The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, September 16, 1898, Image 6

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    THE AMERICAN,
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It ar.aaa in ft 'in lulu p
A ftf xw 1 1 t fj if l l i a a , ,
t.al iif.t,.t It ltt MlH.
ti. t, ml i.,. K Ail .In at ,
'f kllKl i 1.1 ll.IV l.
Mala, a l,n-.i' n il,r r.
rV.narlhti.it h .laf ii'i.mM,
I tiaa Hi!,, a., Hltlt IIH-,
Ttt Ml.1v Hi.,.' I,. I )...,!
t fill, mn r av )imhii
Ilia I to llylil, n Iii hiI
11ml 1. 1., I. !, ii'xii . I. or,
'ir ti.i.rii ti
una. li t i ii ti iIh y
Mud' all Hie va-ai
puma iIiIiir rati , , . a
f alii.liu.a Ht'il i f nl,
To link In i Ina. r I an.-
All human 1'int'i. ilioO'l
Oh, thiia th lirawi'ly trill
Vaa all inm iln li, I, (iri; ,
V"r a inl il.r.l nrrv day
Makra tl....l all tha. )mr.
How Thar Maw the I'rf.l-I. lit.
Tha rrcmiiftii to Arm Thl After
Immiu." So In liol.t l)ir Hip I'littlln
adgr aiiiiiiiiniril lo IU'a (liatt K lrti
erjr morning l,a raiiitlit h imiinlii
llmii- of It on her way tltrniitfli t ho
library. Kite hfalmttil only Iniix eitoiiith
to Ifad: "The rrealiitnllal Train lo
Arrive at 8 I'. M." and thfii hurried
6 to the diilon, whtne nhn rH Jennie
M and took the train to the rlty.
hr thfy were attrnillnK a alfrt
arbool.
Th topic of conversation all inllfa
looi-from Hharon Hill to I'lilladeli.lila
a all about th pmldent, who waa
to adilrrai tb unlvtralty alurlrnla In
tb AraiUmy of Miulo that nlyht.
"f) Jt-nnlt," aalil Hum, "w will b
fet tht Kmail Hlrrrt Platlon when Ma
train arrlva. Reboot la over at half
pant two, and hla (rain I nut dim un
til thrr oVIock, and our train do not
Im until thn-it-arvrnlrrn."
At rrrraa, at Itinclifou, and at (linni
luring atudy pi-rloiU all that day thra
Vaa on aliaorltlng thought th prral
mt Hut at lt the trdlotia l(-oni
irart flnlihcd and arhool wa ovt-r for
tb day. In a whirl of Mi-lti-mnit and
ipiancy two lilt In girl hurried with
fell ponxllln iHtd to th atallon. Thr
tby found tvrrj plara rrowrtfd by
hrlng, yelling atudpnla and the pub.
lie In (eneral. The aldewalka. at reft ,
and the atallon Itnelf. were thronged
With people eager to ee the prealilent.
It waa with great difficulty that the po
lice managed to open an avenue
through the nutea of humanity for the
travelling public to reach the tralna
rady for departure.
!( and Jennie, with the aid of a
policeman, managed to puxh their way
Into the atatlnn and eecure a poalllon
that gave them a view of the call from
the tralna. Here they mood, each with
ena eye on the arriving tralna and
the other on Ihe din k. And m every
pt!ng minute brought the time for
tb departure of their train nearer, and
till the prealdentlal train win not In
tight, they became fearful leat they
Bight, after all, fall to tee him,
In ronaeijuence of the crowded con
lltlon of Ihe alatlon, and the great (II f
flculiy for women and children to
ratvh the tralna. a rumor waa atarted
that aeveral of the way tralna to near
by poind would not leave unfll after
the arrival of the prealdentlal parly,
Which waa not expected until quarter
paat three. Thla order, or rumor, In
eluded the eeventeen-mlnutea paat
tbree train to Kharon Hill,
It waa now thirteen mlnutea pant
three, and hardly had Bea and Jennie
ralM and JoyouHly expreaeed their
"bpproval for uh arrangement, that ,
eemed apeclally favorable to them, j
wljeo they heard above the din of the ,
"Vaklng frowd: "Aharon Hill way i
train, gate number three. All aboard!" j
and looking up they aaw the handa of .
tba flof k pointing io quarter paat three.
"0 IleHi, only two mlnutea, and auch
crowd to get through!"
O Jennie! We will mlaa the preal
Jent!" almoat aobbed Ileaa In her dis
appointment. liut already they were puablng
through the throng. Ileaa leading and
Jtnnle rloeely following In her wake.
All Of a audden they puithed through
the rrowd, and before them opened a
Wlda avenue lined on either aide by po
Itcemen and leading directly to the
- (ate, Down thla run lied IW-a, followed
by Jennie. One policeman reached for
tnem aa they pataed, but they escaped.
On tbey went toward their train,
Where they could aee the conductor,
with watch In hand, ready to give the
Ignal for departure. Thla edit fur
ther hurried their movementa and at
their utmoat apeed they were ruahlng
toward the goal, when tbay plunged
unceremonloutily Into two gentlemen
walking arm Id arm.
"I beg your pardon!" eacaped the
well-nlght breathleaa pair, and aa they
beard. "It U certainly granted.' they
looked tip, and behold! It waa the prea
Ident who had apoken. and by bla aide
Waa the provoat of the unlveralty.
They dared not atop for a aecond
look, but rushed on, while the crowd
ent up a deafening shout of welcome.
"0 Jennie! to think that he apoke
to ua; and excused ua ao kindly!" aaid
Besa, aa they aeated themaelvea just
aa the train began to move.
Should they live to be as old aa
thtlr grandmothere, they will never
I a'li
I ' i., t 1 i I t
II .' ' ' I I . r, j .1 f .
t '. '. !' ( " ' '
'Hi l. .t It- I It'll. ! I I f'
i
t "I 1 i
't. t,...t '
1.'l. . . .
. h At,.!
ft a i i a
t.-l 1 I it ii tt h
t ; ' I .III tie I It- t tlf 1
..in i ! l i -n ai I an
I 41 . I I f. t I. ! . I I I III t
,,,t , l,i urn ' tint .tr (
i i f , ...il l . I
ril.il i In t.t b lir hll'
ttl ali. I , it I
I .I 'll I li mp 1 l....r I . ( 'K a .1
f 1 nmr tij, mi' ' ti.it little i
Mat oil Trim ..ui (ilt u it
i..f .,., Kill. u liMlt' Itft
ne all tin tt.l,
t.-ti llillr in tti ' -
linn I li' " ,il, l,nlh-i Nil
'iaiit- )t'tt 1 1 1 ti r f I tl.ittt ajr
'ttlll I
It
ili.a if
li (,' "
" Wa,"' it. ilu 1 r.l Hta'rr Sue, "an It '
'nut Von ali-ied tin lit ao mm h oi
illi.ainil 1 111111'"
Hut bnl Tit Volt gitraa I'llrle Jtiltil
enlil-' A 11 I lie iiMtia to latae riri-n-lion
i mi l nit m mm) gn-nl gi
tli ti. Rlnl an lie iinrlit to know. In V
tear.
'Tally." be aald. vity anlemtily, "II n
bcrniiHe you pulled ihi'lii up! You
pulled up even weed and you iulltl
lip every eprouted roppv ared!"
"Ha ba!' ahtnt'ed llruthir Ned.
"lie! he!" I.iiiiHh-iI Sue,
"(-oh!' mill r.'ilty. In aurprlae. And
then abe rnn awny lo buy aoine more
aeeilH, only thla lime they were naa
tiirlliinm. "Kttr they'll be big enoutfh
to aee them." abe aald. Margaret
Dane,
What Mtaniim a tienlleman.
"In all queatlonH of manner a young
man ahould alwaya remember that
while pollleneaa la a good trait to ac
quire, courage la infinitely better,"
write Kdward tlok on "What Make a
Gentleman" In the July Ladle' Home
Journal, "pollteneaa la mannrra. but
courteay la heart. Mingling In good
aoclety can give ua the veneer wh!h
the world ralla a pollah of mannera,
and true pollteneaa la not to be made
little of or ecoffed at. Pollteneaa la a
fine art, but la an art pure and almple,
even at Ita beat. Infinitely better la
the cultivation of that courteay of re
finement which enlera Into the feellnga
of othera and bolda them adored. What
we want our young men to have la
courteay of manner not reguluted by
aoclal cot'e or profeealunal censor. It
la aa much the current coin of good ho
clety aa It ever waa. More than any
other element or grace In our Uvea, It
la Inatantly felt and recognized, and
haa an unfailing Influence, It ralla for
reaped aa nothing clue doea. Courteay
of manner and courteay of apeech are
the gtfta a young man ahould culti
vate." A l.lltla Mathematician.
"Eight long furlonge I've gone today!"
With evident pride aaid Ethel May.
"Three hiimVd and twenty rotla, you
know,
la what I've been," 't waa Urother Jot.
"One thounafiil aeven hundred nttd alx-ty-true!
80 many yarda I've walked," mid
I'rue,
"Five thoirvand (wo hundred and clti
ly feet
I've gone," uld Hen, "and It can't be
beat!"
"I'ooh!" laughed Ted, with a knowing
amlle,
"You've only gone, each one, a !"
A. F. C
(li.l.l ami ( rliimm Tnnit.
"1 here are trout In Whitney creek, a
tributary of Kern river. In Kana.tH,"
aaid a veteran New York angler, "tlie
like of which don't exlat In any o flier
water on the face of the globe. Thene
trout have their abode In Ihe upper
water of the creek, and It I not In
vaded by any other breeda of trout tli it
unarm in the watera below, alniplv
beiauae they cannot get at II. About
alx rullea from the head of Whitney
creek there la a waterfall 1M) fc-t
high. The rock down the face of
wbkh the water tumblea la aolld and
amooth from baae to aumtnlt. There
are no protruding ledge nor any hoi
Iowa by mfina of ahUh Ihe other
trout, with leap after leap from leiUe
to ledge and hollow to hollow, could
acale thl precipice, aa ther (In ut
thouaanda of high waterfalla elite
here. C'oneuenlly the trout about
the fall have never been dlaturiied
by Interloper of a different variety,
and they live by themaelvea In th
pure, cold water, a moat aplendld fam
ily of freab water flah.
"Tbeae trout are literally !iepang!et
with burnlahed gold and daahed with
apota of the brlghteat rrlmaon. The
flrat time I ever aaw one of theae trout
I actually thought It had lieen ifeco
raied with flakea of gold by Ita mi
aeaaor and that Ita red apola had been
heightened In color with the bruah.
Hut thla la their natural ornamenta
tion, and when they are taken from
the water and the aunllght atrlke
them they glitter and aparkle like a
harlequin. They are called the golden
trout. Their hablta are the aame ae
thoae of the ordinary brook trout, wl'h
all Ita gamy qualltlea. Their flenh hu
the aame flavor. Their aplendld beau
ty la what placea them at the head of
thi great placalorial family, famom
for Ita beauty. How thla rare varle'y
of trout came to be alone In thoe up
per watera of Whitney creek la one of
nature'a myaterlea."
And They fthoot to Kill,
So accurate la the range finder useit
on American ehtpa that In a recent ten
with two ehota the projectile foil
within thirty yarda of eath other at a
distance of twvlve mllee. Both would
have hit the bull of a fhlp farther th in
the unaided eye could reach.
i. -nV
fc$l.t ta-t
1 1 It't Itni-nt ll.Mr n M-
1 l In I inn . 1 ll 111 an a H I'
' t I u t ' l I I. (l In tlx
,1 nt thl it'-annre tt:ii,ht l-r pi.l ' 1
' i M .i nn ti. tint. . ..I tlit- l I
' i l' I It.a.f ta lut l tliil l '
tii!.,i tiial'l iiea)l to
b ,! h i f I hti r ait t .HI (. a t .t III .'
HI nil 1,a In a I. mil Iht-n bil a
l.i n ..:i.( t in i unit a 'll.J I
;'l in 1n. and ri and n'lttr I bin
in tbta mil civ and l.lii'llieit Willi
uhiiMiat Intuilatti a- No It airina ih'
I'lef , had tiiiitilt to roinpiu
111" reattlta mllh. lttiat good !
iiilil'f. be kboiild htv.' b;td one ''b
f lint noil H limit in, i n ii t and an
i tlo r in hi ih the mnituie
II ami derply Into the ami. ll-'ie m
'nllal MU...li. i,e anil on mi
h II In tula. N iiiiiii,uhUvi ly thin. a.d
titibaa i cated fur I aixm exlini't
ed. Win n exbnuated It I oft n lo K
Inte.l and allotted to gully, mid ibi'
clay front Iheae gullie In apread out
m the lower level In ml In tttitny p'tt'i
Here on tuy own farm I have at I'i-l
thtee well marked cane. In two it
the caae the gullba occupy atimelb n(
mar one-fourth of nn acre em b. and
reach an extrcnm depth of about fi
feet, and Ihe clay I apread over ti
area of aomethlng like an acre, u
Ihe other caae the gully occuple -in
area of about one-half acre, ha tn
extreme depth of about 10 feet, 'and
the clay la apread over about 2 '4 or
S acree. Thee patche of made land,
from hlllaidea where only very poor
crop can at preaeut be grown, com
prise decidedly the moat productive
land I have. While the hlllaidea will
not make, on an average, 10 buahcla
of corn to the acre, thla clay, taken
from them and apread out, will easily
make CO with an ordinarily good aea
on, All the rropa I have aeen grown
on auch land are more productive there
(ban on any other kind of land we
have. Thla la ao decidedly true that
I am thinking aerloualy of compelling
my hill land to waah and apread the
Hay over the bottom and other level
placea. The queatlon, however, la nol
one of the fertility of clay, but of the
treatment of manure when applied to
(he loll, Shall we leave It on top or
plow It underT The recommendation of
the beat authorities I to put Into the
oil and not on top. On top It act
primarily aa a mulch, and, of courio,
would often bo valuable for that alonj.
It acta aa a manure only when the
olii hie part I carried down to th
roota by rain.
If one la to Judge by the color of
the flood water that runa off from a
field where the manure haa been left
on top a great deal la lot by leach
ing. If one I to Judge by amell, n
large part of the nitrogen, which la
the mot valuable cotiatltuleut of ma
nure, and la alao the part mot likely
to be needed by the atoll, la being core
tantly evaporated from manure that
I apread on top of the ground. If ma.
nil re I plenty and tho noil needa a
mulch more than It doe manure, it will
bo all right to leave It on top. Hut moat
of ii are ad!y In need of manure u
manure, and can get our mulch cheaper
by good cultivation.
O, W. M'CLX'Etl.
(lallaway Hulie.
A recent publication, laaued by th
Galloway breeder, any: The hldea of
the Galloway, when taken at the right
lime In the fall, and properly tanned,
make excellent robea, quite equal to
the buffalo robe of the old day. Thla
Ii becoming an Important trade and
profitable one. Acruatomed aa tho
(lalloway ha been for generation to
ao outdoor life In a humid climate, he
ha now an excellent coat of warm fur
with a long wavy outalile covering, and
a abort thick moaay hair below, mak
ing a beautiful robe. For the north
and northweat of our continent, where
winter fur are ao much needed, the
(lalloway offera an excellent winter
covering. Tncy make good, aervlceabM
coat and Jacketa, worn by boih men
and women-fur cape, robe for the
cutter, and ruga for the dwelling. 8l
dom a pure black, they are often a
warm rich dark brown or a brown
black- or vary In ahade between the
two. For thla purpoe brindled one
would be valuable, though now rather
uncommon. The writer lately aw a
fine brindled robe aold In Quebec for
eighty dollar. The brown trlpe
arroa It were a clear aa thoae of a
tiger akin. At one time brindled ani
mal were quite co.nmon, but cince th
fanhlon haa act In for black, other col
ore have become rare. Other color
may be Juat aa pure aa Ihe prevailing
black. The Calloway black la not a
pure black, The. calve when f)rt
dropped are uxually a dark mahogany
brown. The undercoat of fine hair of
ten keep thla tinge which I clearly
aeen when the coat I being hed, A
very deep black la more frequently
fuund among balf-breeda. The rich
brown tinge la a good ign of purity or
blood. Many famlllea have more or
lee white on the udder, and a few
white patche on the underline aa well.
Othera have a few white balra acattered
through the hide, often not notUed,
but the trait may run In a family for
gcnerationa. Belted cowa are tlll mit
with, but are not now a common a
they were In the early ycara of thl
century. Then there were whole htrd
of thl be'ittd race, which bad a good
reputation aa milker. One herd had
mark white face and white atrip'!
on tfce ba?k like Hereford color. Dun
or light drab are atlll met with, and
red a are not unknown, but theae are
becoming more and more rare. Oft
cold U no proof of want of purity of
blond.
Our Boolj
A NT I-ROM AN HOOK 3.
"FIFTY YF.AM3 IN 1 1ll CIU'RCII
OF ROME." by Rev. Chaa Chlnl
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WHICH?" by J. T. Cbrlatlan; cloth,
fl.OO.
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ROMANISM AND THE REFORMA
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'Air
1 x
THt rOPULArt LlfJC TO
IEADYILLE, GLENWOGD SPRINGS
ASPEN, GRAND JUNCTION
AND
CRIPPLE CREEU
Maaohae all the prlnolpnl tawrt nm me
Ing otmpi In Colorivio, Ohm unu
New Meiino,
CABS C 6 TH ROUOM
SALT LAKE CITY
IN ROUT! TO ANO FROM PACIFIC COaST
THE TOURIST'S FAVORITE LINE
TO ALL MOUNTAIN RESORTS.
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and Tuurltt Hli-cplngl'iir.
Tut elatiittill)' lllmlralavl dearrtptlTe hoolultna
of coal, aililrt-
I.MEFFERY. A. I. HUGHES, I K. HOOPER,
rmtaodOillrr. Tnlcluurw. Oaair.ttui
DENVER. COLORADO.
To far I outtiimtlon rarevar.
Talte Caacaret Ciimlv Cathartlo. Hicor5fv
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To quit Uilnvco eaallr and torr ver, tie maf
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FAMOUS
Tho Jesuit Party in
Exposed and
Win n M rtrs .'f t i-clit It ttrn wriUru l-y lUSlIOl' X. Cl K !
j I.AN1 COXK, of Uullulo, Nw York, to the Pal AMrgnli.
j Tit is little 'itiii.lilt t contain. 72 pngt-s of
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uRev. Mother Pose.
A Bishop and
Two Priests."
Price in Paper Cover
AND
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CONVENT
SECRETS 9 CONFESS ONAL
BY R. L. KOSTELO.
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Americanism
or Romanism,
Which?
J. - . ' ."V
VK
Jti aV
.Ji
r ' -as.. . i'
UWfSi
A.
J - -- - achoola aa a K-xt-ixKik."
" " Nurtii Vurolxn lUtiuut.
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