Fnjr- 1 HMHMHMMMHnMHMMHMHiaMHnMtMIIHnnMHMHMMr t lis ;' ! U l? hi lT DAKOIA ClTSf HKltALD JOHN H. REAM, Publisher. PAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, THE CORSAQE BOUQUET. A report from Paris announces that the paBblon for unbroken IlneB In wom en's garmenting has gono to such ox tent that during" tho coming senson not even so much as a bouquet will be permitted to mar tho symmetrical simplicity of the gown. She that would have a show of fiowers about her must contont herself with such ns embroidery about tho watst-llno can simulate Suggestion adds that slen der girls may weave whole garlands of silken blooms about them, but thoso of a plumpness must be content with a dellcato spray. Should this edict hold sway for any considerable period, thero will pass away from ro manco and from dramas ono of tho most useful as well as beautiful of tbslr Joint properties. Hardly any thing of a maiden's droBS has bcon'so often remembered by lovers and de acrlbed by novelists and poets as the corsage bouquot. In days of old, when real flowers wero worn, tho bou quet was generally a gift of the ador ing ono AFTER MD COTML MONO the many huppy hunting grounds In which I novo found mysolf during tho last thirty years, I know of nono which has Inter ested mo moro than tho Great Altai moun tains, where, last year, I had tho good fortuno to Bpoml a month In loarch of tho Ovls amnion. 1 havo laid Interested mo, and It should be understood that this Interest and ex perience wero from tho sportsman's point of vlow, quite unique, owing to the total absence of any natlvo hunt ors to assist, or oven to glvo tho least clue as to where tho groat sheep w f 6 might be found. It may bo superflu If tho lady woro It, all was ous to add that ono Invariably has well. If she did not, cither tho un scrupulous duenno had stolen It or tho end of swoet love was at hand. Even when artificial bouquets camo In there was a chance for love to use It ns a token and for beauty to wear It as a sign. It was something about feminine dress a man could rccognlzo at sight. It would be difficult to find anybody who remembers tho last fatal duel In this country. Tho dato was May 20, 1845, nnd the place a spot on tho shore near Gosport. Lieutenant Haw key of tho Royal Marines, believing Lieutenant Scton had paid too much attention to bis wlfo at a South Sea function, called him a villain nnd blackguard, threatening to horBowhlp him and attempted to kick him. Al though dueling had been forbidden by artlclos of war In 1844, after the hor ror caused by the death of Colonel ' Fawcett at the hands of his brother-in-law, Lieutenant Munro, in 1843, the provocation In the Hnwkoy-Seton case was such that a meeting resulted. Seton llred and missed. Tho hammor of Hawkey's platol being set on the safety notch, It would not go off. At the second discharge Seton fell. Haw koy fled to France. London Mall. tho Borvlceo and benefit of a second, nnd usually very keen, pair of oyes to assist In finding tho gamo and sub sequently to help in tho stalk. In the present instanco, however, it was a caso of single blessedness with a von gonnco. Tho reason of this nbsoluto dearth of local ahlkails Is accounted for by the rootod objoctlon which tho natlvo Inhabitant of these wilds, tho nomad Hassack, has to walking. To his Ideas It la not tho thing to do. Ponies nnd camels, tfguln, nro plenti ful, and tho Hassacks of both sexes, when on feet, shod ns they nro In a knooboot with n grotesquely high hool, stump along In a most uncomfortnblo mnnnor, ns though every stop would bring thorn down. Luckily, I hnd hunted tho big sheep before, and was fairly conversant with his ways, eo ono morning soon after Wf-f' . i-'v- vff i . ,r svr" nPZm -0' -.: i,' f'YA,& A'f ',"" '' IW's.S ft 4w " v K r. A3 1 A. w sJHb jm jrry?r m$ imWpar ll' TyffjBp:?jTR'', ? I , r WA V. I III I I II ".. iL'WflP'i iSrtv aAxxyytKWV.1 ... H fu -wwm i-xi M n.'r Mr. 'William A. Radford will answer luestlons and givo advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of building-, for the readers of this' paper. On account of Ills wide axpoilulico as Editor, Author and Manufacturer, ho Is, without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all Inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 178 West Jackson boulevard, Chicago, 111., and only enclose two-cent stamp for reply. Thero havo been royal Journalists as well ns royal authors. Georgo III. contributed seven nrtlclcs to tho An nals of Agriculture a monthly mnga tine, edited by Arthur Young. These wero published under tho pseudonym of Ralph Robinson, nnd, according to one of his biographers, "display a most profound knqwledgo of agricul ture." Louis XVIII. was a Journalist of quite another typo, says tho London Chronicle. For some years aftor his accession to tho thrpno ho was In tho habit of sending anonymous political articles to various Paris dalllos. Some of the opinions exprossed in theso were so advanced thut tho king had tho pleasuro of seeing them votood by his own censor. II sUKOY.- AA.j'GtjAV s. .WA. 'vffa4Tflflfa(jltv ttsjsss - "Z yjifttwr:ffw-r-"-'"- - 5fest &52?'&C?J?2:' EOX'f &&!& A Philadelphia pollcoman lassoed two drowning canoeists, saving them, and then drngglng a third tosafoty by the hair while another man helped tho rescuer by the feet. Ho evidently belonged to the ideal class of police men who remedy people's troubles be fore tho latter bnve a chanco to toll what they aro. Now that the senson of open win dows is at hand, tho man who swnts tho fly will bo tempted to trnnsfor his energies to swatting tho backyard ?fcat and the early milkman. A woman physician says that n ba by's sleep must not dlsturbod. This is eiiBy enough to arrange for; the trick is getting it to go to Bleep in the first place. It is a close race botwoon the man who writes seed catalogs and tho man who writes up eumnW resorts. Each Is trying to get tho furthercst from tho truth. dawn, I started off to search tho vnlloy, at tho mouth of which wo were encamped. The morn ing wnu beautifully clear, and I took mutters Bomuwhnt onslly, as .1 had loft directions for ono of our Mongol escort to follow mo up with tho lunch and my pony; for, as usunl with theso gentlemen, ho wnB late, and enjoying his onslly earnod "twelvo" hours' ropono. Necdloss to ndd, 1 saw nothing of him nor of tho lunch that day. Working my wny steadily up tho half frozen stroam nt tho bottom of tho vnlloy, nftor a whllo I mado out tho forms of two rnms at tho head of tho nala. They nppoared to suspect noth ing, and soon began to feed on tho new grass BhootB. Then two finer rams camo to vlow. I felt I was In luck, hut "thoro's many a Blip." Scanning tho rugged ground nnd looking Tor tho best wny to approach thorn I soon recognlzod that It was not such nn easy matter. To follow up tho Btroam bed, ovor tho snow and ice meant being Been. Tho left bUIo of tho valley, n filopo of broken rocks and shalo, was equally out of tho question. I thoreforo resolved to try tho rlghtslde, though not without mlnglv'jgs, on no count of the snow ulopos and forbidding-looking precipices. I concluded that If I succeeded in trnckjng this right sldo that I should bo able to work round and nbovo tho sheep. Aftor wnlt lng for an hour, tho lino benstB mado things soniowhnt easier for mo by feeding down aud behind a small rocky point. During my long watch I had been droadlng lest tho Mongol with I tho ponies should appear and senro away tho t h1ih..i ClHliitIlly llitx, IioWhVi.I', mill judging I knew my Mongol, 1 atnrtod off up tho stream. Soma Httlo wny on I mnnagrd to cross on n snow-bridgo, oxpectlng at any moment to disap pear through tho cqft anow. Thon followed a ! long and Btoady ascent over hugo boulders of broken rock. Intorsnorscd with soft, wot shale. . . ..i.i m. ... !.. ,,oro wnR whom tho local knowledge of tho mnn A treasury omcia warns u that on tho Bpot woul(, ,mvo boon ,nvluabl for l there is a new counterfeit 20 bill In ,md not ,,oon nb,8 up to thl() to dUcorn ,nnt circulation. Thanks, old cLap. We'll lo roftCh the high ridge Immediately nbovo tho be more caroful In handling our email sheep was Impracticable. A chnngo of plans was, change. thurofore, uecoBsary. HoKHng on, I tried to ecale tho rocks to tho right, which rocka, I am con- ! vlncod, would have dellghtod tho heart of nn Ibex or thar. Had a hunter boon with mo, I could havo succeeded In this clambering ascent; as It j was, I had to work down to tho lower ground Iuisiuii in hi uiuHu ma uuhi ui u uiui juu ncroBS mo nnon A ln1 e inn If ttit.A.l mit In Im.il.n. A ninghamton woman has beaten ;lUn on ,;ijm,r'ed d8 f h' , The Doston man whoso wlfo throw a pall of water on him while he slept has awakened to the fact that mar ried life is not always a happy dream. tho record for gaining equal rights with men. She was recently sent to Jail for whipping her husband. uuhi wmen tno snoop uau disappeared, to my disgust I discovered two rnms standing on tho top, staring straight down nt mo. Sinking slowly to tho ground, I sat motionless, Ono ram thon moved bohlnd tho rldgo, nnd tho other, having been Joined by a third, followed suit. Tho Inst thoop carried n flno head, and was very whlto evidently an old ono. Ab they had moved off slowly, I hoped that I might find them feeding. Those Cornell professors who named ' nml l)0 Btl11 nu, to Ket on tornm; but they took Why is it that tho youngster who looks upon a bathtub with fear and trembling will splash around a swim mln' hole all day? the seven modern wonders never will bo popular in Detroit, They failed to mention Ty Cobb. Olrla have no liborty in upholsterod cages, says a femalo agitator. Poor Uilngs, by all moans place them in xeed hampers. Lightning knockod off an Ohio man's hat the other day but failed to injure him. Solid ivory, it seems, is a nonconductor. no chnncos, and when I got to tho top of tho rldgo there was not a sign of them. I was Just about to retire when I saw n grand eight Sov erul thousand feet abovo mo wero my five rams, stalking quietly away along tho top of n stony rldgn. Tho lendor, who. was tho largest nnd whitest, had thick, massive horns, and they all, with ono exception, would havo mado n fine trophy. I congratulated myself on thus getting a second chance, nnd watched thera as thoy went "stlltlly" along, In the way they movo when scared. At length tho procession stopped, and thoy lay down onjtue steep sldo of the slope, from whence thoy commanded tho whole of tho valley. Off I wont again, over huge, Bharp boulders of broken rock; but I was soon held up on' coming to n large open patch of deep snow. Thoro was nothing for It but to wait pntlently and mako my ' solf ns comfortnblo and warm ns possible among tho boulders, After an hour or bo, about 1:80 p. m., thoy rose, strotched themselves, scanned tho wholo country-side, and again moved slowly off, away to tho north. They wero evidently in n nervous mood. Following them, nfter a whllo vl crossed tho snow patch, ploughing through the snow, which In places was up to my middle, and fol lowing lu the deep tracks of tho hord. It was stiff work, and was followed by a still stlffor climb to tho top of a rnzor-bneked rldgo. This I descended, the rnmn still In view. The ground horo was qulto open; but wild sheep unlly look for dangor from below, and I remained unnoticed. Thoy finally disappeared slowly round tho slope of a high rounded hill, about eight hundred yards ahead. I quickly started off to gain the crest of this hill, hoping to Intercept the gamo, but was doomed to further" disappoint ment. Tlieie wau not a Blgn of them. My aneroid here registered eleven thousand feet, and we hnd reached the highest part of tho downs. A cold wind was now blowing, mists camo rolling up out of tho valloys and it looked like snow. Taking up a couple of holes In my belt uud a pull at my. flask, I followed along tho north 'fnco of tho mountain. Avoiding the patches of soft enow, in which I noticed tho marks of sheep's hoofs, suddenly on tho oppoalto sldo, nnd some way below, I brw my five old friends, ovldently bent on shitting their quarters still further to tho west. Thoy must have got my wind. CloudB occasionally hid me from tho aheep, bo, under cover of these, I determined to make a dash back for less opn ground, and to move down nnd try to got In a shot. I had now been steadily on tho movo for over twelve hours, nnd had worked back towards tho open valley, though away from tho camp. My hurried movo failed. Now thnt tho oxcltomont of the stalk was ovor, I vented deep anathemas on the Mongol's head for not. having brought up the ponies. When within n mllo or so of camp I wnB mot by our whole retinue, who had turned out to conduct mo In. Search pnrtlos hnd gono out, thinking I was lost. Aftor n hearty meal of our standing dish Has Buck mutton I Boon turned In, nnd thus termi nated one of tho hnrdcBt and most pleasant dnys which havo fallen to my lot, nnd certainly one that I am never llkoly to forgot. The next few days I spent looking for those fine old rnms ugaln, but without success, fyr those '32SS&T GecwJYcy Z&fsH&CS' sheep, when thoroughly scared, travel manj miles, and successfully hide themselves. Leaving camp at 4:80 one morning, shortly be fore dawn, the two hunters and I had not been long at work when tho Kalmuk pulled up short, but too late, for we had been seen first by a flock of nine rams, who were taking their early feed on tho sldo of a steep ravine. Off they went, towards higher ground, but In no great haoto. Riding up to the ridge along which they had dis appeared, we dismounted, and soon viewed them again. They wero somo distance off, feeding on nn open slope, which nppenred to he secure from attack; but thero was one weak spot. After scanning the hord and noticing three or four good heads among them, I Btarted off with Husein to stalk. A warm Job It proved, up that steep, loose shale slope, aud tho pace was perforce slow. At length we made the crest, and took It easy to study the situation. The wind, though light, was shifty, but all seemed -well, for the herd wero busy feeding. They were what ap peared to be nbout one hundred and fifty yards off, but on a slope somewhat below us. The dlf tnculty wub to select the finest head, for to raise one's Belt more than enough to Just peep over would have soon ended matters. Under such cir cumstances ono is always apt to bo deceived as to which head is going1 to beat previous recordsl The question, however, was brought to an abrupt conclusion by the herd getting their heads up and beginning to look suspicious. In another second they would havo been off, so, taking a quick aim, I fired at tho chest of what looked liko the largest, as he stood head towards me. A rush and a stampede ensued across the soft face of the steep slope below us. .The animals wero so bunched up thnt It was impossible to pick out the largest, and the result of my three shots was to bowl over a moderate-sized ono only. The herd then disappeared at racing speed, and when next seen they wero in the big valley a long way bo low. We despended and cut up the dead sheep. ThiB finished, nnd tho old Kalmuk carrying tho hend over his shoulders, we rode off round the slopes niter tho herd, eventually pulling up and dismounting nt the end of a long spur. Here, whllo on the look-out, we suddenly Baw the herd, now only seven in number, come bolting back towards us, evidently disturbed in their flight by my fellow-sportsman, who JuBt then appeared onthe top of the mountain. The oves looked like charging straight at us, but swerved off and made up the mountain, except one, who, over como by fright or curiosity, forgot his usual cun ning nnd stopped to havo a look at mo. I heard tho "clop" of the bullet as It struck, and he Jumped completely round, then disappeared round n amnll spur a short distance off. Feeling quite elated at euch good fortune, I followed up, ex pecting to And the sheep lying dead. Imagine my disappointment he hnd vanished. There was no tlrao to bo lost, bo, Btarting the Kalmuk off In pursuit over the shoulder of the mountain, Husein nnd I took up the blood tracks. Twice during this latter proceeding I heard tho report of the Kalmuk's blunderbuss, and momentarily expected to soo him return smiling; thus, think ing all was right, we returned to where the ponies had been left They also had nil three vanished, leaving portions of tho flret dead shnop'c carcacs scattered about the mountain Bide. It was some time before we hod nil col lected again and the Kalmuk roturned, having, I understood, had a great chase after the wounded rnm nnd marked it down in a nala, not far from where wo had Btarted the day's work. Loading up tho ponies, away we went again, searching fruitlessly for a long time among the numerous nalns. Things looked bad. It was getting late, and wo were Just nbout to abandon the search till the morrow, when, ns good luck would havo It, the old Kalmuk stopped nnd pointed below as ho did bo. I was off my pony In a second, and, peering ovor, saw the fine old rnm, only .lust able to stand and looking very sick, nbout fltty feet below. One shot In tho shoulder finished him. It shows the extraordinary vitality of these fine animals that, though bndty wounded, he had been able to keep going for so long. My shot had Just missed the middle of his chest, and hnd caught him near tho point of the right shoulder nnd raked along his ribs. His boms measured fifty inches. Sometimes it is necessary to build a house to fit a narrow lot. As a general thing lots aro deep enough lo hold almost any kind of a house. Few lots In American cities aro less than ono hundred feet from front to back, but because of expensive stroet im provements they aro often squeezed sideways until houses got to bo very close neighbors. It is unfortunate that it is bo but wo have to take conditions ns we find them and make tho best of it. Sometimes these nar row lots aro in very desirable neigh borhoods, convenient for transporta tion and convenient for othor reasons nnd by building a house to fit tho lot such property may be mado very com fortablo and attractive. This design shows n houso only eighteen feet wide, but tho length Is thirty-eight feet six inches, exclusive of tho front porch. Such a shapo nee essarlly requires that one room shall follow another, sometimes with a very long dark narrow hall, but this plan avoids that difficulty by putting a room at tho back end of tho hall nnd by connecting the kitchen with the dining-room by way of tho pantry. Then tho upper part of tho house Is laid out with a bedroom In each end and a bathroom opposlto the upper hallway in tho center. This arrange ment requires that the bathroom shall be lighted by a dormer window, the design of which 1b very neat and at tractive. It adds a great deal to the appearance of tho house becnupe It Is ornamental as well aa useful. Such attachments mako up the difference between a common chenp looking house and a satisfactory, useful, orna mental habitation that is at once very pleasing and Interesting. So-called cottago houses with one gable end towards the street aro bb common as house flies In the cheaper sections of some cities. You may and contained modern menns of heat ing and with plumbing connections bo the different members of tho fam ily could keep th,.'rne',lves clnn. A great deal depends on the plan as well as tho convenience and tho outsldo appearance. It Is an art that seems difficult to acquire, tho build ing of small arttBtlc, comfortable houses, but It 1b an art well worth studying. Such houses should be a great deal more common than thoy nro. It would prevent families who like U 1 idedRoom I 1 . E3E5S PFV i Yuoi 1 DEDKOOM ' Second Floor Plan. live nicely from crowding Into flat buildings where thoy have neither light nor sufficient air. This Is an other excuse for narrow lotB. A fifty foot lot would hold two Buch houses and mako comfortable living quarters for two families Instead of ono. IN TENEMENTS OF CARACAS Portion of South American City That Has Witnessed Many Vicissitudes. In the struggling, shabby out skirts of tho old part of Caracas one may still trace the necessities of tho BtronuouB days when a man's houso had literally to be his castle, and no T,.! ' r 1WJ.MU - Ii ' - " . .. " ' . . . .j '.., " MIOV ' ,.'.....,,? :,w..Wivx-.,Cw'Aj.vAtrfi, w.vs srA-vX-.V.iX' count them by tho hundreds and they ore all practically alike; cliep tene ment looKing affairs, each house try ing to look as near liko Its neighbor as possible, without any attempt at Individual ornamentation. The front yard is usually baro of grass and thero Is a broken board walk at the side. Genorally ,such houses are boxod In with some kind of a wooden fenco that shows signs of weather wear and the dilapidated breakage caused by children nt play. A neat design like this costs very little more, but what a difference In appearance. The shape of the root and tho corresponding root over tho front porch with the proper placing of windows mako the difference In the outside uppuuiuncu. The colors kLLULbbKitchcn I IdedEoomS -Jgri RNTVl H s - By4" I 11 I OlNUJCECDklL I icAiiitf' r Y T"UVIN1 KWM j I -"l to'" U rbMH mere legal theory could protect It against the lack of physical Invulner ability. One may still see ih Hiphw. eled angles of defense, tho entrants and re-entrants, sometimes a notched wall, nnd occasionally an overhnnging macmcoiauon. mrougn the floor of which hot oil, water or molten lead could be trickled on the heads of the invaders. Often there aro loopholes, now plas tered up with sunbaked mud, whllo here and thero the faded, stained walls Bhow tho gouging spatter of some bul let, the souvenir of a stray revolution or perhaps merely tho remnnnt of some brief but conflicting lovo affair. Tho once gay red-tiled roofs are black ened and askew with ago, and wisps of desiccated rduro sprout from be tween tho cracks; ranks of Bhabby, rusty-black buzzards Rather on thn avails, scrutinizing in solemn vigilance the clattering slatterns about the patio well-curb, nursing their charcoal fires or beating clothes, whllo their plump and naked babies shuffle "together con tentedly in the dirt. It is the tenement-house district, the Whlte-chapel of Caracas. Charles Johnson Post, in tho Century Magazine. Used in Place of Bread Varied Substitutes for the Staff of Ulfo That Are Utilized by Many Peasants, -- In various parts of tho world tho nanrnr classes consume Httlo or no We refuse to be surprised at tho ' bread. linked loaves of bread aro claim that Jam can be made out of practically unknown In portions of pinHcb. Perfume te wade out of ' southern Austria nnd Italy nnd petroleum. throughout tho agricultural districts of Itoumtiuio. AustrlanB aver that, In tho village of Obcrstclrmark, not very far from Vi enna, bread Is novor seen. The ntnplo food is sterz, a kind of porridge mado from ground bocchnutB, taken ut break mentioned, but In Carlnthla nnd other parts of tho Tyrol. Northern Italy affords a substitute for bread In tho form of polenta, which Is a kind of porrldgo made of bollod grain. Polenta Is not, however, allowod to "granulnto" like Scotch porridge or tho Austrian storz. It Is Instead boiled Into a solid pudding, which Is cut up and portioned out It is eaten cold as (r fn8t, with fresh or curdled milk; at dinner with broth or fried lard, aud ut . with n Btrlng Biippcr with milk. This dish Is also often as It Is hot, and Is In every called "holden," nnd Is substituted for sense mnny an Italian's dally bread, brend not only In tho Austrian district ' Thoro Is n variation of polenta called mamallgn, the favorite food of tho poorer classes in Roumanln. Ma mallga resembles polenta Inasmuch as It is made of boiled grain, but it is unlike the former In one respect the grains are not permitted to settle Into a solid mass, but are kept distinct after tho fashion of oatmeal porridge. A woman ls sometimes fugitive, ir rational, lndetermlnnble, Illogical and contradictory, A great deal of for bearanco ought to be shovrn her. Henri Frcderlo Amlsl- Flrat Floor Plan. used In painting of course have a good deal to do with the final finish. A good combination of light shado of paint for the body with darker trim I mlngs carefully chosen to properly i match show to great advantago In I tho flnlBh of one of theso houses. ! It costs a little moro whon building l a porch roof to glvo It so much pro . Jectlon, but you havo got to do some thing out of the ordinary or when the house Is don you nro not satis fied with It. Every house should be built with modern improvements whether the house is large or small. More atten tion Is being paid to bathrooms with hot and cold water connection than ever before Tho time will soon come when a houso won't rent or sell unless It has what are generally termed mod ern Improvements. I have known mall houseB to rent for eight or ton dollars a month and I havo known houses thnt cost very Httlo moro to rftit for doublo that amount simply becauso they wero built attractively Tho Kaiser's Joke. During the German maneuvers re cently a company of dragoons was told off to represent a convoy of wagons. Tho kaiser, riding ovor the field of bnti tie and soelng a drogoon lying on tho ground, Bald to him: "Well, what are you lying down there for?" "I nm representing a wngon, your majesty," replied the sol dier. "Are you?" Bald the kaiser. "Well, got up and go and Join tho others I" "That Is Impossible, your majesty," said tho Boldler. "because I have lost ono of my wheels." Tho emperor burst out laughing and, giv ing tho man two shillings, observed, "Hero's something for you to got tho other wheels oiled with." Paris Ma. tin. Morocco. Morocco has a population of some 8,000,000, composed largely of "Arab Btock. Tho country Is poor In nat. urnl resources, being largely desert, though scattered about the territory aro fertile spots of great beauty. Tho natives aro hardy and by nnturo great lovers of personal Independ ence. Their religion Is, of course, Mohammedanism, but a Mohamme danism that has greatly deteriorated from that of tho days of the Arab glory in Spain and Damascus. It Is doubtful If the while man ever estab lishes his power over tho wide, wild. Inhospitable region of tho Interior. Tho lnducemouts for him to do bo are too few. Wi W'luK wwitorji'Mnwi t mriwir V V