Bloomington Progress, Volume 17, Number 21, Bloomington, Monroe County, 25 July 1883 — Page 4
SEWS CONDENSED.
Tom. Thumb died -A JaTdlaboro, Km, of apoplexy,, HA waskramBridgew OA, k Mb, h(xeal main fMAr
tlk pas thirty years, and Ml oimndaUd
TwoladTrnderiookto
IBa Inokawaiiiai track at Baane, K S. fa VMfevlewtf to JVtfaoatUac Ma. Their
naiaivaed wish lra, sad
l)ytaa-
ajaongeauldwaabadrv aawised, Tbe Treasurer of the Bntland(Vk) BaUToatl Oeeapaav h short SS.OOtt. , -'Father O'Horan, of Wakeabarre, P., ka:CgcWdte audar-Dboot eaildrea to war bang or frixxea in ehurefc. yThe Captam of an English tart from lUnaa' discharged a Chinese carpenter at Boston, who desired to become a resident" of the United States, for which the attBper was held te. 13,000 (wviotaUa-tfaalmaaU fraaton law at" 188a -
Ex-CoBgreasman Archibald McAIlis-
aacntexvat Attoeaa.
B a rowing contest at .Qgdensharg,
H X, Baalaa beatBoaahy aquariac aula, aVtag tao beet f ous-mllc tinte on ienradL SRXif. .A. talking- nmfech ooenrredhef Ate la-'hetwnsn. Baalaa and mrtney..' Ttoharchargoa.ttajiBBaajtnii with -cutting: aaoaa'aaiawlamqtia laki.er hiringansae one to doit eoveral jean ago! Banian, retorted tha Courtney vaahaand
V ',
Another neat storm -awaat UimRid
.tha Martkwart m the- loth inst .At Port AiUaa, Wia. ioo buOdhnre war wrecked, atx penoaaianrf and adaatara of 51000 faaUeted. Alt Ndn, DLr tha loot at the
waa anroofed, two stories at
which 9 109,000 waa recently expended for J
repairs, wrs aarroiK navy-yarn vm Winer
pat
ta at Hampton Beads to remedy defects in
Yellow iefer is prevailing with un
usual severity atfTazaCrai. Thre wereJ
thirty deaths fct Kay, StttaJune and 144 In the tat half of July. . r 3hfxotrmjhas aoae much barm! Wiai-fWaVto ravajrlnsr Q tobaxam the region of Lanoaater, Paj and ra attacked the grass In the 'parishes adjoining-Alexandria, lav FOREIGN.
now deau-es to' tunnel Tinder
OCR YODNG FOLKS.
va.
jranca
YW? "fT lj tha simaroIaM ana wre at One tine
;... . ? i room-iaatee: but it ImWI ben SVe rit
Careys fellow-townsmen again ! yeara noW t an ftrhiearJ
Mib He Tnw located ft
at Bre to hla house In Dublin, bnt failed to hum it. . " : v, : A steamer -from the C3o&go rtvtM reporaj Man7 ia ood health. tieBWglaaitieinberaajapalHyieoV A-wiewi namoi Ute Vere,' a juiatoaiM aaaaifc anda wklowa dwfa. tar, Ms XoSkr, were playing lawn-tennbi at Bad ford, England. Suddenly the young mas abot t&eybong lady dead, and bafors
heeaaklDt'aeixed oOaaaittMd MMde.
A a i a r -m X 1. . L.
tee atAUtada dn. ai af -TariMimatary wests m
M lu- - aiLw ifeWafd uth fee W0aHr Don, lib-
eta), waa defeated and Bodmond, the Far-
neBlai. eaadiV) ejected. The windows of tawtatlerat coiug4tteecOQma were smashed MA other disorderly eeenea took place. BatBDoad had Orer twine as many rotes
v brick foaadry blown The.damage am the dty la estimatad
t 9Q,0OQ, white (M snrrooadiag coantrx!
9M(Wttamt AtPeaaMaaa, Iowa, tha wind attained a Tefcxaty of foi
aagMaaUeaaaaoar, and aaen dwetiinsa I van uaroofed. At aaaay uthsa1 poiata-taJ Bfaoav Wiiniiaafa and Iowa .the effecta of j
nail
Aoeoidmg to agreement erery miatateWBthaaclosed,focaBoat
The aq?eettBjgqf a ampteatoed & torn
weaUB,uauif thebadMttagaaad-aaaeWnerj C tiwaarerOortBaaatLeaole, which
ooat1a,(mi : f
The Hob; 'WpUam: L. Ewing, Major
r nt Isxaa. was ajarrieoT; at. anaiawi, ladatt inai aTeffle geadag, of that oity. . , 'Walter Brewn;;of Eansaa Cikj, has aaeroaavmasra oMaad'aatW eooatMe of Caark and Comanche, Saa., at 91 per aeraTforeapltaBstB, who wttl fence the tract aaaf aaaaVeatfta. : mfleCTerSenatorEdinnnda, t'Auatai.irait Int ArUjar and Sargeoa X itpGuire, U. BA-.weireiStog emaMaehaoh aroand Moaat Waahhnraetn atoTeltowstona Bade, tha aoay MzUdea; by thaaf-Jtnatiioa Watta hweked and thaowita THar linkaalj aathegroaad. estmekon hiaeJiaa; laJtaiasF aad paabahly fiatitiiitag a xfh. Thnrtia very painful. " ' George- Bzamard City Marshal of
, Ofaia, waa ahot aad kffied by
Battuh from
exntk he teAd Ae-.
"rm orkihf t min?i," said he. A, fine in Texas? Gold or silVer?" "Neither." "Pjt, copjrr . ...... . "Ohj coel feem ... . "WSonS &in arid It not iron, nor tmtto- qUffiksilver." "Well, well, some metaphorical sort ol a , mine, I suppose. Some bonanza in stock, some sheep ranch, some OS' trieh farm," I snggested. "No, no; a bona tide mine. Fact! I'm getting out a good five tons of ore a
day. And rt goes S50 to the toft, mk "
I began to wax curious, having ft light attack of the mining fcsYfcr that Wonh aysett. One eaane trVi iA CtiJ&rado
antt ew Mexico wthotlit.(H!hingit. It is in the air this winintf milaria;
Bnt my friend immediately shnfc his
mouthy !. ',
"Not a lisp about it, unless you'll come over and . see me," he said, and I
eonM -get -nothing further from him concerning it, thouch we svent a verr
I pleasant evening together.
xjus anomalous UBW Uonntetl m ourtosity for A till i detormined toldokihonmyW6hum U lift new plttaev ritd see What it was be held there all to himself. So first sending
rum a telegram, 1 set off for Texas. . At F , the station indicated by :my
friend, I found Mm waiting with A wagon. aad twfrmulei; and a ride of ten
or eleven miles up into rate .llano estacado" brought us to his place. ' It was getting dark when we arrived) but. X discerned the dim outline of a
h irf. wri. limneK and wintUaa BVfif what I rtrri-
at oneemieo, either by persons in tha em- slimed to be the shaft of thB nVinBjand Btov of tte comnanr who had rtsan there Was A lOhg Shed Med with barMs
fmm tha onaraai Main to BdaW he nOW board house lh Which we
Hma' t greater' reapnsiolltt, were sooh mfbrtably mslalled for the
by men who had bean secured in an-1 evenmg.
4aaaoaTattlMr- TBeottoH BeS ! . ' 7.'ena aia no oroaon Hiosuu-
waa the most hadtr crinnted oA the line of jv "ui "
the western Vnfaa Oomnanr. behnr . I vnshed to reserve it aU rar the next day ;
tireiy ens hff from communication with New Vork. raw press was fur-
as OXtennbr Cen at the dose of the
In-biB report-to the Panama canal aharehoHersa Pari s iiassaps said the
onaraUo(i of American oontracters had
ffla3iaaed Jttl,pMjdica aUMisg ta tne TJsttad States against aMt eompar con. strvitlnf taaaaaC
iuVjnESL HEWS IT1U. The members of the Brotherhood of
Telegraphers employed by the various lines strnek with remarkable unanimity shortly
Before noon of Thursday, July la Tjm cause -the stroma was a refukal of the
IBesteraaioa aaid aahMe eempanMs td ac
cede tfi the. demand of the operators for an'advaWeaMflt and readjustment of salariaa The operators' desks from Maine to California were abandoned promptly at the word from the Executive Committee of WBSeDeara1alag-away ta
aiqujnderdariy maaiMiit In large
AMtaDlet-
"Do you love mo?" stammered Benny ITo a hriaht-- little maid; . , - T)ororfloTeiiic love roe Jpnnyt " ' I'll not tell; don't be afraid!" . TYc9, 1 lovo yon," answered Jenny, Bnt 'twas only yesterday That I said same thinit. JJcnny (And she blpsjjed), toBebin Orarr Bar&r'g 1 hktt 3o. I
A Citjr of 3O,00o,mXK -. "Well, ho do yo like Texas, and what areyott doing over there?" It semed good indeed, to come upon an old school-mate awav out in Now
. Jjxico.. John Coombs and I had been
Treat appeared at SOTeral' points aarIavaaport, Xswa, on the njght of inljr1
A bank ledger which was expected to fvxinaa evldeaoe for the oonvtetiea of ml Polk has been stoJea fTom'the offee of the State Treasurer' atltaahvtte; aad A xeaattd etT Q0 ia ofllated for its xeoaa. : The: iroaa propellor Kiagara, which eoakS5a,00Q, took Are off the coast of florid. Jsr iiaesusgsis ail aMilU. war aant en board the Coirraianrtery. after which the IT'llBMAitara whoeauaped from the eonyiet gaaaf at 'Cane
3, iMarafd to ttteatoekads, hpntng
m wandering ahous the
1to-&o&t& 8atil near Wrtnaa. Ark, one having a musket and the eM js"nBy:nred wBh '.efleot, aadl died dnrburtiie aight .. -' Taeat' in Kew CMeatuilast week
lastiu that horaea .and mules
I in the
W,
- Tha Prsajjalil ,aa npprowal the sen haacaof olaariassl m theeaseof I4eatK. .BkBaa,e(TBirteenthinfaty,reeae trieda esartiartia at Fart BHaa, fordu-
:lieedar;has been issued from the
of
bobs jae -uasisa tsBiea-ox. toe re-
dwfctpeaeage rates, to take aSect Oct. sad .dlrarthag. mu to ae preparation' toetti ilheBoatmasters ate aoatned that tt
LastoekotS-
Is daalBaele to' aam as saaal
laaaViluatssii stAiiiud asdstsiiiijua eatelone8Twyy
; when the reAisUoav
-t MM goes. tn' effect, aad they are ae-. 'vnvdhady directed Ay Basft their reaaasV aonafor atamps aid eivelojea thia de--awatnsWoii to anoh bjnantWcs aa, upon
earexnl eathmate, they any deem ta tastuaOl tha lat of Oetobez.
and, after a leng caht with him about
old. times in the East, I turned into a
niahed wn its usual quantity of news, I though the commercial world suffered , -it",: ' ,1,. i ' raj i muchonaocou-t of tha iaabuity to Secure 1 . Tf7 rlT n mornmg, as early as , . Tv r: . " IV ,, o'clock, for it was still dark, a IfSSS.1'! T ' ngular noise aroused me. At first f mental uistfl ln.Kew york 800 opera- j ti,nnff1lt it WMI - I, winti mA tnk
tors jint on the strike, in Chicago 750., and ; . -Sorther" had sWetit rhiwni hnt t
th other cities the number was proportionately Sb' large;' There 'was ;no violehee or
disorder of any sort upon the part of tha
strikers? - -.
The Mexican consul at Tucson, Ari
re-
inisseH the litter chill iii the aiti The noise, too, as rather regular ftif KHndj , more like some huge flourittgmilli or A I "smelter" at full blast. John was up 1 and moving aboht
xonla, has advices to theeffact that near the "wnat is that roaring? 13 it the point where dec (book left the hostiles chimney afire?" I demanded, they attacked a settlement and killed Ave 1 ""It's my mine sucking in," said he.
A detachment of Mexican infant- , "wmmeocww suu in-- a aoona o
o'ciock every morning, and makes just such a noise as that till after light. And at night it begins to blow off at somewhere from 6 to 7, and gdes till 9 or 10. "lott 'must have a droll engine," t said. "Oh, it is hot the engine at all)" said he. It's the mine-.' "Look here, oldfello! lexcliiimed. ""What are you giving me ? What kind Of a mine have you got herft, anyway?" "Come out and see it suck in, "ho replied. "It's really quite a sight." I hastily rose and followed him out. Just the faintest tinge of dawn had be-
ry wHcB "fonowed'the ' sAvalwat
imlsadwilha loafof - tsMv ; . i Jtaar farmers havebeerf airested near Newry, Ireland; for beating nearly to death
ami who took a farm from which the pro.
i,vioae tenant had been evicted,
'j-Brajaiangn has brought an injunction aBlst 1tneantiat-Arms of the House of- Commons to reatandn that official from peveatijte kim from anterixijr the House. Waddington's appointment asiFrench Buibassadur to the Court of 8t James is regarded generally in Europe as a guarantee
oi.uie cuooiDanaeoraaucwwe jeiaaona oe --gun to show ta the far east,' and a seg-
tween yranee and. GreM.Briwnn. .. Admiral rnent of old moon bung very low over
the post-oaks out back of the windlass
and shed; but it was still dark. The moment we stepped Outside the door
HetTeVaU is considered probable.
The funeral of Tom Thumb took place at Bridgeport, Ot, with Masonic ceremonies. Fully 10,000 people viewed tha ro. rnsbk' ' . '" ' 1 A very oSsatrods''fire took place in Brooklyn. It.erigiaated among a quantity of Jute lying on' Hakbeck's dock, and the fiameasooa spread to three Vessels lying At
Ma wharf. 'and loaded, with cargoes of jute
aad saltpeter aU of which are a total loss, The loss of property-is variously estimated at from 500,000 to fl.000,000, Five sailors were drowned 'There were' Thany narrow escapes from1 death, , twenty-five' firemen bebag burled under the, debris of ; fallen 'roof, but all -wez taken out alive.. ! The Chairman' of the. Iowa BepttbBean State Committee has declined the proposition of Gen. Weaver, Greenback candidate' for eoercor,40 take part in the Joint dejkates arranged to tafeeplaee between the
BepubHcan amVCeuiOcl atlc candidates.
Kotahd' Swain, of Nashville, Term.,
taxing-Hie Dans: leager rrom
the State rreaeurer's office to the residence of Cat Feik, th defaulter for which he was given fl15,.on the foUowing day, by a third
i Gov. Batler bolldosad the
settalegtalaiaie late ledaajwg thy -tax levy tot,t,00a Arrangementa for. a series of joint delaatas have been made by Gov. Bherman aad Judge aUnae, BjspahBcaa aad Beaao-rialhj-oaadkhdes for Goveraor of Iowa. The ftp aueetiagwia occur at fjadepead asm eat the 39th of Angaat . Thfpmmjsioners of ternalBevtaraeluai sppofated Tibain Touag, of KapavtOeTtoBH tevesae agent, idea O; HrHor-
Preaideht has 'appointed Hemry a Stafforrl Collector' ofeustojna at BrfcvPa; vioe Matthew. B. Barr, resigned; ?. lYeemau, tiobe Beglster of the land Otfoe at Bed ..Wood laUa, Urn., yia
WQnaaa S. Pusiilagyon, aaspended: ChsmieaVi
r. flaiditei, Beeeiver of FubUc Moaeya at Wars amairle. Cat ; Carrie & Befl, Beoeiver of FuhbMeneys at Bayfield, Wkc; Beaja. nrin W- .Thompson: (West Viigmis). Agent of
1 Ageaey, Dak.
Tha oAee of the Amerieas Consul at
, tfaaleai, was entered by a mob of
, aad thw Be Bhawaesfag IMted
BtateA CobsuT at Monterey, was attacked aa'Mastaa naaily to death. The farntture aad papers belonging to the Coneulatewere destroy' Mr. Bbaw, after being beaten
aBBBskfpa, jpet iWed- auiBVisnatiy to crawl te7
ess ofjae pahtkt hotels aaaaa account ath09atage, baA ta fewntoaaents becaasaagaaaiBsenatbKandat last acoounta waa sttB aaoeaaciooa. go saya a receut taaamiipi frma.Tafsflo, Teaaa. Tr1fffflfa at-aiaaW ahnw tW tfc auiiaar m- the TJiattsd Mates for the Ant lf of WW were afataat m,m Mhm m tips W yaw There has,
ThejState-Central; Rapublican Com-
jhtee of ( Virginia elected John V. JHmeadorf Chairman, and 'passed aresolution indorsing James G. Blaine' for President ' 1 The Toronto Globe says the Cansdam crops have suffered no more from the wet weather of this season than from other causes, in pceioue- seasons. The general average wiH be abbat 86 per cent . TTTT; MATtTBT. '., , -rr- - . '. , v rev ion.
rxooa Boperfln.:. WKi--Xq, 1 White So.Bed Oaawr-Mo. '... .4 , . ii,m,. 4ij-K " , . CHICAGO. BKBTSS Good to Fancy Steers.. Cows and Herfers ...... . NetBasstoFair. Hook.... : jruopuFmtiay White Winter Kx. Good" to Choice Spr'gSx. Waauav-No. a Sorton U.J.J - S jjad Winter Come Sal..... , Oats Ha . ; .rffi. f. .S. .: BXB-rlfo..j...........rtL. Bablei o. -l Bim-aT-Ctweoe C reamery. . . ; .
PoaaiiAeaa.i,.
liAMB
& 6.38 m aw
IM & 3.K0 1.13 0 1.1SH 1.1c m 1.1s M i .nit, 1S.75 m.00 . . H
5.90 4.S0 C.30 6.3) 5.M
S.Vf
m 8.25 & 5.15 5.55 & 5.90 . 5.75 m 5.50
l.CS's l.5!4'
.50. 0 .Mit .64 .05
. .Hli .15 ' 14.5) H SO .
Wheat N
rcoajjH
BSWKo9V.ftf. Pw&Mess7..:.-,
KSBD..
MILWAUKEE.
BT. IiOClB.
WiW .54
14.10 tsiM.ll . . 8T . l.mua 1.10 . .3JM9 .85)ii
MM $14.60
"IT
C0X Mixed.
oais no. :.'...-.-. TAWfy ....,..r " " CISCiNNATi '. Wjout No. J Rr4 Oats T.
Pom Mew. fcaah.-vl..
TOI-EDO, WiaATr-No. 2Bed. .. ,. CoaW......, OArs-Ko. a. WaTSoVt White".'. Ceaic-4ta.l3.: - Oath allied. .,
- "raii'APOLii5.
Wanut-rlo. Bd.... 1-08 OOUBWrSIo. ......'. 487,(1 .48 Oats Mixed. . Sm .3t
aasi lBbttj. x. fA.
.. I.M B.SS ... S.16 ($ 5.50 .. U0 64 5.CO . , 5.W 4J ATS .. WO $aj
i.oej e lM'i .ci .saH -3..7.0 .SO .r4'at .55 V' &-l..10 1.M .WJ4! .5!4 4.21 S 4.50 1.1'J 1.14 .65 a .56 .45 .46
the roArimrhmse Was increased ten-fold '
and ail out to the left of the shaft was what looked to be a dense clond of the blackest of smoke, rising like au Immense inverted cone of ebony clean to the zenith! With a sense of wonder such as I bad not experienced for years I followed my friend out past the derrick for 100 yards or more, -it may be-the tremendous whirring nuise getting louder each moment till we came to the brink of a deep canon, or chasm, in the limestone strata? 100- 'or -500 -feet wide, perhaps, and of Unknown depth. Down into this chasm the vast, black, whizzing cloud was descending- not rising -with amaolstrom-lik.6 velocity and lot ce' which was absolutely terrific. The same fateful sense of blind; overmastering force stole over me As when, years ago, I first stood St the foot of Niagara; only now there was a feeling of mystery combined with it , "What is this thing?" I shouted. "Why, bats! Dorrt you see them? Bats!" answered Qoomps. "There's a bat cave all dowg under here acres andacresof it. I've, sunk ;a shaft into itatafijijg jfed TfaV jf0ag Iputthe' earth there, which is powerfully charged with ammonia, and as a fertilizer commands a f?Pd price. That's my mine. There's no end of it in the cave. In places it lies twenty feet thick. All I have to do is to haul it up, sift it and pack it in sacks or barrels for shipping. It's better than a silver mine ; no crushing of pres. no smelting, no expensive machinery. " Meantime the plunging torrent of bats dived downward to the mouth of the cave without the least intermission, or sign of cessation. As it' grew a little lighter I could begin to see them better. The column seemed to come down from the very zenith.- It was like looking upward into a thick snow-storm. To the uproarious whiz of their myriad wings was added a strange, squeaking sound, which had a wonderfully mournful cadence. ; Tift velocity with which each individ-
innl hii seemed to fall from high-, in the
tsky into the pit beneath us, ,was the I T- . - 1 . n ; e ti
moss, astomsning irnug 01 nu. now they ever made tine turn at the bottom of the chasm and entered the mouth of tha cave was, and is still, to me a mystery. -Their descent was like the whizzing flight of a rifie ball. Hundreds, thousands, shot down each qecond and were sucked in, as it seemed, at the cavern mouth below; and 'yet from 4 o'ciock to 6 there was no noticeable thinning of the black pillar. But as it drew toward sunrise their numbers suddenly fell off. Straggling clouds of them, however, continued to come for half au hour longer, and to whir fitfully down. I went back to breakfast with my friend in his cabin, feeling that I had witnessed one' of tho strangest and most impressive spectacles which the great Southwest affords. But Coombs had by no means exhausted the stock of wonders which he had m store. After breakfast he invited me to take a look at the inside of his mine. We put on old water-proof suits with hjeavy boots and broadbrimmed hats; and, taking each a lantern, went by a circuitous route down into the canon and came along to the
month of the cave. It is au irregular opening beneath the jagged sandstone strata, thirty or fjorty f eetwide, by nine jn height, A rugged path, over
! TT Z . . . . 1
and among fallen rooks, loads lack into the cAVem, which is very extensive and as yet Of unknown dimensidns. A confused murrkiur Aud fluttering of win(;e at once breakm upon the na en fin tor in j; ; And there is a!0 A very strong smell of ammonus bieuding with tl5 peculiar mousy odor of bats. Withal the cave is very hot frttm th presence of so
many warm-uiooaea ersaraccs; Ironi tho Strfljp4 J&e iantern-light began to S'evW the bats, clinging in patehes to the roof overhead. Many others were fluttering about.and thjrfr rsliiVi'p squeaking, was peaaVt-. mill further in; the ttttae mil s coM'od by onS continutMVseoAt Df.batA, each hangliig headm his claws. If tl&.lantern Was thrust ujo ddseVj "iey .jWpidd start 'off in lialjlt'eshupdreds a,a tixne-and f$ ntering about in quest of another resting-place. Thefloor of the cavern was all astir, too, with beetles and' worms which live on the dead bats. We explored gniMV'rotii8'' of SoVerni JVcs s,Vcnt; na I judge; and all jhijf e were literally lined with bats, often in coats two arid three thick. In places they hung in bunches, and festoons, "Have you any idea as to their numbers?" I asked. "Very little," my friend replied. "There are millions of them." By counting tho bats n A square yard (wtwre ill huWjr place! w found 81S Of 8een hundreds), it was easy to lockoiift population of SO.QOO.OOObats
for even those portions of the eave jfrhicn -'6 Viewed that forenoon: Truly, the great bitiei of men are Villages, in pbpttlation, .compared with the bat-town of Texas; And this is but one. There are scores like it, my friend thinks; he knows of the other similar caves, himself. The bats looked to be exactly like those common in the Middle States and New England. My friend frtrtlier informed me that fof sbVefal ,itB6S3 during thd Vtitlter season tMe bats appeal? to hibematti, and do not go forth at all. In severe storms, too, which last a number of days, very few bats venture out. These caves, indeed, seem natural resorts for them. No doubt all the caverns hereabouts have been thus occupied for ages. Between 5 and 6 o'clock that evening, and thenceforward till nearly Id, my friend's mine was "blowing off," as he termed it-ihat is to say, the onofmous fcdldny of lists were isstiing forth on their nigUtly hunt for insects; The living black streaih began to pour out of the cave a few hiinutis a,fter sunset. Sitting on the Haiik above, I watched it all long after dark with never-ceasing wonder. Rising in a steady, but swift torrent, from out the canon, . they dashed off across tne prairie in a long, black lin, till they -ere ldsjbpo sight in the dini distance and the twilight. '. Coombs assured me that he had often
seen this dense, black column career
ing onward, out still keeping in close order, when riding across the country at A distance of twelve dr fourteen miles from" the cave. On setting out
at nightfall the .bats move elce to the earth, but on their return at dawn they Appear to have mounted to an immense height in the Uppe? an?) whence they dart ddn vertically to the ittorlih of their cave. How many billions of insects and Worms lose their lives to furnish sustenance for these bat cities, from evening till dawn each day, wlio shall 'estimate'! Ibttffj's Companion.
. three Uistieguighed Feihalesi Two vduntr ladies of Terre Hattte
were returning from California, The
barlof-car Was crowded With paMsengefs. At a small station A Woman in showy
Attire entered And demanded A whole
section. It'Was not to be had, and the conductor, brakeman, porter and cook, who seemed to be impressed with the
new pas&enger s importance, were ail painfull v exercised to know where to
put her. The cause of all this commotion was very blonde, very large, very richly clothed and very swell. When it seemed impossible to get her a whole section, or even half a one, she turned to the young ladies and said: "Will you consent to take the upper berth of your section and Jet me hare the lower?" '
"Sorry we can't oblige you," replied
one of the pink-cheeked fairies, "but
really we prefer to keep the lower berth ourselves. "
Then the big blonde straightened
herself up, throw ineffable contempt and importance into her pale eyes, and said: "Perhawa vou don't know who
lam?" r ":
"No, we don't," replied tho Terre
Haute girl, in a tone of serene indiffer
ence.
"I will tell you," said the women of
silk and jewels; "I am Mrs. Colonel Dunlevy Wickersham." iDunlevy
Wickersuam is known all along mat
end of the road as the bonanza man bushels of money, so much that he needs nothing more. )
"Are you, indeed? replied the
Hoosier maiden, "Perhaps you don't know who I am?"
Madame Bonanza's face said that she
didn't, and also that she bad some curiosity.
"Well, I am Mrs. General tlrant. "And I." said her companion, who
had hitherto kept silent, "am Queen
Victoria:"
f , Ministers t Blame. The protests' of clergymen will have
an influence. Indeed, we are inclined
to suspect that the silence, the indifference, nav, worse, the connivance of
minist ra, has had more effect than al
most any other single 'cause m produ
cing a state 01 tilings wuicn ail sue churches lament. Any divorced person, however guilty, can find a clergy
man to perform an illegal and morallybigamous marriage without asking inconvenient questions. There are min
isters many of them who will marry
anybody, just as there are lawyers who will take any case. Somo of these lax persons would not deliberately make themselves accomplices in a crime ; but they reason that they may throw upon the contracting parties tho whole responsibility for the transaction, and
that the clergyman may assume that "it is all right" or they would not havo come to him. It is no wonder that the laitv lose respect for tho churches
when preachers seem 10 care so little
about public morals. A'cw loric Tribune. - Ann or Anne. This name first appeared among us about 1272. but never became common
until popularized by Queen Anno, of Bohemia, in 1381. Until English be
came the tongue usually spoken 111 .England, of course the name can only be found in its French and Latin forms of Anne and Anna. But from 1381 downward, until the accession of the house of Hanover at the earliest, the form in which we find it is always Anne. The ugly form Ann is purely tho growth of that tasteless eighteenth century, which also docked the final e in "Blanch" and vainly tried to evolve "Catharin." It did, alas! succeed in substituting Betsy for Bessy. The often-extravagant and sometimes-silly H'stheticism of the present day is to some extent a rebound from the dreary ugliness of nhat utilitarian age. Queen Anne occasionally signed her name as Anna; but, bad speller though she was, I will venture to assert that she never perpetrated the enormity of signing Ann. Xoten and Querieii. Db. Large and Dr. SmH are rival physicians at Great Barnngton, Muse.
THE IhtERFKBifG tAHHIERi How tho Cashlof Captured Uie Girl vTHb teams id See the Newspaper Omee. "We hope we Hdn't intrude but we thought we would crime in and ask if it Would 1 any trouble tb let lis see the in$ide 8f A newspaper 'office'." . TJit lBhagirija; eSjitBr of file Brooklyn 0(fif to, his feet iiud the law i.tJL ..U:.' ill- it 1! 2 -Ai-
c(jiun.er i-uvereu run uiucu wiui lira nui. Tho oxchange editor poured his ink into his bottle of beer to make.. it Jook innocent; .nd .tile jest of .the. U0 eftj wiled flKorihd the. two. blushing damsels bagei- t!p oner assistance. "Certainly"" replied, th'e.. managing editor, wioothing; down, his b'airjanij approaching the fair guests. , "This, is my room,, and theie is ihetlpe: J hang my .hat ,qn". Only, the peg seems to have come up through the hat lately. I mnst have that peg fixed. This 'is my " "Perhaps the ladies would rather seo my, editorial an the rise and progress of mission -schools)" interrupted the religious editor, pointing toward his own desk. "Never been in a newspaper office before?" he inquired, tenderly, as the gir's turned toward hiui. "I sit here at this table, and in this drawer is where I keep my " "I think I can show you one of the most important legal decisions ever rondered," observed the la reporter, taking imo of the girH geiltly by the arm and making, bff Wiih-net hi the direbtioH of his deSk. ,"T6u know llie law has always been-4r" "I suppose you relilly want to see the practical workings of an office;" smiled the exchange editotj bowing very low; "If yoii will Step here to my department I will show you on what all the vast machinery of this institution rests, " and the exchange editor gallantly offered his arm and motioned toward his den. "Of course, you would be most interested in the weddings;" observed tho society reporter; feeling confident that he had the bulge on the whole business; "If yon will be kind enougli to come this 'way, Twill show you my account of a swell affair that came off on the Heights last niglitt The bride " "This is Where all the local news is put together in shape," chipped in the city editor. "Everything that happens in Brooklyn has tti pass through my hahdsj and I trill be glad to; show you how it is done if yoii will be good enough to take chairs' in my little office." "Have ybu come to. visit a newspaper fcstabllshuient," asked the cashier) who happened to dfcop into the editorial department at that moment; uY6h, sir;'' faltered one of the bewildered girls. "Then come right down stairs and see me make up the list of marriages And dealhs. You will be ahead of ever'ybddy in town." "Won't that be nice?" giggled the girls, fluttering out after him. "We will know all about it before the paper Comes otit;" And .the triumphant cashier stalked but:, while the staff sat down to get up a remonstrance against that cashier s interference with the regular business Of the office in tho future. A flea for Farmers' Children Children have minds of their own, and they should have incentives to la bor by being Allowed to do their tasks after a plan of their own, where it is harmless, and parents will often be astonished at their reasoning faculties, and will be more than repaid for any Slight inconvenience to themselves by their increased interest, love and respect Many farmers provide their children liberally with reading matter, bnt neglect to provide them the time to read. The average child is not an adult, and after working hard all day will not feel like reading half the night, and by their dull and lifeless looks veriiy the old adage that "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." Children are social beings, and their rights should be respected as well as the older ones in this. Farmers meet together at their institutes, granges, butter and cheese conventions, and their wives at the sewing-circle, mite society, etc, and are made cheerful and happy by tho exchange of ideas and seeing the faces of friends and acquaintances, and do not the children need a similar change and rest too? The legal holidays are not sufficient, in my mind, for the" whole year. - Our children need edncatiou and testhetio culture. If they show a taste for music, botany, natural history, drawing, mechanics, or law, tlfey should have an opportunity to develop that talent. The nation's future welfare rests with them, and now while their characters are easily molded should they be preparing for their life work. Who oan say what shall be the future of children whose whole time and thought are occupied with simply caring for the body and laying by the dollars. It rests, in a great measure, with the parents of to-day whether the future generation shall be a class of mone3'-loving and serving people, or an intelligent, noble and Christian people. Parents should see to it that their children have at least six months of schooling a year, uninteriupted by other business. They should make this a necessity, even if they have to deny themselves (and what "rue parent is there who will not) for its accomplishment. The farm life should be and can be made so pleasant that children will not get a distaste for it, but fathers should not think that because they and their fathers before them were farmers, that their sons should be too. Our tastes are not alike, and it is worse than folly to compel a child by force of circumstances to follow a business for which he has no inclination. The many failures in all branches of business show this. Parents, for their own sakes and yours, let the children have time and opportunity for development socially, morally and intellectually, as well as physically and your reward will be both now and hereafter. K a nsas City Journal. How te Keep a Buby (juiict. Who ever traveled in a hleeping-car which did not contain woman with a baby, a leathor-luuged baby, which gave promise of becomiug u basso-pro-fnndo in mat-irity? She was there when tho pilgrim arrived, and his heart sank within him. Tho baby was also there, in a season of temporary contentment, which every one knew was tho lull before the storm. Several sisters of the parent and aunts of the infant, were tearfully biddiug them farewell and imploring the porter to watch over and protect the travelers, and let them know if there was going to be an accident in time for them to gel oft' the train beforehand, all of which the white cap solemnly promised. Then, after more tet.rs and sobs and embraces, the relatives departed, and the mother looked as it life had lost all its joys for her. The train started, the baby began to cry, and its mother asked the misanthtopie youth who occupied tho next sea's what she could do to keep it quiet. He advised her to chloroform it and put it out on the baok platform, and received a look which almost froze his marrow. New l'orfc Times. It Wasn't PubUshcdT Kev. Newman Hall, who once published a very popular tract called "Come to Jesus," took another a very bitter attack upon an opponent to Dr. Binuey, a clerical friend, arid oslted his Advice about publishing it. "I see yoi
haven't got a title for it," said J)r. Binhe. "If yOu will take my wHoe" about a title, I will Advise its publication." "What. 1,'fli. tirniilrl vnn Iri'va aaVnA
Hall;. "I would c ", answered Binney; "G8to the Devil: bfr, the author
of '.Cbiite tb Jelus:'" Hail toi
then And there:
ore it up
The Early Peach and the tireeh Apple. x Thjj , Earjy Peach came to a place where ,fqur. roads met. He slabped his chest with his siiui aiid looked to the East anil the Soutlj. . "B.ismillah ! " he cried, "I am the boss, and j drive the. sinjiulauce;" - Theiittle Green. Apple came down thloiig.road from the West and heard tini',, He. bowed to the North and he owed tb llie West. "I am the son of the cyclone," he shouted, "and I travel with my own private Coroners" "By tho camel of Mahomet," said the Early Peach, "I am the friend of the sexton, and I can knock you out in four rounds, Marquis of Tewksbury rules." "Come to the wake," shrieked the little G reen Apple, "and yo:i may call me the harmless paw-paw of the wilderness if I cannot double up the man who planted you." Then they looked down the four long rbatls And waited for some one to practice on.. From tho Bast came a fair yOnng girl from Vassar College, and up from the South came A gray-haired African; "Take ydn the fair student," said the Eafly Peach. "Not I," said the little Green Apple, "I didn't come here to attempt impossibilities. For nearly four years that girl has sat at surreptitious midnight lunches ; she has broken up a score of young men with her ice-cream bills, and still she in liun;ry; But I will stand aside and give you a chance at the African;" "I am nbt o:i the suicide lay this mbniing,8 said the Early Peach. "I kndw him; and already, since yestereven's sun, there have reposed beneath his untroubled vest a peck and a half of niy brethre'Di and hb is even now famished. He is known as the destroyer of watermelons, and all my tribe fear him; Allah .is., great, but some things are ithpossible;" 80 they let many people pass by unharmed) the old, the tough, the wary And the well-seasoned. But when the day Was far spent, coming down the long road from the West, they saw a ruddy boy, the pride and joy of his home and the torment of his teacher. Whistling a meify roundelay, he came, his face as rosy as the glowing West, his heart as thistle down. He Was their meat. The Early Peach and the little Green Apple set their teeth and breathed hard as he came neari "Ndw!" they shrieked, and, livid with hate, they fiercely sprung upon him; Irt two short minutes that boy had both Of them down, and, as he cracked the peach-pit to get at the "goody," he said: '"y jirnihy jinks, I wist I knowed Where I could find bushel of them fellers." The Early Peach, with a dying gasp, turned and said : "We were taken in." With a hollow groan, the little Green Apple replied: "Of corpse." But the boy slept soundly all that, night and came back the next day to look for more. Burlington Hawkeye. JeuHcsse Doree. About fifteen years ago, a young man graduated at Yale, who was the only sou of a man who counted his money by millions. "Will you go into business with me?" the father said to his son, on his return home. "No, father. I have no aptitude for business. I should only pull down wheve you have built up." "Very well. There is really no need that you should do anything. Your income will support you in luxury as long as you live. I will see that the principal is safely invested before I die. It is a pity that there should not be some men m America who are raised above the necessity of money-getting." "I wish to study law," said Tom. "Very good. A knowledge of the law is a very pleasant adjunct to a genleman's education," said the indulgent father. Tom studied law; studied as if he meant to make his living by it When ho was admitted to the bar he opened an office, not like a luxurious smokingroom filled with Persian rugs and questionable pictures, as a morning loung-ing-place for the jeunetsse doree of New York, bnt a bare business office with a "shingle" outside intended to allure clients. Clients came at last, and Tom gave himself up to each case with a zeal and capacity for hard work which ensured success. While his companions were driving costly horses, or lounging out the days in tennis 'courts or ladies' drawing-room, Tom was steadily gaining a name and place at the bar of his native city. "This is not what I meant you to do," said his father, coming in and finding him hard at work one night. "No. But surely I have some better errand in the world than to spend another man's money," replied Tom. A few years later he became interested in 'a great national question oi reform, studied it carefully and profoundly and come forward as its advocate. His action brought him into intimate relations with the foremost statesmen of America and Europe. He is now a real power, recognized by those men in the world who move and uplift humanity. When hb name ia mentioned, liis'vaat wealth appears the most trivial circumstance about him. Yet if he had chosen he might, like so many of the sons of our rich men, have gained, after years of display and of toadying of social leaders, the triumph of seeing his name in the "society column" of the papers in the list of men at fashionable receptions, or even have attained the high distinction of being the best leader of "the German" in New York. For lesser triumphs than these our jennese doree are spending the best years and strength of their manhood. Youth's Companion.
Nationalities oi' the Kew York Shopkeepers. Looking over the names of tho great shop-kevipors, I am struck with the predominance of foreign ones. The O'Neils, McCreerys, Ehrichs, Sterns, Koclis, Altmans, Diukelspicls, all show their nationality. A. T. Stewart was Irish. The Johnstons are Scotch. Tho founders of Arnold & Constable, and Lord & Taylor, were from England. Le Boutelliers are French. Simpson, Crawford & Simpson are Scotch. So, I believe were the Kinzoys ; Conkliag& Chevois, aud U'riscoll, are Irish. Only two native Yankee names appear Ridley and Macy and their establishments are so much larger than any others iu the eity as to make their most pretentious rivals looked dwarfed. It. H. Macy died worth $2,000,000, and the house he founded is now worth three times that sum. Aaron Arnold was worth $1,000,000 when he died, and his successors divide net annual profits of $500,000. E. J. Denning & Co., succesrors to A. T. Stewart, are doing a very good business. New York correspondence,
THE BAit BOY
"Whv don't you taka art tcuto! 1
clean the dirt, tint from Tinder Vo-Jr fin-
ger-naus, - saiu cue grocery man to tne bad boy, ad he eame in the store' and' stroked the cat tho wr.bng way( sis sh lay tin the . sun on the counter, bn a quire bf manila paper: "Can't remove the dirt for thirty days; It is ah ehiblem of mourning: Hod a funeral at our honde yesterda&" And. the boy took pickle -but of the tub and' put it into th cat's mouth;, and shut her teeth together n it, tind then Went to the show-case, while the grocery man; whose back had been turned during the pickle exercise, thought by the fmf the cat jumped into the dried apple bartel' and began to paw and , scratch with all' four of her feet, and yowl; that she was going to have A fib . , . "I hadn't heard about it," said thel grocery man, as he took; the cat by theneck and tossed' Mr but in the back shed into on oldoysterrbox.full of saw-; dust, with a parting injunction that if' she was going to have fits she better go out where there was plenty of fresh air. "Death is always a sad thing to contemplate; One day we are full of health and joy, and cold victuals, and the next we are screwed down in a box, a few words are said Over our remains, a few. tears are shed, and there is a race to, see who' shall get back from the ceme tery first, and though we may think we are an important factor in the World's progress, and sometimes feel as though it would be unable to put up margins, and have to stop the 'deal, the world goes right along, and it must -annoy people who die to realize that they don t count for game.' The greatest man id the world is only a nine spot when he ia dead, because somebody else takes the tricks the dead mail ought to have taken. But, say, who is dead At your house?" "Our rooster. Take care, don't ybu hit me with that canvassed ham," said the bOy, as' the grocery man looked) mad to learn that there was nobody1 dead but a rooster f when he had preached such a sermon on the subject. "Yes, how soon we are forgotten when we are tronel Now, von would have
thought that rooster's hen Would have, remained fa'thful to him for a week a't
least. I have watched them all the. spring and I never saw a more perfect: picture of devotion than that betweenthe bantam rooster and his hen. They were constantly together and there was nothing too good for her.- He -would dig up angle worms and call her, and when sbo came up on a gallop and saw; the great big worm tm the ground,- she would look so proud of her rooster, and ha would straighten up and look as though he Was saying to her, "I'm a daisy,' and then she would look at him as if she would like to bite him, and just as she was going to pick- up the worm he Would snatch it and swallow it himself and chuckle and walk Around and be full of business, .as :tiiough wonderintr whv she didn't take the
worm after he had dug it for fier, and
men tne nen woma iook gusappomiea at first, and then she would look re-.
signed, as much as to say, ' Worms are;
too men lor my Diooci anyway, ana vne poor, dear rooster heeds them more than I do, because he has to do all the crowing,' and she would go off and find a grasshopper and eat it on the sly for fear he would see her and complain because she didn't divide', . Oh, I have neVes seen anything that Seethed to me so human as the relations: betweeouthat rooster and hen! He seemed to try to do everything-for her. He would mrfkV her tdop cackling when she laid-an egg, and ho would try to cackle and crow over it as though he had laid it, and
she would get off in a corner and cluck in a modest, retiring manner, as though sho wished to convey the idea to the servant trirls in the .kitchen that the
rooster had to do all the hard works
and she was only a ' unless appendage, fit only for society and com
pany for him. But I was disgusted, with him when the poor hen was setting. The first week that she sat. on the eggs he seemed to get along first
rate, because he bad a couple ot cower beds to dig up, which a press of business had caused him to' neglect before,
and a couple of neighbor's gardens to destroy, so h seemed to be glad to have his hen retire to her boudoir and set, bnt after he had been shooed out of the gardens and flower ' beds he seemed to bo nervous, and evidently wanted to be petted, and he would go
near the hen and she would seem to toil him to go and tako a "walk around the
block, because she hadn't time to leave her business, and if she didn't attend;
to it they would . have a lot of .-spoiled eggs on their hands, and no family to bring up. He would scold, and seem to tell her that it was all foolishness, that for his part ho didn't want to hear a lot of chickens squawking around. He would seem to argua withVher-that a brcod of chickens would be a dead give-away on them both, and they would at once be..:classed As old folks, while if they were alone in the world thev would be spring chickens, And could go in. young society, but the hen would scold back, and . tell him he ought to be ashamed Of himself tb talk that way, and he would go off mad, and sulk around a spell, and then go to a neighbor's henhouse and sometimes be wouldn't come back till -the next day. The lien would be sorry, she had spoken so cross, and would seem pained-at his going away And would look .wixiously for his return, and when he came back after being! ont in the rain ' -all night, she would be soUcitious after his, health, and toll him he ought to wrap something around him, but he acted as though he didn't care for his health, and he would go out again and get chilled through. Finally the hen came- 6fl the nest with ten chickens, and the rooster seemed very proud, and when anybody came out to look at them he would crow, and seem to say they were all his chickens, though 'the 'hen was a long time hatching thsm. and if it had been him that was setting, on them he could have hatched them out hi a week) or died a trying. But the exposure told on him, and he went into a decline, and one morning we fourrcf lirm 'de'od. Do you know, I never jsee" a-heA that seemed to realize a calamity as she did. She looked palOi and het eyes looked red, and she seemed to be utterly crushed. If the chickens, which were so young; "they could riot realize that they were little orphans, .became noisy, and got to pulling and hauling over a worm, and conducted themselves in an unseemly manner, -she would talk to them in lion language, with tears in her eyes, and it was a picture of woe. Bnt the next day a neighboring rooster got to looking through the fence from the alley, and trying to flirt with her. At first sho was indignant, and seemed to tell him he ought to go about his business, and leavo her alone, but the dude kept clucking, and pretty sopn tW widowed hen edged up towards thfe fenoa and asked him to come in, but the hole in the fence was top small for him, and then the chickens went out in the alley, and the hen followed them out. I shall always think she told the cluckens to go out, so she would have an exouse to go after tlwm, and flirt with the rooster, and 1 th nk it is a perfect shame. She is out in the alley half the time, and I could cuff her. It seems to me wrong to so soon . forget a deceased rooster, but I suppose a hen can't be any more than human. Say, you dontwaut to buy a good dead rooster do you? You could pick it and sell it to somebody that owes you, for a spring chicken." "No, I don't want any deceased poultry that died of grief, and you bettor
go hotne and watch your hen, or
sm.peBereavi
if the cat Was over its fit, and when JfcP -
front of the store and he -went fojoV found lie dead rooster lyh efa vegetable stand, Wtfea tmpe irfnanj ite'.lot;?n Which WAA a &, "TWOr
Cheep . tb .bbfdibg : hOwe mM' ?- took the dead , roster And thi' a W
in the street, Arid .looked up and aowa the street fbr the TME boy, uwestf Stand hid A raw hide where h eeM reach it htady.- Pec-',' 8Mb '. s - : ' trick of humend SmuJlenM:u' Thfc recept sale b? . imraggled monas -was the larcetft ih the GulMul
House record, and shows the audacity
witn y men tniirrOTa wpraevioeo. method is very ingeniouay and .-thii
tern has; beeao wU arrAngjeabAt,
officials have Been compejuea to spies -in foreurh' 'ports.- 'who toi
the departure of simtWteoT -'leronaY
takes to the .aearoher bnreaa An the-r.,-S-
Custoiu House, whew, , if WfifMg$$fr's they are, stripped tb the'skhlV 'TStmt;';
clothfhg fe also searched, e3' "to'thi
Seam, asd- -sometinieu the heel of ?fRp;;v boofis are. 'removed to- see if they stf -"' not hollow. Even the hair -je comWd,.' and a frig (if one be worn is tlironghty " examined, lh one irataneo a -paesen'-:-; iter by orie Of the Cunerd steamer hM
910,000 Worth of precious totsW,oa.
eaaied hi the. lining; .fc,j8
were, disrovered and-,con man was a dealer hi IndAe
was determined to cbrittnUlJ'in
fie. In a short time- he went London and soon- returned. -
occasion he was. closely.
nothing was found. As won
reieaaeu, ue wtufc uuen and carried off AiRrge ruonds he- had-! secret
Somaue ago the ai
n-ntMV, nf ill A fli.nii.Ttnffki.ni
diamond smuiMrter fWm EbxbtnV
this port; QutMmfmm
to tha aesrebertr . bDtesi! taeapKir iraghlyexaiitined, J an invoice: of eighteen precious .etatMBk
gUXUIBIl. lKSeSAI. JLUB WEBOBZS 'TOTS
rrmiHwf ntv aUnanfal' 'T.Henf vnAAaawveaauaar naBBtBSBBW ,1 a
het mentioned ..the.. invoice, utwlW.; lowed the an : immm:, went home he removed a phlster, rronta; his back, m'flierridtfes of feh 15; concealed th true dohdsj taWat.4aBV.;
inpre a. rer-;.w .pnBnr1unKBBjr-
been pWticed i&'arousedfill o V . search and one of tte"aWlfr-S33t , . m
seizure of ttM iasjNtientfened mmce!B
. . ..
mi
-tVeio York UttePi f
mi
, fSamluljrgL
Tho gamWmy binees,ia(iMi i conducted as the' arv-iooda'atoi
tact, more so, since' me stores 00 Hpg ud once in a while. wMchmnon '
prmcipal inisiness. m., canted ott.;,.
twelve or fifteen places, all ran m .
nectioo. jwith aaloons, Mpat.io tables are on the first floor;' Andlir
erai saioons operauuua 'eaa wi
seen fromthe street Borne!!
U .nptHtairs apartment, , a,
excuvve - aa jnore ,n hishedl which u'soenutt
and-poker are the ntbatKNiW
and everybody 4laysiif?6i t0;rf
bpywho mates OftolA quartat to the man who fmfSmS-
and:iays down A pile of $20' i on the nee.- The'blement' -r
way interested- seems to stimuhVtol
feverish anxiety td take A;a
something, and the 1
fords the same 'lurid orexcitement ( found in the,!cltion of -the'i
rmctor and tha: minor. To theA whs
is pover-sWciitoa ai.ppaaMy;-
a wealthy, man next weekanyiirdtnayy amusement is entirely w.Mpi
dealers, xne pmyecB ,
most invariably lose ' 1 win. Leadville letter,,
Where the Cost Bees :
cnnietnmir aiur una naanK , xaueaw-
he select tans lie freerfroBvi
picionof rerdnte er shada and drier and--6andiar-it :
He thn;miw ,uw somemijd.l
some. roc.Ks, ana wiwi ue wemf
a ..Art, mu mnna tsin iia'
eismiRne vxuj iw dow walls, without any: 1 as biiv-wiiidowa - or mam
window mayor nyiab
ana. wnen tne w
tWhwner rhav tdAad On")
touch the reof, whiah ot
The mtexioc MmAtiiostf
two rooms, and if theowneris.
nrtatnnravt BftV WOEth 130 OT
adds a sort or pbveh 'Ivoj' &fc
and the thing is done.' A w Ml'
of such ediilcesr. 's A ;'-yery
speqtaple.,t- Bnjtwpajw imnrovinor. Frem the. c
dwellintfs of 500 years ago
1.000' for all certainty WaWWfcl:
subiect). thev hve ariiento
mnd hnta amrWrBund and
Mexican- amjUieri 1,00) yaw&t
may take on wmmu)lan tianln the dwellintr he iiihabil
: , f. . n. .a - ill I
seme- (arAeGaflMlM'err
" Grant hhmmmm' ainltaesst in ruv
to .pay it ba45k Jto,him..e lookal!i
over his paper aad said;.,;-Jfe
it now; when you, get $30,000 A
and hou'se-retft.4 Ffi
wSviry tartiealar oethlii.C
if one or Ms amommm wawi
lose-h situation in Ahurry,
again he was, very rkirdbo
u-rant s oraers. w wouia rrufe" anV oliii oidertf'witl
He simirfv wouldn'tiiiadeaW 1
say in that- qutef -omj of his, wfafle hip
fTpeThAStr'
..-Aail amV'i:
P
11 411rU.lUUI UTtl HlBKBta
niVwish; I shall'hrJ
Raa thai,; 1m" orders are:
out." And vetthe Goneral waa
henpectakt wmmwwy'Wf manner m, means, 4 B.Af' &W4Utp4mi, " $
jfown iravmtiffttf. . . .. , ..
i neld Bincer than Ehede UlAAat'
. in a nS?Ji!av O
TheJaEgest raucft W-AWMI MMW
Charles. Goodwrilght ' At tM UA ,ivr. H hearilii 'fOBr?
with 270,000 acres, boutfatSnf
per acre, ana iia.onfaBo:
paying as high.aAfaper coiitrols 700.000 aerea.
land 250 miles of'tenoAs
has a herd of 40,000 . eetttki
state oi -jKAoue island feo m,m acifesV it-wilj W:seaj, man's . nosi-Msiona ' cover'
enough: for t cornmo Weatthf 'f'
If thou art mh. then .mm,.
vfrirtnne;oWBa-2
ntuM Af t.rtv
the greatness of ;n
ness or an.v cwwow'ww
to men of towv fi.und and E
Be great. &fer& '
Unna v ,a an a
mm.
an. Hain r jput
To lnaiDBBJMia , v.- -
tftft'Aia
' ri n-i
A uni
meat'
