ww 5Wf1 S '42 THE SUNDAY OREGONIA2S, PORTLAD, MAY 15, 1904. ry9 TrGev&T&fF-jr- TTf"' THE STORY OF TRIP, THE TRAMP Adventures of a Homeless Dog as Told by Himself Chapter 2. WHEN the robbers returned and found me at tbe bouse they were for killing me at once, one of them eaylng: "This puppy must be known to many people, and should any one from the village get sight of him It will be known that -we robbed the store. I will take him out and shoot him." But both the women pleaded so hard for my life that It was finally decided to. keep me for awhile, and I must say that things were made very pleasant for me for the next six months. I had plenty to cat and nothing to do, although I heard the men say I would make a good watch dog after X was a year old. There was but little work done on the term. About once a week the two men drove off with the wagon and were gone ell night. Sometimes they were alone, eometimes one or two other men were with them. They always brought back stolen goods, and after a few days the "goods were carried off and sold. Many and many a time I heard the women tell ing the men that they would end in state .prison, but their words were only laughed at. Several months passed when X was awakened one night by the footsteps of men. I had a kennel near the kitchen door, and as I rushed out I saw six or ight men. close to me. I set up a bark ing to alarm the family, but as soon as I uttered the first sound one of the In truders gave me such a blow over the head with a club that I rolled over un conscious. When I came to my senses I found an awful row going on. The strangers were officers of the law, and had come to ar rest the whole family. The robbers had resisted them, but both men and women were made prisoners Just the great ringing In my ears I heard one of same. "While I lay on J2ie grass with a I will l ' '"lrt 0 TmrHADLTJT THE TOTOl&rPOGP OPHTJW OT amsE warns MJowASMSffifER .the officers say that the robbers would get a sentence of at least five years each. "What was I to do? If the family were taken away I could not stay behind, and I knew that the officers would not let me go along. It seemed the best thing to sneak away, and although I staggered when I got up I was soon in safety be hind some bushes. "While I was lying there one "of the officers said to another: "You didn't kill that dog after all. He's got up and sneaked out of it." They made no hunt for me, and when ready to drive off with their prisoners they had forgotten all about me. I crept out to the gate to see them go away. What was to become of me I could not say. The question was"tb be decided pretty soon, however. While I was at the gate a spaniel dog came trotting along. As soon as I saw him I knew that he was a stranger In those parts. "Hello to jou!" I said as he came up. "And hello to you I" he replied as he halted. "Well, youngster, why are you sitting out here at this time of night, in stead of being asleep in your kennel?" He was a fine-looking dog, a good deal older than myself, and I liked his looks. In reply to his question I told him every thing as I have told you and when 1 finished, he said: "Those officers will be coming back to morrow, and other people will bo tramp ing about the place, and if they don't shopt you, some one will get a rope around your neck and lead you home. He may prove to be a good master, or he may misuse you. Plenty of men deserve hanging for the way they use their dogs. As for me, I call no man master." "But what do you do?" I asked. "I am a dog tramp. I travel about and see the world. Now and then I have to go hungry or sleep cold, but on the whole I fare very well indeed. The best thing you can do IS to join me. I have long, wanted a partner, but have found no dog to my liking. Tou say your name Is Trip; well my name Is Ned, and I believe we shall get along together first rate." It seemed to me to be the best thing I could do, and when I said I would go with Wm he replied: "It is only midnight now, and if we start out at daylight that will be time enougn. Let us take a look around the house ajid then have 'a nap." The officers were in such a hurry to get away with their prisoners that they had left the kitchen door open, and of course I was at home as soon as we entered. I went to the cupboard where cold victuals were' kept and stood on my hind legs and turned the button, and then we had plen ty of cold meat and bread before us. When we had eaten our fill and lapped up a pan of milk Ned said to me: "We will now sleep till daylight; and then we will be off to see the world. There are lively times ahead for you." "How long have you been a tramp?" 1 asked. "More than a year, and in that time I have traveled hundreds of miles and met with many strange adventures." "But what do you get to eat, and where do you sleep? "You will find out all about that as we go along. Even it we-have to go hun gry sometimes and sleep under the bushes It Is better than being kicked about Now, youngster, you are so sleepy you can hardly hold your eyes open. Tumble down and go to. sleep, and leave me to wake you up at the proper time. To morrow will bo a great day for you. You will probably have an adventure before noon." gfi (Tp he continued.) POCKET RAT AN EXPERT ENGINEER Halo, the InTentot of tie Mode o! Unc'e ground Travel. -X& ..... iQB5osiisav. vs ii n mmk MULO MUIX), THE TOCKET KAT. "M ONCE AHEAD OF CIVILIZED WORLD OF EUROPE HOW DID CHINA RUN DOWN? T HE more the history of China is in- estigated, the more certain it seems to be that many of the inven tions a"nd discoveries supposed to have first become known in Europe were really known centuries before to the Chinese. The Chinese made use of these inven tions and discoveries for a while; then, as the life of the nation stagnated and all progress stopped, they were allowed to become lost arts in the land where they originated and were forgotten un til they were reintroduced from the West. Centuries before the .people of Eu- rope began to manufacture paper the Chinese made it and used to write on it. Sven Hedln, the explorer, found buried in the sands of Gobi Desert a ruined city, and in the city many manu scripts of. paper covered with Chinese script. These pieces of paper were 1650 years old, and very good paper It was. According to the Chinese chronicles paper was made in China 2000 years before the Christian era, whereas it first became known in Europe in the ninth century, and its general use and manufacture dates from comparatively recent times. Long before the Europeans began to mine coal to use as fuel the Chinese were using it. Marco Polo, the Vene tian traveler, who visited China in 1275, being then a young man of 21, .was' much surprised to find the Chinese "burning stones," as he expressed It. He says in the story of his travels: "Through the whole province of Cathay (that is, China) certain black stones are dug out of-the mountains, which, put intothe fire, burn like wood, and, being kindled, preserve fireva longtime; and if they be kindled in the evening they keep fire all night; and many use these stones, though they have plenty of wood." Recently there was celebrated at the City of Amalfl, in Italy, the 500th anni versary of the birth of a sailor named Gloja, who has been commonly regard ed as the Inventor of the mariner's compass. Though his claims to having invented the compass have been discredited, it is certain that it was about his time that the magnetic needle began to be used by European sailors, and the in vention became generally known. .Yet an ancient Chinese record speaks of the compass as having been used by one of the old Emperors 2635 years before Christ, when the Emperor, being caught in a fog, made himself an instrument which told him which was north and which was south. "Wliep the interior of China is at last opened to civilization and all the his tory of the decrepit empire becomes known, it may be found that many oth er inventions, comforts and luxuries which Europe and America enjoy were old stories to the Chinese centuries be fore they became known to the West ern world. UliO, Expert Engineer," Is the sign which should hang above the dorway of a strange little fellow who makes his home a foot or more under ground. "That south subway of ours that runs through the peach orchard," remarked Mulo. to his wife one morning, "has all caved in. The heavy rain last night com pletely destroyed It. I must get to work on it at once." "Not before breakfast," remonstrated his wife. "Oh. I'll take a bite as I go along," said the engineer, hurrying away. Mulo worked with a will, digging out the sub way till by and by he came to the root of a peach tree. "Now," said he to him self, "I think I have earned my break fast," and he cut off the root, bit by bit, with his great incisors. "I am very fond of peach," said he, smacking his lips, "It's one of the most delicious roots I know!" Just then there was a sound overhead which sent .the cold shivers down Mulo's back. Ho turned and hurried toward the west subway, then through that to the center of the village. There was a great commotion. He saw daylight streaming down Into the livingroom, and his little son ran up to him, crying: "A terrible beast broke our roof in and seized mam ma. He has carried her away!" ' "Just what I feared," said Mulo. "I heard the man walkipg In his orchard and hi'i dog barking and jumping about, and then I heard a squeal. Ii: must have been your poor mother." When the village had quieted 'down Mulo, called all his relatives together; saying: '"Tonight we must leave, our old home. It Is no longer safe to remain here now that the man and the dog have discovered us. As soon as the sun sets let us go up into the field and pre pare a luncheon for our journey." So at dark every one of the pocket rats hjfetend to the field and cut a great many blades of juicy green grass. Each stuffed his two deek pockets as full as he could, so that they hung down and touched tho ground, which made it rather hard to travel, but then a pouched rat must have food on a journey. Over highways, through meadows, across stone walls and ditches they traveled. Now and then when they felt exhausted thejr thrust their hands into their pockets and pulledout a mouthful of grass. At last Mulo called a halt. "Here," he said, "is as pleasant a placa as we could wish a pear and apple or chard, a vegetable garden and a pasture. Liet us begin work on our new homo at once." Every pocket rat Immediately" "began digging as fast as he could, for they all knew if they were not out of sight by daylight they- might be discovered and killed. When the sun rose there were many long ridges of earth running in alt direc tions. These were the roofs of sub waysL If you had traversed one of them you would finally have arrived at the great central station tho livingroom. where all the Mulos were gathered at breakfast, which they ate from their pockets, a bite at a time, as the boys and girls cat candy in school hours. As Spring drew on Father Mulo worked busily, digging out a new rdom. at the end of the east subway. He brought in many a pouch full of dry grass to lino It, and then ho suddenly disappeared. Two nights later he Introduced Mrs. Muto num ber two, whom he had won in a far away village. "See, my dear, what a beautl lul nest I have made for you!" ha said, pointing to It proudly. "Humph!" she said, "gooil a3 far as it goes, but not half warm and soft enough for little Mulos," and she began tearing the fur from her body by handfuls and spreading it over the grass. What a fine family was Mr. Mulo's, three sons and two daughters, every one with a pair of handsome fur-lined pockets! All the .rhndren. the girls as well as the boys, were taught engineering and spent fully half their time building llttlo subways in every direction. They all he came experts like their father". Now when you go whirling through tho subways In our great cities, remember that it was a little pocket rat, who be lieved in transit that Is, in being able to escape rapidly from his enemies that originated this excellent mode of travel. THIS REMARKABLY STRANGE LANGUAGE OF OURS It Is Made Up of All Sorts of Foreign Speech. M ANY words in the English language was wandering in a crooked course, and ... .,.. a ...,iv. 1 finally to meanaer came 10 mean wanner wmen we u erj u,, . ... ftbou- Jlke rlyer have become almost "slang," have hlstori cal or classical derivations of which we seldom or never think. Nearly every lan guage, ancient and modern, has contribu ted to make up the English tongue, and it is surprising to stop to realize occasional ly that we are using Arabic or Greek words without knowing It. To say, "Oh, I saw him meandering down the street." does not sound very elegant, but, as a matter of fact, we are using a classical Greek allusion. Meander is a slightly modernized form of the name of a little river in Asia Minor the part of Asia Minor formerly peo pled by the Greeks. It is a crooked, little stream and wanders to the sea by many turns. The Greeks began to use the name as a symbol for anything that The Romans took the word from the Greeks; the Spaniards, Italians and French took It from the Romans, and the English took It from the French. When you say, "Have you any cash about you?" you are using an East Indian word from the language off the Tamils, a race inhabiting the Southern part of India and the island of Ceylon. The Por tuguese and Dutch found the word there meaning a small copper coin. After Vasco da Gama had rounded the Cape o Good Hope, those nations began to trade with the East. The word was Kas In Tamil and the Dutch adopted it without alteration, the English taking It from the Dutch and calling it cash. The word soon became to stand for all sorts of money. When you say "I can't listen to that long rigmarole." you are using an ancient legal phrase which was once applied to the most solemn and portentous docu ments. The word Tvas originally Ragman roll, and long, complicated deeds with seals attached to them were so known in law. In the middle ages even Papal proc lamations or bulls were called Ragman rolls with no thought of disrespect. In fact, nothing was more solemn and re specting than the ancient rigmarole. Perhaps it was because solemn and stately writings are apt to be rather long-drawn out and hard to understand that the word came finally to mean what it now does. Why these ancient documents were styled Ragman-rolls or rigmaroles is a more involved question to answer. A roll, of course, was the regular form of every document before books were used. Writ ings on parchment used to be attached to pieces of wood, on which they were rolled up when not being read. The word ragman, us It appears in this word, does not mean a man who sells or buys rags, but is a corruption of the Ice landic word RagmennI, a coward or crav en. Somehow the word got mixed with the Anglo-Saxon language while it was in process of formation, but it has now disappeared except as it forms a part of rigmarole. While Ragman still meant a craven, King Edward I, of England, bound such of the Scottish nobles as he could to serve him by .a long document of 36 pieces of parchment sewn together Into one "roll." This was called by the Scottish patriots tho cravens' roll, or ragman-roll, and from that calling we Inherit rigmarole. A word of everyday use with us is cot ton. When we say it we are speaking aV most pure Arabic. When the Moors were, established in the South of Spain, they were familiar with cotton and Its uses and they called it "Al Godon" "Al" meaning -"The." The Spaniards took the words from the Arabian Moors, making one word of them Algodon. The English, taking the word from the Spanish, dropped the "Al" and with them from being godon the word soon changed to cotton. And there isn't really much dif ference between godon and cotton, if you say it quick. Thus In these four words, taken at random from the English lan guage, we find that we are really using Greek, East Indian, Icelandic and Arabic. THE ARTICLES WHICH UNCLE SAM "SWAPS" He Sells and Ships Queer Things and Buys Queer Things. STRANGE DANCES OF .REAL WILD DERVISHES Wherein Fanatics Bite Red-Hot Iron. N THE past few years there have been many exhibitions of Oriental desert dwelling tribes In Europe and the "United States, and their performances' have served to take away a great deal of the romantic glamour that used to en velope tho name "Dervish." Now. whilo there Isn't anything ro mantic about most of the Dervishes whom I have seen' in the Mohammedan countries they aro far from being the rather poor kind of trash that I have seen in the exhibitions in tho Occident. Tho real Dervish is dirty, hut dangerous; lazy, but quick as a snake when he wishes to be; ragged and poor, but proud as Lucifer. The good people who have witnessed what the programmes announce as 'a genuine dance of wild Dervishes," should have seen the decidedly genuine dance that I saw three years ago in tho sandy country a'few miles east of Bagdad; then they would havo understood the difference between the Dervish of the shows and the Dervish of the plains. to . : J i i l 1 : i i IrfFfiL I -1 J z:::..,.v x ; 1 ooo ooo I if" I Mi I I J t I Ii : I : ! : i :. I i ! i A I I I j j . r a KITCHEN RANGE TO TOT UP. This diagram represents a kitchen range, though you would not, perhaps, sus pect It. . A lery little cutting and & little more folding will produce It In per fect condition, so that It can be put into a doll's kitchen. If you follow the.in alructlons )ou -nlll find that there is not enough trouble to be worth mention ing about making It. Cut around outline. Then fold under and paste to the under part of the tops of the range the parts AAA. Close the front by pasting the flaps BB to the sides. Then fold so that the flaps C paste under fetters C on the sides. Paste the double sides together and paste the flaps D D to the top. Paste E E Under the rim of the range and the work is done. About 200 Dervishes, mostly Persian were gathered in a great half-ruined hall one afternoon when I was enabled to (smuggle myself In, through the connlv- Sheikh who presided over the affair and who was said to be one of the most learned Holy Men of the Orient. First, all the Dervishes chanted praises of the old gentleman. Then the oldest of them advanced and kissed him, once on each cheek. After that all the rest ad vanced on their knees and kissed his hand. For half an liour after all the big-lunged men roared out long passages from the Koran, while the old Snelkh chanted In a still more mighty voice a single sen tence, repeated unceasingly. Then they all sprang up, and for at least three-quarters of an hour they swayed back and forth, one against the other, keeping time with their stamping feet, until many of the Dervishes began to tremble, while others sobbed aloud. Suddenly they all removed their tur bans, locked their arms and moved swift ly around and around the hallt pound ing their feet hard oh the stone floor and springing high in the alrat regular In tervals. At this time their chanting changed to wild howling, rising Incessant ly. This violent exercise was kept up longer than any of the others; so long, in fact, that men began to drop here and there. As soon, however, as the mass of dancers showed signs of weakening, the old Sheikh would liowl aloud and wave his arms till they were spurred on again. After they had worked themselves into a positive craze, came the most fright ful spectacle that I ever saw in any jart of tho wirld. The most violent of the Dervishes seized swords and daggers and thrust them Into braziers that were burn ing in various parts of the hall. "When they had turned red-hot, they were car ried to the Sheikh, wno in turn pre sented them to certain dancing Dervishes. As soon as the fiery weapons were held out, tnese men would seize them eagerly, and lick them with their tongues, bite at them like wolves, grip them in their teeth and so dance around or thrust thejn into their legs and arms. It was wonderful to see how tne mad excitement of the ceremony enabled them to bear what must have been intense suffering. Very few of them seemed to succumb; most of the Dervishes danced and handled the red-hot weapons until they had cooled entirely. Some even licked them continually till they steamed and lost their heat that way. I saw only three men faint from the wounds; and even these were out of the dance for only a few moments. The next day I saw a number of the Dervishes who had cut and otherwise in jured themselves In tne dance. They wore wounded, but the damages seemed to be giving them no trouble whatever, so far as motion or appetite appeared to be concerned. Brooklyn boy named Robert was taught to swim by his father last Summer in a simple and delightful way. His big dad merely dug a hole in the sand above the line to which the rollers reached. He made it Just deep enough so that the little boy could float in It. Then he filled it with water as the rollers broke near it, and that day Robert learned to float. Be fore the end of the season that hole and similar ones had taught him how to swim like any grown boy or man, and, though IT is a curious list of things that Uncle Sam sends to savage and half civilized countries and as curious a list of things which he takes from iho3e countries in return. In far-off Uganda, where the lions roar as the train passes on the new railroad, and the engineer has to slow down now and then because a hippo potamus gets on tho track, the natives buy our kerosene and And it useful, not only for illuminating purposes, ."but for anointing their shining black bodies to make them shine more. They have also taken a fancy lately to our cheap phonographs, and a well-to-do savage becomes a society leader when he sets one up in his hut. They also like our watches the large ones, the kind which it takes about half an hour to wind up and they are begin ning to make a market for them. In return the Uganda natives send us a peculiar gum which exudes from a tree which they call the Incense tree. This gum burns with a clean, pungent smell, and is the chief ingredient In the Incense used In Episcopal "high church" and Catholic churches in this country. For untold centuries this gum has been exported from this section of Africa- It is the "olibanum" of science and the frankincense of history. Inferior kinds of incense gum are found in India and Arabia, but the East African sort is the one most in demand and the one which the United States buys. So when you see incense burned in a church you probably see the same kind of gum burning, brought from the same place, and smell the same smell, as did Solomon when, at the completion of the temple, nearly 3000 years ago, "Burned incense on the altar which was befora the Dord." Savages delight in watches and clocks, but the clocks must have a loud tick to them and the watches must be of generous size as well as loud of tick. Tho story is told of a clock-making concern which determined to get a sharo of the "West African trade, where the natives had taken kindly to an In ferior brand of clocks sent out by a rival house. A better article In the clock line was manufactured and sent out to be sold at the same price as the goods of the rival concern. To the astonishment of the manufacturers the invoice failed to sell. , An investigation showed that the cheap clocks of tie first house had a large and powerful tick to them and a gong which struck the hour like a fire alarm bell. Thereupon the second firm set to work and manufacturd a clock with a still louder tick and a still more resounding gong "in the striking parts, and soon captured the desired trade. The clocks and watches of savage and semi-civilized peoples come mostly from Connecticut and Birmingham, England, Connecticut having a practi cal monopoly in supplying the watches. Egypt sends to the United -States and England a curious article of commerce, consisting offragments of mummies or perhaps mummies whole ;which are ground up and used In mixing paints for artists. The mummies are not the finely preserved royal remains from the sepul chres of dead kings, but the mummies of the common people of Egypt who passed away 2000 or 3000 years ago and were embalmed less carefully and laid away In less costly tombs than their more for tunate fellow-subjects. Appropriately enough, poppy oil is used to mix the peculiar brown paint obtained from pulverized mummy. In return Egypt Imports quantities of Imitation scarabei, those little stone charms worn by the an cient Egyptians, which look like a beetle on top and have, on the smooth underside, the hieroglyphics of some great prince who reigned in the Nile Yalley when the world was young. The Americaps say these false scarabei are manufactured In Birmingham, England; but the English declare that they come from Connecti cut, where they are made by machinery and shipped in barrels to be planted by Arabian guides ,in the desert sands, and "discovered" in he very sight of confid ing tourists, who pay a big price for them. The United States does a flourishing business selling patent medicines to the untutored savage, who is in the process of being brought Into contact with civil ization. The savage takes kindly to pat ent medicines. Imported first by the white settlers for their own use on the African coast, the medicines have found favor in the throats of the natives, and now many a black; naked, stalwart native chief keeps in his bamboo hut in the jungle a bottle of "Somebody's Celebrated Nerve Tonic," of which he takes a dose before he goes out slave-hunting. In return for patent nerve tonics the sable savages of Africa send to us among other things Invoices of some of their own medicines, not patented as yet, but highly prized. In the Dark Continent. Among these is the poisonous calabar, or ordeal Tieans. In Western Africa these beans are much valued by the natives for the curious property they have of exposing witches. If any one in the tribe is sus pected of practicing witchcraft, he or she must swallow a strong decoction -made from the bean, and the tribe sits around to observe the result. If the suspected person is guilty, he dies; but if the stom ach refuses to retain the decoction, he is declared guiltless, and the Voodooman who accused him Is put to death instead. As might naturally be supposed, the Voodoo man tries to see to It that the accused person gets a dose strong enough to kill. But in his anxiety to do this he some times gives his Intended victim an over dose, and then It goes hard with the Voo dooman. The beans are not used in this country for discovering witches (though had they been imported in the days of Salem witch craft they probably would have been), but are used by doctors in treating lockjaw, neuralgia and certain other nervous dis eases. Thus do civilization and savagery medicate each other. otTT YL:r ino t l- nov$e Cft.k.- jw Ukfc a. Ooo , would b&tfR- mJ ."This 9eYula.nf If does'at- do one lihe c1s M :'r climb on cne HOW AMERICAN ESKIMOS HUNT They Run Reindeer Fawns Down on Foot. A WHAXJNG captain, who was forced through tho loss of his ship to spend almost a whole year with the Point Barrow Eskimos of Alaska, has returned with interesting yarns of their methods of capturing and killing the Arctic game. "At first," said he, "I thought that they weren't good hunters. I saw them hunt reindeer and, without either trying to work to leeward of them or to crawl toward them until they got within gun shot they started right for them. Of course tho reindeer ran, and the Eskimos had to run after them, firing at intervals. Most of the deer got away. I tried it myself afterward and then I found that the Eskimo method only looked clumsy; in reality it was the only way in-which the beasts could bo hunted in that coun try. There isn't any cover and the ani mals can see an approaching figure so far away that there wouldn't be much use "Then I found out that the Eskimos are cunning hunters, all right. In places where the reindeer had regular trails they drove stakes In such ways thathe beasts would be diverted gradually from their course and made to pass over ground where they could be shot with the least waste of time or ammunition, and near enough to the villages, so that the hunters wouldn't have too muca of a distance to carry the meat. "The Eskimos prize the soft skin of the young fawns highly for clothing, hut they do "not waste precious powder and shot on them. The women and lads are sent out and they actually run the little things down on foot. It's hard to believe that a short, ungraceful being like an Eskimo can do It, but It's so. "They have great times there In the Summer when the flies begin to bite the deer. Often a reindeer is so maddened by the insects that it will rush straight Into the arms of the hunters. "The most interesting thing to me was to see them hunt seals. They had several methods, but the best one was carried on In the darkest nights only. They wouldn't try It even In a bright display of North ern Lights. , "The day before the hunters would scout around on the frozen sea for a "lead," that Is, a fairly wide crack In the floe, showing the open black-water. As soon as they found a promising one, they would three-legged Ivory stool, an Ivory rattle and an Ivory 'scratcher, with three sharp claws of bone. "The Eskimos gravely climb on their little stools, which are onlv a few inches high, squat on their heels, drape their sealskin garments over their legs and feet, and begin to scratch the ice gently with the scratchers. At Intervals they cease scratching and work their rattles softly. "After a half hour or so, the value of the funny little stools became apparent to me, for I didn't have one; and my feet, although protected by fur boots, were nearly frozen from standing on the Ice. I was Intensely grateful when one of the hunters offered me his stool. "The sight of so many of the grave little men scratching and rattling like children for the seals to come struck me as lu dicrous. I thought, of course, It was be ing done simply out of savage supersti tion. But to my .surprise, within three quarters of an hour, five of the nets had caught one seal each. "Then I learned that the rattling and the scratching were far from childish, but were the results of thorough hunting knowledge. The Point Barrow Eskimos had discovered generations ago that the seal is intensely curious. Knowing also that sounds made on ice travel a long distance tinder water, they devised this way of attracting seals from far away. The m trvine to ret to windward of them i-drag all their nets, which are beautifully animals, lured on and on by the myste JnS.rj? Tn"J th? S.Sr.aae of slnew. to within about 100 yards tton. sounds, will I swim strait toward of one edge of the crack. There they cut holes, parallel to the lead, and Into these holes the nets are lowered so that they hang quite straight In the water, like cur tains suspended In the sea. "As soon as darkness has settled, the hunters " assemble on the ice just behind the nets. They are armed with three queer implements besides their harpoons and spears. These three objects are a them until they run head first Into the nets, the meshes of which are so con structed that they choke the creatures. "The object in setting the nets near a lead or crack is to get as near to the seals as possible; for the seals always con gregate near such breathing spots." She I will scream If you klse me. He Then I won't kiss you. She-But er I feel Just like screaming, anyway. Judge. he is still too small to be taken out into the breakers, he will be carried out beyond them this year and enjoy his swim in the deep ocean. SOLUTIONS OF LAST PUZZLE. SUNDAY'S A Three-Year-Old Swimmer, stout little giant of a 3-ycar-old Answer to Combined Words. (1)' New Haven. (2) Con-cord. (3) Little Rock. (4) Dun-bar. (5) Nor-folO (0) Spring-Held. Answer to Crossword. 'Why Do You Weep?" "Why do you weep, my little lad?" The Tclnd school ma'am inquired. "Oh, miss. It makes me feel so bad To see the wheels all tired." ike -verbs re qMite mcerHm folk; Yom 'never know wkvb tkey kve doive; , for irstwce, st'fcrta raxe But stops Md C2dlc3 kimself I r jrS (A M05t Aivd tkey mto & quarrelsome apt- to fly ofteiv tur5 rouivd prove at times, pet ; fa .Aivd orders everyone A 3