Evening Star Newspaper, July 17, 1897, Page 15

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THE EVENING “STAR, SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1897-24 PAGES. 15 believe that if the white man Is allowed to H | PS THE PESO-LA-KI MINE | sis‘is‘cur country te shall be made slaves as the Utes were enslaved by the Spaniards ‘ on the big water.” ae aes Hite said no, he would not purchase Peso usly contrived mask, which it had[ of Loo Chai as an I. -D. B. before the THE DIAMOND DOG | teervertacreesscers etait sate om 8, LaPeer sh and the animal a like period of not in bribing Ah Foo with cash down. leasant training to get and keep in posi-| promise of more, to plant four “traps, Hon. But the hinder part was a miracie| which he took from his own safe, in a con = =o 5 sounded., In special eases leave may be obtained at any time. s ‘This training school ,offers,an opening to boys of a musical turn of mind that it would be hard to equal elsewhere. It is :. : f itution of its kind in the coun- of that imitative ingenuity In which the] venient place in his master’s store. But, with his brother's blood, and Hoskaninni = the only institution « t i ‘ ivi 2 1g 40 the marine cor] BY GEORGE GRIFFITH. lestial excels all other workmen. as there is more honor of a sort among A Navajo Treasure Guarded Both by Living | was wining to tet tt go at that and con-| A Pleasant Plaoo for Boys in the | iy, end ts en onminede,the marine corps eee [eo a tinue to oar eer u bests the land of M Fy a score of boys at the barracks, but the Sete ee the hair of the original owner of the skin | the plot away in the same hour, showed = af Hoskaninal with nis sealp, but the friend- 8 Corps, Same ones rarely remain there more than had been thickest, something after the | the trap stones to Loo Chal, who Nad been . two years before being crdered away for (Copyright, 1897, by Geo. Griffith.) fushion of an unkempt skye terrier—was | scspecting some friendly action of the sort, eC Ee duty. ‘The lot of the Dugier boy ona ship| You might go far afield before you founa | {stlon.,of an unkempt when closed, and | and. with ‘his consent, took them away Licey aes ea toes bobo en Just before Hoskaninni's death Hite haa TRAINING SCHOGL FOR THE BAND is one of the most pleasant.in the service. | two more queerly associated knights of | yet the inside of the skin was lin with him for greater Safety and his own SCH ; reated,-espeelally well bi usly contrived pockets, destined for | reward. Cops right. 1897, by S. S. MeClure Co.) the misfortune to kill a man at oa me ae aaa oi reais ie aetoal Babar industry than the Jew of Whitechapel and —— avec stones, accordingly as the | Very early the next morning the potice, It is a fact well known throughout the | River, Utah, for which ne was sentenc: a : principal<duties consist | the Celestial ef Singapore, who were sit-| inequalities of the animal's body or the | “acting on information received.” alded rm Lake prison to perform. His ea west that somewhere, hidden away in the| tO a short term in a Salt Lake priso’. | g only of blowing his horn or hammering | ting together over a bottle of brandy in a| length of the hair Best, afforded conceal- | the store of Loo Chal, turned it mostly into “ uri abs BY i 01 0 e si % 7 - a Navajo reservation, there 1s a mine won-| the Colorado river his ol friend called to Have a Chance to See Service All | drum, beating the mer to quarters and | little back room behind a tin coolle store| ment. Loo Chat point em reet, and found nothing, its owner ous son board shij w, with a calm, and, in| meanwhile looking on with «bland = pectors have ventured into the land of the | Hite's “brother that he was growing old oe he Wate theae Dugler boys, and they travel ail over | ight im the early ‘SU's. Yet it was no very | HS way, Justilable, pride, end when, Ne Not | nation that would have well ‘become Navajo, in search of the Peso-la-ki mine, | and that he wished to do somerhity, fe ver the World. the world under the most favorable circum-| uncommon thing here in this vortex of cos- | uttered any articulate sound, looked first | language was used by the executors of the and not all of them have returned. In quiet | his Dale, fricnd, “Hosteen-peso-laly th stances. When they attain their majority | mopolitan villainy into which the magical | at the half-naked dog and then at his own | law of which no respectable printers’ inte canyons and deep gorges many of them| frat end in view he had brought a fine they are either allowed to leave the serv- | gitter of the diamond, more fatal in its | blandly-smiling face ard said very softly: | would convey any adequate expression, but tt t on at it was nothing ¢ 1 Fick The woven and noe le bleaching ta the | oaaam, ©9282, the wife St ccwar languish |COURSE OF INSTRUCTION | fie ‘masine corps. The boys who ate as-| fascination even than the glint of gold, | jy MT toned the dog to tts | Manne Rotmine go the eloquent Yiddish in the wolves and now lie bleaching in the| Upon ledrning that Hite was languish: signed to shore duty are no less fortu-| had gathered together men of all colors | original condition of disreputable curdom, | his feelings when he heard of the barter summer sun. Se ee ae ee ruaesteatantec eee nately situated then tleir fellows 1 the| and creeds from the remotest ends of the | kicked it cnto the floor with a motion of his | result of their labors. . for- | h€le in a man’s heart with a six-shooter, rule, they have soft berths | earth, knee and said quietl: ‘The next morning a somewhat unwonted Should this country have the good fer-| Whe, that same man was shooting at him erates Bt See eee oe eaten Gather WGI eee “Well, Missa Lonefeldt, you no tink dat | scene was enacted outside the main pate of tune or misfopgune to adopt free coinege, | with a rifle, Heskaninni grew furious. He | Written Exclusiyely for The Evening Star. with many privileges ~ ts to| Something was evidently exercising the] \ uy ‘fret chop LD. B. doggie. eh?” the De retirees igo K esy and silver go up to $1.20, the search for the | gave a good illustration of his innocence’ HE UNITE D| boy of fourteen or fifteen who wan. eres nf oaplecces eg : : : yf xe 3 vation and have a nice home | Mind of the Jew very considerably, for his} ‘the tmmediate result of the somewhat forty Kaffirs, whose time was up and who GS ee a GOs worse than enter the ma-| prominent eyes kept wandering restlessly | animated conversation which followed [oo | hud gone through the final formalities pren offers exceptional in- | rine corps as a bugler boy. about the little room, his fleshy, pendant | Chal’s pertinent ard business SR) bee ceding dismissal, were coming out laughing ancements ie ere ——— under lip trembling every now and then | ¥28 the payment to hin: and singing and chattering and jinglix who have a fondness £250 in notes and gold, ond the drawing cf | their hard-earned money like so p oh for music and who| CHIMINAL AND CRIPPLE BOY. | with the movement of his heavy Jaw, his | a pill tor £250 more at sixty-five days on | dren, and among: them: os imonnnay te f are willing to go into Peso-la-ki 1s sure to be renewed. Although | and loyalty when he demanded pe the Indians rely to some extent upon the | WRY they did not, eek Tle Girother of the ghost of their dead chief to guard the path- | condemned man. way that leads to the great mine, the] “Have you tried?’ asked the Indian. lve ones can be depended upon to do a No.”” little guarding still, and those who enter fat, lavishly jeweled fingers kept alternate- | the Standard Bank at Cepe Town. It was | tive as any, young Byme-bye the Pon- “Then how do you know you can't do ly drumming on the dirty table and wan- | a big price to pay for a little cog, especial- Pathetic Side of n Cane in the United not carrying his dog thts 2 aes . Hoskaninni will try. Maybe so git kill, Uncle Sam's service States Court. dering aimlessly through his black and|ly when considered in conjunction wns He knew that the officials had al- the rose vation ts Sad Takeo bat he try, ae ome, dectar tie ioee as buglers and bands- | From the Detroit Free Press. rather greasy locks. commission of 10 per cent on the possible | most, if not entirely, forgotten its exist. expected to pres- required 5 shal's | |The Chinaman sat with his long-nailed | future value of its skin, and the paying of | Gnce, and he wisely thousht that i gant office yesterday afternoon lay @ puny blouse, and looked at him placidly out of | ncssessed ache for several days and nights men to furnish field and band music for ent ratio of 16 to 1. This fact, howevet, | suade the old chief to return to his res- will not stop the prospector. He will con- | ervation instead of moving upon the gov- among the le; c1 tinue to take the very slim chance, as he | ernment prison at Salt Lake. the navy. The train-| boy, with a bundle of newspapers for 2/ his bright, inward-slanting littie eyes. | with a pain which stimulated hi: it to cae silo gated ge coking oe pice Nees Cotue for shelvest twcuts seaxs iaibe fic) hae ee tea waes vexdonsds after ing school for the| pillow under his head. These newspapers | Neither had sald anything for some lttle | keen wits to a really dangercus state of | in Wis arms. vajo reservation. The prospector's atten-| of death had touched him and he had al- come from all over | father, William P. Hanke, a news vender |“, shaggy, long-haired, disreputable-look- | was for the heathen to do the rest: and, as Sone De : e able to pick it up without any diffic tion was attracted by the splendid orna-| ready gone to his own place. the country, is located at the marine bar-] running a stand at 3S North 10th street, | ing mongrel, which seemed to combine| a first consequence of what he did, a Bon-| When he hind got P without any aiticulty ments worn by the Indians, most of them} ‘The only thing this chief feared was | racks, in this clty, and is under the super- | who is cherged with eelling obscene Iitera- | some half dozen varying strains in his non-| do Kaffir See ere Etats tinal. | gate. Thi be cous have Qous quite any, fan to cultivate the acnuainance of Gite | Mater, He invariably stripped naked when | vision of Col. Heywood, with Professor | ture. Hanke had been arrested two days | descript lineage, seemed to be doing the | scheme, presented hiitaselt at the gate of | if the dog had only been left to Itself. But gan to cultivate the acauaintance of Hcs- | entering a caroe or boat to cross a river, ‘ *. ure. ble to give bond before | 8#me thing as he lay on a frowzy sheep- | scheme, present: mself al e gal waewe: kaninni, who was not long in office. having | and when seen thus he gave one the be- | Fanciulli as instructor-in-chief. The num-| before, and, unal E United States Commissioner Gray, had : : No sooner had # passed the Rubicon al- murdered his uncle, a thoroughly bad In- | lief that he had spent most of nis life sit- | ber of boys at present in the service is not tS =ery reseed and shown itself in the been lying in jail. road, at school, and more boys are wanted to toot His little son is a cripple, being a suf- dian, to get the position of chief of the | tirg on or leaning against a barbed wire | up to the full capacity of the training peculiar cry, something lke western tribe. He gathered from the chief | fence. Upon either thigh he had count- he I 1 i Hed the | 1 hough he had t hipped ‘ai d his life is slow: Ste ae rons eater oe abrilly into tho that the Indians owned a mine called the | less scars, as though he had been whip) ferer from hip disease, and his life 1s ~ sull air from nowhere in particular. The “Peso-la-ki.” where native silver grew on) with a flax hackle. They were wounds | horns, blow fifes and pound drums. ly ebbing away. It appears that the father heathen dog pricked up its false ears at the every shelf made by arrows and bullets that he had | These boys are needed to furnish the mu-| V0.0 the boy as he dces his own life, and familiar but long unheard sound, emt ino He learned, also, that the Indians quar- | received when riding in a circle round the | sic and the calls for the marine barracks | nisnt after night he has tenderly nursed next *instunt between £10,000 and. t12.000 ried all the Iver that was in sight, and| enemy with his body hanging over the | in this city, and at other naval posts over | the little fellow. When the father was that the mine could be bought. side of his pony. In time an agreement was reached. Hos-| In 1892, when in the reservation, w8 made | ‘™ : kaninni was to show the Peso-la-ki mine | an effort to see the famous warrior who | €V¢? are ordered for duty on the warships, Worth of dog and diamonds was scamper- the country. The majority of them, how-| absent from home the little boy missed ing down the road as fast as four wiry legs him, and fretted and cried, and asked his neh Gantry ee mother, “Where is papa?” Byme-bye let out a high-pitched howl o to the Hosteen Pesgo-la-ki (white silver | 1s said to be the only chief who did not | Where they are sent all over the world. On | ™P{heh, (aynere OS Pott von, could nut 4 % 3, rage and horror, and started off with rece punter) for 2.000 pesos~2,000 pleces of sil-) surrender to the United States govern- | account of the fine educational facilities of | tefi ths child that the father was in jai. [> : Se ee ema! OF with arene ver. meat in the war of 1866. A Navajo as- | the training school, and the pleasant mode | She made excuses, but the little boy, in i longed for wives and cattle and guns that Hoskaninn! had paid so much attention | sured us that he would take us to the ho- | or lite on hoard ship, the training school is | his suffering, kept calling for his papa all h / were literally running away with the get to the white man that the Indians legan | gan of Hoskaninni in two sleeps, for which . the night through and refused to sleep. \ fe 2 The rest joined in the hue d e fo Bucs that something was up, and when | he demanied 10 pesos. We made him un- | Usually well filled. Inasmuch as tuition is | mn. hext day and the next night the boy for gcod ‘reasons of thelr own, and some! © council was called for the purpose of dis- | dersiand that we hed learned that Hos-| not only free, but the boys are paid for | continued to cry and call for his parent. { for the mere fun of the thing, but, w eussing the proposed sale of the silver! karinnl was dead. “Se,” safd the Indian, | their services, it seems strange that the| Yesterday the boy, through fretting and i fortunately, Just as they we inning, number of buglers should ever fall below | worrying and the loss of sleep during the roe ne, Ying treasure, a squad of; the limit. The boys enlist in the Marine | hot weather, had become quite Sl. y mounted police, coming back from their, Corps when quite young, learn the duties | Hanke was brought before United States = 4h night’s that are expected of them, pass through | Commissioner Gray again yesterday and A a regular systematic course of training, | his bond was made as small as the rigid and when they have attained what is | law allows ($1,000), in order that he might known as a “rating,” are sent away on| be able to gain his liberty until his trial vessels or to posts in the United States. If | begins. Mrs. Hanke, fearing that the little @ member-of the corps shows especial apti- | boy would cry himself to death, brought tude in the musical line, he is given an op- | him with her to the federal! building. The portunity to become a regular member of | mesting between the doting father and the the Marine Band. little crippled gon was most Pathetic, e “Oh, ghere’s papa now!” exclaimed the Candidates for Enlistment. poor little fellow as his father clasped him The ages of candidates for enlistment | tenderly in his arms and showered kisses must be between fourteen and sixteen upon him: ce a ciara continue the chase, with the result that | year! ¥ s " ‘The boy was too ill to sit in a chair. He they were speedily run down, collared and RSaSELELGE HSE SITES eee taul| Wasiiolaced;ontaiitable. anda (pillow! was Z ; marched off to the tronk--where, being able ‘ made of newspapers. He soon fell asleep, to give no satisfactory reasons for their fere entering the service. When the appli- } not realizing that his father, who was fan duty on the Free State borde: turned a corner out of the Du Toits Pan road at a trot and barred their wa The dog dodged in among the horses’ legs and got clear away (o the cager arms of Ah Foo, who was waiting for it in a half ruined tin shanty about 100 yards further! down the road. The police, always suspi- us of anything like a Kaflir emuete, or- d Byme-bye and his companions to stop, but the Pondo and one or two of the 8 who knew the worth of the quarr: made a desperate effort to get through and anxiety to catch the dog, they were sum- cant is first approved of, he is ordered he- | ning him, was a prisoner in custody on a WW marily fined 5 shillings each and kicked fore the nearest examining physician. If | Serious charg, S 4he poy slept, his ae the slightest physical defect is discovered, | father and mother conyersed in low tones * ana aneir ee he is rejected. Uncle Sam thinks that as | and frequently burst into tears. the tuition he is going to give the lad ts me moment that they regained their liberty, an occurrence, which \ the Diamond Fields Advertiser described ———_+ es 1 = entirely a gift, to be returned by the serv-| Turning the Weelln ti! Good Use. ihe next morning as “a shocking tragedy.” ice of the boy in the future, he has a right OH % HE DREW OUT A HAIRLESS DOG. took place just outside the bar of the to accept only those whom he thinks will | om the Boston Evening Transcript. + [Central Hotel. Mr. Augustus Lowenfeldt turn out well. ‘The physical examination | Summer heat, when it:comes, starts a nu- being. satisfactorily Completed, the candi- | merous and enterprising ‘crofy of weeds into ate is fully accepted and Is’ required to ve life os Se # sign the papers which bind him to the gov. | &cUve life. These may be ‘Asily controlled had been taking a few whiskies and so) the new compound of the De Beers mine | With some friends, and was just bidding for hire carly on the following morning | them good-bye to go and see about some skin near the table, with his wickedly clever face between his paws, and every y the Z now and then blinked up at his heathen | but one. important business, when he happened to ernment until he is of age. No mental ex- | PY the frequent use of the jron rake, which master, as though wondering whether he| He had a very disreputable-Icoking mon-| look across the sireet and saw @ well. amination is necessary, though a boy of | stifles them at oirth. But i& through inat- | had found any solution to the problem yet. | grel under his arm, and this with only sed Chinaman walking up the opposite fourteen, noticeably ignorant for his age, | tention, they get the startibf the gardener | "“Itsh no god, Loo,” half whispered the | partly Intelligible eloquence, he strenuously | side with a hairless Chinese tertaet ae hie would probably fail to gain admittance. and need to be reduced by” the hoe, they | Jew, at length breaking the pause, and | dcclined to be parted from. | The omficials | heels.” His fri ds saw his hands Bo up cS. = 7 hen the boys arrive in Washington and = firet | bringing his fingers down from his hair to | objected, but the Kaffir stuck to his po! ‘0 his collar. ‘at checks and low fore- DEATH RIDES DOWN THE CANON. report to. the barracks, they are, put | SBOUld be attacked vigprously at the first the table for something like the twentieth | nnd his dog. and eventually carried both y a deep bluish purple — = a through the active course of exercise and |‘Chance, and not altowed:to yerfet and drop time, “the old plants will all be played out | through, foe the compoun a set eyes, BAbeaebnt and s , start- discipline that immediately bre: seed ii soll. oP and shake y law ish passed. | new and unpopular then, an ed half out’ of thet “ Sumbling mine there was already a strong silver | and, taking a miner's shovel from one of if rife ite the areca, them | thelr seed into the soll. »Pull up and shake | now that this infernal new la ber ite ‘a into the rigors of life in the army or navy. | the larger ones when tlot #8/near as to en-| The gonivahs will be harder to get than 3 2, £0 at last, feebly with his fast tighten! he iment antagonistic to the chief. our party, he made a grave about two | The F el Ree taal cet ave 7 a years y to offer his ser se- | half gasped, half gargled: ne council was called to meet at Hos-| Inches deep in the sand. lay dow ey are required to fulfill all the duties of | danger valuable plants‘therbby, and hoe up | ever, and look at the rishk—fifteen ye P « ‘ in it, | a regularly enlisted marine, to salute all | all others, not merely keraplng the ground | on that blathted breakwater, just for being | where, he was called back and allowed to | “Dog—ten’ thou don and then kaninn hogan, and on the day designated | crossed his hands, closed his eyes and | officers, and even to de guartt duty. ‘This | over, but ‘breaking it ity ata D Senne it | found with a few little klips on you. The | tuke his cur in, for he was a fine, athletic, | he reeled back and pite ys Into the braves came sullenly and squat upon | said, “Se, all same Hoskaninni—mucho | latter duty 1s not quite as strict for the | while rooting out the weeds. ‘These may | game ain't going to be worth the candle Iikely-looking buy, ard, after ail, if the | the road, and before they could met him und. 5 sleeps six moon.” And we decided not to | boys as guard duty usually is, as some al-| then, while atitt grec’ and’ succuient, be | any more, if we don't find some new way | dog gave trouble, a fatal illness would | tack into the bar he was dead. © head Indian, in a viva voce message vake him. ‘ead i lowance is. made for the ‘age. 0 ethet mut fu com: of getting them out that the tecs won't t be a very difficult thirg to arrange for.] “Never knew poor Gussie to have ‘em > house, stated the object of the me ough he has been dead but a little| When the boy first enters’ he is not sup- eens whereitney: wil ite sullgeniseetes tumble to. It ‘ud be worth a fortune to a| The Pondo proved to be an excellent one of his friends sympathizingly ing. and followed with a very plausible | while, the Indians have a very pretty story | pcred to understand anything about the|to the gardener all that they have ‘pur- | man who could hit on a@ real brand-new | workman, and so little was seen or heard | remarked to another when the: had geen Senile tales Te GOdith Ss Cote eR ene | cn tin eee away: They. assured us that | duties of tha Marine Corps: ‘The course of |/lomen fare ni cil aie eens nea, take) (Sus Cralow, Acie atts reid, and Ae we Or che Sos) tials sextatence was Fore otte tains safely on to the embulanc Waite man. - In addition to the 2,000 pesos | on his deathbed he made a solemn vow | iistruction 1a se thorough that before the | may, by a little care, be made quite an im-| can't get one. the industry's going to be | long before the usual two-months" engag “D'you think there really was a dog the! free thle tate, Shera vantage Of learning | t-guard the trell that leads trom the. pro- | candidate has been| there many weet, te) sare feet Meike fertility of the gar-| ruined, and that's all there ish to it.” Rient waslup) = evince tye. 7 se the Ramin meths se © the thing looked to me from their pale friend how to mine; they | Vince of the paleface to the land of the | understands every detail of the service. | den. Not only all weeds, but, as crops m4-| The Chinaman looked at him stoligly | called himself in accordance with the com-| more like a rat. Come on, let's go and could find other valuable mines and be- | Navajo. It is in the fulfillment of this prom. | The first few weeks are devored almost en- | ture, all the garden refuse not used for | While-he was speaking, and then, with a/ mon cu: a e 'S BrO- | ‘ave another, it's given me quite a turn, come rich and respectable. While he an-| ise, the natives say, that chi . the ghost of] tirely to the setting-up exercises of the | mulching other plants, may te pnt into it, | broad, wooden smile, which crinkled his | tesque 2 plenty of old ticipated no danger from this arrangt Hoskanlent gallops ‘nightly down ‘Ticka- | army tactics, which are designed te eve | war thoroughly and covered with a little | €¥es up into two little slits, he nodded his | acquaintances in the compcund, as both ron. it was his intention, neverthei -_ + A LITERARY MECCA, the boy a military appearance and earth, and thus rotted down and retained | head after the fashion of one of his own | Loo Chal and Mr. Lowenfeldt hai foresven wat point a subchief to as ting That every night, at midnight, strong, healthy body. After the first few | for use as so much homemade fertilizer, | idols, and said scntentiously and with the| that he would, and, by virtue ot BOURY | oe eucusoue WAN Wapeine bu Sous peach beri vho would ah ed winds go wailing by, Weeks these exercises are made a less | It should be established in some out-of-the- | air of one who knows what he is talking gen Se eo eee: =< aa we Dankenos. look after the mi ee that the white les the ghost of Hoskaninni rominent ; ; : about: “em his-dog improved rapidly in value, 5 man took no more land than he was ¢n- ’Gainst the Hosteen-Pes'-la-kt. they are cane ee ee lanes See late Stout nee “All light, Missa Lonefelt, no need | a'though its presence became even more] A correspondent of the Boston Herald at Suutan beet ee oa te ee hours a week only. After the setting-up | and the contents drenched with the hose ice See Gee ie ue ey | Se young Byme-by's | 50uth Framington, Mars., says that Long- assis six braves selected by the head ‘LE: y a xercises, 5 .| plenty clever yet, allee s n de Byme-| “ow’s , » pecoming chief. Ail these men would be mo: LADY AYLESFORD’S son. there are three’ setae fhe marchings, | from time to time fo promote decomposi- | Tearchee no good.” Plenty new fake, too.| time was up, one of hit mest intimate | fellow’s famous Wayside Inn is becoming a on Mormon horses, known as Mountain | pe puke of mane through parate schools to pass oe bated ee ee oven Stain ttt | Dodge tecman easy all same’s before. Yoh | friends left the compound after passing | Veritable Canterbury for literary pilgrims. bapa at Goa Ma © bes Seat meee kis (Ol ; See yet, Missa Lonefelt.” | blamelessly through the then usual for- | ‘The old Howe Tavern, known all over the rifles that money pera Me ieee Half Brothee, SOS. Course of instruction. gases. When used the addition of wood | bab no got to workee yet, Mis: e y 2) : “If you've thought of a xood new fake, | malities under the hands of the searching | world from the “Tales of a Travels Ay tee abel hore] Graves dacsiad is London Dispatsh to the New York World, Mivery Gaya except (Baturdaysand) Sunday] ssnes/ sud bone) dust of colirdd|makes ib/by}}( (ho Poul ores mindy and thatethettecs| oiiclals and) that might eontmves to con FeapeAGa GANS Sonne te bo seas Gc grand parade of horses and rifles, fell The death of E : from 9:30 until 11:30 o'clock the boys are | 8° ™uCh the richer. aren't likely to get on to for a bit, I'm the| vey, through Loo Chai and one Ah Foo, |" s 2 2 ort, the trap of the wily chief, and’ signified of Edith, Countess of Ayles- given instruction in the use of th Songinn ca een a man to go shares with you on it, and I'll| his servant, the welcome rews to Mr. Low-| and it has made the town of Sudbury a aliein i wiliiigsueee tornecce “" | ford, recalls one of the most notable En- The tnateust We eo aut The Well-Bred Looking Letter. make it pay you well, Loo, I will, s'welp | enfeldt that the Pondo's dog would come | very popular place Hoskuninnl was something of a aghter, | €lish arfstocratle scandals of the century Fier OE eae | ey eT me. You know me, Loo, and we've dore| out with such a lning to its second skin | Though the season is still young, over a and made, at all times, a beautiful bluff: | {1 wh?eh the father of the present Duke of the Marine Band detailed for this special ee S business together before now, and I've al-| as the experienced broker felt justified in | thousand pilgrims have foun¢ rir way to and when Nevada Bill, a half-breed, stood | of Marlborough was concerned. ©} duty. All the garrison, ship, navy and| A young lady who always does every- ways treated you fair and square, haven't] estimating at from £10,000 to £12,000 in | the W eiry up to oppose the sale of the mine, the chief When: thepe Pe skirmish calls are taught, and in a short | thing nicely, said recently: “What a high- |]? Jf {t's a likely lay it's worth twenty, | value. i 2 am oe = th whipped out his hatchet, and was about to | tour he wares made his | time the boys become proficient in_them. | bred, well-groomed Icok there ts about an| no, Lil make lt ftty, there, Nitty down | ‘The Kafir received five sovereigns in re- ep ete ees cut the warrior off at the hip poc when | famous Indian tour he had in his suite | In the afternoon, from 120 until San ins envelope that is properly prepared for the | let me into it, and the usual terms after-| turn for his news. and with them and his | Mrs. Rich and Henry Dana and Mrs. AD- half a en braves sprang between them. | both the Earl of Aylesford and the Duke | ‘boys are taught to handle the drum sticks. eee ine hing: se, but ,| wards. Tkat’s good enough, ain't i 1/ own earnings he proceeded cae senha low jorpe have been among re yicy “BIS Roint, made a medicine talk, | of Marlborough, then Lord Blandford. | 4 Tecess of fifteen minutes Is then allowed | ™4lls. A little thing, of course, but one | Wards Thats good enauen, mat tt er of bis kind, to, blind himsclt to the | the first gueste | in which he counseled peace; the chief | Blandford returned to Ent, | the boys, and at 2:20 the school com-| of the Httle things which tell. The hand- | Yo, old pal?” lights of heaven and divers bar rooms for | A great transformation has taken place talked more, and milder now, but they | rest “ot 3 gland before the | mences. ‘This is in many ways similar to| writing? No, the handwriting doesn't | “The Jew spoke eagerly, almost caressing- | three days and nights, after which he went ee Seen gots Coney he Party and cloped with the | the course of instruction in the public stand for much, because each individual | ly, to the yellow heathen whom he would Zhe rooms jake sow /enrscbed ty opuntiess her brave took the floor and made a | Countess of Aylesford, with whom he lived | schools of Washington, Instruction is'given hes bi eclal chirography, and it js | have passed by without a wink in Main exam of antique furniture and china, plea for his people. |elghteen morths in Paris. When Lord | 1" reading, writing, history, geography, | 288 Dis owa especial chirography, street. There he was Augustus Lowen- paintings and bric-a-brac, worth se argument was to the effect that Heskaninni a e jousand de . The host of the tavern, vleste eae mathematics and the ordinary br: more characteristic that she should. But | feldt, licensed diamond broker, stock and thousand dollars vern, Aylesterd returned from India he began tuition. The boys are graded erence the writing on a well-looking envelope {s | share dealer, and all the rest of it, a man Mr. Edward R. Lemon, has been collecting been chosen chief t = divorce proceedings against hi: vel E these articles for a number of years. partly b e he had dared to removw gainst is wife, but | first enter the service, and begun far enough to the left to be well bal- | with a reputation to lose, as reputations man much meaner, if possible, than hing os che was able to prove unfaithfuiness | taught are in proportion too uReenee anced. The last word is not squeezed and | went then in Kimberley, and with a future Among those of historic interest are the self, he had pledged himself <o protect the be at ean against him the court re- | know already. crammed. The adéress, with the name of | pefore him; but here in Loo Chai’s back Howe cou -of-arms, alluded to in soe people and their property. He told almest ame ~ =) is suit. He then went to West- The boys draw a salary from the govern- | State and city, is written in full. The] sitting room he was just what the heathen “Tales of a Tr aveler; a —— r er by In tears how their grandfathers had eut- | ¢5,*merica, and died on a Texas ranch in| ment of $13 a mone Or this, however, | Stamps are evenly placed in the upper | was, neithef better nor worse, an I. B. D., ‘Squire Lyman Howe, the landlord in Long- fered at the hands of the Spaniards on the | phe sy: hig or s they have each month to pay ‘$1 for in-} right hand corner with a slight margin left | a “fence,” as they would have calied him feliow’s time; a window pane wes ren on The smooth trail traveled by | with him in be ifoclety was altogether | struction with the bugle, $1 for instruction | between the top of the envelope and the | in his native Whitechapel, and like him a 3 g with a diamond by Maj. Wi tam olineux. said he, “our fathers blazed | the Duke of 3a ai t against his wife, for | with the drum and $1 for school tuition. | edge of tne stamp. The flap, too, of the] potential felon, and so there was no need . and now carefully peasae: a parca seaet ect. They were slaves; they | timate friend. ‘The fre Crea. es in | The only other expense 1s $1 a month for | well-bred envelope is muctlayed down in a| for any ‘overstreined. etiquette. between - by ‘Squire Howe; a thimbie of Miss Jeru- fought and gave us freedom, and I, for une, | Um*te friend. The fruit of the elopement | washing. This leaves $0 2 month, and, as | Clearly, orderly manner. It is often ren- | them. 5 é- sha, a sister of ‘Squire Lyman Howe; an will not submit silentiy to be bound and | 39% S00. now about 25 years old, a year | their clothes, lodging and board are all fur.| dered modish with sealing wax and the| Added to this he knew that his “boys” . . engraving of the landing of the coin branded like a maverick. OE a, Le than his half-brother, the | nished by the government, they are not | sender's monogram.” must by this time be getting a very nice! (xES 5 troops at Boston, the work of Paul ter “Hardiy has the paint dried up on the | PYsut Duke of Marlborough. Placed in hard circumstances. They are RIE Rn ee little collection of gems together for him, an original silhouette of Gen. George ash splendid plumage of our new chief, when re ti A sar brought up this son with | allowed two suits of clothes a year, and if, Should Have Bought Another. and he felt a very natural anxiety about ‘ ington, by Annesley; a c! alr nyse We find him betraying his people ‘to. the | {h¢ ttle of Lord Guernsey, treating him as | by economy, they are enabled to make one ae be | them now that this detestable new law had by John Adam: an engraving o the Bos- = — a het eet be be Dut | Aylesford could not avesbeees hectares a eta cape enne Aircast ee Mr. Mulvey was seated in his lttle sta- | Search and the penalties for belng found 7 < ty Otadiah Perey of Baabary, Rae tran OF I am » d to be called a rel manry | They had not met for a year and a half | draw the money only as they need it, and| tlonery store uptown Monday when his Loo,Cha!’s almond eyes, wandered slow- ancient pattern, taken from the Walker and the outraged Indian strode from the | P¢fore the child's birth. __ usually the greater part of it is retained | wife, who had been shopping; entered with | ty from the dog to the Jew, and his head op j garrison house, the only remaining struct- tent When Lord Aylesford died the next heir | until the expiration of their term of serv- @ large, flat paper parcel in her hands. began to wag again, but this time the other f Y ure of its kind in the town; an old jus Hoskaninni made another play with his | wick “institutes orounet,, Charles Wight- | ice at the school, when it.is paid over to| «wnat have you got there?” he ques- | Way, and after a little pause he sald slowly iP used by Gen. Gansevoort of Gansevoort, tomahawk, when the back of the speaker | Sqn, iyetituted @ sult to set aside the | them. tloned.” and_meditatively: ‘ coer pe Picea Ie te tg” gear, gi was turned, but a dozen hands were lifted | (aim of the alleged Lord Guernsey, and But Few Fall. ones “Fifty pound tlen per cent not good Ing of James Madison; an oll portrait of seateat Sm. abit tae waare cece ‘keg | after @ sensational trial the court decided interne Gn 5 ai t's a patent tray for the ice box, dear.” | enough dlis time, Missa Lonefelt, not by Thomas Jefferson; a portrait 2 ot dow Sry chief backed | that Lady Aylesford’s son was “a stranger ter Bethe Us the: corps long enough 10121 whats ipetent boat it? big heap. I hab got thcught here"—and he 2 Bishop Thomas Berkeley, the philosop her ‘Another noble red man took the floor, | 12,2!00d" to the Aylesford family, being in | master the calls and other duties, each boy “It saves half the ice, so the man said | tapped ‘his shaven skull gently with one and an oil portrait of Capt. Eleazer Giles, fact the son of the-Duke of he and as he proceeded the excitement rose to | So the title passed to the other claimant ER ie fever heat. who now bears it. The son of the duke ‘When a chief was chosen,” he began, | and Lady Aylesford adopted the name of hat is— ivateersman of Beverly. that I bought it of.” of his long nails—“which make velly big pri eS solace Band, Prof. Fanctulll. The examination is} « a chop—tlen, twelve, maybe twenty thousand ! In the old tap room, or the main 5 entirety of a Seeeheay nature, ee pro- wea oF pound alle same time, and no chance t may be seen thirteen chairs of antique - Saceie. é = rors ses % aiterns, original furnishings of Admiral Mate ncan NOT, OF & wiser and a etter | Spencer Churchill and ‘dropped into ob | fessor merely having the boys stand up be-| “Then you should have bought two of | catches. flim. worth pay for, eh, Mis Farragut’s flazehip Hartford, desie owned ‘rave—one who had been tricd for twenty | scurity. fore him and give the calls ‘as they are Wy) : . and used by Daniel Webster in Hanover, fozcn moons and who was always to the | It must be said to the credit of the for- | read off. Passing mark on this examina-| ‘What for?" ees eee ueanal tec St may De smenky: 4 N. H.; an engraving by Sharp, after John petted hig £2208 Plumes when his people | mer Duke of Marlborough that when he | tion is 7 per cent, and, according to the | ‘80 a8 to save all the-teef’ and his wife | exclaimed the Jew, leaning forward with sth : 7 Trumbull, of the sortie made by the garri- Peeded hig service. Brave and just, fear-| was giving his testimony in the Colin | record made, the boys are given the rating | WeNt away looking somewhat puzzled.” cwitoning: ape ane Heaeyee peiteee: Sere aon OL aMialint oe She mere of thos less, but friendly to other trives, his own | Campbell divorce sult he swore that he | of “fifer” or “drummer.” ‘The boys mule pase etait a hs ea ar area i = eof) bes image By-Law people never lost their rightful place tn | had offered to marry Lady Aylesford when | ing the highest records are given the Tee a Eee wi tate beh J Sees ital aiier iuhot Genaiuten Uphan, 30 ten ame his heart. If now he looked from the hills | his first. wife, Lady Blandford, divorced preference when it becomes necessary to = te ae eee eee fee Pe. and relief of Gibraltar, published in 1810; + of the happy hunting grounds his v him, but Lady Aylesford declined. The | send a detachment to some ship. This de- oe sell you one plecee doggie five hun- four lanterns, resembling the one Paul would break the locks upon his lips an fact is their association had been termina- | tail is usually the ambition of the boys, 2 dlea contnita.?s Revere hung aloft in the tower of the old brave spirit would cry out: ‘Begone, ye | ted by a quarrel, Lady Aylesford compiain- | who are attracted by the chance to see <a 2 z y North Church; two ancient clocks, and gray spiders, who seek to take from my | ing bitterly that when she was disowned | something of the world. The rating of 75 As Loo Chai imparted this apparently ir- 4, many other curiosities. people that which was given them by the | by her husband, the duke, the cause of | per cent is not hard to obtain, and few aera ae anak tecente he shoheret oe The new proprietor of the Wayside Inn great father. Legone, ye squaws! Your | her misfortune, grossly neglected her, leay- | boys fail in the examination, while those 1 the sheepskin, and smiled blandly as he has named his different rooms in honor of gers ore tickled with the applause of | ing her almost starving with her babe in | who do fail are given another opportunity i added, “and vely good chop, too, I tink. famous characters. These are the ones se- strange tribes, but deaf to the appeals of | Paris. to retrieve themselves later on by the: fe “What! five hundred pounds for a bloom . lected: Washington, Paul Revere, Long- your own people. Lady Aylesford's son is far more like the | kindly professor. : Y d F in’ tyke, and a precious ugly one at that; fellow, Ole Bull, Howe, Parsons, Lafayette, oO wrould he say—so would he rebuke | former Duke of Marlborough than is the| If at any time a boy desires to leave + Ze what's the good of pulling my leg like Slave, Emerson, Thoreau and Grain. the coyotes who lick the feet of a fat mas- | present duke, who takes entirely after his | the service it is necessary for him to make P that when we're supposed to be talking Pe ter fora stout kayuse or a silver-mounted mother’s family, the members of which. by | application, stating a sufficient reason for 4 strict business; what the blathes do I want Bymebye Startea of. The Isle of Boredom. saddle. Dogs! ye make me tired.” And an- | reason of their lean, gaunt aspect, as well | the change. In case this is approved, .he 7% i with your dog’ Z From the Rochester Post-Express. other warrior went out into the sage trush | as their repacity for wel-paid public of- {is then allowed to buy bis discharge, the Aud Mr. Lowenfeldt asked the question with | pack with a light pouch-and a heavy head and the night. fices, have earned the nickname of “the | price paid being in proportion to the length ‘ an air of disgusted indignation, of which| to) do another two months’ spell in the Hite looked at Hoskaninni and Hoskanin- | hungry Hamiltons.” of time he has been in the service. The ae 2 the plactd heathen took not the slightest| mine. This time he @was the bearer of a ni looked at Hite. They sat in silence for rice is regulated by the value of the cloth- 3 i notice. He simply picked the cur up on 2 some time; theg Hite rose up, put on his 1g that has been issued to him, and if he ¢ 7 to his lap, and said in a tone of calm and ms and said, “I will go.” S Pearls of Eti leaves befcre attaining his majority, he wt almost digrified reproof: You will not,” said the chief. “You vill ed pres a es pee a ie nn As Fic arconey Ay P a stay tonight with me; they will not molest ition the money may have . ‘ Egle elly handsom you while you are my guest.” been saved for him by the disbursing otti- . seers Cabri teen tenes atte Till late at night the old chief paced the 8 cer. ‘Mhis is subtracted from his pay in i J same. Him what you call patent I. floor with heavy arms about 1im, fearful 2 service, and whenever he leaves, Now you watchee.” of wives and cattle in his own that his people might demand the white A is always some money due him. In the a : nd, incontinently consented. man, and determined to defend him even second year, $1 is held back, in the third ‘The reason for this leading astray of the fo the extent of risking his kinglom and j : ee ee ne ee ; : 2 untutored savage may be quickly seen in fe. 4 > years, may f f N “fact it 10 ‘> £10,000 At tho dawn Hite was awakened by the e 3 ‘ never be cast adrift without a cent. Ie J = = fingers oe ‘be £1,000, ahd this, with prem old chief, and iooking out between the Their Fortunnte Lot. aS = fe blankets that served as a door to the house, = they saw 300 ponies tied to the sage brush Trree times a week the boya have leave ebout the camp. for the evening by meking application to Be = Hoskaninnil, a backs are the commanding officer of ‘the barracks. ‘ bare—Navajos go to war with no valdics. owed Fond Parent—“Well, we wanted to give Pennsylvania pareware My people will fight for the Peso-la-ki. I| It is the correct thing to remember that | At 2° time are haptic on ‘ma chawnce, and’ Gas tavin’ ton trates factures to the value of $388,000,000 Will show you the mine, as I have prom-| all games, such as fencing, boxing, etc,, | berracks withou' 433 for a butterman, when wot docs the which is equivalent -to $74 per fsed, then you must look out for vourself, | increase both the Giisce of the movements} evenings thay can. -get ch the average in Great Britain being $19 for we shall surely be killed. My people | and the health of body. nd remain out until in Germany $10,

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