The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 14, 1900, Page 13

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THE SUNDAY CALL. 13 thin' worth investig: fl 2 PR more dead insurgents in i e little beck: 225Nl 2 g further on. T heard tk 1t : & . ¢ 7 in' and.made tracks thre tore w o as fast as I could get o s s t dragged off the horse and n A deaf- the brush an’ thorns, an’ = B in’ uncomfortable close wi hat triend- flagh o’ Mehtnin® and =2 wh 5 = 1 o' nothin’ in particuiar, ambo a-singin’ around in 211 directions. It wuz feller hed throwed up his hands and was.ly zip o' theirs. Weil, the devils were ey & x sin X hte just a ahead, like a hornet's nest they hed run into, and fallin’ to the ground right ahead o' my. cornered and they hate the Macabees harrel leve t my t 2 > t o s nd give.a half-dozen o the ' o' the hornets were objectin’ like the dooce. horse, not more'n a hundred feet away. worse'n the Americancs. They wouldn't same mimute = ) 1 ¢ fouk ¥ s larmed like, and nger. He was Just about thet time the lightnin’ begin Then the Macabees went wild. They wuz surrender ez long as they i put W &% oo X wui'te ¢ " by s = a a 1 from ‘the scouts off to to flash, and light things up. We hed got goin’ after that camp o' Aguinaldo men to ghost ov a fight. I s Ughtnin® the f1a s rees the left. I hedn’t heard it at all. There into a clump of trees, a regular jungle, beat the band, clost handed, with their two of our scéuts layin’ dead and more v hed come up where hangin' vines wuz stretched across—long blades, and was prepared fur killin' of 'em fightin’ hand to hand with blades. poree jeap E ndud gl I 3 k gents of the music to throw a feller down, and the brush and and lootin’ to the queen's taste, but I I went tearin’ on in the d 1 the bit, fur I 1 . and there wuz some- things scratched us up, but we got down yelled out at 'em to stop it or they'd get horse and tryin’ to round up my sc with th. T hed all T could do to keep to fightin £ th pe ry time it and it didn’t take us long to Government bullets through their black fur some system of tin’ or withdraw- the dark al A middle Sambo. The iittle brown feller get them fellers runnin’. There couldn’t hides, and p'intin’ my gun at one o' 'em In’ until we could see what to do, but . o 1 war ol along. t like a hound after a hare. We a been many o' the insurgents, and I thet hed a woman by the hair I com- they wuz at it good and hard an’ I might ca1s especially s o ree hours ' over the slick grass, the blg guess the noise we made shootin’ into manded him to throw up his hands. Thet as well o' tried to get hold o' SO Many¥ pheard that g f big droy b » splash and $ fallin’ and my horse guessin’ at thelr camp made 'em think we wuz a put a stop to that kind o' business, but a whirlwinds. Nex' thing I knew I w self reel In the didn't wet he wuz goin' to put his feet next. whole army. A jagged flash o' lightnin’ lot o' my scouts were missin’, gone on the right in the midst o' the enemy - the A5 sl 3 he but In two or three minutes the fun begin, come acrost the sky, and I see three dead dead run chasin’ the fleein’ Filipinos. gettin’ fired at and two fellers w i down tHl it se and we could hear Mauser rifle bullets insurgents laym’ in the grass, and one “There wuz the dvin’ woman and some me With knives. I knocked one of 'em .4 yanded at gun hedn't hi jumped ove begin to git cor i’ in my face and fightin’ s with the ram b that howlin® st sin' on, T thought it o ne we run the o 16 “T shet my e 1f T wuz hu about done wuz saili whe nin’ showed me why. My d on tt. Af there, indul groan, as I tho I heard bushes, and brown form of a ward me ] looked mighty like through the b jagged streak . with hi toward me. en I n myself on a them darned s er the rou. on the st w b camp. The litt vuz beca " fral would wouldn’'t walk and to die any wa comin’ to kill me s to drag me out had gents to flight, what t 3 plng give them a c b Macabees wil g a windin'—all they need fs to t loose.” The captain of filled his pipe 2 five feet and though h entit’e him to th fean citizen o of which C: Twelve ars and two campaigr have left him a solé the greatest reluctan 1 has obeyed orders to g ton, where he is to be h charged for war s thrilling va tulles among then 1 , 4 kept to self, is th £ w > : y Macabebes. “It's pretty e regretfully: © warhorse like me stable. I'm © 1 you need up in the urse of the e yet.” NAN BY R R SRS S Y Have a &indow Garden e e = ) Jce JSteves for Heating. ENTHS of Wash the le week. A pi Showering th out of the p Imparts vig do not harbor of the indc fight. &WWW*H"WH’WWvM. Loosen the crusted ss the con- however, is that t the same for B B o s re Ice . t ts. The ro - it 32 degrees Fahr t first. Accord- theory has been suggested to dccount weather is unusually severe the barrels are sprinkled from time to time with ice peach, plum and walnut, sprout better In :f.‘hé,,p,fl» , th t b 3 s very reluctant to give up Ingly one r of the satisfactorily for the phenomenon, which are covered with puper also. ‘water. It has been noticed, by the way, the spring if frozen in the winter. ( . ‘}p s fon b e Henta, when it © s ab at the larg- is certainly interesting. ' It is suggested Clams and oysters are similarly shipped that clams or oysters in transit through RUGESRORC O S CEL Y S v atside the cyl es Dok lines cooling by the Weather Bureau that growers may sofl up as in paper-lined barrels, to keep them from a snowstorm do mnot freeze as readily as Our sun is a third-rate sun, situated in able merchan- derive suggestions of the ;utmost value freezing, and cars for transporting perish- when the weather is fair. Fish may be the milky way, one of myriads of stars, ® before send- from the weather reports and predictions, able merchandise are quite commonly kept sound and marketable for thirty and the milky way is itself one of myriads nor water f! Plants in hard acts as stoves, help- Tooms, In e thermometer inside. dise may per t for a wi device ,by which lce is Ng it on its ney. Oranges on the thus avoiding the shipment of their goods lined with paper. There is sald to be days after being caught, provided that of sectional star accumulations, for these = mn!smr_? et tien against cold con- trees will endure 2 degrees for an hour When a cold wave in Winter or a hot spell nothine like it to keep out frost. Eggs they are cleaned soon after capture. They scem to be countless, and to be spread "o oo 5" € upon the car whea Or two, but 1, hours will freeze in- in summer 4 imminent. shipped in crates with separate paste- are shipped by express In barrels with over infini At some period of their ": Slide vh: a near the zero point a side They ought to learn at what polnte on phoard divistons and covered with a ice,”or by frelght in casks or boxes on istence each of these suns had planets ooy ooy e h promptly freezes One recom tlon made by the the raflroad transportation is llable to be layer of oat chaff will endure & very low Wheels. circling around it, which, after umuhi plant windows a coat all over the Weather Burcau In regard to lemons is blocked by snowdrifts, and from the temperature. It is-observed, by the way, Ever so many little polnts of value'have ages, are fit for some sort of human be. "oy 0¢ ™ his prevents radiation of heat that in hotels and other places United " States "Geological “Survey they thay pickled eges are injured by cold more gold Is to a been’ ascertained by shippers of perish- ings to inhabit them for a comparativ able produce through long and costly ex- brief period, after which they still con- perience. For example, it is now known tinue for years to cirele around without that sweet potatoes and turnips must not atmosphere, vegetation or inhabitants, as In extremely 1 watering pot, Plants nee during severs weather tends to keep up Where q ties of them are used for can find out as to the altitudes of reglons quickly than fresh ones. It is & plan fre- lemonade apd other purposes they shall traversed by shipping routes. Of course, Thick or fat clams or oysters do not in the transportation of not be taken from the cold-storage room the temperatures encountered In Crossing freeze as readily as lean ones, and oysters h are particularly suscep- 10 & heated room. but shall be squeesed mountain ranges ere apt to be much lower ‘resist cold better than clams. “Shucked” be put togsther, because the proper tem- the meon does around our planet. Thecs el (Tict 8 Julekly after . Fruit of this kind is put in the oold-storage room. They lose than in the valleys. oysters, kept in their own liquor in tight perature for the former (60 degrees) is ls nothing so calculated to (ake the con g i T ,’f,»o?' .:.“.‘-t. , and covered with salt hay quality quickly after being taken out of = The use of paper for protection against barrels, will not gpoll If frozen in transit. too high for the latter and rots them fast. celt out of an Individual Who thinks him. of the room arnd give only,in the morn mperature is dangerously c0ld storage. cold is increasing very much, and its éf- When clams or oysters in the shell are Potatoes do best in double-walled cars, self an important unit in the universe ':s ing. Wat e evening during a One very curlous fact that has been fectiveness in this way is wonderful. frozen they should be thawed gradually p, = s to invite a visit from Jaci 1 eated by stoves to keep out the frost. astronomy. It teaches t cold snap is to in sit from Jack pers of fruit in the South Sscertained is that perishable produce, Fruit wrapped in heavy brown paper will in a cool place, Thirty-two degrees will not injure them . hat we are less, g out by experience that it such 8 frult and vegetables, wil stand endure 15 degrees more cold than without Oyaters in the shell can be kept two for eating, but will prevent them from or sts ia to ue. and veee (.. Sy I yowr plants, TN G tvae Chons ©% not do to take fresh fruit, especially & lower temperature when the car s it. -Potatoes are. sometimes packed in months.in a dark place,. when the tem- sprouting in the spring. On the other s Eoetn: tate. shape’ 2. SUAE SHSWE ML o overy : ! : ( between men ‘s less than that bet d leaf faded flower. Haphaza antaloupes, and load it upon in progress than when it is at rest. No barrels lined with paper, and when the perature is a little above freezing, if thoy hand, all sorts of tree seeds, Including one ant and another.—London Tru'n:"n 3:?; duc‘l n‘éi p:;’ with \;mr.“ r;;:n;a.“” compared with the universe, than acolony

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