Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e ——————————————a———_ DL O MAHA DAILY BEE; THURHDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1900, FROM PALACE TO NADHOUSE| st riv, ooe geite o tahe uo throuss |t 18 sbtiim o uris stoum e vumy PREACHER'S UNIOUEMETHODS The old plank road rumbled and swayed | Which steam was kept up continually | underneath us and the fiying sand cut our 1'” ables covor about a third of an acr o . . | taces through our heavy veils. When we|80d are built of ent stone, with solld timber " . N Tato of the Gorgeous Home of a California | gates WTuEh our heavy ve and the plank | foors aix inches thick which would not even | Subdues ' Untrained Horses and Preaches | Millionaire road the train was whistling behind us and | €reak it an elephant walked over them Gospel at Bame Time — Mr. Ralston whipped up a little more, as he The gas worke, reservolr and stables each' called ft. As a matter of fact, the horses | cost $40,000, and are good as new, as in fact | TRAGIC SUICIDE OF THE OWNER | needed no whipping, all they wanted was|are all of the improvements on the place, tho chance, and they seemed willing to do | from the main house down to the door locks the golng. After we got to the top of the |everything was built to I for all time, | Scene of Social Splendor, Champagne | grade and in sight of the ocean our speed | Scene of Great Fanctions, Takes Wi Mustangs and Makes Orgles n Lofty Kicking Given was again increased. It seemed as though| While Ralston owned Belmont he enter Them e and Then Talks Over to the Whims of every change of the road was excuse for |tained almost continuously. The parties Mental Wrecks, faster traveling. were of all sorts, from the quiet times when It the horses cannot trot fast enough[a few bright Bohemians were driven down they can run,’ was the way that our gentle- [ by himself in his private coach t - Money talks. Not ever in plain language, [ man driver looked at traveling gaits; it|theatrical troupe who were already being But in parables and between the linea |Mmade no difference to him how a horse trav- | entertained and eutertaining there, to the eled 50 that he got there grand affairs, such as the times when epe We made two changes of teams and the | clal trains conveyed San Francisco soclety eapital is timid an n a lagt one took us over roads which were | ®0 masse to banquets with Admiral Farra viclou @ blight upon Belmont, but says it 16 0t | bujle for the purpose, with easy turns and | gut or General Sherman, . 4 at the tn words, but thus well crowned surface. We lost a little on| Ralston, whether voluntarily or by acc : given daily . of “Belmont cost Ralston & million to|the train, as it made up time on the|dent died as a result of griet from ste ot Grmakk WIR e8k ulld 11 1% as go0d a8 new—but, Ralston | SUFAIENt reaches, and when it stopped at a | treatment given him by his old assoctates |5 y the Tt EQUALLY SUCCESSFUL IN BOTH CALLINGS to the Crowd of Religt who arrive relates the San Francisco Chronicle, for unique o of e ation we would be up with It again. As |At the time of the suspension of the Bank of ; ed the ost s life and fortune | at of the e P Yived there, 1 his 1 n we swung out of the long straight road | Callfornia. The Belmont place fell into the & Sharon | here, became entangl into the avenue which led to Belmont we |bhands of Sharon and from that time on to N¢% Mmethod troubles which drove him, miserable, to| L0 (RECEY DGTd Teot ahead of the |Bis death the magnificence of the entertain- 'DCFYAIS of wres oF b & Bin grave. It was tried as a school |, which wa slowing dowa as It came | ments vas redoupied engaged in preachiog fatled. Capital will not touch i {nte the Htatioh Sharon was in politics and the require., Mullen's method of tamy nd whic But hoodoos cannot harm mor omans | 00l il ) Lig we were clipping | MeDts brought nim under a wide range of | ¥hich he himself has per cbts, Th - - @ismay the lunatic and so the palace 18], "0y b rey branches that over- | social obligations. The guests of Belmont he never falls to apply WR CUEIECH "0 to become a madhouse, or in the milder) . ofo%e o ge (o P utitl hasy vale |during bis time ran the whole gamut of | treatment saves all pair fo "¢ AEEREL T words, “a sanitarium for the treatment | UOE Ee driveway. around it | the social scale from Mammy Pleasant and [ Mullen says, and 18 muc e untain rim result than apy other. The candidate fo ea Hill to General Grant and | G ervo a mental diseascs the roadway a heavy black smoke rol.ed | Earl Dufferin, governor general of Canada.| et/ MR B AR Lm op P raiier approach nd for the beau 1la 30 3 g end 1”. e ! it 1 LA !’ 1 \. TPEEL tHY BHILY BEw Wokks (hAL 08 Down the toboggan of time the house has | MOREH ¢ it A vty he Belmont house ablaze with 1igh me with a crash, from the gl s d 4 ou e fosane. There Jeast wildness and il Rdor i b B \ Tops Pigging. ob.n pe the 1o b |' ”r e ‘n (e Blerel 10 0 We drew up under the porte-cochere | Vhen gy soubrettes were put into c ”'V :N Vask is t0 get the p :‘;"”'h"‘ e ora never come o 8 prosaic end, [and bundled down hastily, for the horses | PAsne baths, on through the later yeats,| 0T T 8ot b i heg g gt it Bl . ‘the ground on | Were shaking off great flaky masses of | When as a young ladiés’ seminary midnight | W0 § i f Tta whole existence and even the ground on | weF | lather and the grooms were |1adder parties gave rise to burglar storfes |be done by reaching a tch 1t stocd has been a tangled mass of | f0Am and lather and the grooms ey ow, poc I ¢ | the broker b :':i,h, 1 b e G abtes xlous ta get them in the stables to cool. | U0t 0 poor old house, sold for a soug, | ! “..‘ y surprises and delights that did mot | “H i e NN BiS A i wrecks whose mental lights have failed is turned into & lock with with a halter 1k at han rancan lakes, romances, tragedies and wild | Mr. Mulle Iy strok.n adventures The mirrored walls which for thirty years rl\vl A the ¢ beautiful faces which| “The motherly housekeeper had my b pasted through California will now return things brought up to my room, which was BOSTON BARLD BEANS, v on the But the gin of (ha il nd the dark mask le third floor, overlooking a terrace of SFAEF T’ Bl Fal Mol madases tast he Might of rea- | OTange trees. A cool bath to freshen me |Mow New England Housewlves then Kupsisver riggmie oo Yv y¢ Belmont, hou to be made the | {rem the dust of the ride and then dress “1 e ok Rk B wrap the cente ind the son, for Belment bouee el 1n America, | foF dinner I delighted myself for an hour [ Of buked beans, the genulne New England | W1APS P C€8 O Tho tail 18 % H: | L‘I .1 1 ¥ 1 1 how! looking at marbles, bronzes and otl | kind, Sallie Joy White writes at cons d.r h ‘V t Ji‘ 1 .V‘l. r f lot M B AR o Al o Aintings whic ed the great lower floor, | Able length in the October Woman's Home | then braided, the s through, the § tul pillared halls of the aintings which filled the great lower floo a n int Oct rw an's H. Mullen metl m this poin There were some tweaty persons at|Companiou. This is the way she says the Mot f tollows the table, yet so large were the rooms, [famcus dish should be prepared L setstponinitur bbb Jaralandiid il unjustly suffer | 50 attentive the waiters and above all the The best bean to use is the pea-bean— | :\Q»‘\ PR P LAY A Byl from the swinging changes « brings | Powerful personality of the host so per- | Which s the smallest white bean that is | and coit's nd fasten in the ring o forth. as though every joy had a pain for | VA4INg that all meemed to blend and ccn- | Krown A ‘quart of the beans | the halter: put the other end intg o rog 1ts shadow aml one cannot bid the wel- | Centrate until it was like the smallest and |#hould be carefully picked over the night | Py b then the other end into a_rop come kuest without burdening himself summer ple ¢ of the great bonanza prin Houses, 1ike their owners coziest of family affairs. before they are to be used and all the|around the rump, which we will call No. 3 “The dinner, the waiters and chef had |SPecked ones removed. It the beans are | Take through t ack of No. 1, dropping with the othor | 4 the end’that ¥ t to the halter in » o BAve as | all been brought from the city that morn- | OVer a year old they may be soaked over | the EWG \EAL S It holding up Nos. Of joys the house gave mi It was Bight. (6 sotd the front of the ¢ still b p 2 s the custd ¢ ane water, water belng | 3'trom the bic Reach in front ¢ for nothing elso than to delight every | I0€, a8 was the custom when there was Srom the ba :::.‘ ,,’,r.,, ‘I, o emsen X million dollars | ADY 80Tt of a function. While everything [turned off in the early morning and re- | of the colt with No 1, then pick up the was spent for comforts and conveniences | Was elaborate it was apparently simple newed with fresh water, If the beans are | T and urge th ver brings 1 under the be T St o e, nf ot 1t S e oprtdy ol sl T e e, Uk st B L G B2 of His Roval Hichness terior, which was plain as possible, merely | none of the stiffness wbich usually domi- | Over night, as they would grow too soft | the horse, walk buck # e ¥ nates. An orchestra was placed in the |and would break and become mushy when | ht 1 the ¢ Ing 2 to weatherproof and shelter the guests . through the eye of : mezzanine floor of the reception hall and | ©00ked. a result that is to be sedulously | through the « within » ‘ . 1 'he most striking (hing one notices about | flled the house with its music. avoided. In the morning put them over the | to the ring of the I ‘ Ak S r e e lsmense number of bed- | “After dinner there were more arrivals |fre in cold water wnd parboll them very | 6f Neo b ond P the, = a -~ en Soonif: BVer MELy-Nve, (hi dumber | In_carriages of guests from neighboring | $1!&htly. Allow the water to come just to | through the t f th it e oh et viling nt 8k MAte0 and Hedwaod a boil, then take them off, drain them 'saft rone over the colte witl The Bouse 10 meny ways served for & Pl i through a colander and pour cold water | {en tike the qolt in, model of tbe Palace hotel and was itself | “In the meantime the great partitions be- | OV¢T them, rinsing them thoroughly. This w m \ the cause of the bullding of that vast car- | tween the billiard and dining rooms and the | *! PN EHRCL L LAe Vot i LR L | ecoption bt b oo raee an e dours |17 PIEY 16 have een bojed, but K G : Profusely Illustrated from Photographs Taken When one of the titled Enslishmen who |opencd between corridors and music room, | o' 0 RAGSIERS, FRERe BUCR (R fence (o vine apout e ——— visited there first saw (he place he ex-|so that we could dance round and round | 1% PREVEAE WBEE BIERCRE WIS T AR ERUE LU R W 2 = — — - e - pressed great surprise that it should be |the main floor of the house; something over | soft ground, with a high f denominated a palace. That was b re he | @ block the distance was. Some time we b not only rinses all the water from th 0 a hit the beans will have a much more delicate | him e cannot injure himsclf, nor yet got flavor and will be less likely to disagree |tangled in his own rigging H . . A SN BRsottA THUBHBE were under the bright glare of the myriad i s S b t ff A t t persol o has a delicate stomach| M Muilen completes process wit Fialion. MR tha: TomATk sadwas'pbuse | FISTIa8 glad chaadetiers, (hen glalng Iato| MLLo & fareon who BAR a dlicate atomacki| e Mullen compietebychis process with eciatl or the uccasion ur dSta rtist \& by it, for he had never called his home a | the semi-darkness of the corridors, where [ “.y R RO EREC L on 1 F distinetively his own. The it —— E— - = — —— " palace, nor thought of it otherwise than as | the moon, half screened by the big mag 2 s ¥y his owr rigging as de- bottom of the bean-pot and on this a small | seribed technically above ba ery pe- a comfortable summer residence. noligs outside, (hrew patchy lights on the | k T e onic pou! th beans. ave ready & | culiar effec ipon an anin endowed ® Py i & Ho said: “But T will bulld sometbing. | polished floors; from thero again back luto | ofice PO 1% 1h¢ BOARe. Have reads o | CUlar effect upon o auimel endowed with OO DD~ DD DDt —D e DD D~ O—O—D—D" though, that will be big enough to hold | the grand music room, whose mirrowed sides | © s . ol b : | pound, the rind scored overy quarter of an | to buck or kick the 'ropes show a very ? balf u dogen of their little palaces and show | showed reflections back and forth until the | boop ang % y =dar=-ben s ich, and put it in the pot with the boans, | strong tendency to dratw its mouth back to ectric eauties them that America, and California above | repeated figures vanished in the distance. 1 arranging it so that the top shall be eve its tall, the sure “énAng B he co all, s tho pince for human-achievements.” | had many partners that evening. Most of | P v 1 hen the colt ——— ith the top_of the be d' the rest | becoites more tractale, The broncho whi R 3 Nelmont Hospitality, them bad traveled and while they had seen | oot "\ vh‘:mm |‘1 ij 4‘:“:h“!"\ \:-rly \,u\'l‘m ooy i) PR R S b Oyal ChariOts Of the Carnival 0 makiog a display of temper speed 2 deeq | More elegance or greater size in European ed and partially lean very little salt | ily finds fts ng Jts tail in the man- " 3 oy Entertainments at Belmont were Indee castles or courts, yet nev einih il e ot il MU R SR Pictures and descriptions of the true hospitality. The house was built at a uch a combination of homelike 1 of a tea- | ner of a 1 time when (here were o Areat restaurants| fort, spacious apartments and Architectural | theomiul: Add ono salesohaentul or Sroend | sUryl by Aoiiys Mr. Mullen does not eighteen floats that will make up or hotels in San Francisco. Everything | elegance poot 4 -". 0! b * PAPOON ol " d | supy nself a k or an ex the wonderful = i Yas run o the pine shanty plan, for all| - ~At midnight & supper was served fn the | MUS1ATd. one heaping tablespoontul —of | horee, but sub Rt/ s ity it hi ul parade the only men sald that California was but a gold [ are gallery, while duncing still continued | Ernereicd SUBRT oF two tanlespoontuls of 1s not his complete guide to thes allegorical camp, and that when the gold was gone the | beneath us. RN b il dbpl b horee out or to in zling street illuminations. Photo- ut It Iy & matter of taste—cover with col L : Sl : R s graphic views of the enchantin people would go, too Looking down from the curved balcony Ll‘«.r set Im”u ioderate bYe m:lLln!;\f!;m animal that man i ’n”v Bk T s 3 T S BT . w tha soon as the rail- 5 thave Bdidet . ! master. In the : g et i e Ralston knew thal as soon a rall- | rails there passed a continuous stream of | from eight to ten hours slowly and |South Omaha pen beforc a crowd of drove an intelligent appreciation of the T Joie T B N T road was completed across the continent | gorgeously costumed women and men in | oy s S slaseran ol | suests on every sid there would be an influx of eastern and | evening dress or uniforms, all dancing, | ' | Mullen subd 1‘71 TR i gorgeous spuotacie; e H = European capitalists, and he wished to en- | whirling unceasingly and repeated in mir- | XoW YOnk: WATER. Mullen subiued tho wildest mustan in the ‘ tertain them suitably, that they might be | rors on every side, the only figures in re- — | Aoiiars semernarts S (A L b LR e d G e R 40 i ettt ’ more readily persuaded to invest here. pose being here and there & marble statue | Some l":‘n Will_Amaze by | peicast el beas lhl\x»'hw:n“:“\{.:\ u.u..\..: by the ¢ ¢ \z‘ were usually from elghty to orses, s | the activity with which in their lifelike- iy Ayt i i b owerin 108 hAnd-to-hand atruge H d C 1 d C Food 4a"couid o bovah. snd o Suntay | ness (he seemed rmdy o ke part .| {10 Croton dam (Croton ke wad | EONeTOE 8 ek o Nond-tobund siruee andsome Colore over Design mornings there would often be four four- [ “‘Before 1 o'clock all but the inmates of | T°%€rVOIr), 2 R 10 a g e b & V‘ horse coaches rent out loaded with guests, | the bouse had departed and wo were soon | L7 404 the old reservoirs was 0.000.000,000 |\ Walaink horses beforo o entered the to say nothing of two-seaters, buggles and |at rest in our rooms, for thero was to be | 41004 Croton lako holding s R i he e raating SAa80s: Horaes & coaching party to the ocean the pext A . his FERAT e e L] Ralston helped build roads ull over his|day and an early start was to be made. sourieyirsasrvoiss: Bodorm nd Reb/iA ik Seliblo saRkiliytend - has preschey 2 Jaltien heiped wulld ronds al ovar ble | day sad an eary alast wAs o bo made, |riou Diieus, Caramer had Amawalk hopd | £9091 . trained hirve. 1o ‘Boury: svens Program Rise and The Board bedded highways which he prepared for [ after the European custom just as we hap- | O, fUtUre needs at any hour 32,000,000,000 | western state since e left the Chicago head- public use are still tho delight of bicyclists | pened to drop In. The gentlemen waited | E21I0D8 more. The storage reservolr in|durters of the Instituto twenty-seven of the Week HIStory of of Governors nd automobllers who perhaps never heard | on the ladies and the delightfully uncon- | CCO'F®! Park has in reserve over a billlon Although he has somewhat Ot the name of the man who comstructed | ventlonal recalling of the experlences of the | 410 (e Bronx syatem reservolrs 5,500,000,- | fallen bebind in his expense account Mr. Tabulated list of the Kfllghts The chief manage: ¢ & ¢ day, | Mullen believes tha the boulevards that have made San Mateo | night before crystallized that beautitul | oo m07¢ 8tored up. not ugainst a ratny day, | "o et A o b i i L1t “Bante. Clara such favorite outing|dream fnte & mass 6f rekliiis seritiful | but agatost a succession of dry ones moro than enough good in his clerical ca- I». gala events scheduled Interesting historical § ment of Ak-Sar-Ben is The new Croton da © Cornell dam, as | PACItY to cover the shortage. i grounds, which will never be effaced from the mind The new Croton dam, the Cornell dam, as | o cover the shorta Mr. Mullen | In the rear of the house is a large Turk- | of one of us as long as we live. “‘n‘:dfl, “',""1’ "\‘”:,"‘;n‘:":\ A "'“'","“‘;"“1;' { ::;‘ ]:;;:.;].i\:‘,:‘:,',‘,';‘,']”.",",‘,"' his tour by bls ¢ for al'nusc-mcut SRd ons !ketc:lhOffui% orisin "“d Vfiltefi I B bt b Woro uests and even 1o MDY FegUIAT In- | seen brought togethor for 'n drive ang. tg | TLCT, Will come against this and back up |In & reunion of bis old clussmates, all of » royal guests during ¢ tion that has made iteelf 4 the governors are and on which floated & little boat. Descending | light lunch taken in hampers, returning in | = : the annual carnivals it has held > by a concealed stairway from the interior | time for diuner ® 18 { Croton lake, covering over the old dam. | hIs exhibitions and gospel services for sev. g week. in Omaha for five successive § FOrtraits of the governors ln Carnival week sees Omaha ablaze with novel electrical effects in daz- - of the house one found a landing at the| “For myself I preferred to stay and in- “m\‘lllfll,‘,',' e (‘“{,,\l,:"‘.y.l..n(yfl.;".:\\:.;x:z :':‘ ;w‘f‘vlmth'”"""'“ at Sixteenth and years. review in full regalia. bottom and from there might take a trip | vestignte the house and grounds, which | aqucducts will be its outiets. It will back Mg . B e o = S it e DD with candle torches as on the lake in the | I felt as though I never wished to leave.” | gater" up among the hills sixteen miles| THo Wolf ta the fabie n sheep ec es | iy o Mammoth Cave. Gaiiitaoa o ] teries. om its plug o o sites of e | ClOthing because it veled on his ow There is no one spot in all California inidbes from its dam, wipiug out the sites of three | 8 ise It he traveled cn his own There is a ch abo he place ch | old villages, d crease the storage | Teputation he couldn’t accomplish hi . ' s which has more of the essential romaNOe | oo “over” everyane, and ‘et witn 1 sl | copacity wo-thirds, bringink it to To00 | Pose: Counterfeliers of Dewitt's Witeh | A Pictorial Magazine of Twenty-four Pages Harney of the state centered about it than this old . there I8 a fatality B such as 000,000 gallo ad elf 30,000,000 000, | 114%el Saive couldn't sell thelr worthless | O B atality pursuing, such as that |00 gallous, adding itself 30,000,000 000 helr worthless | which destroys so many b it : eno resources aud these areatly | #31ves on their merits, 8o they put the | Surrounded immediately by the gnarly o many beautiful women With the o ur and th greatly hey put them in Nobody could 1i o plac e+ 34 ORSGN PoLBT i el ey boxes ans wrappers like Dew, o £ ol oaks and brown hills, which make so much | hopoo?, €ould live In the place without 1 opportunities of storing up a e wrapp e DeWitt's. Lok F belug tempted to strange d eccentric eserve of water st evil times em. Take oniy DeWitt's Witel of our scenery, and in the distance, all | § g0 _snd Atk O TANRTYS of water agelost il tim h adventures. It makes the workaday world | of drouth, it may be an occasion of surprise s : Hazel Salve. 1t cures piles and all skin | & R 5 :,‘.n::‘ ';(.‘\‘.:Tm‘;h;: "x!\llllyvl".‘.::l.ln‘mm" MOUB~ | yeem unreal merely to wander through the | that the near future will certainly need | 36cases | l\ 4 The Oyal Coflsort Kiugs of the Realm pillared halls; to walk from roo oom. | additions on a larger scale than ever be- = ———— The exterlor of the house, new and star oom to room. | additl n a larger scale than ever b ou renings where the 4 Hobson in Washingto " ‘ . tng yet, although It Is thirty-Ove years old, | ioUSH 0Penings where the walls have dis- | fore WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.eLi .(‘) t The queen chosen by his majesty Identity of the potentates who have swayed the sceptres over Ak- Bar-Ben's hosts in the past, with portraits in which the kingly fea- tures can be readily recegnized. 00 gallons a day is near at 014, | gppeared up into the cellings The explanation is to be found in a few hioutensnt | shows not the least softening of time. Two | “'myo houe ta full of surprises and mys-| fluminative figures o domanis of New | Richmond P. Hobson of Merrimac fame, who | , < S g :.‘“,l: M Z.I‘nwx.l‘,‘;“.‘yl;.:;‘.n \lv”.l..h.».\ 10.Klyo] cotias AR B T AMANFERMON 0. s0re \‘l” BAEYS e ‘”‘l-m‘ 'T“!“l“"‘:l !\”1 yl,, Just ret ‘m trom \1“,’M k in the| .V.\ + oach year rules the feminine mem con arge Is the surface, i A S il L g o ) et A1 | Orient, passed through Washi 3 P . mis- of three-quarters af an acre and 18 10UF| 40" then Lo ool the foora und wails x| it of T Ak s Whlle heie Licutenust Hobson ¢ ’ n ¢ tress of the court ball. The queens orles 18- DARtS, With &0 eleve and tremb some valve is opened and | official 000,000 g 1 denials of any on. Lo ¢ § 3 which runs by water power from a lake In| 4" tpundering torrent of water is poured t g ot R g ork of Admir s AN e of past years illastrated with the mousisia, into it from the lake on the mountain S TS Houn : e ¢ "\ 2 « o | erease he hour when New York will call o . 44 hand trait Helmont in Glor, The search for water in this dry canyon | for 200,00 v andeome poriraits. The following Is an extract from a let- | was the greatest undertaking upon which |hand: in fa 18 8aid 1t will be reack eutenant received the 3 ter describing o visit to the place in Ral- | Ralston entered. At first he had tried |in a year or a little more. bRy : ard the recommer \ ol et O ston’s time small wells and springs which failed. After g for his herc tiago. He r * ¢ & “ had heard many wonderful | that a tremendous cavern was excavated | Ru r 1 pnsistent, | emmended that be advanced eight num. stories of the Ralston home sui of the | in the mountain side back of the h se | Philadelphia Pres: My dear,” said the | bers for th xploit, and it is exy ed the magnificent entertainments ihere from my | and lined with masc All of the rai cusational clergyman I want you to |recommendation will be renewed jn his an- older sisters, who were forevor mentioning | Water from the roof was led into this, but [ Write to all the city editors and ask them | nual report Belmont as Cinderella’s sisters did the | still the supply was Insufficient. A di to send representatives to the church on| It Is understood Lieutenant Hobson, who party at the prince's palace mond drill from the mines was then set [ Sunday to report my sermon has fondness for line duty, would prefer to “Mr. Ralston never took the train to Be to work in the valley near his private “‘\h[ “Very well,”" replied his wife, who was II. transferred to the line and have his ad mont works in front of the house. At a great|}s0 his secretary, “what do you propose | vancement made there instead of in the| There were several reasous. One was|depth and before water was reached the | !o Preach about?” | staft, and it is probable that an effort will (hat he aid mot Nke the railroad people: | drill struck a ledge of jasper which re I will strongly urge the abolition of all [ bo made to comply with his wishes in this he sent all his freight by steamer, having | Sisted all efforts and finally it broke off, | Sunday labor.” | respect I ar e uantiti s bought a wharf for that purpose. Then it | useless. e ° was inconvenlent to arrange bis business to| A shaft was then sunk and from the suit the exactions of & time table; but, mos! [ bottom of it a tunnel run across the can of all, his reason was that he could beat [ yon and extended far under the monntains the traln any way, and besides there was|on elther side. No water was found, and 3 > : 5 . . the glorlous fun of coaching the tunnel is still there to mystify some 7 Send CO les tO Your Frlends “On this particular occasion the coach had | future geologlst : ’ gathered us up, & party of ten, and called | His final and successful plan was to buy | J & 19 A ol i i L A for Mr. Ralston at the bank last of all a mountain tract across the valley ull‘[‘ / A “He took the reins himself and the driver | bulld a large stone dam, fifty feet high, | B BB Thre s only ONE POND'S EXTRACT and sverybody knows s purty bad barely time to spring into a seat on the | which created an artificial lake that has B strength and great medicinal value. rear before we were off with u rush, for it | given a perpetual supply ever since. frmgh o Don't take the weak, watery R . . L ! itch Hazel preparations represented to be * the same as" POND'S was his purpose to go out the Mission plank | i'rom here the water is led across the| M o m PO! Toad and take an even start with the train | valley in & six-inch main to the subter | EXTRACT. They generally contain ** wood alcohol,” which irritates ; - - e s - FOMARARIERR AR prss. Wy o g Pl g e PR o M Lt the skin, and, taken internally, is a deadly poison. b “In those days wind blew and sand flew in | under the house, and also to smaller ones Get POND'S EXTRACT, —— -- - — - 5 . \ fan Franelsco as it never does now and Mr. [ on the hill above A separate system of Ralston made the excuse as we were going | replugs all over the bulldings and on the (V] ' ¥ out Miseion strect that he would whip up a | roofs are directly counected with the high Al Mitle and get us #ul of the bud weather, for | pressure of the water from the mountain T