Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 22, 1895, Page 9

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==l THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE [ - NING, ‘iEn‘li‘ll.fl‘JR 22, 1 'WENTY PAGE GLE COPY FIVE CENTS. N. W. Corner 16th & Douglas, OMAHA. ORESS G008 == KS and FURS ==| [LADIES SHOES == l:_(l)lrhe!:l?: Inlmf}kl?tll(_ (lz()éd‘ unmade flress Pa"erns ) et ) Rt el Special tomorrow, | Special Tomorrow Special tomorrow made dress patterns in 4 with electric fleal, made to -1l R TR Py s nnd Woit's Col- i s und Noveity Suit- o 3R for $7.00, spectal for tomorrow Naybor's Ladies' |, : ; 3 Ladies’ jecks and plaids, worth up to 3 only ateieeinge sale Monday at 20c yar BOE yar. i o drbes pitiavos, choh MRS 85,50 specialty in Jhooln t wathet saos 20th Century Strictly all wool Blick Serges | pe For o -0 At .00 we cah give you n great button or lace ex Shoe ain Entiro ; Vartety of all Wool beaver and treme new style A Lt with small, neat weaves, go cu Suit . ! in ey M sale Monday at 29c yard Doub! , Button 2,000 dress patterns of imported broad- A 5 edged, el fo (i : o STATOHATE SIelI(at Del Aot e cloths in black and colors, 13 yar ; L od@oirow xRy 3 ‘ Lace :r'y“,.xw” in the city, up to 1% ) s wide, wide. ‘m..ul ‘;‘V:V:‘(,:v‘n‘w;‘y-y‘.;.lx‘\‘..)ix;"ml;‘lfl(‘-"vli 7 2 h I S S Need}‘e Toe l y res, ~(mu1~ in navys and W\ AR . 1 AR 25¢ 39c¢c 59c O8cC | biuck, « e to el tor 4150, ; : woeth up t) 8100 a yard, go [ 4 \ N Hned, mad Sguare Toe. Sk and wool mixture [ patterns on by $2 98 \ N R * Speciai Sale , also Mohair . at i Brilliantines, all p L T - R R Special Price A »-‘-i e Tamorrow 1. Saprollered 10 chooss i 50 pleces black Brocaded Siiks, 3 Over 1,000 plusl and claborately 0inorrow Kl;n $6.00 A full line r heavy surabs, good satins, il % 3 They are made2o sell for 425,00, e oy T Fiagh Noveltlon IR v B i e Ladies' ¢5 Side Lace Shoes TOKIO own importation, go atest shades, woi i i i aenin e Monday. special ‘st $1.96" & yard, for Monday 39c... & Ladies’ ¢5 Congress Shoes Turn-up Toe with small, neat weaves, go on Bhott and mwfium 1 he, all ~3 Lt SO A SHOES Black Gros Grain Silk 3 Yile joar's Myl o 4-bitton Ladies' g5 Button Shoes 8ilk Velvets, in odd s Bisiaos: Hofes - q 3 5 SO e A GUthctory:. TFO! , Peau de £ 8 > Y h 3 1f {B sale 5 Ladies’ ¢5 Front Lace Slmcx to 6 yards in length, ever tra value, worth up 0 o > Strictly all w¥9 » Jnckets, shade, go at 39c yard, worth yard, for Monday at 98¢ yard.... SeUbISag Mt or meal- Every Pair Warra.nted so0co yards narrow and wide s Ny § 5000 Pairs Imported High Grade Kid Gloves— 4 7 All in the Latest Styl e R, FRENCH VALENCIENNES LACEN 2 @ 250 el : . el Enfl;;r;:sP;,:; ~Karranted. ! Pt o Isc worth HECEES v &l i Tala NN tEN 1UE for4s A (0 o 2yt , i 5-Hook and . ‘ 4-Button 2% | e 4 i velvot hats, trimmed with o 99 4o Oy O Y0 0 2y q - BUTTON S ENGLISH c b Wl :4 double ribhons, velvets, 0, g 4,7 e i IMPORTED ‘ / WALKING AND DRIVING ancy feathers and os- o e, iy FINEST QUALITY : : 100, picces black and B SRR Thousanas of yards § : nany of 2 ¥ QU4 cre; .‘.’. Silk Chantilly £ RE ; ¥ very d u-!t) patterns {3 . u. Sy 1o o i o ‘ DRESE KID net top and blagk Silk 3 ¢ 3 :\llll\lh'“ Nainsook & i 5 ‘. N ; B evening shades— match your costume Up to 9 inches wide, go at Go at d 2 # " A gredt¥arietyiof new, styl ‘L‘ : Every Pair Warranted— : Will bo sold at Yard The |urvu\'u price of these 4y The regular price of these 2.00. gloves is $2.00, 75¢c : sailor Hats, ja fur felts, wool folts A . Gt U b b velyat aud:satid oromaeio & ; . : c ; : (&) ° C, (€, C,\ & T e N1 IV s T TS | moment of completion of the new apparatus, | of the bubble representing the excess of | kingdom which Mr. Perrine has created and | “ V e TPTENT OTILD | #1de of the clift and dug out the remaining | plete series of skeletons of this remarkable RE\EL\TWN l:\ l“l) {: ) will be turned into a larg el connected | pressure on the bottom of the globule over er L he presides with all the rights U l.\(; h 1\\“1‘“\1 5’““‘ bones " animal, with a horizontal pipe several feet in | the pressure on top, which causes the bubble | of a feudal lord. Never have I looked upon The professor arose and walked rapidly ANCESTOR OF THE HORSE. phnt G diameter and feet long. A certain | to rise and glves it velocity. Theoretically | & more tranquil ecene than that afforded me back and forth In his room at the hotel, a8 [ wanother find,” said the professor, “and quantity of air will be carried with this | the bubble would have the same velocity nn) the u(-(l'lnu‘lun of this \'h‘l\,‘ ] |..k»),«, | he recalled the exciting experience. He said | o " Gfo e BTG |.u|'.w "“; 5 A‘;: {rati water and the mixed contents, air and water, | wheth=r under one foot or 100 feet of water, | While small in arca, are many feet deep, the ai 3 nhabi he did not attemyit to take comple'e measur. sebte] g WCelalon oL, wht i Novel Trrigation Scheme Invented by an | whter ant ¥ ged into the separator, as the | its veloclty being the same as that acquired | crushed muscle shells that/cover the bottom Remains of the Oldest If habitant Found on | 1% 0 0 100 0 tod the. akeleton to be | Lo RUSCL AR S0 B Iokon of what MR ik Idaho CGenius. reservolr 1s called, at the foot of the wall | by a body falling through space of the di- | adding their rich® blue-white color to th the Banks of Bitter Creek, two and & halt feet long, forming an animal [ go o B hotee. This horse was the an- rock, which is ten feet in diameter, ten feet | ameter of the bubble. Therefore the veiocity [ deep blue of the water, giviog a cobalt tone to about the size and with the general makeup [ jo 0 o0 The Die cles. Tt may per- and with combed heads fifteen feet, | of a bubble arising through water increases :I [xnvvw;t‘v which ]r n«xl‘n:.‘:\w'h rg\r a mas- of a spectes of monkey known in ¢ n \i .'f!" 1!:’“: "}:\ “l K ‘]\) |\ i..]( s ‘,,:.11.",.: a capacity o 000 cubi e erse ratio of squares of the diame- | terpiece in a gem-adorned fga he wat y arlance X d capuchin » | Was no large an a shepherd dog. Instead PRACTICAL UTILITY OF WATER BUBBLES hat e oy ey b proparts | tars e Babbla or i il rios ‘eight feet |are - perfectly placid and ~ still, . cool | THE BAD MAN A MISSING " LINK |Pariance as ihe white HceC earare missing, | Of @ single toe ho had no less thun four toes P distributed the pipe is tapered to a hyper- | per second, one foot in diameter, in the open | in the quiet deeps where myriads of brook and B Eat 1o asploto. and. It ‘would be s | on each of his four feet, and three on his bolic curve to meet the varying velocities of | water. In a tube the water must pass | Fainbow trout are to be geen any summer Revolutionizing the Antlanated Meth=| ¢ )ine bodies, From the separator are two |around the bubble at the same velocity as | 8y, and where they fight for a feathered fly | Darwinian Theory Glven a Fresh Im. h 5 ods for Raising Water Above Its mnm'«_ one for water, the other for air, the | maintained by the bubble itself, taking up a ulnh lh‘; voraclousness |-v'nlllu1r to l\)llwlz' k]ixu petus by the ry of a |the human race as he appeared long eons ago. | (1€ “"‘w ’-,'.LL",H”E the d ing o f”:‘\{ml\'.flill?l; pvel=Enrich Hundreds pipe for the water outlet being nearly three | lar; ortion of the tube in consequence, the | the good angler very oiten being able to lan N ke rei g JATIVE OF NOR BRIC. bbb L AL LM, to demony e to I,\\;l‘ rie |‘1.\wm‘ 4 Bius foriticiydiar. ot batistnantly tiros ) (Iares portioniotithel tube intoonsequenoo e |18 B000 ACKRE ery CSOEDE A0 ) e \‘::‘"\” e t Bones _ NATIVE OF NORTH AMERICA, me 1 observer the evolution of this re of Acres o J air output. At the same point at which]flow of the water, consequently when your | fishing here is hardly to be called a sport, E Leur Speculations. Sclentists have Intimated that the monkey [ markable animal from its primitive begine oty water {8 poured into the down or tapered | bubble is nearly or quite as large as the tube | although but a stone's throw away from these was originally an inbabitant of America, but | ning, away back In the commencement of the 3 ©orre | PID@ 15 A U-shaped pipe and agafnst the face | it will act as a piston and nature's force is | lakes a turbulent little stream holds out an ; the proof Is now_ forthcoming, and I the | eoceno perlod, at least 1,500,000 years ago, up BLISS, Idaho, Sept. 17.—(Speclal Corre-|of the wall rock presents a most Instructive | scen working for the betterment of man's | irresistible invitation to the angler to com Prof. J. L. Wortman, paleontologist. of Co- [opinion of Prof. Wortman the chain leading U'“"]]lr“ present moment. apondence of The Dee)—Trrigation, upon | losson in hydrauties. ‘Into tho longer o condition.” and enjoy the decp delights of trouting within | lumbia college, New York, and one of the lead- | ffom the mollusk to man Is no louger miss- | | (OF tof e 8 Parar In tha storypiilie | epend s [ 108, as Mr. Priestly calls it, of this s| Mr. Priestly, however, 1 nging water rush on to join | ing sclentific schola ve . The Wyoming monke 6:{he gof i o 2 LEnnaaeros f 'gely, is likely ® | pumping water as in the numerou four-inch pipe into the large pipe through FRUITS OF ,RRmM-m\- o Rocky Mountain Our object in coming to the west last | bones found in ‘he regl the Rocky moun- in the next few years, and all because a|p,umpg which are extensively used, not only | o 2 gl 0 Arge DI IFOu el News. Th» pmrwur is on his v\.\y home | summer,” said he, “‘was to look for fossils ns and elsewhere, almost as accurately as 3 ¥ | which air passes and which, falling upon the | Here, in the midst of #his semi-circular e . modest genius has gone to work and put in | in placer mining and irrigation, but for lift- | wolumn of water in the long arm of the | amphitheater, hundreds of feet bslow the | after an expedition of six months along the | Which were deposited at the close of th ‘.L',‘,{,:‘.m{,::,,»,,.’.',.':'.:; cats oF r”-n’.‘;:-:d\{“{‘:“; a plant on the Snake river that bids fair to | Ing water out of flooded mines. U-shaped pipe, ndds materially to the dis- | plains on either side, Perrine has irrigated | northern and westorn line of Colorado. He | CTétaceous epoch—a perlod when the sea re. | (RERREL FPYEONAS oF IR OF Jeifnes Which revolutionize the autiquated methods for A REVELATION IN HYDRAULICS. ement of the water which by ald of the | hundreds of acres of 'virgin soll. Thousands | was accompanied on the trip by a party of | (ho srert wiqok¥ mountaln plateay urose and | Mixe ‘of thoso animals.” ralsing water above Its level. There is not so much in the mere detail of | separator is constantly going on. of peach trees are ylelding gnnually the most| golnbia college etudents, who have pre- | eame eradually Intr suictonce 1t win oos't | Speaking of elephants the professor safd Amid the weary wastes of this young 'whlfl)]lll;“( that |; )iulvr'u-a!lmg u‘n«l il\s'lru;‘n\.v CAPACITY OF THE PLANT. :\l(::l«:lwllf(x’unl\r:‘l"I;nx"-;:vrhllr;:;:‘"'f deli; }‘,‘“:‘“ ceded him on the way e 2 The ‘,;; ‘, :,, ";'.2", 'J-r.‘:l-ia fi ng ll\uu,“';;‘fn the L f.’?f.\.'j, fossil remains indicate that the true elephant - p the layman, oug ere i not a s aste, the prunes eyond co n, ) g e objec | e By ST L 8! ai not o \ abl o American conti= state, to find a genius was as refreshing as ‘\\uu-k‘lng e rj‘rlj‘hllxx\'(.‘iu‘ e e 1281 | This novel and ingenious plant, which |large and julcy and almost endless in va:|the summer's work was to look up several | bistory of the American continent. :fm‘l Tho ”u”,‘u ’.'."'.“‘.”, i AP (‘_',',\:,,',':f,:t the experience was novel, and now, after , but in the absolutely new iden as to|Shows every reason for success, coupling as | riety, while the pears and grapes have the | “missing links” which are required in the CONTINENT DIVIDED. from Europe or Asia, arriving In America having seen the irrigation scheme which W. and relative veloeity of bubbles that | it does with all the laws of mechanics, ac- | bouguet and flavor assoclated with %0 rich a | yugoum of matural history in Central park, | “There was a time” continued the pro-|about the beginning of the pliocenc periods W. Priestly has almost completed, I cannot |the chief interest centers. cording to the young inventor, will dis-|soll and so glorious a climate. BEvery fruit | o oo Mhe! oblact e P fessor, as he advanced in his theme, “when | From recent rescarches in South America, help but marvel at the simplicity of his| In a conversation with Mr. Priestly he said | charge in the nelghborhood of 15,000,000 gal- own here in this walled-in home of a |* 2 he object was attalned. the American continent was divided {nto two | the professor is of the belef that the ele L ke hundreds of other people, ask | 48 to this most important discovery: *After | lons of water per day and this' gey ike | representative citizen of 1daho and it is a | addition the expedition made a di halves and a ocean of salt water oc- | had its origin i uth America or pos plant, and, like hundreds of other people, much thought I came to the conclusion if 1| pump will continue to raise water on the | perfect object on to the sightseer. The | cannot fail to create a profound se cupled the area between the higher peaks of [in the southern part of the African continent. mysell_the question, “Why didn't 1 think|could make air bubbles the exact size I[bench lands above the Snake river until | perfection in fruit and cereal to be obtained | 1 (ne selentific world, the Rocky mountains and the Appalachian The camel tribe received the attention of of that idea fnstead of the young Kansan,|wanted them, I could 1ift water to almost any | some of the stationary parts rust or wear | through irrigation is here best exemplified, THE “ORIGINAL" MAN chain. In the mighty elevation which took | the inquisitive students from Columbla cols who is about to real his day dreams?’ | height. I examined closely all the books on | away or the supply of water is cut off. and the wonderful results to be had from o« g UGINAL" MAN. place, the Uinta mountain range, which [lege during the s er. “Fhe camel,” said For In the very simplicity of the scheme |hydraulics and mechanics, but found none | To put these great pipes in place, rivet | these dosert places when touched with| Prof. Wortman has brought to light “the|forms the southern boundary of the Green | Prot. Wortiman, “was orlginally an inhabitang Teosts its stron clalm to recognition at | that went fnto the consideration of bubbles in | (hem together at riveting stations along the | water will alike servg to interest and in-| orlginal man.” The benes of this much |river fres sin, was rawsed, rd- | of the North American continent, He had & the hands of engineers and sclentific people f relation to my plan of lifting the water. In| gace of the wall rock, was no ordinary tri- | struct the tourlst who visits these beautiful | wanted individual are now en route to New |ing to the geological survey, to | beginning gimilar to that of the horse In lte generally. Ylew of the dearth of unything ke sclentific | ymph of engineering in itself, the danger at- | lakes that give £o rich a coloring to the land- | yo,ic “miey are wrapped in cotto |8 height feet above sea | t19 creatures no lar than a spaniel dog Tiwenty miles southwest from this place, | Investigation on the bubble question I went to | yondant upon the lowering of the immense | scape which once suggestive of déath itself | = % on and | ool ®Phe lack of elevation at present fs due | and we find the remain the lake basins of which contains halt a dozen houses and has | Work to demonstrate my theory, taking a se- | G0\ columns belng very at, and even | 1s now vibrant with the r o never, perhaps, was a package more carefully | to erosion or the wearing away of the moun- | tho Rocky Mountain region. During the B e uREeaton O L e Thousand | & I -“”;WT. rfil:l:‘(y oqifined spaces and | with the utmost care Priestly came very near NYDER. | prepared for a long journey by rall. When | tains. The Rocky mountain I s and Bl e iR e AR e I have visited in Idaho, are the Thou: open space. After two years o S ylelding up his life the other day, a sacri- - ‘ it is remembered that the precious bones|lieved by geologists to be at present under- | @lly Increased in size until he reached his Springs, & wonderfully pleturesque spat for | close study as to the phenomena of bubbles 1 | FETTE B0 C0 Ll € WOTE DAY, G MIEE L were the framework of a béing that hopes an ‘elevatlon shghtly in - advance of | Present form.” the tourist in search of the unusual. Along | arrived at the conclusion that a bubble nine | o 0 0 FER s o0 = Weievation of Lka Men Considered Too | and moved 1,500,000 years ago and the skele- | cess of erosion. All other mountain CROWDRED OUT BY COLD. & wall of rock, two miles In extent, hun- | Inches In diameter was the worst to contend | ), "ar reor when one of the aprons blew Tonder for w Hapsh World ton 1s the only one of the period i 15 of the United States are being d W) 1 the dis ce of th acinks &ush for ¥ he [ with and my course was open to avoid a pipe | 2bou y fe e 0. aprons 3 e ol h y one of the perlod that has £ E 5 g de hat caused the disappearance of the dreds of small springs gush forth from ¢ that would create such a bubble, but would | 0ut, the force earrying him off the platform, [ A choice bit of humer comes to us, says | €ver been found, the importance of the dis- |&raded. samel and the horse in America?” was asked, solid faco ot the rock, and l]:lunl,xl:!lp(nwulnlm‘f e o uibbics elther Targer or smaller than | hurling him twenty-five feet, striking the | the Chicago Post, in the form of a dispat-h | covery may be estimated. 1In the opinion of | “'Our study during the summer was to ex-| “That is a study of considerable interest e g he Snake river far below, at | nine inches. I ascestained that a nine-inch | front of a rock rounded by water and covered | from 0'Nelll, Neb. Some time ago a num- the lucky ndery of the anclent rellc, those [amine into the changes thal bave occurred |to studsnts. of paiscatolomy, The answae i Deace with the whole world, Viewed from | bubble would rise in a glass tube at the rate with moss, which broke the force of his fall. | ber of pleasant, mild mainered men gathered | dry ”unlw establish beyond peradventure the | from (:nlu‘r-rm time of l’h- recession of the | found in a study of gla v:.u“unvm Up the bench lands or ridge far beyond, these|of nine feet per second. In rising through | He was carried into his tent overlooking the | together, and, in their genlal, off-hand way, | truthfulness of the Darwinian theory. From |5 ne formation of the great fresh water | to the hnn‘) of the glacial period the ca 1, bl or streams look Iike great encrus- | sixty-five feet of water if would take thirteen [ work, where he has.been confined for several | lynched 'a man named Hasreit'Scott. It was | the time the long neglected skeleton s | which supervened. The rela'lon of the | horse, elephant, rhinoceros and taplr were tations 6 marble or snow fastened by the |seconds. A pipe twenty inches in diameter | days. The absence of the guiding spirlt in | {ntended merely as a plegsant littie divertis:- | mounted in the fireproof museum in New | fresh water basing to one another, and more | fornd in great abundance on this continent. O llder to the sides of the broad can- | represents about two and one-fourth cubic | the new enterprise stopped all ‘work, but | ment, of course, to help them pass away | York, the world of sclence and letters must | particularly the form of life that inhabited | The glaciers cither pushed them southward Yon through which the Snake river tortu of air to each foot of water, and, carry- | Priestly is again at his post and it is possible | te time, but it appears to have been taken | bow its acknowledgement to the doctrine that | the shores of the lakes centuries ago, were [ or the intense cold killed them uely winds on its way to join the Cojum- | ius my theory still further, 196 cubic feet of | that by the time this letter appears In The | seriously by some of the other people living | the claims of the evolutionists are based on | subj in which we Were particularly in-| The professor explained In a most Interest- bia, e ebona e T A B L e an! tvon. s che ScAlon gt R tub. nelshiorheaté Epaite oen dien /S0 forostod, . The iarsoat aaimal of thate {imes | Iof Way the methods Bumseed uy LieReien oy sk W e R PR R R e L /. W. Priestly has given to the solution of | eug o (7 liv-thar'h M SOUTHERN WY 7 Kabwh 16 sclarios 25 the unilatheriim ke Eins tHe nadasenite A 4 RICH SOIL AWAITING MOISTURE. | % UCHeE “rais would be without g flow | the carrying power and velocity of bubbles i i e tiaian ProIF‘::')v:‘:llfi:)nl II'.H:;\, b ‘.I?[‘"‘\p‘ college already has parts of the skele'on, such | Faowledge of geology taught that nature Far .Zm:q,;:::;|:ly”;’g;;yb:):";dl.:\h: tim fat any kind trom the pipe. Having clearly | will be rewarded beyond his most sauguine | who took part in it. - The Iatter, as they have | was found near the head of it ¥ creck qn |8 skuls, feet and llmb bones. The expedi P A R s B g L neaditis onigthe touch of water to make them | {kat any excess of air over the amoupt re. | SPectatons s shown by thelr actions, are;men of tender | southern Wyoming, about ten miles from the | {107 Was fortunzte cnough to secure an entire | 16 thont, WRO lenew WRCKS 16 TR0 for thom ot ol Y THE INVENTOR. susceptibilities, wbo feel deep’y any eriticism. | Colorado line. Sy £ vertebral column, as well s the ribs and o her party dug Y w rich beyond the dreams of men, a soil limit- | quired to lift the column of water to the top iy e L £ % tl rado line. = The reglon was once the bed | \/io ino narts, so that it {s now possible to | excavations. — Like prospectors they went fess in possibilities and inexhaustible. of the pipe will cause the flow desired, the | Mr. Priestly Is a tall, angular man, of un- | Anything harsh~grates upon their gentle m\t: of a fresh water lake. The sediment of the ount the skeleton of the @nlnal as ho a | torth, traveling through the deep cuts and water these lands that now grow only sage |size of the globules determining this result. | certain age, ~He may be 40, yet hardiy looks | tures. Consequently they have very naturslly | lake gradually accumulated through unknown | ™ g Rk 10 animal as he ap-| \ons which are found in the great basins brush and grease weed is Priestly’s de- The shorter leg In the U-shaped pipe, | 30. He s an enthuslast upon this growing | taken steps to protect themselves from fur-| centurles until it formed a deposit 2,000 to | Peared in mature. of the anclent fresh water lakes. The hones termination and the Boston and Butte people | which essential to the complete suc- | question of irrigation and came from the | ther annoyance, and to'Ahat end bave re-| 4,000 feet thick. 'The sage Inhabitant whose WOR X HORN were found at the bottom of the gulches or who are at his back are evidently impressed | cess of scheme, Is sixty-five feet, the | University of Kansas to take a position with | Quested their critics to seek fiew horaes, lest | remains are now disclosed to the eye of man| “This unitatherium was the last of a group | iy the sides of the cl o with the ability of thelr engineer, for $10,000 | tongue leg is 152 feet in the vertical. While | the Boston & Butte Mining company as a | there should be another fynching bee in the | was apparently drowned in the lak His | or serles of animals now extinct. He re- - has already been oxpended in harncssing the | there are sixty-five feet of solid water in the | mining engineer five or six years ago. He | Delghborhood. é body was presesved as in an Egyptian |sembled the elephant In size and had six Photographing Flying Insects. forces of these springs, that they may be | short leg, In the long leg the sixty-five feet | enjoys the confidence of his employers, who [ We extend our sympathy to these courteous | mummy cave. By and by the water receded, [ horns upon his skull. The longest horn was 4 it g ’ made to do something more than help fill | of water is scattered from top to bottom, the | are conservative business men, and I confl- {(enhllxr’uun in r:m‘|1u‘:ur of melr'nll:l‘i;uu;'.ml; new lurv, ‘)n-g.«n to operat nmummnw least twenty or thirty inches in m.,p. 'Thv F tm)h.m i ; n:pn!r 0 m\le I:u: e: the bed of the Snake river, romaining space being occupied with air. It | dently believe their judgment in him will be | is hard, very hard, for a man of delicacy and | streams rippled across the dry lake bottom, | One palr of horns projected from the the art of photography down to a much fine Tunnels have been run, into which the |becomes absolutely necessary. under these | more than justified when the great pump at | Fefluement to be criticised merely because In | great chasms were cut through the soft carth | one pair from over 3 eyes, and another is | basis than those of America and England, ter from these numberless subterranean | conditions to have excess of sixty-five feet, | the Thousand Springs commences its work | 8 moment of mental exhilaration he ""‘And the skeleton was exposed ou the surface | believed to have taken root in the back of [They were first to photograph flying bullets, streams are led, and by their force, and the | suficient to give a velocity to \he water of | for the greater daho. taken the lifo of & humg§ belng. At the|of a vast cliff. ~The bones were broken into | his skull. He bad five tozs on each foot, and, | race horses in motion and other rapidly mova other: “forces of nature, will shortly be|five feet per second. The air being at a| While the element of uncertainty plays no | Same time we submit that fman at all given | pleces and portions fell to the base of the |while forming an independent group of hoofed biect The latest triumph reported utilized in Irrigating some 1,500 acres of |standstill any excess of velocity of five feet | small part in the success of the pump at | to levily must find sometWing extremely lu-| clift Prof. Wortman came along in the ( quadrupeds, was very distinct from any now ing objects. The est A fi;: l; land, extending at least two miles back from | will Ty air in the separator tauk and | these springs, it was one of the great pleas- | dicrous In the protest. nick of time. His practical eye detected the | i; existence. This animal marked the decline | KoM l‘{;"»‘"-‘»' phuluxrld:;"l' v” a fly ".! 'I.r-:_uu the Hm rock that darkly outlines the course [ create the lifting force hecessary to force the | ures of my visit to this inter-mountain coun- Public Haths in Epgland. presence of an unusual specimen, but Who [ as well as the extinction of the order to which | 1Y bY M, Marey, in which the exposute was of the Snake. flow try to realize beyond the question of a doubt | Within the past two years the city of | ©an describe his joy as he stooped and picked | he belonged.” [N San SoRuSHAPATE O (e P e _ Along the tide of the wall rock and im VELOCITY OF BUBBLES. what irrigation will do when wisely diregted. | Birmingham, England, has built and is now | Up the tooth of a monkey? Proceeding, the professor to!d of an anclent ‘,'Iim“‘f .:‘r :'“ N..».'.::.',;: 'M:Y'L‘;' .{:‘:"f‘l.:'m ": Yiediately below the tunnels, into which the| “But how did you arrive at a positive so- | It was after my trip to Shoshone Fulls that | conducting four large public bath houses GATHERING THE FRAGMENTS. pig, whose bones were found by tho Dariy. | have photographed. the moving globules of former waste water {s now led, there are |lution as o the velocity of bubbles?” I in- | I became the guest of Mr. L B. Perrine at | Which have cost In all about $350,000. They | “The fragments of bones,” said the profes-| THS PIK 18 Known to sclenice an tho palueo- | Lioay Seciinn i the wetns and 1 have lmmense steel pipes chained to the rocks and quired Blue Lakes, the contrast between the tem- |are furnished with large swimming tanks | sor, “‘were many of them a&lmost as small as | 5Yops. The party was fortunate in securing ! getected difference in the motion of the leading down to a compressor which stands hile T bave not formulated a rule that | pestuousness and grandeur of the falls and |and also individual baths, with hot and <old | a pin head and it required many hours of | an almost comp'ete skeleton of this specles. v-rx..‘.u "1 .1E 7“ -uruu’ les. 3 on & level with the Snake river, its bottom | will bear close inspection from a scientific | the peacefulness and rostfulness of the lakes [ water at all seasons. Last year these baths | time and great patience to gather the pleces | Some of the pig specles, according to the | 0o o 404 coloriess Sorpuscies. Delng sunk below the river bed and standing | standpoint, still 1 may say that the helght | being one of the delightful memories of a | were used by over 300,000 people. For a | together until we -ould make one perfect | professor, attained almost the size of the | h upon solid rock, that the greatest anchorage | of the water above the top of the globule [ glorious summer's outing. Blue Lakes, | small fee—a penny or a half penny—a bath | whole. We gathered all the surface dift over | elephant. The most marked pecu'lariy of the | O Of the functionuries of Japan who ls may be oblalned to resist the pressure of | represcnts the pressure on the top of the | three in number, formed by subterranean | Invariably treated with great consideration | may be had by any one, experience havi of twenty-| r thirty feet cies was the possession of a single pair | n {he Immense volume of water, once the pump | bubble; the pressure on he bottom of the | Spriags, are situated six miles below the | shown that it is hetter (o make 8 small | and whshed 1t OGC sr the miny b Ee | o I the Nicinity of the mocte oo | | b, the preas of thb Countey. I8 KapNE AL EN 1s turned on. | bubble is represenied by the helght of water | falls on the north bank of the Snake river | charge, though the fecs do mot pay the ex- | the gravel for gold. Then we located the{horns grew to be thirty or forty inches in| ) gace aa Koo ed by th The water from these springs, upon the | <bove tio bottom of the bubble, the diameter | and furnish the water for irrigating a little | pense of conducting the baths. papers whose managers are -jugged by the original resting place of the skeleton in the length. The Ceniral park museum has a com. |ris: censor simple thing for any paleontologist to draw ]""{“ I‘l The story of the evolution of & complete picture of the representative of | !he horse Is one of the mo:t con- —

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