The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 07, 1880, Image 2

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    s
Fplre.
, ana tuzgcu
liothouzht.
.. el train."
i wna ncarlv dead.
Anil thin, an J old. and crnv.
Quoth Hon: "Theru'M no more bnrci work
You're lit to lo. I'll pay."
A barrolf ul of nut he gave ripe, rich
And liip, hut oh!
The pquirrH'H terns ran down his checks:
He'd lost his teeth, you know.
.Sort J American.
A .STAGE-MtlVEIl'S STORY.
Fourteen years ago I drove from
Dahbury to Littleton, a distance of
forty-two miles, and as 1 had to await
the arrival of two or three coaehcrs,
and I did not start until after dinner, I
very often had a good distance to drive
after dark. It was in the dead of win
ter, and the season had been a rough
one. A great deal of snow had fallen,
and the drifts were plenty and deep.
The mail that I carried was not due at
Littleton, bv contract, until one o'clock
in the morning, butthat winter the Post
master was obliged to .sit up a little la
ter than that hour for me.
One day in January, when I drove up
with my mail at Danbury, the Postmas
ter called me into his ollice.
Tele," said he, with an important,
serious look, "there's some pretty heay
money packaged in that bag," and he
pointed to it as he spoke, lie said the
money was from Boston to some land
agents near the Canada line. Then he
:uked me if I had any passengers who
wore going through to Littleton? I told
him 1 did not know. "But suppose I
have not." savs I.
"Why." said he, "the agent of the
lower route came in to-day, and he
.said that there wero two .suspicions
characters on the stage that came in
last night, and he suspects that thev
have an eye on this mail, so it will stand
you in hand to be a little careful this
evening."
He said the agent had described one
of them as a short, thick set fellow,
about forty years of age, with long
hair, ami a thiek, heavy clump of
beard under his chin, but none on the
side, of his faee. J did not know any
thing about the other. I told him I
guessed there wasn't much danger.
"Oh, no, not if you have got pas
sengers all the way through, but I only
told you this so that you might look
out for 3"ottr mail, ami also look out
sharp when .you change horses."
1 answered that I should do so, and
then took the bag under my arm and
left the ollice. 1 stowed the maifaway
tinder my seat a little more carefully
than usual, placing it so I could keep
my feet against it, but beyond that I
did not feel any concern. It was past
one when we started, and I had four
passenger:;, two of whom rode only to
my first stopping place. I reached
(iowan's Mills at dark, when we
stopped for supper, and where 1113'
other two passengers concluded to stop
for the night.
About six o'clock in the evening 1
left iiowans Mills alone, having two
horses and a pung.
I had seventeen miles to go, and a
hard seventeen it was, too. The night
was quite clear but the wind was sharp
and cold, the loose snow flying in every
direction, while the drifts were deep and
closely packed. It was slow, tedious
work, and my horses soon became leg
weary ami restive. At the distance of
m.v miles I came to a little settlement
called Bull's Corner, where I took
fresh horse. I'd been two hours
going that distance. As I w:is going
to start a man came up and asked If j
was ;oing through to Littleton. 1 told
him I should go through if tho thing
could possibly be done. He said he w:is
anxious to go, and :is he had no bag
gage, I told him to jump iu. and make
himself as comfortable as possible. I
was gathering up tho lines when the
hostler came up and asked me if I
knew that one of 1113' horses had cut him-
oli badlv. 1 jumped out and found
that one of the animals had got a deep
cork ou the ofTfoot. I gavo such direc
tions as I considered necessary, and was
about to turn away when the hostler
remarked that he thought that I came
alone. I told him L did.
"Then where didougct that passcn-
ger
r said he.
"He just got in," I answered.
" (lot in from where?"
"I don't know."
'Well,
now,
said
the hostler.
"" that's kind of curious. There ain't
been no such man at the house, and I
know there ain't been none at aiiy of
the neighbor's."
" Let's have a look at his face," said
I. "We can get that much at ain
rate. Do 3011 go back with me, and
when I get into tho pung just hold
3our lantern so that the light will shine
into his face."
Ho did as I wished, and. as I stepped
inly the pung, I got a fair view of
such portions of my passenger's face
as were not muffled up. I saw a short,
thick frame, full, hard features, and I
could almost see that there was a heavy
ljeard under the chin. I thought of
the man whom the Postmaster had de
scribed to me; but I did not think seri
ously upon it until I had started. Per
haps I had gone half a mile when I
noticed the mail bag wasn't in its place
under im feet.
"Hello!" says I, holding up ny
liorses a little, " wherc's my mail?"
My passenger sat on a seat behind
me, and I turned toward him.
"Here is a bag of some kind that
slipped back under ny- feet," he said,
giving it a kick, as though he would
shove it forward.
Justatthis moment my horseslumber
cd into a deep snow drift, and 1 was
forced to get out and tread down the
snow in front of them, and lead them
through it.
This took me all of fifteen minutes;
en 1 got m again I pulled the
I ba0" forward and got ray feet upon
jt. As I was doing this I saw the man
taking something from his lap, beneath
the buffalo, and put it into his breast
pocket. This I- thought was a pistol.
1 Jiad caught a gleam of a barrel in the
.tarlight, aid when I had time to re
ject I knew I could not be mistaken.
About this time I began to think
-nniewhat seriously. From what 1 had
Vc .Cittl and seen, I soon made up mv
' 1 fcftttbe individual behind me not only
' "",-Bted to rob me of my mail, but was
V,ared to rob me of mv life. If I re-
ittrteA fete fe would shoot me, and
arfeap ne meant 10 penorm mat
-r inritttmV operation at anv rate. While
A poadecng the horses plunged
r -ttUr "snow drift, and I was again
to get out and tread, down the
them, x asKea my pas-
if be wouldn't help me, but he
Aa1 Aa- wll rt1 TrllI'f" f-TX
cjr well, " ""Uiiui J)
d alone, and was all ot a
of an hour getting my xeani
ft-ike 'drifts.
tinto the sleigh again, I
' tnr' ttio mnil hoor Willi mx
JTJiMMLit where I had left it, but
led to withdraw my loot
k.had become fast insome-
rht it was the buffalo, and
in to
e more lore-
r YiTnrv HntL
such wishes was only a
n --' , -.
I quickly gave it up, and
to consider what 1 had better do
under existing circumstances. I wasn't
long in making up my mind upon a few
essential points. First, the man be
hind me was a villain; second, he had
cut open the mail bag and robbed it of
some valuable matterhe must have
known the money letters 13' their size
and shape; third," he meant to leave the
stage on the first opportunity; and
fourthly, he was prepared to shoot ma
if I attempted to arrest or detain him.
I revolved these things in ray mind,
and pretty soon thought of a course to
pursue. I knew that to get my hands
safely upon the rascal I must take him
wholly unawares, and this I could not
do while he w:is behind me, for his
eyes were upon me all the time, so I
must resort 10 .stratagem. Only a little
distance ahead was a house, anil rn old
farmer named Longce lived there; and
directly before it a huge snow bank
stretched across the road, through
which a track had been cleared with
shovels.
As we approached tho cot I saw a
light in the front room, as I felt confi
dent I should, for the old man gcneral
I3' sat up until the stage went by. I
drove on, and when nearly opp'osite
the dwelling, stood up, as I had fre
quently done when approaching diffi
cult places. I saw the snow bank
ahead, and could distinguish the deep
cut which had been shoveled through
it. 1 urged 1113' horses to a good speed,
and when near the bank forced them
into it. One of the runners mounted
the edge of the bank, after which the
other ran into the cut, thus throwing
the. sleigh over about as quick as though
lightning had struck it. My passenger
had not calculated on any "such move
ment, and wasn't jreparcd for it; but
I had calculated and was prepared.
He rolled out in the deep snow with a
heavy buffalo robe about him. while I
alighted directly on the top of him. I
punched his head iu the snow and sung
out for old Longce. I did not have to
call a second time, for the farmer had
come to the window to see me pass, and
:is soon as he saw 1113' sleigh overturned
he had lighted his lantern and hurried
out.
" What's to pay?" asked the old man,
as he came up.
" Lead the horses into the track, and
then come here," I said.
As I spoke I partially loosened my
hold upon the villain's throat, and he
drew a pistol from his bosom; but I saw
it iu good season and jammed his head
into the snow again, and I got it away
from him.
By this time Longee had led the
horses out and came back, and I ex
plained the matter to him iu as few
words as possible.
Wo hauled the rascal out into the
road, and, upon examination, wo found
about twent3' packages of letters which
he had stolen from the mail bag and
stowed away in his pockets.
He swore, threatened and prayed, but
we paid no attention to his blame.
Longce. got sonio stout cord, and
when we had securely bound the villain
we tumbled into the pung. 1 then
asked tho old man if lie would accom
pany mo to Littleton, and he said, " OJ
course 1 will."
So he got his overcoat and mufilcr,
ami ere long we started on.
I reached the end of 1113' route with
1113' mail all safe, though not as snug as
it might have been, ami 1113' mail bags
a little worse for the trick that had been
played on them. However, the mail
roblier was secure, and within a week
he was identified by some officer from
Concord as an old offender, and I am
rather inclined to the opinion that he is
in the Slate prison at tite present time.
At any rate he was there the last time I
heard of him.
That is the only time I ever had am
mail trouble, and I think that, under
all tho circumstances, I came out of it
pretty well.
PERSONAL AT LITERARY.
Miss Mauv Axdeksox has just cele
brated at Long Branch her twent3'-lirst
birthday.
It is announced that Mark Twain's
latest work is not for sale. It is a girl
an innocent at home.
Mb. W. T. WitioirroN', the English
composer; who died atTunbridge Wells,
was the author of "Her IJright Smile
Haunts Me Still." He was iu his sixt3
fourth 3'car.
Mi:s. M.vuv J. Holmes, the prolific
novelist, is traveling in Scotland with
her husband, and while on the way is
reading the proofs of a now novel called
"Chateau d'Or."
Miss Dkiw Fletchek, the author
of those charming novels, "Mirago"
and "Kismet," is "about to publish a
new one with the striking title of "Tho
Head of the Medusa."
Mit. Hell, the inventor of tho tele
phone is thirt3'-two years old. He re
ceived a large round sum for his in
vention, besides shares in the corapan3'
as consolidated, and ho has a salar3' of
$23,000 a 3'car as an electrician.
Bket IIakte is well satisfied with
his new consulate at Glasgow. He will
pass some weeks of the summer with
Froude, the historian, at his residence
in Devonshire. He is engaged upon a
novel of countrv life in England,
whose scene is laid iu Devonshire.
At his county scat on tho Hudson,
called Ardsley after the old homestead
of the Field family in Euglaud, C3TUS
W. Field has nine separate habitations
occupied 03' himself, his son, and lws
daughters. Four other houses are oc
cupied b3 his relatives.
Maksu.yll O. ItoBEKTS, the New
York millionaire, began life in a I0WI3'
manner. Ho kept a ship-chandler
shop, and was glad to retail tar and
oakum to the North River boatmen,
but he got into the California trade and
is now one of Gotham' s solid men.
Puof. B.vikd, the Fish Commis
sioner, is said to be an insatiable novel
reader. When he goes away for the
summer's fishwork he takes with him a
large valise of two compartments.
One is filled with the paper-covered
novels about to be read, the other with
those swiftby disposed of, where his
famih may browse at their pleasure.
When it is remembered that a "fish
story" is a synonym for a relation of
fiction the suspicion of an incongruous
mind will be removed.
Girls A-flshing.
The Philadelphia Bulletin gives tho
following a an accurate report:
"Oh, I see one!"
"Where?"
"Oh, mv, so he is!'
"Let's catch him!"
"Who's got the bait?"
"You lazy thing, you're sitting on
my pole!"
"Oh, something's got my hook!"
"Pull up, 3'ou little idiot!" .
"Oh, murder! take it away!
take it awav, the nasty thing!"
Ugh!
"How will it ever get our"
"Ain't it pretty?"
"Wonder if it ain't dry?"
"Poor little thing! let's put it back
again!"
"How will it get the hook from its
mouth?"
tncr-
Jlccicic:
furnish manv
nious hypotheses and i
lo those whose sole
was to make the h'wtorv of man
In America conform to revelation,
Ztoah s ark presented itsell as a conve -
nicnt (Uua cz machina. Lescarbot fails ' tain property. The document occupied
to Jtee why Noah should have exje-r abont five minutes in reading, and mi
rienced any difficult" in reaching nutelv described the initiation of the
America, when his reason is remarka-
oie "ooiomon
la-jting three
is that the sons
ica bv land; while Orno, m order to
m . ... ... . .
show that one human pair was equal to
the task of populating the Old World
and the Xew, assures us that "one
woman can in 210 -ears become the an -
cestor of 1.647.04G person." In nup-
port of a derivation from Noah, we are
constantly referred to the tradition of a
foreign origin and the native Hood-
mvths. According to Iord Kingsbor-
ougii, who is a willing believer
tilt.. I ri. Ir....3 ,l.. H..........
.r in Scrip-
a tradition
of the Deluge bears " unequivocal marks
biift .Aijtiiisi'ii;;', tiiu .iicAitau iimiuuu j
01 navmg been derived Irorn a Hebrew
source. Hut there is little reason to
doubt that such of these traditions as
are not wholly spurious are in the most
essential parts "improved" by the
Spanish chroniclers and priests, who
were not unaccustomed to draw upon
their imaginations for their facts. As
a sequel to the llood-uiyths we come
upon traditions ot the building ot a
tower of refuse, and this has led some
writers to identify the Americans with
certain of the builders of Uabel. who
were scattered over the earth after the
confusion of tongues. Indeed, tiicrc is
no limit to the fancv of the chroniclers.
Kuerites. the chronicler of Guatemala.
fives an interfst.in- aer-mmt. nf tlm
fabled descent of "the Toilets the
builders of main- of the finest structures
of Central America from the house of
Israel. These amusing stories and
spec
the
leculatious have their counterpart in
more or less frivolous theories
which arc put forward in later times
without the excuse of being warped by
a religious purpose. The Celtic theory
issupporteduponcharacteristicgrounds.
It is based ujion the idea that our old
friend, the elsh Prince. Madoc, son of
Owen (fwynedd, established his co!on
in Mexico, and the proof of this start
ling assertion is threefold: " First, the
Mexicans believed that their ancestors
came from a be.tutiful cjuutty afar olf,
inhabited by white people; secondly,
they adored the crois; and, thirdly1,
several Welsh names are found in
Mexico." In further corroboration,
various stories are told which are .sup
posed to point to existing traces of the
Welsh colony.
Hut all tiicrc theories of the origin
of American races from an Isr.iclitish
stock, or from a Kymrie or a Gaelic,
may be safely dismissed us tho fruits of
misguided enthusiasm and perverted
ingenuity. There remain, then, three
hypotheses, each of which has its
strenuous advocates tiamebj: First,
that the American races arc autoci
tliunic, and this was held In Agasiz, in
accordance with his doctrine of mul
tiple centers of creation; second, that
they are of one blood with the races
inhabiting the Eastern continent, from
whom they were separated 13' the sub
sidence of the interveningjand; thin!,
that they represent a migration from
Asia by way of Hehring Strait or
across the Pacific iu lower latitudes.
Either of the first two In'potheacs,
could it be proved, would harnioni.e
many apparently conflicting circum
stances connected with Mexican civili
zation. At the same time it would
give to that civilization the peculiar in
terest which must attach to an inde
pendent development, presenting a
curious and suggestive parallel to that
with which we are familiar. True, there
are striking resemblances between the
architectural styles of American and
of several Old World countries, and
slight, but scemingb real, though iu
fact fortuitous, points of affinity in
language, while a consensus of tradi
tions shows an aboriginal knowledge of
certain countries be3ond the sea in
habited by "white faces." Hut this is
not overwhelming evidence against
either the Atlantis or the autochthonic
theory, and is as nothing, indeed, com
pared with the proof that can bo ad
duced against anv of the other
theories. It is difficult to sa3' whether
we may expect much new light to be
thrown on this phase of tho subject
from future investigation; but Ave can
rest assured that a nearer approach
will be made to tho truth on the ac
quisition of fuller and clearer knowl
edge, Marriage Fees in Russia.
1
If we may judge from an anecdote in
the Smolcnsker Hole, there are parts of
the Russian Empire in which it is no
easy matter to get married, owing to
the autocratic wilfullness of the Russian
clergy. A schoolmaster in the district
of Jueknow was engaged to wed tho
daughter of a landowner iu the neigh
borhood, whose wealth was not at all
proportionate to his acres. The bride
groom, bride and the parents of the lat
ter called on the priest of the laity's
village, in order to settle the amount
of the wedding fee. The clergyman
fixed it at twenty-five roubles. Cnhap
pity, the bride's father was determined
to make a show more in accordance
with his ancestral dignity than with his
impoverished condition, and invited all
his kinsfolk and acquaintances from far
and near to attend the ceremony. The
result was that the procession to the
church included no fewer than eleven
carriages, all full of wedding guests.
When the priest saw this magnificent
preparation', he hurried to the bride
groom, and informed him that the fee
for a marriage of such pretentions
would not be twenty-live but one hun
dred roubles. When the man pleaded
his poverty as a schoolmaster, the pas
tor replied b3 pointing to the signs of
of his father-in-law's wealth. The wed
diug party held a consultation, and, in
dignant at the priest's conduct, re
solved that the whole procession
should drive oft to the next village.
The priest outwitted them, however;
his messenger arrived at his brother
cleric's door long before the lumbering
coaches, so that when the3' reached the
church, and asked the price of the
sacerdotal function, the parish priest
was ieady with the repty, " one hun
dred roubles." The procession started
again for a further village, but the
messenger had been there before them;
the priest of the place could not marry
them for less than one hundred roubles.
The experienced a similar discomfit
ure," according to the reports, at no
less than four village churches, and it
was only after a long drive across the
country that they succeeded in finding
a "little father," who readily consent
ed to bestow the sacramental benediction
of matrimony for the fee which the
ladj-'8 own pastor had.originally asked.
London Globe.
A Sew Kiak in Scotca Law
Ox Sunday an extraordinary scene
!ook place in Irvine Parish Church.
During the siuging of a hymn, previous
to the commencement of the sermon, an
elderly man of singular appearance en
tered the church and attracted general
notice by his strange demeanor. Clutch
ing by the middle an old umbrella, he
walked with a determined aspect up
the area of the church, claiming audi
bly that he intended to occupy the min
ister's seat. This pew, which is situ
ated well to the front in the area of the
church, was completely filled, but nev
ertheless he crushed himself into it,
compelling one of the occupants to seek
rt Inrdlmf nnlnioh Am..l. ihM rom.inf Airtii.nr If -. BC XlOv qllHO
-zwtfr u m0 -fj -.'' - MM . vm - -w . - -w - ,
f , 4Mr.,t V'.ISU tf VAJitfllUVi fclii; DMr.Uil.M 9UVfl. j ..- t . - . 1 .
of Noah reached Amcr- nl.inorr. he toot an extrcmelv lonir ! -acre 300 uosu
eat. Having hurtled himself
thu position, he waited patient"?
until the conclusion of the hymn, but
no vooner had the minister rUen to an
Bounce his text than the man arose and.
taking from hU pocket a paper, he ad
dressed the minister by name and com
xnenccd to read a long statement pur-
porting to be an interdict forbidding
certain lawyers and others in Irvine
1 from proceeding with tho sa'e 01 cer-
property down to the square yards it
.9 . . ..
handkerchief
frr i ruuLif nnil Ii
gan
J"W. i
i measurement. When the man hail fin
A If 4 IVt ' . .- 7l v v w
iM.nlil l.mtnnafrifinn r1 f hit
isbed, the minister quietly asked some
1 of the office-bearer to "remove him.
which wm accirdinglv done without
' any disturbance taking "place. He stated
I that what he had done was in pursuance
of an old ecclesiaUic law. entitling peo-
j pie to claim publicljr in church any
property of which thev were threatened
to be di.-posesel by "legal action. The
" police afterward convej'ed him home.
hnindurgn bcouninn.
Trials of a Tramp -The Effect of Dr.
Tanner's Experiment.
Dkjectkdly he
e appeared at the back
n hugenia .treet -
UWI"lk m m uti uii;iia -fc.vfc i
mournfully told his pitiful tale. and.
with a deep-drawn sigh, seated himself
at the kitchen table to attack a break-
! ' fc before him by the sympathetic
cook, a lent y, out uexierouoy, ne
stowed awa3' t'ie cold ham ami fried
potatos. while his entertainer re -
g.irded him with wondering compas-
sion and kept an eve upon the spoon
Ten m'uutes devoted he sirietl' to
isiness, and then, as he poured out
business, an-l then, as he t
' his fourth cup of coffee, under the
in
fluence ot the genial .lava, the re
cuperated tramp seemed di.tpo.scd Ij be
.-oeiable, and in repty to an intimation
that he was evidently no disciple of
Dr. Tanner, broke into voluble peech.
No, inarm.
he said, "1 tase no
stock iu that old maniac. Dr. Tanner
has done incalkerlable injury to the
cause of humanity, and poor fellows
like me find it mightv
hard scratching
to make a living senre he
has under-
''
tooK to prove mat people can live on
air and water."
"How is that?" asked the cook, as
she cleared away the table.
" Well, manii," said the tramp,
giving his chair a hitch back and
Ntreteliing his legs out comfortably,
"I'll tell 3'ou jest how it is. Hcforu
this fasting experiment was com
menced folks were imdiucd to take
pity on a feller when he said he was
Iiungr3. and mighty few would turn
him away without givin' him some
thing. How is it now, inarm? WI13,
3'ou gets the door slammed in your
face at most places, and even those
who are charitably disposed have be
come perverted."
"Perverted? How?"
" Korin-Ntance, inarm, there is one
heretofore susceptible 3'oung laity who
answers 1113' plaintive appeals by draw
ing invidjus comparisons; she tells me
to 'look at that poor Dr. Tanner,' aid
advises mo 'to live on my fat awhile
for the benefit of science.' "
"Well, I declare," remarked eook.
"Yes. inarm. Another laity, when I
informs her iu mv feeblest tones that 1
hain't eaten a morsel for two dav
and a half, encourages me to 'per
severe in the good cauc,' and to call 1
'round when I have completed the
other Uurt3'-even and a halt diys
then she purposes presenting me with
a watermelon."
"Land sakes!"
" Yes, inarm. One old man, to
whom I presented niyself in the ehar-a-ter
of a phyed-out school teacher
from the country, and asked his ad
vice and aid in procuring employment
suited to 1113- abilities, told me to hire
a hall and go into the starvation busi
ness." "Gracious goodness!" uttered the
cook, getting a broom to sweep out
the kitchen.
"Yes, inarm," said the abused
tramp, as he rose hastily, glancing at
the broom, "for everybody ain't as
soft as 3'ou- as soft-hearted as 3011 are,
mar m."
And he vanished. St. Louis Chron
icle
A Dog That UmlersloDiI.
A coitKEsroNDE.VT writes to the De
troit Free Prcsx: Some 3-ears ago we
were operating a leather store in a
small town iu Wisconsin, and it was
part of our business to buy hides for
shipment East. The hide-house was
situated in rear of the lot and a wheel
barrow was employed to convey them.
This dog. which we named Watch, part
shepherd and Newfoundland, always
carried with the greatest delight the
ke3 which was attached to a piece of
shingle by a string, to the hide-house.
One ihy as Watch pranced gaily down
to the hide-house with the key in his
mouth he met a strange dog. The two
commenced to snarl at each other, and
Watch closed his teeth so tightty into
the piece of shingle that he broke it in
two and lost one piece ami kc3'. When
we got to the hide-house he "came up
and had onty the piece in his mouth.
"Watch," said I, "this won't unlock
the door; where is the key?" Watch
looked up. and when the "words were
repeated and the door shaken, to show
that it could not be opened, he started
off. In a short time he returned with
the other piece of the shingle. He was
again shown the two piece?, put to
gether this time, and made to under
stand that the ke3 was yet missing. It
was getting late and we followed him.
Ho stood a moment, as if rellecting
where he was at the time he met the
dog, and scenting up his tracks, found
the ke3' and brought it to us dangling
from the string between his teeth. It
seems b3 this that he certainly under
stood what we said to him about the
lost kev.
A Handsome Pnlpit.
A brass pulpit has recently been
completed in Philadelphia for St.
John's Protestant Episcopal Church,
Troy, N. Y. It will be erected as a
memorial by William Stone Smith, a
verv wealthy gentleman of that cit3
to his deceased wife. The pulpit is
about seven feet high by three feet
square, and is made "entirely of
polished brass, except the lloor. treads
and handrail, which are of solid ma
hogany. The ornamentation consists
of rosettes, intersected with twisted
rods, -after the style of 1750. The
eight posts or columns are intersected
at given Spaces with square grooved
blocks, and the balusters aro round
and twisted in the center. There is a
scalloped apron below the floor, hand
somely ornamented, which greatly adds
to the" appearance of the pulpit." The
whole is heavily braced and counter
braced, and is exceedingly strong and
massive, though it has "a light and
graceful appearance. The reading
desk is of brass, and will be covered
inside with scarlet velvet. There are
four small gas-jets, and the light will
be hidden by a nickel-plated reflector
from the audience and the speaker.
This is not the least ingenious part of
this beautiful piece of art- It is in
scribed in old English letters, cathedral
style, in colors: "In Memoriam. Fan
nie Burdett Smith. From Faith unto
Fruition- March 2, 1880." The cost
of the memorial to Mr. Smith, which
includes handsome marble steps, al
coves, etc, will be ten thousand dol
lars. N. Y. Tribune.
TnE Chinese Six Companies in San
Francisco own property valued at' $-,-290,000.
cruris mtr m VfieifMK m tttMl huff h finntrniir iliil nnr " -- !'-" -.
Tke Fib f.Hiarfc Fialir.
.- 1 I I . k . . A
ago and gone oat " jharkln with u.
av a correpmdent of tbr Springfield
(JLa) ttcpubiimn. Ei-ht went in
whalcboat, and caaght nin in about
two hour. We hare great iron hooks
corered with small hh; eight fet of
chain arc attached to the book, and
then 'ixU' feet of rope trong enough to
hold a hone. We l: the bait nk to
the bottom and wait in tranquilliu- for
a bite. By and by thre U a gentle tujj
at the hook, or a Veatton" mwbc
1 it -eav slow vo
certain whether he U
your broath whtMwr
to 3-our companion. "iluh rv- got
.
1 V"t
I he shark larts o3 with tae
jbnL. on let him run about a ard.
I then with one mighty jerk fatn the
1 hook in hi mouth, and haul to. Thai
t 1 ., . 1 ,M
, "- iaf ,un :,- " ou etcr
. ''J0'1 OIJ lfarra- 'l ' '' ,
1 lne roa 1 wa4 bound she wyuldu t
K at all one minute, and tl-cn bound
, l,. . 0
climb trees-,
then to go bwrkward. and then to
ton can imagine what it U
to haul in a hark. l ou veil all the
j time, vou must ve 1; you can't help it. !
You feel that if vou don t veil, vou !
I . . .1... .i"i. '
won t get
me sitarK. l our com pan
ions begin
to veil. Hand over hand
you lug m the hue
You stop yelling
j for a minute, and inch by inch the shar
taken the line out, he brings jour hamls
clean down to the gunwale. You rail v.
! brace 3-our feet give another velL
I he crew help you pull -they ell--
; they stjieak encouraging word to ou.
i niupiamntii. ami paui aim nowi.
i and strain h:uidoer hand while the crew
J shout. "Hang to him!" WhnekpMour
J knuckles against the gunwales. buty.u
I still hang and veil. Just when ou
j feel as
jw)iind.
as it you couldn t pull another ,
. . - . . . .
w)und, his great ugly head comes m
sigm. men 3011 give a nig veil, aim
right in the midst of it the shark give
a tlounce and pours a bucket of" salt '
water into your face and breast. You
grab the chain with both hand-. lift his '
head clean out of the water, and then
the brute phys he is an auger
and turns himself over and over. ou
think, at the rate of fom times a min
ute. Then vou veil, in riht down
' earnest, "Hit him hit nun:
lit him:"
.Meantime the crew
are not idle,
feet long thev
.-riiieu wmi cuius inree
pound first his nice (his brains lie in
his nose), then the gunwale, then the
chain within four iuchet of 3 our hand,
then his 11010 again. The hark stop
dodging for a moment -a f-w more
welts on his nose and he is a "deader."
We get him aboard with hooks and
lever-. Then 3011 it down and tr- to
draw a lon breath perhaps youwill.
but I ddii't. I concluded one wa ,
enough for me. and in the future I
would help 3 ell. In the even ng I I
went to teachers' meeting, where the j
question came up of the dhine care of J
animals. I aked if it was right to '
take the life of an an. mat jtit for the :
pleasure of it, and it wa voted "No."
An lee Cream Tr.Mt at .Nantucket.
Hrunnrri;, of the Hurliugtun Hawk
eye, tells how the earoity of oung men
works for uvd at Naiiluelie:: "Oni!
evening. 1 don't reuu-inber when, 1
introduced a 3'oung friend of mine, and
1 he is very oung and bashful, Mr.
' Julian C. Eglnbrol of Hullalo. to a
I 3 oung huty acquaintance. After a few
s moments ot socteiv chatter he Miirgest-
ed the ice-cream ,-aloon. l ht-n slie
arose and introduced him to her two
s hodlgirl friends, her mother, the
mother of one her friends, and an aunt
who was visiting them. Then the aunt
introduced him to her elder sifter and
an old lady who was not a relative, tho3"
explained, but was as dear to them as
thouirh
she was their own mother.
Then the all said in a general sort of a
way. 'Vc!l. are vou all ready?' and
answere 1 thenisefvcs in the affirmative.
as they- slowty followed the liurror
stricken young man to the door, and
the procession hied down street toward
the ice-cream saloon, stopping on the
way home at a houo to pickup the old
latlv'h
ingliter. and calling at a More
. .. -, .............u...-.
k ... -
for the twin cousins of oueof the aunts
s . 1'-
beautiful girls they were from Spring- !
field, I watched tho oohmin when it
swung by 'fours, r.ght into line' iu front I
of the ice-cream S;d on. where it formed
like a line of men at a ticket office, the j
old huty smilingly and patiently bringing
tip the rear, standing under the nicker
ing gaslight and the steadfast stars, j
awaiting her chance at the frozen nud-
ding. It was far. far in the summer liight ,
when ,)u tan hlginbrod return to the
hotel, and when I looked out of the win-
dow and saw his pallid face and glittering
eyes, and noted the club in one hand
and the revolver in the other, and heard
him mention my name and ask the
night clerk what was the number of my
room. I feared that he might feel harshly
toward me, and I barricaded the door
of my room with the lounge, the bed
stead, the stove and the tniuk, just be
fore he came banging against it. He
slept in the hall that night, across 1113' j
threshold, and I only escaped the next '
afternoon, when the landlord, aweary j
of his incessant pounding of my door
panels with his club, had him arrested
as a dangerous lunatic.
" Hollering" Is a Ilig Help.
Thev were holding an out-door ward 1
meeting the other night, and a speaker
had just commenced
I to warm up to his
work, when a stranger with all his
worldly "duds" in an old sheep-skm
on his "back, boots gone, hat going and
a ityed-in-the wool tramp air about him,
halted on the outskirfs of the crowd.
The speech soon caught him. and he be
gan to applaud. At the end of every
seutence he clapped his hands and
roared like a fog horn. No matter
whether the speaker " hit 'ffin" or not.
the stranger never failed to come down
with the applause, and lie carried a
good share of ihe crowd with him. Aft
er tne speaker had finished, and while
he wis wiping his heated brow, the
tramp approached him and said:
"That 'ere speech was one of thc
best I ever heard in all ray life."
"Ah? I'm glad it pleased vou."
"Pleased me! Win-, it lifted me
right ofTn nn; feet! I "tell 30U. you're
a Lo-n wrator, and I just wish I could
sta3 iu this town and hear 3011 make a
speech every night."
" Yes, I wish you could."
" But I can't. I am on my way West.
I shall, however, think of vour speech a
huudred times a dav. I can feel
electricity of it yet, and sa can't you i
lend me half a dollar lo help me on?"
"Whv. I don t know vou.
Whv
chould i lend you half a dollar?"
"Oh. come now -don't try to ride
any high horse over me. You know
how loud I nollered. and vou know a
well as I do that if I hadn't put in my
best licks vou d have fallen as Hat as a
shin-l You are a great orator, sir.
and that was a great speech, but if yon ,
don't know that hollering is what does .
the business, voa'd better hang right
up."
The orator pondered over the mat
ter for a few seconds, and then proba
bly concluded that the reasoning was
sound, as he passed over the money.
Detroit Free tress.
Youxg authors should not be dis
heartened in view of thc facts that
Thackeray was not known as an au
thor until he was nearly forty; Scott
was fortv-three when "Waverly" ao
peared; Defoe was fifty-eight before he
wrote his first novel; and other not
ables were equally tardy in gaining
celebritv.
Mr. Fraxcis Cowlev Bcivam, one
of the staff writers for the London
Punch, will succeed the late Mr. Tom
Taylor in the editorship of that paper.
nf fnr ntriv rn II
ALL .SORTS.
I
.b f ratf T . .f 9 .msmm
: pUbrd" totviu Udy. ha opened
training ho ia wifal Jvtnj
a citte. whera lic
U tccha wvmn
now to nr.
Ltxrmr Mew ha bcn nietM-njr
! "s ouie ox lar srcnriarr 01 i
' T for more than Half a cesUrr.
' having br?n apoolat i nndcr Jom
Qmncr Adaros July 13, ia
, S.vuvli WtsNticc will ukp tp
' her abole herraiter at Vanewtrcr.
Washington Tcr . wherw lc wiB W
; potiMoard ai ;) wr xnamtn. ttJi
qarun and ralm. for gtH! oadoe:
a wmt in the BanocV war.
Thk ccnu enarucralor of NVrada ;
' County. Cal . cars atro two Ud '
' who vferr twin One of tkMt plcid !
bcr ag at twenty ght yvw ad ike
(other at twrnlr-two jrar. Cuo j
, one wa ruarned and osr wa m-;'
A Utah writrr vv that Job Mat- -
. kay. the mining mltiJonaire. wali atmt J
Virginia City in a liiirtw!dlar ut of j
gray dolbw". gm to wtrfc in ht. mist-1
at live o'clock in the mrmBg. hrm i I
' the plainest ntyje. Hut Mr. Mwtir,
who abroad. ..ponds rmrrmoH tknn
an" other Amork-an wom-u m Km-vjv
The highest monurarnt in (ifl
Hritain, and po-jildy in KurotH. I Uw.t '
er.Hted b lm tenantry to Ut trl ;
Dule of uthorl.iad. on the ummit f
Ron Vraggio. bulhtrandlri. 1. 1J
feot above the .ea. The pedettal lU-J
feet high; the .tatu fro'ii a !nodl by
Sir Franct Chantrev, thirty. It a
conspicuous landmark on both tdis of
Moray Firth.
Some painters while at work i the
outside of a MoilHHlist Kpiwpl
Lhiin-h at Hiadinbrg. Md . rwntU
l;.u.. ..-...) 1...1-- ;.. ,1... ....... d...- i..ui
: t .. . t. 1 . .
'"n ,1U "' wci iin.-t.iiM-; in aw. wi
Some of the Injanlmg wa removed.
and betucon the joists wn. found a
solid mass of honey twolve fel in
length, sixteen inchui wide and four
inches thick.
A Nkw Yoi:k -ocioty bcllo who ha
a strawberry-mark on the underside of
her ann near the shoulder, oiler one
of the hoipital surgeons l.OJU if hn
will remote it and graft the stiu f a
healthv white person ujoii iu She
s.'ns if" she got married her husbnnd
wouldn't like the hoks of it. and then.
too. she is kept from wearing th low
necked and short sleeved jwrty dis
unite. Miss H.vrni: K. Kak.s's worth, who
has been Postmaiter at (Jrolon. Mass.,
for thirteen ear-. has rodgned. and
theolli-ial examiner bears thii toiti
uioiiv to her lidelit: "From experi
ence l can salelv miv in tiur.j.(UMiuil
offices we have few Poilnintiri who
c;m compare with the 0110 at t.rotou
Mass., and in her retlnng from the
olhee the IW-oflieo Drpnriiimni le-
one wuose piace 11 ui 00 iiiincuu 10
""
In'itiatokv steps are be'uivr tnen t4
establish a circle of obe
rvm ' station
around the .North rolnr region
an i'
be connected by telegr.iph. Th pro
posed points for station- are at L'oer-
navi'i in Wel (reeuhiml; at the m with
of the Lena iu KiiHi,t; SwitbergiMi,
Holland; on the new Siberian Island-.
Novaya Zemla; Point Harrow in
Alaska; at some point ou the Art-tie
coast of Canada, and possibly at other
intermediate pointt.
Tin: following i- from a fashion arti
cle in the Cincinnati Knftt.nr: A
fnend ot in ne held a wad of . something
in one hand, and it was uot so large but
that she could close her lingers over it.
1 asked her what il was. A mw pmr
of stocking-, she said. Istockings."
1 echoed, in 'redulousty. She showed
them, and stockings they surely were,
but of such a gos-amer texture that the
were of next to no bulk or weight at all.
; il,u.v uere niiiu-r u
' r-loii bright. 1 re
look so llmv Vxii -v
Thev were rather bright scarlet in col-
marked. 'Oh. they
oung la tysai 1, but
thev wont be when they are on. See
that.' and she stretched one over her
plump, while arm; 'the skin fairly
shows through, and makes the Ntoefciug
a verv light pink.' ' So the color, when
- - -
vBa . I .&... ikiijuliel .& ...!...-
iiiii.uv.rmnu.uwi.mn..ii "'"'
! .....M..u ; . .. 1. 1, ....... .. .. 1.... .. ...
the wearer is a blonde or a brunette.'
' That's a fact sure enough. On a ne
gro woman. I guess they would be a
reddish brown.' "
IIUMOKULS.
A HUM) man cannot be obliged
to
p.u a sight draft. .V. O. i'i-aiuns.
Thk conductor who divided his col
lections with tho companv claimed that (
I'o I '
it was a fare
arrangement
Transcript. j
It is difficult to conceive how a
woman can put up her back hair, rock I
the cradle with one foot, loo' into the -mirror
and lecture her husband with)
her mouth full of hair-pins all at the I
same time. Cincinnati Saturday XiyhL
Detkoiteks are complaining of the '
poor qualit3 of ice sold in that c tv.
Thc3 say ii is worm-eaten, mildewed ,
and much of it warmed over from 3e.tr '
before last, and a ten-cent chunk won't '
last a familv of six over two davs. Whv '
Uon't tcv. jvncj, thc. icc.de.tlers!
ristotrn Ilcralil.
Xor 1
Wiiev the prudent girl takes a no- i
tion to make over an old dress, what is
the best to let her do? Let her rip. '
Boston Travc'lcr. Sew siy we all of us.
Yawcob Strauss. We don't know what '
u,c ncenio c lore any more remar.es on ,
t's sutect-7om- bcnlincl.
The hottest man seen latety was at
work, in the blazing sunlight, on a
oi, .,,-,.. c!.ni. Tinrrn ii cmuintn in i
v....... .,.,.,..,.. --... v- j
this about ner-"spire," but we have not 1
energv enough to dig itouu 77k Score. '
If the man is reallv sitting on the top
of the spire of courie no one can seethe :
point, but he himself may feel sure that j
there is one. Boiton Advertiser.
Iris said that a woman's voice can
be heard at a distance of two miles by
a man in a balloon; but if the black- I
haired spider, which can stretch itself j
to several inches in length and eats
-"r- "V, w -r,"", "v', " ,.; '"-' l
voice cou'd cisilv be heard a distance 1
of ten miles on" a level Normal I
Herald.
"Heixo?
when did vou return?"
t :
n:koil Snoninnnf litafrienil Hinn-s. ivhnm
: "- .... . '. .
..w .Hw- w-- - .. -- ..... ........... ,
ho mp on thn street. "H hi- h.inm t
hnnn aivnr.1 renlietl the latter. "You
r ,.,7r :. ; , , , , c
son. "Win-, you look o worn ont and
near dead that I positively thought
vou had been awav to one of the wa-
tn-tntr nl.lus frl- fnw cn.ls 1ni- tKi
er
UCliUUbUJ IUUI UbtUUI. WMrf 4.V'. IIKSJ-
A Caution to Horseaieu.
in the German armr call ' sizea gnat and moqoiu.LoaU. and they -of
all who have 'to do overtake thc swift hit! tadpoles ami j
-t- .1 ..; .i. , serve them ud in " sm,-irttinrr rui t
A SCRGEO.V
the attention
with horses to the danger of usin? the
pocket-hankerch cf to wipe away any
foam from the mouth or noe of a horse
which mav have been thrown upon their
clothes. Some months ago, th
the writer
states, an officer came to him
offering
from an obuinate cold and cough. The
usual remedies were prescribed. buUn
ran: a visit to the baths at Keichen-
hall also did the patient no good. Ke- .
turning to dntv. the officer became j
irnnv fr- fit tnil..i! with -tmi nain
in and fiwellin-- of the head, set in. and I
nltimatelv, after
t Ua -I,A enlfliaM tpIii fi-fl Tw.n nff-,r t
tt, t,- !.-o Wn -tf-t-At htr rln.l I
ers, aad consequently it is nipected
that the officer who died mav have con-
veyeilthe disease into his "system by
perhaps using his handkerchief to wije
some of thewfoam from the mouth or
nose of the horse from his uniform.
mtiMi siiflVrin"'- he uiu "w: "iwi a pamp m the (
died with every svmptom of gbndcrs- . ? wah:r aia oe uratra . istered the Lot rites ef the Chnrrh
Inquiries were set on foot, and it was 'naa'J P?Pwt Wlth eth, " " The doctors. anxiotM to?e $L t
found that some time before he was ; Pjopelthe bt along- But the in- Untaed their Lmbon BalilS JS21"
taken ill he had ordered a horse which ; Seaionj Franklin although he coa!d when they gave up ail h,!
he beheved was suffering from glanders ! l&H??. fro? ct.oa,U "1 coffin ha. been ordered ail 2t
. --. v:.u,.u'-w,mnn.,B. make it ober him. had to r tj. nn it,. -,i !.... . r?ureu iae Mrr
iu jjx: auufc. .'tu m. .v-t" ..v.. ... ... . . et r - uivutc. in m
Our Young Headers.
OVH YEAR.
j ;ir3t nMt ,l4ff,
I W us w t tHrr-ttA vl rtnr.
j w
;
Kiai MW(ltf. 1 i.r'.
ii !
4 wt taf ISrtfl fc
Wfc v&f Aa prJ
T3m- rrwr w- f
Itot , i"" .
TVr rtr t f " ..
TJ frf f 4
,d M.MAX Vr r r r 4i
Of ir l 4 f Mm0l
Wt aw 4. -
,Vtt mo t r-"- At" :Vr-?"
t'tna ri-rTj dns tmH4 --
Jr Wn 4" ittwM t 1'v . .
ltk kiwOtr ! 4 iIM t"S
lt MaM -a4. - '- t"i
i llut .input marm U4 ilf .
Ate4 K.-r ft hw mmtr
Tls-r pp-a kvtil. -s- 4
Aa ia hK- a-o-w "
Tb- woNib f hrt ita mtmml
.-wptmllltfr. .till &
Ot 4m !. - Si K--' U
lnft tfai -t t.t fNmI w4M.
Au4 l.ill(Utu.)i bmiUZ W.
iwintM ,un hiw tll lt V.
!
ntr--v rf ml. " WW
i Jj-t ,lM ,M f .! .. AI .
,-t ,.! tk kj " &.
N- MV- tXrfxrj .jti. h ratmm,
AJ wM b otKw. . " Ct-
IWrml-T. hmUmI nn tf all.
ViMir IHttv lu mftt ho m'
llMt Iwttfm'h J-UJf j will m.
Aw.! vm IH gwttvwf oW rr -
WbUe at fwrat. wOl ! J fcw!
-A l.atu utx. in .v 1V4 !.
Till! " UAKNlMJ-NKKnUU'
Tin: dnralng-tjeedle has the wl
family naiue LiU.Ih.-U, th plain K-
gUih of w hUh U dnijm-ilr- It dw't
object to either of thee imttKMi. or evm
to the common uameoi darntg ihmhim.
if vou onlv don't aocintt it Uh anx-
thing still or blind It l rrally no
1 cluuisv affair. Thero .- not a iu MM
m its body, and a tor foug wif,
uhv b! volir ,,vc, n 9rtrl
. ,,,'rVwi. you Movor nrt- uHthMg
lnore ondorful. It wimM tnlit jour
l,rihUced. .niart lilt
i hour -the longest, lHiiit Inrtin Imt
! ever spent hi hn life juil to rotiat th
ees ul the iiragoii-Hv. 1 vemr-ioir
thousand eyes! Jt tliink of a littl
chap with twelve thim-tand tei yrwr
one. He can look to tin right ami t
the left, down and up. backwanl and
forward, towanl all jxint of th imi
pis." at the -niui lii-Utnt of time Who
can toll all that hw ,ms? Wouldn't you
like to borrow his 1301 tor about ten
minutes?
The dnigou-tlv Is not onlv iwtrvoloui
on account of lis vat nuniLer of jtw,
but it is curious in 111(1113' ways. Thorn
are about two hundred knouit s'tK"i.i.
soujo of which aro very beautiful. The
largest and most brilliant kind ar
found on the Amazon Kher. "Souiv
of them," sail a traveler, "with goMi
or crimson bodies seven inehei long,
and their elegant, lace like wings tipped
with white or yellow."
The dranon'tlv is the most ferocious
. he is truly the greatest cannibal of the
, insect world, lie dines with keenjt
' relish upon his many couins. has a
! special appetite for tender 3'ou.ig 11101-
ipiitoci. and does not hesitate to devour
. the prettiest, loveliest butturllies or anv
I of the family relatives that ho Is able to
catch.
All the little fellows are afraid nf him,
but it is uselesa to tr' to o-cape him.
Even the swift mospiilo. with it three
thousand vibrations of the wing a min
ute, cannot outlty this terrible, swift
dragon.
He take.s his meals while on tho wing
a whole inject at one swallow and '
Jou c;in ',ar,"y g"-i how many victim '
are scrn-u up lor 11 goou jiinre
meal." Quite a little nwanu is needed
for his dinner, and he is nlwav.s readv
to make way with all
ones that he lintLs for 1
meals.
The dragon-fly knows all the ways of
the world. He can dart back ward juit
as wed as forward, and Ity sideway
jusi as wen as aivv oiuer wav. nnu o
-
there is no chance to get out of his
war. WhonhRf.nci.fOR. for hUvinttm ,
it is all over with it.
Naturalist have been greatly Inter
ested in this insect, and have otudied
its habits closely from its babyhood tip,
Mrs. Dragon "is a firm believer In tho
use of plenty of water in bringing up
her babies, so all her little ones be;in
life in an aquatic nur-erv. From the
leaf of a water-plant, in which they are !
at first cuddled up, they come out'writh
rough-looking, gnib-likcbodie. baring
six sprawling legs. They find th"tn-
selves all alone in the world. Their
mother luts iroue and left them, stiil
r.... ... , . .. .; 1
thev have no one to provide them
their " bread and dinner." They
m with ;
must !
stir themselves and "grub
It
for a lir-!
ing." But they have .uch
a stupid.
lnbber-beel look, that no one would
' 1
think they knew enough to take care of
themselves. On their head is .some
thing that looks like a hood, and this is
drawn over their faces as though thev
were ashamed.
,...-, 1 , ., . .
uui uus noon oniy ineir natural '
!.,.. 1 .1 ,. 'ru... ts.fi- ..-. t " 1
..V.-V..U.-,-. .. i . , , "rt,CJ-"j'"pns 1
don t reallv wear their UihhU for bon-
n.m ,, - ,i... ..., ,i.- . , , ,
.'i1?..1!1? "n"SiW.bHt
ucj o4c Ca..j .-. -iiu erj curious
1 ones. to. J his mask is
U m-oli. r.4
r. ' - .. . .. ----- -. .""-". i ,
hinmw slides Ntiil Tirmlri -ini! l - .:
.". . n ui ..
irati iu vz. a miii;'. onrn lliev fee 1
L. .-t.tt.ii... it .. . -
.iMiiHiiiji'r ijilt:i liiv wfin fi rn uh v. I
.1: I. u: J '."" '.
uiujjci. mc umKt njnug open, in e
plide .shove out. and th
in, and in one Instant of time the.r prey !
is secured. And that is the wav tho. '
HOOH.S CllOf '
in ftii iiit,ii nttii in, iin iiir xfii rifiLim i.:... ... .1 .1. .. i.u. . ,.. 1.
1 - ) 111111 ii uviii( mil t;Tin iv 00 op3i
been cnlluJ the "devils darning- , lo rj,H,-nlu. let the pernon mlliMit that
neisllc." but it is better to dnp tho big , , , j,u wn tl.,M,, nlAll n,,c up
adjective and not call hard unmivs. el or wi.. ,, ri,.l,i ,! u,w ,,niloiiiit.
.1 t-t. tu .- i:..i .
little chaw "o -
the livery way; u,ey .tfrve up refresh-
mpnta- Ona-tcr than -r ,,r, fi :.
,. -," "- c.j ,
it,
p-
ey ;
inry pacit ineir inncu-oa.ets!ronicat
"it r--4
meai-pics.
I'erhan von would lik to lm, 1.
these lutle fe'lows get about iZZ .
-Neither fins nor paddles of any Und
areued in chasing their pr-y. nor to !
help them handle it when caught. But .
. -
neiP 'nc " lt,wne "ght. lint
IO ?fct bont they Iiave a way of their I
"""' -V '" j" --. a onaw
??T Jf was buUt t go by a method
" Ibc,ra- . , . -.
lou n! have read that Benjamin
?Iw ones had an idea that a boat
lOea
Of
pnaiptBg boats abont.
Aad
Cere Ji lOSl WnCT UllS little
is
grnb
? beaU ?e , Z1, P'Iopher. In the
j ff ra of " "tt-e worm-skin boat h
j"a P"P that worfci like a csara.
j nen the little nymph want? to go on
exploring Toyage his clever little
j "wcles instantly set the prcnp at work.
"Vl'-'7 "1HB cr-' "g' a- nesia suip," The drog-ut wa, hurried
them dull fellows if you should once .ee'lrt- wrcra! who w. uZ ?u
--- -. t t-ti. . . ; -.-. T.ii.jeii iur inn s-imin.
! -! w.r ). tu Yi!:
oi?4 vlrt.
(, rw. .- -
fti trn-
! M tfcra4 U H Jr: MX
JUrt. IH Wr r. U w
0a .as4lHr -rtyi" .. v,.t,
T, Try mr of lat tH drxr;
ArU a fmftJ. rf """iTr!
h:i,f -r.U,t. d jv2
bt .f t. r rpriU. tr j
n ifp. J " "MTO,ki
rtf UUnk" f b" "
rtI m tkt mtw rr :ti --
Um TTt iaKt ilrarvJ
1UH - Kit rv"a ! Ir
Urn. a.IK gry pf f
Isrrd ? iprt. by ho Ju
walEd htm ttjH
it4.tJAa mU rm.ln zwsniy.
? wki ro fr bBC J4
tWo-h mr.J.y H.. r a"
tke UMgW ot dofiwoi r whM ymi
kr dtyi yr " w hV
Wl vwr inpny. J!
Jrtwp., W 4t r fafr!4wj fr
r 0tnHy V.e l rr h K
Mt Kih xmi arv MJr4. as! f"'1
mtkn rxV yw Wd Mi" "
l-wtt mikn U pHraf Ww, And
Jmiw .ei.ty h I. Kmv Yt h d
h1 fr. tvturMlnjf ofttla U !
rwrr tHt from 3u drr Mt
nV. f. th. tfcat at "4t
wwmp nJro4 f h UioaHd eywn
yM, Ut, titi?b h ' ""w"
to hl tn and kllrl.
Mv-y ttuk aU uiottlMtd. and ju mar
! Whwo aiufttHtMl wlUi M Wtti
bwt tlwew denting hpih who amw.
f MfMtr a 1h tk ho.iily. IUUI oo
In gruiMWUir, t.Hjkng-bAii.t- O..
The tlllM'unrr
SMt one once, nio
mad tii p4twiantrf:
S mi ttr! hat u
U Wat I- ttthtd?
mJatr? Nevor mlndl"
I Wbant nmHr livor and mind Im
' jpu,, W ,f-.tlMU Uiathn jHiJtteil. aJ
MJ jHiJi. aM nr phlmpliy.
; u 1,4 ik ohh lnuus-o ta innr,
Is a matter of fact u Hloli eamwt ih?
piUMMod. KhioUuo oi4sm a nrlty
4 phyH-nl. ihi Im lan 1 mitmtat
'miIu MMi o)Mmt 0 MiaWor, ur
HiUdUcliinl ami npirttued WtMC ttn Hir
ImhIiIv. If jjncvwl, wo sp: It tu fiwr
w irrow imIu: tl angry, or hurt, ve
biuh.
Kri)ht tHoy brine on kortdneH. Ii
jiOi'iM of thbody Kav. hmu kuown to
tt dried Mf by groat terror . oviii lU
(Hdorliig mutt ? r that oirrttlnl UinHijrh
toe hnir llku wntir through a Utbis. hut
bsNM Utriytl by fwar.
Th iiorvmi oytui nU Uhhi lho
1 rout of Urn Inxly and prdM tsi
Chang''. In icnf it hion tho lkw
of thtt ll44l tilat uoimII, nh m il ooitni
. fnuu the eye in drop. Uwxr. In bluh
i inr. U an ells th snnU blKl-vo(d
Hint Iter elo-.it to the Vhi. and thoy lot
- n Urgor ipiautity of bisHxl flow fdiHig
; tliHiii. tun I tHM give tho rod n tun 10 I'm
' Hivh that wo ctill a blu-lu
; The will may ooiitrtd. not all, bit
j timiiv of the-M MiiotKom. A pnM)n
may ii'ti-pier fintr. for cxunplis. by a
, vigorous oll'orl of lib will, crjlnt. by
thinking of oinc les Mid nuojoot.
, and blushing br changing the Hue of
I thought he tn puruui)c
hor itKtanc", tt another 1 taunting
of rectitude will tttkn the plaoti of oou
sciousnnsi of self, mid ton to otiu euro
i the ox il.
; In a thousand w.iyn tho wilt In a
vast Inlluunce over tho Ixnty. It may
j make us brave, instead of co-wurdty.
! I.rt a mini fully tniikn up hU mind that
j he can and will walk ihrough grav-
yanli at night, and though ho may
have been timid before, and though ho
' nitty Milfer a little In doing o. ho can
do iL Th will Is either master of u,
1 or wo are of it. It makes tho oldlr
j stand his ground in tituo of b.itllo. It
UU us do a ineau thing, or It make na
do a brave one.
A boy or girl who Is ntrkwan! In
coifiHUiy. who feels 111 at nae, an wtno
most ex -client young penoii do, may.
1 alwav.sreadv """-' PHHa,uui.z perwiw , in
the siatterin''lunj're5tCKtcnl'rtm1' U m!l" ,w'
luuch between ' t,ro," cl,re l,nlv rco!ati
iiiULii tittnjen!llJ of lhn wi A 'th, u tft
en-
cx-
fun
praotlcally half dorm already the mo
ment we maka up our minds that It
hall be done.
Determine that you will bo 000I. col-
' 1 ...1 n.. ....... . .
, , ' ."'T' """'"""'X ' y"
Wutfr. keep aw ami oyus open in
onier 10 oe tti eac nnu appear
well.
ami ten lo ouo, you will
lolnt.
oarry
your
'PI fV . .t .,,,
1 ne euorui 01 wic win Krm
you tip.
omwhat as a pair of intltttcd bladders
do in fr.vimuiiti'r. Ihe
nvvimutuig. Ihe will mav b
made a greit frirud. It controls, to a
great oU?nt, the nurvous syntein.
Thc nervous ft?tcm K "a il wen,
the holier that ni)V; tip rest of tho
engine; but the will Is thu engineer
that keep the boiler up to the "hun
dred aid plenty to noire." as the rail-
rod men aay sumck' tlie lire. iknn
u ,.t. :.!. i . : . :.
' "--" ' wv cu,ii, iiirniMiics in
. and sees, too. that it Is applied
In "le St way. Itcv. IL H". Irne.
m toWen JJatt.
The Hlnsderlnjc DraIsL
The residents
of thl pltcc were
startled thw m irniog by the informa
tion Ilia Mr I :,.,,.-. v... !.-. . 1. ..
. ... -.1. '-ii , ii uiit. mil
an Brunt, tho
dm A.t lv-.il ,,.i.."- t n.i ,...
, " ' - H-iuwe ii.oiiao
de mUtaka
m compounding a
that the nat.th IXZStt 1
"'"" patient lial Uken a fatal doe
of Ma-wlw's a,lutioq of morphine in-
prescnplion, and
sujad ot two ounces nf mnfm-.l . .t-
i 1.. . t"7.'"'""V
v- 'win aiwi. me natiKtit. Kl7.tvtl.
Monahan. forty-fi.e vears old. an m
jjdoyeat Mm. Uarne cottage, cut the
s - - - - - , -"' W
--.- -... ,
..i . . .
"nnffer 01 hr
right hand laat
I uesdav on
a broken dish, and in.lam-
Dr. Bobert Tver.' of IWIh Z
Th...i - ..-.t t .' .. l?ar" on
miVlfin nf ..t....t ..t . . .
n .I "f'Y, X" V"???? m. "m:
. and he mail- the fatal error The VnU-
'..i . . " ";- .w. -ftexnis-
take wa? deU'cted three houn atwr br
V an Brunt's t-Ierlf. yrho askci him. on
the clerk s arrival from a visit, if h? hal
put op a nrecriotion. Vm it-,..,, -.-t.i
that lie hail put up two ounce of flubl
rfT-rrif?frfc- T1.-, -! . - .
;. Si", "" V" nweu jum
H',$, FI????""' '1 '?
---.- nB4ar-- niL T -ta t-
telegraphed for dSorZ an t in afho?
time lir. IL C-norerT o " ll lZ
Chittenden, of Yt i? Jf5'
Chittenden, of Kairbaren: Chlud'
of BiUghampton. ami Klinba! t 7w
on-'fiL were ai thi. h,Li.i-..f .t. j.-" .
.,--. -v. m. LUIS OWMIUttfll Ifli. ripirt.'
woman. All night long tiiey wofkeri
to rtr.ore con.cioiae4. but without
sncci. Tins Ker. James IL Wahih.
of the Ilomaa Catlwdic Church at Loar
Branch- wt faI--.t..i t . , . .
.ii- r W.MU adnata-
DOosr vretmaa ,,..
moned.
Dr- Van BraYt is scarf v fran
tic life u a tnct tempcranci .
find bears a high repuUfW Las, year
his ore wa, destroyetl i the brge tire
at ScabngkU ad he had bo mwraace.
He is a graduate of the State School of
'-Scbrighl '(.V- J.y Cor.
tic He
i
I
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0-
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