WAYS.) bend. at oF Geecent were cacause slip, “OF course itis eany to understand why |jike sheep fa the Sook puck keen ot | Riten bed teak Gin tn, thie to ee oe a <orue people might like to have «x idea | children like women better than men. It is | wanted to start « fire, we'would fun sey” ost | could. safely be inferred. from the el pes pie en ‘eh ee ‘ike's Keak as compares: with | simply because the women and the children see | with a hatchet. and chop a oF two that | statistics that such was the fact. The pom eae ania, a bated tees I States t fa tothem. The movntain, | one another more. While the father of the | would ft the stove n* ‘Though some are just a litle lame, we'll travel | by Hepes oue of (the very highest in the nited | house is at work the mother is in the nursery, | “Have another drink!” interrupted the man Tight along; fal, yet asta: S*Mt€S, towers 14,147 feet —— be fess | paying the Lear are me Sano pms she | with the flask. For gfe chilled our blood and the call But In one of the Paris factories they turn them = twenty-five shafts of the height of the | is the one they find at home when they return 7 to Washington ™ ep cope <ton monument were placed nd “upon | from school "Bat sore fathers don't “take the menont mind fT do,” replied the ancient ‘Wakes tne old martial ptrtt.ie the note of clarion. | FSP! UP mee peck grag mene ‘When « fao- > al vermost extremity would not be | tronble to know their own children w! y i: ‘the da: cate to the, burps | Tite so high ws the summit of Pike's Zesc. | are athome.. ‘The story is told of a father who | gai Teabe "0k a ood pull. Fs ph Bes Hy Red it ee srinding ware, or Hudson's | the dar timer a week. Inthe |, 48% 20t-orry T walked down from the sum- | looked curiously at @ boy he met on the street!“ once knew an ald. whaler’ who’ bas boos Frome Desaiifl PS saauene ch coum’ | mit, but F would advise no one else to try it. | ¥ as though he had a dim recollection of | dead e) 3 Dat cofice and beef ten wong CuRter | Paris of the hody amused. ia ordinary w iowa i many Tenre, His ond won very. sad. From east and west, from north and south, where | ‘The iwiches and other edibles, such’ ar may Sf¢ Utought into play, and the unusual be ‘Old Glory waves o' ing | having seen him before somewhere, when the | “How did he die?” saked « brvtaider, erhead, grandsire of ‘You may listen for our coming, as a mighty army's ereise boy came up and called him father. Hehad| «xi . ient to leave miscles that will be lame | really hardly ever noticed what his own son | gia Auled,OF ® Whale,” said f | i nnd at ‘m railway lunch establish. vs i > * Sinsconset. wedded, and a big general feast ends the dance Thenbara aie for a week ot When I go to Pike's Peak | looked like. Some sors are as much embar- | Fe, ak bin Eek: €- | again the rulroad will be enough for me | rassed when they are left alone with their father | gtraout,0? ‘Be Water, of course,” suggested the For many a day we've hoped to see those elds of | fo" “hie See oe pry oid aig d th ways. G. H.W. | asif he was aschool teacher. ‘The father has | NS’ at in his back yard.” ng oy bevy h argh 4 f the pl SS never succeeded in making friends with his own it - nation’s | repiewend (OO ‘#0 the dancers provide Sri ll the ear round. ‘Ta pee re nlf eed gander ra cl ee Tomancer. Now at last the way 1s open—this ts the “soldiers | their own refreshments. Often the board is himself up with plenty of pro- A : i i E | i hardiy pute his bead out of doors The stone walls of the building are two or three feet thick and the windows are double, with air chambers between them ax a | better protection against tae icy blasts that play around the mountain top. The territic | gales of the winter season explained why it was | that the building was only one story high and | year"— cause she yields to them. They like to tyrannize And we'll ‘us “on to Washington” with many | A) and they are fond of their slaves, ringlag sheur TEACHERS MUST BE FAIR. sri aay,ccom self-invited, well not lack Tt can hardly be said that mothers study how Ae pe Panne be Just dish us up the “army bean” and the steaming uraily to them, or it does not come at all, but school teachers frequently make a scientific study A i | ' fa gt made #0 eabstantially. ‘Theee poe the subject, decming it, very properly. a part nowise been Other basldsngs of the cain pains 4 anstoreaea | 4 of thelr dahon "Hers i 8 fof the con- ote mortem ws I strolled about in the meontigh versa coming home from ‘bad otraita, A NIGT pigeon nce First dog catcher (to el school: average annual I Beard come of the passengers talk about | Taste de muttor' wid yer. anybow? He's tooken pante!”” OT | ceeds Monon ee fe remaining on the mountain top all night to wit- Second’ Do cane al laid hold he ‘Yep! He's a mean sneak, that’s ness the sun'rise in the morning. Co.d as it grabbed marvin ae panel — Lifes wutnyaee f H li

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