The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 27, 1881, Image 2

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THE BED CLOUD CHEF.
M. L. THOMAS, Publisher.
- NEBRASKA.
KED CLOUD,
AESTHETIC.
In a j-arb that was srulltlo of colors
She stood, with a dull. listless air
A orcature of dump and or dolors.
Hut most undeniably fair.
The folds of her garment fell round her,
Hcrcallnif tho curves of eneb limb:
Well proportioned and graceful I found her.
Although qulto nlannltijjly slim.
Trom the hem of her robe jKscped one
sandal
"HlKhart" was she down to her feet;
And though I could not understand all
She sold, I could see she was sweet.
Iniprt-sscd by her limpness and lantruor,
I proffered a t'halr nenr at hand:
Fbo looked back a mild sort of unjrer
I'oscd anew, and continued to stand.
Fomo praises I next tried to mutter
Of the fan that fhe held to her faco;
Fhe said It was "utterly utter."
And waved It with languishing jrraco.
1 then, in a strain qtilto poetic,
Bejorcd her -raze on the bow In the sky.
.hp looked said Its curve was "icsthetlc,
ftuttbu tono was too dreadfully hijrh.
Hor lovely fain, lit by the splendor
That glorified landscape and sea.
AVoko thoujrbts that were daring as tender:
Did her thoughts, too, rest upon me?
' Ob, tell mo." I cr.'od. growing loldcr.
Have I In your musings a placo"
Well, j cs," she said, over her shoulder:
' I was thinking of nothing In space."
Ma ll'tirtler, in Scrlbncr.
MISS SPINNER'S DIARY.
July nth, 1 .
"Come now, Sallic, set the day.
What's the use of fooling any longer?"
Deacon Scratcher ought to have had
better sense than to begin that old
song then, when my loveliest pie that I
had spent fifteen minutes in crimping
with the shovelhandle, had just tum
bled oft' the stove-hearth upsido down
and killed itself.
"Deacon," said I "you are several
shades worse than the sevciitccn-year
locusts. I wish you would walk out of
here."
"I won't." said he, "till I get an
answer. Will you please to decide?"
" Decide what?"
" Whether you'll be Lira. Scratcher.
or an old maid?"
"Verily, I will If you give mo timo."
" How much time do you want?"
" Only a few years."
"Why don't you say a couple of dec
ades? You'ro thirty-six and I'm forty
six. Ninety is a good age to get mar
ried at!"
" Yes," I said, searching carefully in
the wood-box for tho nutmegs (which
had fallen off the cupboard), "and von
do need a few years more at school if
you mean that for an arithmetical cal
culation." It was bad of me to worry
him, but then it was baking-day, and I
think I got up wrong side out this
morning, too.
Ho jumped off tho meal-chest, where
he had been doubled up like a Chinese
fan.
" 1 won't wait tho twentieth part of a
minute longer," ho vowed, and went
prancing round "the kitchen in the
most tragic manner, and the worst pos
"sible temper.
" Oh, look out!" I squalled, "you've
got your big foot on my best crinkled
pie pan!"
Ho kicked it under the stove like a
savage, and then went dashing round
every way.
"Give me an answer," he kept roar
ing, "an answer an answer. I'll have
an answer!" and I had to lty about like
a top to get my pies and gingerbread
out of tho Avayifor I had strung them
out on the lloor all around the stove,
and he would have capered over them
rough-shod.
"Quit quit," I cried, brandishing
the flour-scoop. "You great, big jug
gernaut, if you don't quit capering, I'll
bhy the sifter at your head. Give mo a
day no, give me two days, and I'll tell
vou." I hen lie stopped.
"Is that tho truth, solemn?"
asked.
"That's the truth, solemn," 1
he
au-
swered.
So now here 1'vo only got two days
to decide whether I'll stay Sallie Spin
ner with no one to love, nono tokindlo
the lire for me, or bo Mrs. Deacon
Scratcher, and have to iron shirts. Per
haps I had better ask the advice of my
married friends and relatives.
July 1-lUi. I got 1113' first installment
of advice without asking!
Being in a meditative frame of mind,
I had just kind of slicked things up,
swept the dust uuder the edge of the
zinc, and jammed all the papers and
such behind the door, and was rev
cling in the society of my rocking
chair and a green apple, when cousin
Juliana Pike came over to borrow a
lemon.
"Well. I've got on o somowhero," I
said, "if it isn't in tho cupboard or my
work-basket, perhaps you 11 find it in
an old trunk in the smoke-house."
"Mercy on us," said Juliana, " why
don't you be systematic?"
"System and Sallie Spinner don't
travel hand in hand through this wicked
world," said I, rocking away placidly.
Juliana is one of the fidgety kind.
"Can't you quit see-sawing a min
ute?" she asked, squirming around un
til she knocked the coffee-pot out of
the window, "what arc you fooling away
your time for any way, when your work
is not half done?"
"'Tis half done," I said, "and Tni
tired. My constitution is fragile and dif
ficult to comprehend"
"Shucks!" interrupted my imper
tinent cousin, "it's pure laziness.
What ever you'll do when Sallie, let
me advise "you never to get married.
Your fragile constitution would be
bound to get fractured if you had to
spond your days as the rest of tis do
picking up hats," coals and boot-jacks
for a living, not to mention hunting
nails, strings and hammers, at all hours
of the day, turning the grindstone by
way of recreation, reading old dry mar
ket reports at night, till you couldn't
sec, sewing on buttons, darning
socks"
"Enough!" I cried, "tell
more horrorsP'
me no
July 15lh. More advice! I ran over
to Mrs. Drydox's to get a .night-cap
pattern. She was cleaning house, had
all the chairs stacked up outside the
door, and she looked as if her last
friend was buried under them, as she
sat on the step clasping the dusting
brash with visible dejection. Said I:
"What tower is fallen, what star is
set? What chief comes there"
Eying me with dismal scorn, she in
terrupted "Ain't nothin' fallen, as I know of,
nor set neither only "the old dominiken
Lin."
"Why then this pathetic attitude,
this"
"Sallie," said she, "don't never set
married."
"That's so," sang out Mrs. Flitter,
who came hopping up on the porch
-nnth her snnbonnet over one shonlder.
like a frisky grasshopper with a stiff
wash-board, " they're worser than tar
rapins, men are. They"
"You don't begin to know 'em,
Sallie," said Mrs. Urydox with greatly
increased dejection, "they'll call you
honey and everything nice now, but
once you marry 'em hit's a solemn
fret, they won't eat cold greens for
dinner of a cleaning day!"
"You don i tell me their depravity
jg that far!" Igaspeo, dropping into a
...1. f WiiAnlr
-ki. i. ;' wrdhinn" said Mrs.
Flitter, " why they won't so mucn as
churn if they take a notion, to plow or
anything "
Acshillynow." Mr. Prydox coa-
tinned hnr PTinvanrtPR. Itnhhtit fnrsed
to-day' cause I never cooked no dinnor.
nit beln' clean in' day. he uiu so: i novcr
aggravated him a nit. I sayed, gentle
lilrn antra T 'rnii pin lini nmn (villi
greens, Kobbut,' an' what you rcckiSrj
he savour
"What O what?" I cried, thrilled
with horror.
"Hesayed. Git out!' "
"What a most perfidious Robbut!"
"Law sakes!" said Mr. Flitter.
" why Sam, he went to town to-day an'
forgot to git sody. when I told hint p.ir
ticlar, ar? then Mowed the corn pone
wasn't good. An' he rami like a o!d
nirate ("other day 'cause I sw.ipped o!l
his coat to tho ragman for a chiny mar
tyr at a stake."
"Well. I made a handsome black
berry pie a Sunday, an Kobbnt 'lowed
hit was sour enough to make a pig
squeal.
" well, ham"
"Well, Kobbut"
"Dear mn, I must go." said I, "or
I'll die of Sara and Kobbut."
I saw the Deacon slowly approaching
my cottage. He looked Mid, poor fel
low! Remorse touched me. notwith
standing the fact that he belonged to
the class who would not eat cold greens
of a cleaning-day. "I owe him some
reparation," I said to myself, "if only
for the names I have called him. 1
cannot take every bodv's advice. So. I
think, I'll take the Deacon." Demo
reaPs Magazine.
The Young Lawyer's First Case.
The young lawver conducting hi?
first case before a jury is worthy of the
deepest commiseration. Take him. for
instance, in tho Criminal Court, before
which he has a case. While the Pros
ecuting Attorney is tying tho first wit
ness into bow-knots" aud untying him
again, the amateur sits listening, out
endeavoring to look as unconcerned as
a marble statue in a thunder-storm.
He throws in timid objections ever'
time he thinks ho sees a hole, and as
each one is overruled by the Court, he
nuts on a stern look, as much as to say:
"I'll knock the wind out of that in the
Supreme Court!" When the prose
cutor, usually an old, able attorncv,
dryly says, "Take the witness" the
youthful aspirant trembles a little, and
endeavors to swallow something that is
sticking in his throat. He feels that
every 030 in the room is upon him and
that "they are as hot as &tove-lids. Ho
lires a few questions at the witness, and
warms as he proceeds, until he is
brought up standing by: "Oh! your
honor, wo object to such irrelevant
questions," followed by a fe a scathing
remarks from tho prosecutor. Tho
Court sustains the objection, and ad
vises the yo.ing lawyer to keep within
bounds, which sets him to wondering
where in thunder the bounds arc. Ob
jection follows objection, and each one
is promptly sustained. He wonders
why it is that a free and independent
people will tolerate such one-sided
justice. He lunges ahead blindly now,
until he becomes so confused that he
does not know whether he is a practic
ing attorney with a gilt sign, or a fly
wheel on a steam wood-saw. Finally
he runs out of questions, and, with a
sigh of relief, or something, tells tins
witness "That's all." So he grinds
through; and at last the prosecutor
rises and proceeds to address the jury
in a masterly style. As he proceeds he
picks up the evidence adduced by the
defense into particles fine enough to be
incorporated into codlish balls. The
3'outhful Hlaskstonc wrestler begins to
feel uneasy as his mind reverts to the
fact that in a few moments he must de
liver his maiden speech. He wishes
tho prosecutor would hold his grip and
keep it until time to adjourn court, feel
ing satisfied that he could make a splen
did speech the next day, after a night's
lighting on the evidence. He tries to
remember what the witness swore to,
but cannot recall the evidence to
save his life. The prosecutor fi
nally winds up with a grand
peroration, and, as he says "And in
conclusion, gentlemen of the jury,"
the youth nervously fingers his
moustache, if he happens to have one
about him, aud wishes he had never
begun the abominable business. Cold
chills are fingering him all over the back
as if measuring him for a new shirt, and
his spinal column acts like it was tired
and wanted to sit down a while. Like
Uanquo's ghost, the lump in his throat
won't down by any obstinate majority,
and he swallows at it and wonders
what ho is going to say and how long
it will take uim to say it. As the prose
cutor calmly takes liis seat the young
lawyer rises and moves to the front. He
dare not look at the audience, and tries
to imagine there is no one in the room
but himself and the twelve sphiiytfike
forms in tho jury-box. Tho eyes of
each juror are fixed upon him, and he
would almost relinquish his hope of
Heaven if some ouo would raise a cry
of fire to divert their attention until he
gctsa start- Finally he shrugs his should
ers and manages to remark, "Gen
tlemen of the (swallows) jury." Very
good. He then surveys them a moment,
and every man in the box thinks he is
endeavoring to read their thoughts;
but he isn't. He is wishing to gracious
he could read his own thoughts. At
last he strikes out and goes for them
about their intelligent looks, and now
he feels that his client's interests are
safe in their hands. At the same time
he feels serious doubts as to their
safety in his own hands. He worries
through his speech with an average of
two swallow? at that lump to the sen
tence. The prosecutor closes the ar
gument and the case goes to the jury,
who retire to a secluded room to chew
tobacco and ask each other what they
thought of it It so happened that the
flimsy testimony against the accused
warrants a verdict of not guilty, where
upon the amateur grasps his client's
hand, whispers: " It was a hard light,
but I got you out of it !" Then he
rises, loads up enough law books to
swamp a mud scow, casts a triumphant
look at the Prosecuting Attorney, who
smiles pleasantly in return, and walks
slowly and majestically down the aisle
to the door, with as much dignity as if
he owned a Western railway. Oh, you
can't deny it, even you old veterans
3'ou've all been there !" Quincy Mod
ern Argo.
m t
A Refreshing Shower.
"I am mighty thankful for that rain
yesterday. It did the country a power
of good," remarked Colonel McSpilkins
to an Austin gentleman.
" Was your farm suffering much for
rain. Colonel?" queried Gilhooly.
" I haven't got any farm."
"Have yu got a Government hay
contract?"
"Not that I know of."
"What makes you take such an in
terest in the weather then?"
"Til tell you why I am glad it
rained yesterday. There was to be a
church picnic, and my wife had fixed
up a lunch basket for the preacher's
table, but you see it rained, and there
was no picnic, so wo had the lunch for
dinner, to keep it from spoiling, and
it was the best dinner Tve had at home
in ten years, and I never would have
had it if it hadn't rained, so now you
know why I say that rain did the coun
try a power of good savey?" Texas
Siftings.
m t
uDo you lore ine, sweet?" was the wail he
wole.
As he pressed her close to his heart's wild
throbbing;
"Does love's fierce tide irrigate yonr soul?
Is your heart with mine simultaneous bob
bing.'" Her soulful eyes flew up in his face.
And pierced bis own with their lovely
BWter.
Then soft she murmured with witching
grace:
"Do I love you, George? Well. T saou!i
twitterl"
The Xaa the Steepla.
The hundreds of people who have
watched the operations 01 the man upon
the towering steeple of the Third Street
B-rptist Church painting tbe wooden
spire? and arranging the wcathcr-vanc.
have expressed wonder as to tho means
used to reach this lofty position. A re
porter yesterday went up into the belfry
and interviewed the most experienced
Htceplc climber in the world, James
Kenruson. "Why. rav dear boy." said
liH. with an honestv of expression that-
struck home at once, "I've spent the
greater part of my life up among those
rolling clouds. For eighteen years I
sailed the sea between the Hast Indies
and China before the mast, ami after
ward occupfed ever station excepting
that of Captain. When I was sixteen
years of age 1 climbed a steeple in Glas
gow 30i) feet high in half an hour.
The same feat it took the noted 'Steeple
Jack' three days to perform. I've been
mounting steeples lor the past seven
years, as a business. The last one I
went up previous to this was the Chapel
Street Presbyterian, in Albany, which
is three hundre.1 feet in height. I
took dawn the weather-vane, in the
shape of a fish, which weighs '.Ml
pounds, being of copper ana loaded
with lead. It was the first time any one
had been up the steeple in thirty 3ears.
The highest steeple I ever climbed went
up .'570 feet. This was in Ayrshire,
Scotland. The general impression is
that when on a steeple it is easier to
look up than down. This is all a mis
take. When looking up an almost irre
sistible feeling comes over you to jump
from your seat. I had experience of
this kind while on the steeple of Dr.
Darling's church in Albany. I gazed
steadily up for a moment into space,
when, without any feeling of dizziness
or anything of that sort, i became al
most beside myself, and a kind of de
lirium came over me. I had to quit
right then and there, for a moment later
1 would have sprung from my seat. I
can look .steadily down and it does not
affect me. I seldom climb steeples in
cold weather. It's too confounded dan
gerous, the sides being icy and slip
pery. I was up on a Hudson steeple
last" January, and then vowed I'd swear
off climbing in winter, as I nearly fell.
"They tell me this here steeple
shakes when the wind blows. Do 3 ou
know, it's all the better for that. It
gives the iron rods on the inside play.
Look out for those taut ami apparently
solid steeples. The' go sometimes With
a sudden crash. And. besides, I enjo
a ride on a swaying steeple. It reminds
me of the days when I was at sea. Troy
looks immense from the top of that
spire. The people appear like mites,
while the sky bears the same aspect as
from the street. I never remember of
having felt dizzy when on a steeple. I
feel just as much to home away up there
where God's handiwork can be viewed
in all its beaut' as on the ground. I've
got to, in fact, for if I didn't you'd
never catch me hundred of feet
from good walking. That arrow on
the spire of the church I took down,
gilded it and replaced it. It is ten feet
in length and weighs all of 200 pounds.
When putting it back I held it in posi
tion with one hand and tightened the
bolts with the other no easy task, I toll
vou A man at this busiuc-s can earn
from seven to ten dollars a day. As to
the manner in which I ascend that must
remain a secret. 1 never allow an out
sider to handle or exanrnc my ropes.
I attend strictly to business when up
on high, and if I saw even my wife on
the sidewalk would refuso to recognize
her. I just glory in being as high as
ever I can get. It's nvy home up there,
aud I think if I go below when I die it
will be a terrible piece of bad judgment
ou somebody s part probably my
own." Troy (Ar. y.) Times.
Au Exciting Melodrama.
The fifth act was lively. Tho stage
showed the interior of a barn. There
were two apartments on the lower
floor and a hay-loft above. Tho hero
came into one room, drank out of a
bottle and had delirium tremens. The.
actor suffered dreadfully. He saw hid
eous beast3. he wrestled with himself in
the straw, he described a cemetery of
open graves, he told about his sup
posed deaii daughter, and altogether he
made it as unpleasant as possible for
himselt and the audience.
"Merciful heavens!" ho cried, when
the paroxysm was over, and he fell
asleep.
Then the wife dashed into the other
room with the daughter. Sho ex
pressed emotion as the freezing, hun
gry, despairing mother by dashing to
and fro. flingiug her arms wildly about
and rattling in tho circumscribed space
like a pea in a pod; at length sho took
the little girl up a ladder to the loft to
get warm in tho hay, and was down
again in a jifly. As" an acrobatic per
formance it had merit.
"Merciful heavens!" she cried, and
darted out m the storm to search for
her husband.
Then came a prayer by the little girl.
There was the child praying above, un
conscious of the besotted parent wal
lowing in the straw below. The hero
awoke in mental and physical torture.
He wished to die.
"Merciful heavens!" he cried.
His eyes fell on a halter. He would
hang himself. He tied the rope round
a beam overhead, climbed on a manger
and adjusted a noose. The horrined
child implored him to stop, but he
thought her voice was imaginary and
did not heed it. Ho leaped from the
manger, the noose seemed to tighten
round his neck, he made wry faces in
dicative of strangulation, and stilled
exclamations by womeu in the audito
rium denoted that the were thrilled.
The child made an outcry and racket,
and at length found an a"x, which had
been left in the loft to chop ha. She
ought to have used it to cut the rope
and thus rescue her father. She
hacked away vigorously, but without
severing a strand. The" hanging hero
made fresh grimaces, drew up his legs,
straightened them out, quivered, and
did all he could think of to fill out the
time. But still the ax didn't cut. I
heard excited words from the author
as he suffered in tho prompter's corner.
Eventually the actor reached up and
deliberately uutied himself; and a roar
of laughter by the audience drowned
the voices of the characters as they
crowded into the stable to close the
play. Cincinnati Enquirer.
m
The last statistical reports show
that in Germany the wages of both ag
ricultural laborers and industrial work
men have sunk to a lower level than
they have reached for some time. At
the same time tho cost of living has in
creased. Ou the other hand, a table
published in the Statistiqut de la France
shows a marked rise in the wages of la
bor in the small trades in Franco in the
years from 1853 to 1877. The wages
of male labor have risen in that period
fifty-two per cent., and those of women
have risen to an almost equal extent
fifty-one per cent though there is a
great difference in the actual sums re
ceived by the two sexes. In the period
included in the inquiry the cost of liv
ing has somewhat increased. The
price of bread remained about the same,
and clothing is cheaper; but wino is
somewhat dearer, and there has been a
marked increase in the price of meat,
butter, eggs and cheese. Bents, too,
have increased in the cities and larger
towns. But on the whole the condition
of the French laborer has not changed
for the worse.
m m
To Keep Jellies From Molding.
Pulverize loaf sugar and cover the sur
faco of the jelly to the depth of a
quarter of aa inch. This will prevent
mold even if the jellies be kept fo
years.
I A "Hch'XarrirJ MwlaJkr.
The career ol tho swindler and biga
tniit, Mcrritt, with a do'en allac. who
was recently arreiU?d at Lynn. Mm.,
by l'inkertoa. would point a xnry im
portant and Bignilicant moral, if only
there were any one to heed it. Thu
scoundrel ha lived for years upon his
wit, and made a good living apparent
ly. He has had no local habitation or
permanent abiding place, but has trav
eled over tho country upon passes,
cither forged or obtained upon false
pretenses. In 1979 he swindled a bans
in Helot, Kas.. out of $3,000. In the
same year he swindled banks in Alala
ma. "Three years ago ho swindled m;v
enl peoplu and banks in Missouri, and
when arretted his trunk wa. found full
of burglars tools and forgers' imple
ments, and dispatches showing he wax
about to issue counterfeit money.
1 his precious scoundrel's operations
were not confined to obtaining money
by swindling and forgery. He was an
adept in marrying, and he married
governesses, widows young women
anil respectable, middle-aged women,
and lived with them just long enough
to be able to forge drafts ujon their
friends anil relatives, or borrow money
from them, and then he left them. The
record of his marital adventures is al
most ludicrous. " In all. thi3
venerable scoundrel, verging on sixty.
a grandfather in years, and with no
hair on his head to" speak of, has mar
ried fourteen young women in about
three years' time, and never lived with
any of them but two or three da.s.
though in that time he has succeeded
in borrowing money from their "sis
ters, cousins and theiraunts." and even
that ordinarily unimprcssiblo class, his
fourteen molhers-in law.
The arrest of the man. however, dis
pels all the illusions, and now tho mor
al stands out plainly. The fourteen
women whom he has recently married
were all young, good-looking and re
spectable, but they were eager and
willing to marry th's old man. though
he was a stranger to them, without in
quiring who he was. or what he was do
ing, or where he wxs going, or what
were his family connect ons, or what
was his character, merely because he
professed to be rich, and they thought
they were about to move into a sphere
of life where they would sport their
silks and diamonds, and ride in their
carriages, and make a sensation in so
ciety, and live without work. To all
appearances their friends and advisers
we-e equilly indifferent, and only
looked at his financial pretensions. Ho
was a good catch, and fourteen of them
caught on, and now have the poor con
solation of knowing that they were silly
gudgeons who were hooked by a vulgar
swindler, former and counterfeiter. The
narrative of his career only shows that
there is a considerable class of women
in this country, and respoctablo women,
too, who are so cray to live without
work and to make a splurge that they
are ready to jump at any bait
that appears to be gilded, aud
to marry anything in man-shape
that pretends to have money,
without stopping to inquire into his
antecedents or real character. The
ratio in thN case of fourteen to one
shows that there is a surplus of this
silly, reckless class, and that when tho
ostensibly rich person appears, though
hemav be as old as Mothusaleh or ugly
as Caliban, he has only to solicit matri
monial contracts to have them filled all
over the country, without any inquiries
as to the party of the first part. And,
vice vena, the career of tho precious
rascal and the conduct of his dupes in
timates that this same class of very
good and very respectable women think
that they would demean themselves by
marrying a poor man upon his merits
and running the risk of having to work.
The amount of unhappiness.even under
the most favorable circumstances, of
regret and of bitter compunction that
the victims of these one-sided and in
judicious marriages havo to undergo
seems to bo no bar to others, however.
Where there is so much temptation ly
ing about they seem to fancy they are
derelict if thsy do not yield to it, and so
rush blindly in, and "where one suc
ceeds in getting her prize the others
pay a bitter penalty for their rashness
and silly ambition. Merritt's fourteen
victims ought to be warnings aga:nst
marrying for money, but the silly gamo
will go on all the same. Chiavjo Trib
une. m m
How Thoy Slipped.
At eleven o'clock yesterday forenoon
a couple of excursionists took scats on
the east portico of the City Hall directly
under the window of the Chief of
Police. He was a bean-pole looking
chap of twenty-three with dust an inch
deep on his back, and she was an
auburn-haired angel of twenty, wearing
a solid shoo and chewing three quids of
gum rolled into one. For a long time
they sat and looked at the fountains and
sighed and were silent. Then he ten
derlv queried:
"Hanner, isn't it dreamy?"
"Yum," she answered.
" I could sit here forever," he whis
pered. "I don't believe I could I'd be hun
gry
More silence and sighs, and then ho
took her elbow in his hand and said:
" Hanner, I'm hungry now."
"Didn't you bring a'biscuit along?"
"Hungry for your love, Hanner
not for biscuits." Hanner, 'sposen wo
'sposen a case."
"Well?"
"'Sposen I knew a Justice of tho
Peace who would marry us?"
"How much?"
"Two dollars."
"Have you got the money?"
"Hanner, do you doubt my love?
I've got seventy-five cents, and I'll hunt
up the Harker bovs and borrow tho
rest"
"I'm afraid."
"Now, Hanner!"
"Oh, I can't; you know my folks
don't like you."
" Hanner, hitch this way till I talk to
you. 'Sposen I bought "you peanuts
and candy and watermelon? 'Sposen
you realized my great love, and con
cluded to hitch to me before some oth
er girl captured the prize,? We'd gently
slip down, these steps, turn the corner
of this stately edifice, walk to the shop
of a Justice, and you'd have me and I'd
have you."
"Oh dear, but pa would rave."
"Hold on, Hanner. Your par
needn't know it no one will know it.
We'd keep it as silent as the grave un
til I had made your old man respect
me for what 1 are. Gimme half a
show and I'll make your par foller me
around like a calf within a year, and
your mar will fairly love the "ground I
walk on. Come, Hanner, let's slip."
Oh, Gawge!"
" Hanner Hanner! Think of the ro
mance the love the mystery the
tenderness the gold watches and dia
mond rings and silk dresses."
"Where?"
"Why, next year when the wool comes
off. Don't I own forty acres of land!
Don'tl dote on you? Would I ask you
to slip around if I didn't love yon above
the best hoss in our county? Haaner,
let us slip."
VAnd. you really love '
Then they slipped. They caught
sight of a six-foot farmer coming up
tbe walk, with a big cane on one arm
and his wife on the other, and the girl
slid for Michigan avenue and the lovet
for Griswold street, the latter whis
pering to himself as he dodged through
tbe City Hall:
"That's her old dad, and -he knocks
oxen down with that club!" Detroit
Free Press.
A hero iz often the acksident ov
moment. Josh Billings.
Tht Sckare of Osl?Bati.
Prcjldcat A. sT Welch, of the Iowa
Agricultural College, starting. la
public addreM. with tho statement that
nearly all the processes of prodactir
industry arc only occiiTc step In
the progress of condenatIon. developed
h interesting and uful thought in this
lucid way
Wc turn o:.l into gra. graw Into
milk, milk into cream, and cream into
butter, which L the final product in
tho riM. Corn, which is a lorxn of
condcned soil, mav't-xlf bo condensed
into whisky, starch or glucose Tho
tmount of twenty-eight pounds of glu
:roe extracted from on buhc! of corn
is ?old at twice the price and freighted
jt less than half the CO-.U Oat arr
condensed into oatmeal, sorghum iuto
sugar, apples into " cider; barley Into
beer: and mj on without stint- Every
step advance. the pr.cu. duninithes the
weight, and saves co3t in carrying to
market. Hut the urdinaty f'-rm of
condensation on the farm begins with
the coarser crops and end- in the vari
ous animal product. Sheep, cattle,
hogs and hotes are condensed from
the grasses and grain, and ever tep
of the series all the way up from the
;oil to the thoroughbred, if rightly
managed, briugs its legitimate profit,
the final gam being the comparatively
inexpensive convrance to market
which comes from large value packed
into redu ed magnitude-:. Hut this
constant crowding of va'ne into Miialler
dimensions is shown not oniy in tho
transformation of the coarser into the
finer commodities, but it is seen like
wise in the improvement of our domes
tic animals. A Teas steer and a high
grade Shorthorn arc freighted to m ir
ket at the same rates, while the one
brings double the price of the other
when they get there.
"The waste that come from the e
cetive making of what is called offal U
the grand caus of failure on the farm.
It absorb- food and time, it costs even -thing
and brings nothing. It i. fully as
expensive to raise horns and white
leather as to raise marketable muscle.
The price U different, but the freight
the same. Some farmers display great
talent in the production of otlal. They
raise hay that is all woody fiber, apples
tha a-e all core, com that i all cob,
an I cattle that aru all head ami horn
and gristle and tail. They stigmatize
the skill and care that d.minislies the
core, the cob and the overweighted
bone to increase the salable parts as
fancy farming. Now tho whole scope
and purpose of improvement, both in
the animal and vegetable kingdom, is
simply to redu e to the smallest com
pass consistent with strength the un
salable portions, and to enhance the
quality and sie of the salable ones,
ihe crab apple and tho Northern Spy,
tho choke pear and tho Flemish Beauty,
tho Mustang pony ami the Atabiau
mare, the Florida cow with her shrunk
en udder and the Jersey that fills the
pail, are examples of the oppos to ex
tremes in the different series. The one
resuit sought in breeding, practiced as
an art, N to raise from the lower end of
each scries up toward the higher.
The model Shorthorn cow is a sam
ple of closely compacted values a
treasure of the most nutritive food so
packed as to secure the highest prices
and cheapest transportation. She is
developed to fullness of quality just
where the epicure funis and pas lor
the most delicate roast or sirloin steak.
And those portions of her body which
tho butcher considers superfluous aro
condensed to just within the limits of
size and strength which are indispensa
ble to the economy of animal life. In
the gradual progress of condensation to
which she litis been subjected through
many generations, her bonis have been
made rudimentary and her head shaped
after the best model and her bones
brought to the fineness and strength of
steel. And tho policy that has effected
this striking result rests on the follow
ing reasons: 1. The offal absorbs for
its growth and support a portion of the
food which tho animal consumes, con
sequently tho greater the volume of
offal the greater the amount of food
wasted in feeding. 2. Large and coarse
oflal is almost invariably accompanied
by coarse muscle. Capacious offal
carries inferior beef. 3. Large and
coarse offal usually goes along with a
scanty development of valuable parLs.
Hence it indicates a lack, not enly in
quality, but also in quantity of market
able beef. 4. Heavy oflal is rarely ac
companied by the fattening quality.
The cow or ox whose carcass is over
weighted with offal will not as a general
thing take on fat easily." Ar. Y.
Tribune.
Stjle In Farming.
There is such a thing as style in
farming, regardless of economv and
good sense. There is such a thfng as
neighbors practicing opposite styles,
unconscious of their good or bad exam
ple. We have a case in point. In a
town not far distant is a hill, overlook
ing a beautiful meadow, owned by dif
ferent parties. It is the time of rye
harvest, and your correspondent is on
the eminence swinging his grain cra
dle, raking and binding sheaves, stook
ing grain and "meditating generally on
things below. In the meadow two
farmers are seen engaged in haying.
One starts the mowing-machine in the
fresh and early morning and cuts a
large piece by" ten o'clock. After a
short respite one of the horses is put
on to the hay-tedder, and by a vigorous
use of that and the horse-rake, some
of the ripe3t and thinnest grass is made
ready to cart before dinner. All this
is done noiselessly and smgle-handed.
In the afternoon two men appear on
the scene, and before night-fall nearly
all the hay mowed in the forenoon is
raked and carted homeward, while
some of the greenest is cocked up for
removal before dinner the next day. So
the haying proceeds rapidly, quietly
and economically of time and help.
Ihe other farmer takes things mod
erately and as he doubtless thinks more
easily. He starts hi1 mowing machine
in the middle of the forenoon and does
his heaviest work in the hottest part of
the day. He gets so exhausted by the
heat that he has no energy in reserve
for handling the hay, and so he lets it
lie, sometimes two and three days, be
fore carting it from tho field. He
claims that the hay is better for being
bone dry and that bleaching it is no
detriment. This man makes hay all
summer, and drags through dog days
as best he can, but tired all the time.
Both these men have bay to feed and
sell, and both ask the same market
price for their surplus hay, and both are
classed as farmers.
There is little question which pays
the best. In the good old times when
words were fewer and more expressive,
a farmer was called a husbandman, and
the meaning of husbandry was frugali
ty, economy and thrift. A husband
man was a" mated-man. and one who
possessed and saved things. A thrift
less husbandman was as much a misno
mer as a wifeless one. There is a great
deal of fagging and fancy fanning nor-a-days
that won't stand the tests of
common sense and a fair balance sheet.
"In all labor there is profit." said the
wise King of Jerusalem, and useful ag
riralturafiabor wisely directed is prob
ably no exception to this rule. The
style ol profit is a pretty good style for
inv kind of business, and particularly
for farming. Springfield Mass J) Hepub.
m
One of the best ways to cook rice
f tn stom it: best because it is no
trouble; all that is needed is to be sure
to put in plenty of water. If you wish
for rice pudding and have not planned
for it hours before by cooking the rice
in this wav. vou can have it in a sur
prisingly short time. One cup of rice
trill mke croonettes and ouddimr
.enoogh for family of four. I
rERSOSAL AJU LITERARY.
- (oloar! Joha W Krra!r wriiis,:
1 life of ThonxiLi JrfTerwa
The wife of W.ll A3i ICw. ho
ibor. t a blonde. ad a Udy f morr
than onliajirT ablhir. The jsot-?tii t
i tne-lookial; man. aal reidy iorT.
teller
John IV Wardlaw. Jr . a )oa-
Soathera cholAr aad writer. l d I
He w-u an hooorr-1 gTJut o riecj
toa Colirgr. and at Ui t rao f h!
death a Pro?cor of I jaosr xod
Ltcr-tur tn a eollojjw tar wuaaea at
l'hrUaburg. a
The will of tsj lot Nithan Vav-.r.
of l'oaghVitptie. N. Y. txUMvlh U
Vaar CoJlrgo. for c-holrhl and
educational fund. JjO.ImJ. nail for
coHegf profe-.trkip SO.WOl Alo,
to Vaar Hrvlt-r lUjital $-.tj.
Vaar l"rolh-r Horn- fur Agt?d Men,
$ti.i); lViplit Church ol I"oujh
k , jo. 10.103, and SNiaday-Scfcooi
of various I'oughkeeo! churches 57.-
-A-ilongajoa IMG N. V. Wills
wrote to a oung c-mpondeut. "A
to writing for magx-aiic, that h very
neariv done with a .- matter of
protl'. The competition alon glvo
the e litor more tnaa thor can ur.
Vou roukl not -oil a piMeuljHotry now
in America. The literary avenue 1 am all
oiorcnmdcd. and ou can not !ve b
the pen except a a dru igo to a ncr
paper'" Alexander Duma nR at m, ami
immedinielv proceeds to warm a plalo
of sue p. which hai Injun prepared the
night lefore. and cort'umti tin a.vno
On the strength of tins otip ho Mnr'.
until noon, uhrtt he bteakfasU, lit
compoes all thee hour, and neldum
rcail. hreneh literature- at le.vl ihn
gravr part of it - lie know by heart
With that of other languages, iurludmg
Knglish, his acquaintance l very slight.
In the course of conversation at
Concord School the other day I'rnf
Harris ..m that "by moan-i of his
morn-tig jwper, man each day adjusted
anew h s relations to the universe '
' By this wonderful principle." he ad
ded "of tin' c operation of man with
his rai'i. b which each partakes of tho
v..-(loiu of all, we have for three oonts,
our da ly knowlmlgo from Japan,
Aribia and the rutire earth. Thimost
potent element in modern civilization
is the newspaper."
,pap
IH'Jdt'HUl'.H.
Hoop skirts are to he revived and
there is a great deal of biitl in the
feminine world. ." linvtn lUgister.
A nnl'lcii ntnf lnwn from IIHuli,
Torhxw oil tun t!' In iMrwt.
Who 1 Hit' t In ih- irwt
filoU -Ufa rn. xn.it l.d"
MiimIIiIii t H'J" to rnjojr't,
- Detroit t'rc Vrs.
--Four oars ago a young man, with
out a cent on his back, mid only one
suit of clothes to his nam, rutorud
Denver and bt'ggi-d his .supper. La-t
week he eloped with Ins employer's
wife and ten thousand of hi.- cadi.
Close application to busitn'Ss. coupled
with pluck and industrv, wins every
lime. .orrtMoum Ikrnll.
"These rooms aro not on .suite,"
said the gue.st of a Mini nor hotel. "Can
you show me ome that are?" Tho
"room clerk," recentlv promoted to
that position from the villag store, re
sponded. "Fact inarm, them rooms
hain't very sweet, bum' as they IfMikoul
ou the stable; but I can -h)W ou omn
on the other side sweet as a nut," and
the rooms on the other .side wore en
gaged. i'tt.ihttfjtoit Critic.
Skiggins was asked what he thought
about cremation. He said it wa- all
right enough for those who liked it. and
a good many won id use it because it
was cheap; but he did not think it
would be good in summer any way.
Others who wished might ux'H'rimcnl
on such new fangled rotious. but as for
Mrs. S. and himself they would stick 1 1
the old fashioned butter, no matter
what itcosU Wit nnl li'isdotn.
There is a very little consolation to
bo found in the conventional condol
ence of society. When a poor Irish
man lay on His death-bed one of Ins
friends came in to express his sympathy.
He took the poor man's hand and said,
with evident emotion: "I'lit, my boy,
we must all of us die once." The sick
man turned over in a disgusted frame
of mind and replied: "That is just
what bothers me. If wo could only die
half-a-doeii times 1 wouldn't worry
about this once." litttf'ula Express.
A fon.l mother leaned from a vino
embowered window the other evening,
and in tones soft as a gentle mother's
love ould make them called to her
bc.iutt.ul bov: "Clarence! Clarence
riantgenct Jones!
Wandering
little
honey-bee. mother hears your merry
prattle in among the flowers. Come to
your tea. my honey-bird." And just
then the mellow hum of thu little
honey-bird twittered out on the gloam
ing: " Dog gone the dog gone luck to
thunder! 1 was trying to make a big
black ant fight a gray npidcr in a battle
an you hollered and made me mash a big
green worm in my fingers. Dog gone it
all!" And the mother, hiding herMiules
behind a wcil dissembled frowncamoin
to the garden and said: ' Ohyou naty
little pig. I'll flake the hide oflyou with
a mop-stick if ever I catch you in the
garden again. Wash your filthy paws
now and come along to vour supper if
you want any." This, children, strongly
illustrates the difference between poetry
and black verse. Burlington Haxkeyc.
Mr. (.HlctrOVonderfnl Hort.
The other evening several persons
were in a cigar store on Wall Street
talking about intelligent horses. One
of them referred to a horse once owned
by G. SL Gillctt, which he used a num
ber of years ago while in the bakery
business. The horse Mr. Gillctt pur
chased for a mere song, the animal be
ing so poor he was thin as a rail, but
his owner, by dint of good feeding and
good care, brouget him up to be in all
respects a hand-ome cqutne. Mr. Gil
lett usually kept him before the bread
and cake wagon, and the horse became
very fond of his owner, and, being very
intelligent, would do a great many
things that were really quite wonderful
for anything short of a trick horse, in
going" from house to house with his
bread and cakes Mr. Gillctt would leave
his horse at one place and then go on.
crossing the street at time until com
ing to a bouse where they wished to
purchase, he would call "his horse.
" Come, Ned. come over here, old fel
low," and the horse would trot away to
where hb owner was. get as near to
him as possible, and then stop until
ordered further. Sometimes naughty
boys would annoy Mr. Gillctt, when all
he would have to do would be to point
his finger at them and say: "Ned, just
go for them-" The horse would lay
his ears back on his neck, and in
fact go for the bovs, on the sidewalk
or elsewhere, until ne caught the wag
on fast, and then would back off and
start again- One time Mr. Gillett left
his horse and went away about a block
distant. Going in the "middle of the
street, he shouted. "Come, Ned, old
fellow, hurry up," and the bors im
mediately smarted for him on a trot.
Mr. Gillett commenced to run, which
made the horse fairly crazy to eaten tip
with him, so that he came along at tre
mendous speed. Just as the horse
reached the front of fhe Court House
the top ox one of the barrels in which
bread was carried fell off with a clatter,
and the animal stopped stock still ia the
road, and wouldn't move again until it
had been replaced.
Mr. Gillett always claimed his horse
was wonderfully expert in business
matters, and that to him he owed at
least some of his success in business, as
while he bad Ned, in twentv year; he
made $20.QOOt demringeac&jeart 1,000,
Our Young Heatlcrs.
VKHK Tot, IJMJSB
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CWLS 1M sf(K MM.
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J t lfcJ-JV
A UIDK X WI.MIHII.L.
i wvU to toll hi about tt-ueth!
! that haMiH'tied many ar a in th
town 01 NanUirlot.
VJtsJte on the bruc of thr MjfbeU hill
stood a curou oldfashaed in III, tho
at.j of which ri -o Jn; that thy
uonrh touched th giotmd. and of
courx Ifcoy no ltnul a hfcjh 1vi
the to, of tho mill nhrn tkoy won
1 whirled up by tho wind.
Nuar this old wni.httUl tho lulllor
liet. with hi wlfeand to ohddron.
John was a sturdy. m Wnwid boy.
two t-ar older thn Dorothy, but he
was ivrv eood and !onUe to Jifr. lor h
loved his si-tor uoarlv, ami t-ni lit
ol h'.s timo playing un nor
wore always happy together, aud in
Miuimer. whou tho weather wa but.
! they used to Mil a tiny boat on 0110 l
' tin manv ponds Thesr little craft wa.
, not a French to with pamtod hull and
gav streamer, but a plain affair which
their fatltor had made (or thorn In tho
j long evenings, and it find a tnor bit
! of colton for a ail. But that did not
matter. No, Indeed! Thov tied a
' string at either end, ami as the pond
wore very nhallow. they waded nbm.
I pulling It merrdy from ldo n Md.
using all Muds of" real --hip name-; and
, word, which they had foamed from
' tho nallorv
1 So the Mtmmcr-i flow awav until, alas!
I John was thought old enough lolnimnl
j to .school, and jxnr little Dorothv was
left to pla all alone he was a hol-
ful little girl, ami saiod the mother
many .stops. Still, idie found her piny-
tinlox cry dull, t'-nuo she didn't care
nnv longer for the boat.
At last -ho Irognn going with her
' father to the mill, and all dnv ho flitted
j about, as busy a a boo. and humming
j a cheerily,
( Sometimes nho would lie on thograi
and watch tho mill mU as thoy swept
1 slowly down, and n again on tho
j other side thinking all sorts of odd
j thought) about thetii. Ono day whllo
she was Ia7)l watch tig them, .sho had
I a bright idea. What fun! Springing
f up. he waited for a ad to come within
j her rea'di. and caught it. holding 011
until it lifted her oil her feet, and then
! she let go and eiyd another, until she
was tired. Dav after da she aniu od
t heruulf thus, and when imturdriy canto
1 nho brought John to see the ittxirt.
m . .. ..m i . " ft. a.
Mie bad becomo too well ac pialutod
with her great friend, tho mill, to have
any fear of It. and eadi tune oho trtutcd
herself to its ar.ns ho let them earrv
her a little higher. 50 that .she began to
I mm; a long way oil. over the land and
the ocean. .... ,
hat a heroine ln; must seem to her
.-Y 1. "-. . '""'K"T, , 7 " ",,v"r lhe biuln.fi of coupling car Is ohi- of
tned it. not once. K lated by her ,ue- lbw IlliMl dangerous In'whloh tin -,
com. hho sprang iitioi. the -a,f for a last , , n wM h a(.0,,,nfl,
rule, as it was oiniuir time. I.tKiklii r " ... ... ' . . .
I .1 !.... -t.. t. .. I ...
11 1 111. .1 .. T ' oc ur. lull wnoro iiaii wo hmik ir
back over her shouhler to eo tho olloct , ,1 1 ., , . . .
. , . ,. , , 11 those who arc thus unfortunate? "Sato-
rfe r' ; i-SsAS f .: ff' ,v;; rl? "-V,"" m '"
a l!.ikMi?L- l l.m.1.1 thai hc cuol.1 Mw!"u."'",."'"''",,'r- .' '" "-"""I
ft W 9 1 A It mm 1. -h
Them was the harbor, with l!s hJt
Kail Met to drv Sho could look nw,-
down into tho town, ami WO the ix.-oj.lo
:.. .1... .
in the streets
There, too, wa
the Sankut Head
light, so far away: now she must bo a
high as the tall light-houso. 'Hion-iigh-
ly frightened, yet not daring to let go
. ..!. .it Ci.-t., i. i.' ... .n.
i 1111.1 tiiij iii;iuiih ii'i in.-ziii " XT.
She aw her mother couHng to call
them to dinnor. and she thought. iKior
little girl. "I shall never see my dear
mother again"
Higher an.ftill higher nho flow, her
dress tlimtlng out ou thu wind, and
her rioor litth- heart nearly burntiu--
with terror and grief
She did not sec John. o pale with
fear, nor did ho hear her father err:
"Oh. my child will be killed! My i,oor
little girl'"
Sho had now onlv .Tcs and cant and
thought for that terrible journey, and
once she wondered if hc were goln" to
Heaven, for -he wm sure it could "not
be much higher than she had rion.
Still she clung tightly, and at but she
shut her eye.
The top once reachod, IowIy the nail,
with iU precious burden, began to de
scend. How they ail watched it! No
body pokc, and they hardlv dared
breathe. Lower and lower
j until within a few feet of the ground!
i when Dnrfilhtf nnnnl Imr ?.. n.l
If .,n
I -... ,- . ..-,. -.--T, ......
overcome with a sense of itafctr. her
little fingers unchu-ped. and down she
came.
She fell pretty hard. but. luckily.
there are no -tone In Nantucket, no no
bones were broker; but her head had
such a bump that he aw bright lights
1 1 asnmg. auu nearu a num of trange.,
sounds; and s-wn her poor back began j
J to ache, and her head felt jwre, and "she
.Treimol BW;mKfMlentf tlm kind w.JI In, found ti
opened her eyes once more to find her- "Z5 omc 100115a or uaagcrotM act, when
-.elf safe In her dear father if arras; sod ! 3 arc 'lared to dolt. Is not oowanfkc
then they all wept together for thank-' "t"t P'ace, and will sot prevent tho
fulness. . exhibition of courage whes there U o-j-
And thU was the last ride that Doro-, for -- WcUcrn Burnt.
thy ever took on tbe saili of the old I . -------.
windmill- St. Nicholas. J Toe death of Spoltod-Taii recall
--- l,hc romance la which the favorite
A Iirastirsl Bird. daughter of Ihe old Chief and Lieotea-
. . . 1 nckhum Livlegton. of the well-
Tbe flamingo a a beautiful inhaJbutaat.S-flowB New York family, were tho
of ail marshy regions in the ircyiCM. J priacipal actors. While tatfooed at
It is found in great numbers ia Soath J Fort Laramie is 18 Lieuteaaat Lir-
Amenca and the West fndtes. and is -gon taw and fell ia Ujrr with the
AfricSouthertJ Asia and Chiaa. Udft.ky mahlen. They were marr.ed.
is a bird of wondrous bcaaty. It has i aad -he bore hi a oa. but the Toaa
slender. gracefully forroeu body. loog. J officer bealtJi falM sad he w&A-at
thm lez-i, and a very long, flexible to Karope. where ! fsisd fcaetin-
jBir-A. n oeniM siacoA erect. it aecJc
stretched m the air. its head is fajjy six
- - -- - fc.w j
The feathers on the body of the a -
mmgo are white, delicately tfeted wjtjj
rose-color- Ita wmrrs. which in
large, are of the most brinbnt cariet,
ad the loag qall, are bbek. It U a
yery-ioeiable bird, and is aliraj, wt
ta Eocits ot aeveral haodrw. The a-
-tAAiSriUk tf m. M tU 3 S
tc w. a. awe. 01 camiBgoes.
described by traveletti. is oae of tart
ngBaZiifceacc Seen fros afar,
wadiaor swimaiag ir. the lalela of
salt srrh-for the jlaajisgo lovea
best to keep aear the sea-cout--ee
t .ma I
would think" that M iaaJease armv rt I
laaxaa
soldiers
1 w m -w a w Kri-nia---a - a m
- s -B-w -L -L-' -.-LaX-n X flKT 'mum - Jta ---. a-aa. -
the &mmgt u called "the aokBer
binf by the aatives, and Hambohlt.
the great Ger-t-aa traveler aad Batsral
tat. relates a very ajHwiag story, jjfcj,
be gives as aa actoal occarrence. illtH
trauag Uie Ctaeaa of thij nimc A
new towHihip of Asgo-rtura hail been
lormca; bat the iiikhLii .
ther iiwtiwi- r.fc-w rim2.w to1- trii
, -ttueai- ise-s; kSSiSKS
.! t&rov. u tu -& &
. - irant&i Wdr ef in r -r-f
" pnilrtNir tadfc "
, 4 ,ren feltfy s aI a t
H5ta ''i 9mmww Jf '
! . rtttl! t to dfm4 Usir W?
l-lIt- lb -3i-r-s f-t-w rcar
Mia t!k lr. aL 1rmie
in of ga -Krt .. ?
J W -v u m lJ r
ikt f tha grl Hra-- -upm-m um
mo-tt& ol tfc tMKnf-a.
,VirHt aar n-MvtrM &,
ditfUruUT it thr attempt t i4?
' haSU vt the isutw m R I
aaat. for it U r r J -a---
I -if4. jxad au iUs4 Tr to4
I j ati potl t
' MUMft t dtijr TV
U U-rt. anL tnfeMtr. IW .
' aad w4L rd lh 9- M "
' lvMt .uid H lift Urjf W4 . trt
in iht air Wojt ih"
1 and J! ot JJr
j Wt ha t i . t .
wh Wl ss-rait-X. tfc4AUj ift
ih5rotn,jte lall " j-t
WM Ih ttuat f "
oae Uz op nma t Vtvt U'
ae.L t-tidujj ecV iknri, "
lt h"ai 00 iho roWdl o ! , is
the ix-AV -wwi n U r W4
; ru !-;;, U a -,"-- fU. rf44 s-nt
taC J.ad lU vUt. !fw-rl w kmg
ntk Uflurv ad M Hf fcaL t
. tie rraJK t-"r!L lto 'u
M-nW by thow? ivawra'i k
bxn fortUttAjM mo- U - w
lm, hf kII g""""
In t- dpth of twmio 4to ---.
-r th wluT brd bo4 -for
tru day wi IW t rmp-!
whto ;-, Nhon il HJ mmmm
ltathol IJicv taWtf U tho vMr Immim 1
atoJv nd -im aKmi !? -
duel, but hy are a-l r$ tmmmg
to sly fr Mmi mti. al iwtrt mm .
that art thr car old do tfwy Ma
tho full mA$UsWt- of thtr wrV
ptMtitar
1 ao tjarau a iwut punmr
1a luanr oni t--t maa. It)
of Mt aro ioiwlc lr a !
ami Mn th- tHrsl whds iV
htm -.!ot4t in Ifeoir tuar-hy hm. Its
the grortt "south Woi,an ttai 1m
itOsdot t Hir of Its tt fftfittl-.
Iimv "ITh- tx-olol ts a Virt mUI mm
Wr of tho panther fajwllv. sad k. 1
in .MexHfoand all through th AHsrt-.
tropic It l atawH--tlnd vttmtr
eovorrd with gH.lulutf bsWk tatl
Ing-i. It h th no habk -
moHiWrt, of il famMv, h1mj- it
ta nsleoo lu m-i odidd UirVt
and ritnlng tho forot at Hgka
early tin, 11 In arehot lrd ad cftU
animals. Ai''' ).ut tf4$.
, I'MHrajfr nad Kofk!oiir.
Tlio habit of lUrlng eneh olhor it)
dilllotilt and jometlitH daj--rut
thing l very common anions olttfelrrn
and oten ihoo of Uirgwr grwih 'I'V-
praotho ofirii ld to tho onmmi
of fiHilUh aot wIih-Ii erv ht -to.t
' pHrjH)o, and a dl-regard of dawgrr
which is oltoii tiiistakon for ifj--butin
roaht U nothing but r-Vl
tioss. Tho otllld who vlll I11M IftVo a
' dart is ooiuidervd as wanting Mi
nv. but In ronlitv ho mar roit imk.
01 tho real arthdn than thwo wk lh
nvcuo turn.
Ihe Imiv who will nih In tnml f a
train of nam to resell" noltlhl n drfHtr
display) oura,. while tho prooUre f
ten Indiilgod in by lt s of ruii4ic ,N
front of a inov n, train to i wk.i
dares come the unrat l dift4
reoklostn-i. S lit wlmuiinr Imttt
Ing. lMy will vrntnro tHrmd Ur
depth, etch 0110 ambitious to do m
tiilng more daring than hi Hitiiiito
They may do tin 11 no huadred and
. tiinely.nino tltnr-i In afoiy, and Ui m-
1 thousandth wo hear of a id aoettit
whereby joiiu ouo I klllnd ordrownrd
The grontor part of tho ai-eiilowtM
' oonitattllv iM'uurring are du to owre
I fact that familiarity with dangor .
' ,.. ,.' . ,..r... ... ,.
lenoas wliluu is roKiisiJoi. It M a
ono to iM-oomo almost Insorisiblt t It
Yl to mte old and oMH-r)fit-l
I'ra:r. Uy constant cxpos.iro
constant exoosuro
ITfu .. fi 1 . VVTi .1 .
that H tll exists, while thoe not
r .i f it ...
f.itulilar with tho bmino. renlU tJ
nocoMity of precaution, ami do not for
,
k'.c. lo
, Cl !'?
tat it. I h nowljoy of lh
I , . "Ml Wl KIUI1U VI l IT! II HIT. tllll'l, PUTT
ITOi.i.i . . .. . . . , . " . .
ari nnnthnr rlnx wlm Iwuiniim
recaie irotn ucin-r in uaiu-or A hort
t . .V 1, i . .
iIn,,J .a- T n lb,,W! " '' ,
JmnI,lnX oTa .trrot car. did not nUo
; wni'ns down by the .M of
"c car -v w','r hing unable to ut
' ',,,,'f, af,,,,?i!?- th !a ,nm W9T
2 3,"! kiU , Uo wl!''fMJ' what warn o
T,r' "e:Jr U,n;? A !If?Uar J'"''c"
night tunc rh circumstances
! rirc tJ"' mB; but tUo l,l'r"' f'rtur'a',
V wf I"WI1 ,m wadn U to th
, fr?'n -W1 . moro ,-rot,, tbar
txdng knocked down.
iIuch of,lte ""'"IneM feJt by mth
rr ,jn ,Mje nZ ,"-!r hlhlren -tart off
,,.Pf'n1,th'5 fart or a picnic, ami tlortr
m'll1 In allowing tbm ujMin tho
Ta:cr woum - "7. t!iy coun
feci nuro that the children would ot-
i-erve tho ncceary precaution, and
not become reckless. Children, to bo
mru, cannot always remembor and
h'uld not bo trusted alono, but when
wc those of lanrer L-rowth. who
should ct a bettor exampto, dirr,gard-
" lbn wtanocst rule of safety, wo
cannot Wonder that XVCulo.nl iiwnif
",'T '-'"ri may ifinztn a party or yotiag
PP1 "- H boat. ome standing
. Ilr. nl)ii. w.iVlM.- flL I. .. u.l- .1
., .
-i'ivw.miuhih-mi; wn wiui nnr
I We,Kht hen an accident happens to
f af " a VnT i l natural result lo
" ePUd.
" e src ""poeI to danger erory day
- ..- r ,.,.
'" -- oxjko ourselves ut
vnnwizrilY l reckle vul wickd.
v-n,l're" shonw be taught that not to
etuc-i. aaa he dieL The Siemx tHrl
oa hearing the tad sew, piad awav
uvi, ami Her oosIt waj brots'kt to
Fort Laiaale fer SpoUed-Taif and
buried there, the grave bein- fll aa-
snallr d.-,.-t Lx.i. . ' , !T
oIdieTji. Of Llr'agoa's child lo
trace has ever been fo5-o lX
moUier of the LWesaat lZn tA
adopt and educate it. If the Sioux
aa.e any Kaowled of the ckild's
whereaboBU they keep the jcret wdL
..
A. man drove njiita territic pace
to tae railrosvl fcti. , v -n
.:v. . - .. . . --
I.LZL STT-!2Lf?l,frf-5-. Sh
-wrJT-. f .C" --5?or.-wowu
Tk... m
for the East,
ta tifBe.'" the
"laaalc gocdae. 1
BU3&3BU cried- Is
?i? Vi!l!5? "tieljed a tragedy.
great exciteseat.
asd
Ir.
; iie cowered ia a. ii-
-w.. m
VOBr rhfht
he Gostiat-ed.
"Jteckoa too
w.acia- a utile zirL
forgotaer is roar lit
VOr ktM-nr. Va t-,
caa get oCai f u v.. f;i. 1
dmve away wttk &y jfrwfi rf,
4
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