Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910, November 20, 1902, Image 3

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A MAN’S
A MAN
By Arthur Colton
Copyright, IMI*, by Arthar Coltou
c
througn the ora in hies There was the
stone wall uot five rods away, all lined
along the top with grimy faces. A
thousand rilles within as many yards
wanting uotblug lieiter tliau to dig a
inuml bole lu him. He dropiied his
head and closed Ills eyes.
His thoughts were so stunned that
tin' slowly lessening I'aimmiaile seem
ed like a dream, ami lie hardly noticed
when It had ceased, ami lie began to
hear voices, cries of wouuded men all
down the slope ami other men talking
up above. There was a clump of trees
to the right anil two or three crows In
the treetopa cawing familiarly.
Au
hour or two must have passed, for the
sun was down ami the river mist creep­
ing up the slope, lie lay on Ills back,
staring blankly at the pale sky.
A group of men came down ami stood
on the rocks above. They eqilld prole
ably see him. but a man oil Ills hack
with his toes up was nothing particular
there. They talked with a soft drawl.
"Doggouedest clean up I ever saw."
" I hey hain't no business to come up
heali, yuh know. They come some ins­
tance now.”
“Sliuah! We ain't huntin’ rabbits.
What'd yuh suppose?”
Then they went on.
The mist came up white and cold and
covered It ■ 'I over. He could nut see
the wall a’
'onger, though lie could
hear the vo . . s. He turned on bls face
and crawlei' along below the brambles
ami rocks to where the clump of trees
stood with i deep hollow below them.
They were chestnut trees. Some one
was sitting In the hollow witli his back
against the roots.
During the rush up the slopes and
terraces Dinkey Cott fairly enjoyed
himself, The sisirtiug blood In him
sang In his ears an old song that the
leopard knows, it may be. waiting In
the mottled shadow, that the rider
knows on the race course, the hunter
In the snow—the song of a craving that
only excitement satisfies. The smoke
blew down the hill in liis face. He
went down a hollow ami up the other
side. Then something hot amt sudden
came Into the middle of him, and he
rolled back against the roots of a great
tree.
"Hullv gee! I'm plunked!” lie grum­
bled disgustedly.
For tlie time he felt no pain, but his
blood ceased to sing ill bls ears. Every­
thing seemed to settle down around
him—blank and dull and angry. He
felt as If either the army of tlie north
or tlie army of the south had not treat­
ed him rightly. If they had given him
a minute more, be might have clubbed
something worth while. He sat up
against a tree, wondered what hie
chance was to pull through, thought It
poor and thought he would sell it for a
drink.
The firing dropped off little by little,
ami the mist was coming up. Dinkey
began to see sights. His face and
hands were hot. and things seemed to
OMPANY A was cut up at An­
tietam so that there was not
enough of It left for useful
purposes, ami Deacon An­
drew Terrell became a member of a
ceitain Company <!. which nleknain
cd him "’Is Hulliness.” Company A
ciime from Dutchess couniv. There
was a little white church lu the vil­
lage of Brewster and a little white
bouse with a meager porcli where that
good woman, Mrs. Terrell, hail stood
and shed several tears as the deacon
Hulked away down the street, looking
extraordinary In his regimentals. She
dried her eyes, settled down to her
aenlng in that quiet south window
and hoped he would remember to keep
his feet dry and not lose the cough
drops.
The deacon took the cough drops reg­
ularly, he kept his gray chin heard
trimmed with a pair of domestic »da-
aers and drilling never iwisuaded hitn
to move his large frame with other
than the same self conscious restraint.
His sallow face had the same set lines.
Bui no doorkeeper in tlie house of
God the deacon's service In the meet­
ing house at Brewster—who should
come perforce to dwell in the tents of
wickedness would pretend to like It.
Besides. Company G hail mi tents. It
came from the lower wards of the
great city, ami If you take Dinkey
Cott, for Instance, that thin legged,
utunted. Imp faced, hardened little
Bowery sprout put his left fist In the
deacon's eye the first day of their ac­
quaintance amt swore for several min­
utes in tlie pleasantest manner poasi-
ble.
And the deacon cuffed him because
lie bad been a schoolmaster In liis day
and did not understand Imw lie would
be despised for knocking Dinkey down
In that amateur fashion, and the lieu­
tenant gave them both guard duty for
fighting in the ranks.
The deacon declared “that young
man Cott hadn’t no moral Ideas” ami
did Ills guard duty In bitterness and
strict conscience to the last minute of
it. ldnkey put his thumb to his nose
ami offered to show the lieutenant how
the thing should have been done, ami
the big mau laughed, and both forgot
about the guard duty.
Dinkey’s early recollections bail to
do with the cobblestones of Mulberry
bend and bootblacking on I'etirl street.
Dfiicon Terrell’s begun with a lonely
farm, where there were ton many po­
tato bills to hoe, a little schoolhouse
where arithmetic was taught with a
ferule, a white meeting house where
tlie wrath of God was preached with
entliuslasifl. Both seemed far enough
away from the weary tramp, tramp,
the picket duty ami the camp at last
one misty night In thick woods on the
Stafford hills, looking over the Rap­
pahannock to the town of Fredericks­
burg.
What happened there was not clear
to Company G. There seemed to be a
deal of noise and hurrying about, can­
non smoke In the valley and cannon
smoke on the terraces across the val­
ley. Somebody was building pontoon
bridges, therefore it seemed likely
somebody wanted to get across. They
were having hard luck with the
bridges. That was probably the ene­
my on the ridge beyond. There seem­
ed to be no end of him, anyway; up
and down the valley, mile beyond mile,
ll< crawled alonn Mow the hratnhle».
the same line of wooded heights and
be riproarlug inside him generally.
drifting smoke.
And the regiment found Itself cross­ The mist whs full of flickering lights,
ing a shaky pontoon bridge on a Satur­ which presently seemed to be street
day morning lu the mist anil climbing lamps down the Bowery. The front
the bunk Into a most battered ami tired windows of Reilly's saloon were glar­
looking little town, which was smolder­ ing, and opposite was Gottstefn’s Jew­
ing sulkily with burned buildings and elry store, where It happened that lie
thrilling with enormous noise. There hit one Halligan in the eye for saying
tlie.v waited for something else to hap­ Babby Reilly was bis girl and not
pen. The deacon felt a lump in Iris Dinkey’s, mid be bought Babby a nine­
ty cent gold ring of Gottsteln, which
throat, stopping Iris breath.
“Git out o' me tracks!” snickered proved Halligan to be a liar. The cop
Dinkey Cott behind him. “I'll step on saw him hit Halligan, too, and said
nothing, being his frleml And Halil*
yer.”
Dinkey had never seemed more imp­ „an enlisted in Company G with the
ish, unholy nml incongruous. They rest of the boys and was keeled over
seemed to stand there a long time. In the dark one night on picket duty
The shells kept howling and whizzing »omewhere up country, All the gang
• round. They bowled till they burst went Into Company G. The captain
and then they wlrizzed. Ami uow and was one of the boys, and so was Pt te
then some one would cry out and fall. Murphy, the big lieutenant. He was
It was bad for the nerves. The men a sort of ward sub-boss, whs Pete.
“Reilly, he's soured on me. Pete, 1
were growling.
dtiuno wot's got the ole man.”
"Aw. cap, give us a chance!”
The lights seemed to grow thick till
"It ain’t my fault, boys. I got to
everything was ablaze.
wait for orders, same as you.”
Dinkey poked the deacon's legs with
“Aw, come off! Dis ain't de Bow­
ery,” lie muttered ami started and rub­
the batt of his rifle.
"Say. It’s rotten, ain’t it? Say, cully, bed his eyes.
my ma don't like me full o' holes.
The mist was cold and white all
How's yours?”
• round him, ghostly and still, except
The other gripped his rifle tight anil that there was a low. continual mutter
thought of nothing in particular.
of voices above, and now and then a
Was It live hours that passed or soft moan rose up from somewhere.
twenty or one? Then they started, And it seemed natural enough that a
and the town was gone behind their ghost should come creeping out of the
hurrying feet. Up a steep slope to a ghostly mist, even that It should creep
stretch of broken level, rushing and near to him and peer Into Ills face, a
tramping and gasping for breath; fen­ ghost with a gray chin beard and Img
ces and rocks ahead, clumps of trees gard eyes.
and gorges; ground growing rougher
"Pm going down." It whispered.
and steeper, but that was nothing. If “Come on. Don't make any noise."
there was anything in the way, you
“liully gee!” thought Dinkey. “It's
went at it and left It behind. You de pope!”
plunged up a hill and didn't notice it.
A number of things occurred to him
Y’uu dove into a gulley and It wasn't
In I'onfnsion. The deacon did not see
there. Time was a liar, obstacles were
lie was lilt. He said to himself:
scared anil ran away. But half way
“I ain't no «-all to spoil 'Is luck. If he
up ran a turnpike, with a stone wall
Is country."
lu front that spit tire and came nearer
He blinked a moment, then nodd.-d
and nearer. It seemed creeping down
nml whispered hoarsely, "Go on.”
viciously to meet you. I'p. tip. till
The deacon crept away Into the mist.
the powder of the guns almost burned
Dinkey leaned back feebly and dosed
the deacon's face and the smoke was
Ills eyes.
so thick he could oul.v see the red
"Wished I’d die quick. It’s rotten
flashes.
And then suddenly he was alone. At .luck. Wished I could see Pete.”
least there was no one In sight, for the l The deacon crept down about 200
smoke was very thick, Company G all yards, then stopped and waited for the
dead or wounded or gone back. There young man Cott. The night was clos-
was a clump of brambles to his left. Ing in fast. A cry in the darkness
He dropped to the ground, crept behind made hint shiver, He had never luisg-
It and lay still. The roar went ou. the lned anything could tie so desolate ami
smoke rolled down over liiin. ami some­ sad. He thought he had better see
times a I
et would dip through the w hat was the matter w ith Dinkey. He
brambles, hut after a time the small never could make out afterward why It
fire dropped off little by little, though had aeented necessary to look after
Dinkey. There were hundreds of liet-
tlie cannon still boomed on.
His legs were numb, and his heart ter men on the slopes. Dinkey might
was beating his sides like a drum. The have passed him. It did not seem very
• moke was blowing away down the sensible business to go back after that
slope. He lifted bls b<md and peered worthless little limb of Satan. The
i u«*a«»on never thought tlie a«iventure a
FATE OF HINDOO GIRLS,
WOMAN AND FASHION
rilur, uu
Xi>UHl,lu Tops.
BLAkt,
civdit to bia Judgment.
Nothing iu eugmecring Is more ro­
But li* went back, guiding bimaelf NepHUI I<!ilt""i1n « Mime Their liatiuh-
mantic or curious tliuu tlie fashion in MUFFII I
W HAPPING ... 1
« «»v «*r( i < loth ,lM<»ket.
ter»
lo
tie
Murdered.
by tbe darker gloom ot tbe trees
.-.•in I»- woni over th* which the ordluary conception of a & Ki* Nt
CARO STOCK
Thia
jacket
>
A Capuchin monk engaged in mi>-
against the sky, and groped Iris way
most dtdicale i waist wiibout iTiisblng mine as an opening peueiraling far tie
...Straw und Hinders' Hotird..«
down the hollow and heard IH key •ionary work hi Nepaul. witting of
low
ihe
ordinaly
level
is
reversed
II. Tbe shaped belt and |tepluiu give
5."»-57-ôD-l» I Fi I’M St |*et*t
muttering and babbling things without Hindoo family life, remarks that it is
distinction to this mode, The use of « hi re Hiilm eini'iiis offer to climb high
Tel. Maiu Ita».
it
SAX FRANCISCO.
very
difficult
for
parents
to
make
ail
sense. It made the deacon mad to
aiiove
ilie
earth's
surface
liefore
picrc
The
sleeve
i he peplum Is opt urna!.
have to do with Irresponsible people. vautagetrtVi matches for their ihiugb
lug into II.
such as go io sleep under the enemy's tera. The Hindoos therefore find a
There is. for instance, the Eureka
rifles and talk aloud In dreams. He nieaiia of ridding themselvea of too
gold mine, prolialily Die highest iu tlie
pulled him roughly by the boots, nml many daughters by murdering them.
world situated 14. ihm » feet up in the
Diukey fell over, bubbling and mut­ It is a well known fact that lliudoos
Amies range not far from the city of
of
high
birth,
those
who
are
called
tering.
Juju.v. in Argentina, So high is this
Then It came upon the deacon that it la.jpisits. caused their daughters tt> be
mine that It is only worked with gr tit
was not sleep, hut fever. He guessed put to death after their birth by men
■ litfi' ult.v owing to the "inoiinl.iln sick
the young man was hit somewhere. spi'i lally eugag' il by do so. This crim­
n ss" and to similar troubles to vvbi<li
They had better lie going any way. Tin inal custom hml become so general
workers at this immense altitude, al­ Rrljjht’a D ìhchhc mid Dinbotcw
Johnnies must have out a picket line that in 1Sk> in the seventy three vil­
most three miles In I lie air. are suli-
Are l’iiHltivcly Curnblc.
somewhere. He slipped his hands un­ lages of the Allahabad district there
der Dinkey and got up. He tried to were only three girls under twelve
N ar t'hoca.va. In Bolivia, there lathe
climb oat quietly, but fell against the years of age. and three years later lu
\ . la del t’umlro mine, where silver ore
bank, Some one took a shot at the the tow h of Agrn there was not one
is extracted I3.IHMI feet almve sen level,
B«‘fore the business men who fucoriKirutetl the
to
be
fouml
under
that
age.
All
hml
mdse and spattered the dirt under ids
while the same metal is wrought near Fulton Cuu>pouuds invested they put them to
nose, lie lifted Dinkey higher and I h ' cii put to death.
1',-opo. lu the <'ordiHerns. I'J lisi fm-t the test in dozens of puncs Hearing that K
The English government has very
above liile water. The produce from M Wood, the editor amt proprietor of Thr VX iuo
went on. Dinkey's mutterings eeased.
Spirit Review, of ;V.'u Montgomery St . Imd
nil tlnse is carried on mule buck over i Atid
He made iio sound nt all for awhile mi tul ally passed severe laws against
certain » use of Bright's I> sease, he wusuue of
this abominable crime, but to evade
tremendous mountain paths to points those urge«i io test it The following letlei will
and at last said huskily:
them the Hindoos allow their girls to
:
"Wot’s up?”
where It can tie plactsi on rail or lie uow lie undersltnkl
"(Utt« Wine und Spirit Review,
live until the age of twelve, after
“It’s me.”
eoiici'iitrated into more portalile form
•*M0 Montgomery St., San Frumdsco,
who h they do away with thi'iu by ad­
“ Sept -.»I, I'.MJI
"Hully gee! Wot yer doin’?"
for further transit by wagon to the
»• Gentlemen : I consider It m.v duty to tell
si nlioaril. Stray Stories.
His voice was weak and thin now. ministering poison iu small doses.
the world whm the Fulton ('onipoiiuds did m
my case In November, IWV, after a lot
ill
He felt as if he were being pulled In Orientals an* past masters In the art
ue*<H. which carried me to the verge of ilia
of poisoning.* and after gome minute
<'«»«»! Gorden SpotR.
two in the middle.
grave, a scientific analysis b.v the most uote»l
In this city disclosed that I wus a vic
A glacier when it dislodges itself analyst
"Say, ole man, 1 won't Jolly yer. I.es' Inquiries it transpires that in many
tim of Bright’« Disease My physician told me
and sails away over tin» Arctic ocean that my only hop»* lay in a strong constitution
find Pete. There’s a niinie ball messed districts twenty live out of every bun-
dred girls Imve been got rid of in this
hiii I a chang«» to a warm clime.
He simgesied
never travois alone, In ilu* wake of Santa
up uie stonilek awful.”
Barbai n, and I w«uit there, having fallen
manner. Those girls who have been
” "¡'ain't far. Dinkey,” said the dea­
is imide from the tiewest cut in bishop every large one floats a line of smaller from 2»ia pounds to less than 190 in a short time,
spared they marry very early, goner-
" During iiiv abseno»’ in the south a Suu Fran­
con gently.
sleeves. Covert cloth.
hoinespun, compa nions.
cisco business man call»*d upon m.v wife, and
ally between fourteen and tifteen
'I'll«» Eskimos call this plmnomenon told her of the F'ulton <'ompound; that it was
And he thought of Pete Murphy's yi'ars. ami that not according to their broadcloth, serge or silk, trinimeli with
“the duck and ducklings,'' and any actually curing Bright’s Diseas«*, ami urg d
red, fleshy face and black, oily inns own choice, but by the will of
their fumy gimp, braid frogs amt stitching, one who has wulehed the progress of that 1 try it. I began under protest 1 mkiu
felt better. Normal sl«»ep returned, ami in a
tache. It occurred to liiin that lie had pari'iits, which is decisive.
woulil develop a liamlsonie Jacket.—
tin» eider duck followed by her brood few months 1 r«-gained m heultli I now weigh
noticed that most men In Company (>.
■¿tti pounds, and enjoy better health than 1 lm\e
An Indian family of good rank Ni'W York Evening .loiirnal.
will appreciate th«» aptitude of tin» in Ufteen years Naturally I told several
if they fell Into trouble, wanted to coulil not keep an unmarried daugh­
friends, ami in every instance the results were
name.
Hml Pete, lie thought lie h I ioii I i I want ter. It would not only be a public
SatiiiM miii I HrofUtlet.
the same, even whet«! Itey had been sutTeriug
Strange as It may seem, plants grow for years. The world ought to know that
to himself, though he could not tell shame, but also a crime against reli­
Next to flic sumptuous yellow Milt
Bright's Disease is at last curable, and appro*
why. If he happened to be killed any­ gion. To procure husbands for those ins. moires and brocades ilia! rank ami blossom upon these great Ice elating
my own goo<l fortune, 1 will be glait to
where. lie I bought lie should like Pete who have not already fouml them prominently among tbe evening tex­ mountains. When a glacier Is at rest. give further details to interested parties.
“ R. M W ood ”
to
it.
protecting
moss
attaches
itself
Murphy to tell Iris wife about it.
there are a number of Brahmans, old tiles to be worn for two seasons to
Dinkey lay limp and heavy In liis nml decrepit, i.illi'il Kiilin Brahmans, come the beautifiil lost* tints stand su­ th«» ice beneath, just as sawdust does,
Medical works agree that Bright's Disease
arms. Tlie wet blackness seenieii like who go nfioiit willi bn* one object of preme. In dancing toilets of silk or After a time th«» moss decays ami and Diabetes are Incurable, but H7 per cent uro
something pressed against Iris l'aie. going through the ceremony of the satin draped witli lace ami trimmed forms a soil, in which tin* seeds of positively recovering under the Fultqn Com
IMmiids. (Common forms of kidney eompluint
He could not realize that lie was walk “seven steps” with ns many young witli satin ribbons a soft pink gown buttercups ami dandelions, brought by and rheumatism off«»r but short resistance.)
the
wiml.
take
root
and
flourish.
t’ric* fl 'or the Bright's Disease anti |i .‘»u for
Ing, though In tlie night, down the girls as they can upon receipt of a imparts an <-x«|uisit«- glow to the com
the Diabetic Compound. John .1 Fulton Co.,
Those who hav«» traveled In arctic <20
siime slope to a river called tlie llappa la rge’ sum of money, but who after­ ploxion. Many of the French toilets In
Montgomery street, San Fraucisco, sole
bannock and a town culleil Fredericks­ ward leave tin1 country mid perhaps vaineo, orchid or seashell pink ami la mis say they hav«» fouml no point compoundei •». Free tests made for putieutt.
DeNeriptive
pamphlet mailed free
burg. It was strange business lor him, never see tlii'tn again. Pall Mall Ga- pink alone are of chiffon or mousseline yet where the ¡»oppy does not bloom
during
the
brief
northern
summer.
de
sole
over
tatleta
or
peau
de
cygne
of
Deacon Terrell of Brewster, to he in, zette.
a deeper shade. Other toilets are
stumbling down tlie battlefield in tlie
Tlie Mitin.
mixed or delicately toned with reseda
pit darkness witli a godless little brat
KINGS AND QUEENS.
Bathing to many p«»rsoiis is a term
or sea green, palest mauve or honey­
like Dinkey Cott in liis arms.
baldoR during th«*
mortality among
embtHlying an expenditure of linn» ami
And yet why godless. If tlie same
teething years is Rotnethlng frightful.
Tin' king of England who could not suckle yellow and also a certain very considers bl«* trouble. It Is probably
beautiful
faint
shade
of
fawn
color.
—
ellsllH
of
r.HKJ
show
a
that about on«* in
darkness is around us all, ami (lie same tpe:ik tin.* language of his kingdom was
se\ en succumbs.
because they do not (»leans«» the skin
New York I’ost.
light, while we live, will come to all in i leorg* I.
cause
is
appar
until it gives visible signs of its needs.
the morning? It was borne upon tlie
hardening, the font
In tin' lialtli'of Bosworth Field, 1 IS5,
Skirts of Simple Cut.
Now. ill«» skin Is «»verlastInglv throw­
cloning up ami Its t'
deacon that there Is no man elected to
a den
< -lining at once t reat
a I. ing was killed iRiehanl HI.) ami a
Tin* most graceful skirt is still the ing off Impurities which you «»imnot
tlie salvation of the sun or eomlem.... I king was crowned tHetiry \ 11.).
matei lai that nearly half II
one severely simple in cut. The lines always se«» with th«» nak«»d eye, but
in
are
deiicient
in.
The
r
to the night apart from other men.
lllieNN, weakness, HW »atlng, fevi
The motto. "Dieu et Mon Droit," was are long and flowing, a Judicious simp
which will b«» rrudily found in th«* ap­
The deacon never could recall tlie de
brain troubles, co >nvul^h>iiH. <*i
first assumed In Edward 111. of Eng­ ing of tin» bottom prmlucing th«* requi­ pearance» «»f the bath water even when
tel l ibl.X l.ltSl
'I’ll*» • deaths in r.<
tails of bis night's Journey except that
land win'll lie took tin' title of king of site fool flare. Sometimes th«» flare is one bathes each «lav. When you can
J ears were :UH.!)SS. . to sa J
he fell down more than onee ami ran
list number outside the I h .
I'rn nee.
mad«» by the deep flounce seeu this wear a while collar a few hours with­
not reported, an<l tills tn
against stone walls in tlie dark. mid.
alone.
"Your majesty” as a royal title was long whil«»H but tin* newer method out marring its siiotlessiiess where It
as for direction, he kept in luiml that
n
baby begins to
1
sweat, worry or cry
achieves it with th«» skirt cut alone. A
11 sleep don't 1 wait. an«l tlm n*»<*«l im
he was to go down Hill. It seemed to iisiumed in England at l.V-’T by Henry concession to novelty, for fair woman «»oiiies in conta«*t with th«» skin, you
VIII.
Tim
tith'
before
tli.it
was
"your
thinking
Wlmt the
may
have
some
excuse
for
r medicine nor narcot I ch .
him that lie had gone through an un­
HjNtem Is crying out tor I m more bone
grace" or "your highness” for the king must hav«» some «»hang«*. Is to outline a that yon are perfectly cl«»an and not
ini.
Sweetman's Teething Foo»i sup
known. supernatural country Dinkey
hip yok«» with several rows of stitch
i.r queen.
before. The neatest person I ever saw
it
It has saved the lives of thou,*<ulids
lay so quiet that lie thought lie might
bh
I hev li.'E H to improv«* within
ing which exicnd down th«* almost could not boast of such an achieve
William
IV.
was
at
the
time
when
he
be dead, hut he could not make up Ills
*ight hours.
lie re 1 h whut ph.VNh'iaiiR
straight apron gore. With this de«*ora
inent.
for
the
thing
Is
well
nigh
im
sill
eeetled
to
the
thl'olie
tile
first
Wil-
mind to leave him. He wished lie could
lion a graduated tloiin«*«» Is often slum
Washington St.,
possible.
Nature
has
prov
ided
tin
limn
of
Hanover,
the
second
William
find Pete Murphy. Pete would tell
Sa n Francis
I m «’ o , .lune 2,
of Ireland ami the third William of lated by the stitching, which If it is In pores for drainag«* purposes, and in
Gentlemen
I
am
pres<
ribing
your foo«l in
Idm. if Dinkey was dead.
th«» color of tin* gown and well done is health they work without ceasing,— the multitude of baby troubles due to irn-
Scotland.
It was very well to remember to
peded dentition.
A larg»* percentage of in*
very
handsome.
Boston Traveler.
Henry YIII. was the first to assume
inutile Ills and fatalities are the result of
walk down hill, but there It was down
slow teething.
Your food supplies what the
hill in many directions, so uneven was the iilh' of king of Ireland. The title
deficient system demands, and 1 have had
Cunt For Sclioolnirl.
The
SI
iik
I
hk
Mouse.
sut’i'i IsitiK succeae with it. In -score ‘H of CUHeH
the slope. He walked not one mile, king of Great Britain was assumed by
Th«* ilhistintion shows tin* latest de
'i’ll«* power of song among tbe brute this iliet, given with their regular f.HHl, has
but several, In the blind night. Dinkey .Janies YI. of Scotland when lie became sign for trawling or school wear, Al­
lulled to clle.'k
1‘heck tl»
th»*
“ infantile dlHtrCRReR.
creation lias so long been asBociated not
Janies
I.
of
England.
Severn I ol the more sei
serious cases would, 1
had long been a limp weight. The last
though
s«»vei'e
in
its
outlines,
it
is
luri
in our minds with th«» feathered tribe I'vei hu re, hav been fatal without it. It can*
Richard
I
was
the
first
to
call
him
­
thing he said was "Kes' find Pete,” and
t........ quickly
pt h k I \ io ■ in lit to the attention
not be too
self king of l-lnalaml. Every king from only practical. I»u( very becoming to alone (but we do not think of l< as b«»- of
that was long before.
th«* mothers of the country, it I n un ub-
i girlisli ttguf'e. ii Is extremely easy longiikg to any four footed animals. Rotate
William
Io
1
1
nry
II.
called
hitnself
necessity.
At laBt the deacon saw a little glow
of construction, being cut in sack Yet tber«* Is u mouse that sings why,
i. c. mi : xi » i : l , m i >.
In the darkness and. coming near, king of lhe lou.lisll. 'l’ho title was as­
nobody knows. It is a small animal,
:
i
.'hert.
tile
tirsi
Ring
of
slimed
by
Petiiluma,
Cal.,
September 1, l'HI2.
found a dying campfire witli a few
the teething
Dear Sirs* I hav«’ J iim L
with very large ears, which arc inov«*d
flames only flickering and lieside it two England, in
food
in
two
«us»*M
and
in
h<>th it wuh a mu «-
about much while singing, as If that < esH. One was a very neriouR
King ot l ia i. • was a title borne by
t as«*, ho uriti*
men asleep, lie might have heard Ilie
were necessary to the success of th«* «•al that it wum brought to me fr««ni another
ripple of the Rappahannock; but. being the monarchs of England for 132 years,
treatment
*atment
Fatal result.*« were feareil
vocal performance. ’I’ll«* song is not, « In itv th lor
and
when
Elizabeth
became
queen
of
km dwys the bnl»y pdumh <I worrying and
so worn and dull in Ills mind, lie laid
as you think, a prolonged squeak with t«iinnien<*ed eating and is now well. Its act Ion
England
slm
was
also
"king
of
Fram
e,
”
Dinkey down by the fire and fell heav­
varlatioiis, but a succession of clear, in tilts case was remarkable. I would a.I
asserting that if she could not be a
vise you to |uit It In every drug store in I his
ily to sleep himself before he knew it.
warbling
notes, with trills, not unlike city. Yourn,
When he woke, l’ete Murphy stood queen she would be king.
i M PROCTOR, M n.
iht* song of a cauary. and quite as
near him with a corporal and a guard.
beautiful, though soin«* of th«» notes
Sweetrnan'H To»»thlDg Food will carry baby
The Spemltlirift.
They were looking for the pieces of
ar«* much lower. On«* gr«»al peculiarity hhi «*I j amt comfortably through the ni<>Ht L dun*
Once upon a time there was a spend­
Company G. "Dead, ain’t he?” said
period of child life. It renders lune*
is a sort of doubh* song, an ail* with Ki-rous
ing of the ffuniH unneceHHary. It I h the « Rafent
thrift who niaiie his father very un-
Pete.
accompaniment
«init«*
subdued.
I
’
pon
plan and a blegnlnir to the baby to hot wait
HyniptoniH but to comnienci giving it the
The deacon got up and brushed his happy tlirough his profligate habits.
first hearing this on«» believes that he for
••My son.” said the parent, "you
Fourth or fifth month.
Then all the teeth
clothes. The two men who were sleep­
is listening to more than on«» mouse, will come healthfully, without puln, dM-
spend
every
penny
that
you
get,
ami
ing woke also, and they all stood
treiw
or
lancing,
It
is
an
auxiliary to their
so perfect is the illusion.
tegular diet and *afllly taken. Price 50 cents
around looking at Dinkey in awkward it must cease. Remember that the
(enough
for
Hix
weeks),
Rent
postpaid on re-
pennies make shillings and the shil-
slleiu'e.
eelpt of price. 1‘a< Ilie «'oast Agents. Inland
The Lual« Style».
lings make pounds. If you do not
Drug
Co.,
Mills
Building,
San
Francisco.
"Who's his folks?”
It whk the French King Louis XI.
change your habits of always spend­
“Him?” said the big lieutenant. "He
who
Invented
gold
lace,
and
it
was
ing to habits of Judicious saving. 1 will
ain't got any folks. Tell you what, ole
ller Hentlnienta.
Louis XLV. who ordered all the silk
not spare Hi«1 rod.”
man, I see a regiment drummer some­
It la related of a clergyman who was
upholsteries
of
the
palace
done
in
The admonition had no good effect on
where a minute ago. He'll do a roll
white with figures of gold and blue tin' father of a charming and beauti­
Illi* youth, and lx* continued to spend
over Dinkey jus’ for luck, sure!”
and a touch of rod. ’¡’lie loiilslne silks ful daughter llmt one day while pre­
Hie itennies before they could accu­
They put Dinkey's coat over Ills face mulate into shillings.
are named after him, and all the paring liis Sunday sermon he was sud­
• nd burled liiin on the bank of the Rap­
French kings of the name of Louis denly called away from Ills desk on a
Ills father spoke no mure about the
pahannock, anil the drummer beat a matter, but he applied the rod most
have had their names brought down Io mission of mercy. The sentence at
roll over him. Then they sat down on vigorously to him until he howled with
posterity through tin* invention of which he left off was this: "I never see
the bank nml waited for the next thing. pain.
some article of dress, whether it be a a young mini of splendid plivsiipie nml
The troops were moving back now
Louis Quinze heel or a Louis Seize tin' promise of n glorious manhood ul
Moral. He who spends the pennies
across the bridge. Company G had to will get the pounds. New York Iler-
coat, while to Louis Quatorze belongs most ri'iillziil but mv In-art is tilled
with rapture ami delight.”
take Its turn. The deacon felt in Iris aid.
the honor of a cuff ami a hat.
liis daughter, happening to enter the
pockets and found the cough drops
st inly, saw the stTinou and read the
and Mrs. Terrell's scissors. So lie took
A Genius.
Instinct of Horses In War.
COAT FOR SCHOOL WEAR
• cough drop and fell to trimming lllH
Kmall Son 1 know what I'll be when words, Sitting down, she wrote und<*r-
Arabian horses manifest remarkable
shape and the only decoration needed I grow up I'm going Io be a great In neatli. "M.v sent iiiK'iits, pupa, ••»act-
beard.
courage in battle, It is gitili that when
being machine stitching. The sleeves ventor.
l.v!"
a horse of this breed tinds himself
are I wo piece. with stylish flare cuffs.
Papa That's ems.uraglng, certainly.
wounded and perceives that he will
A Qnrrr TranisHctlon.
Broadcloth, cheviot, satin faced and What makes you think you have In­
X ik I oiim I«» I)«» It I gilt.
Sir Arthur -Sullivan discovered at not be able to bear Iris rider much box cloth in shades of lau. dark
Th«» children had quarreled, and Wil­
Hue ventive genius?
Mont» Carlo one time that certain res longer he quickly retires from the con­ or black will make a serviceable
Small Sou Why. 1 wanted to take a lie had striK-k Toimni«». Instead of re­
tiiurant proprietors had a way of reg­ flict, bearing his muster to a place of inent, with lining of plain satin ga r
in ■ screw out ami I couldn’t find a screw­ dlining tli«* blow Tommie turned and
safety
while
he
has
still
sufficient
ulating their charges with the appear
harmonious color or in black.
driver. so I unscrewed it with your ra­ ran down th«* hall.
ance and standing of their customers. strength. But, on the other hand, if
“Where ar«» you going. Tommie?”
zor. Short Stories.
Wlnm lunching alone, sir Arthur was the rider Is wounded and falls to the
Renter II h I a Thia Winter.
asked his nmllier.
III Hie liiil.it of frequenting one partic­ ground the faithful animal remains
Anvirni Skyscraper*.
“Kitchen." answered Tommie tersely.
The woolly leaver of last winter I m
ular place where hi' knew to a centime beside him, unmindful of danger,
Numerous conflicting estimates have
“What for?”
With us once more, hut it is more
neighing
until
assistance
is
brought.
» bat tlie prices were.
shaped and less graceful than last boon made of the height of the tower
“You said if anybody was mean to
Due day there sat nt the table adjoin­
year. Then Its broad brim drooped at of Babel, but one fact never bus been me to heap coals of tire on his head,
Plenty of Color,
ing his own a wealthy Russian noble­
its own sweet will, forming becoming denied and that, is that it was a sky- ami I’m goln’ for tin* coals.’’—Chicago
man. I'pon asking for liis Kill tin'
"That Mrs. Wmlhams to whom you
curves over the face. Now the crown scraiwr. St. Jerome In his conimeli- I *os(.
composer fouml that the prices were introduced me tbe other evening re­
is crushed in, dented, crumpled and I ary on Isaiah says that the tower
exorbitantly high, He sent for the minds me very touch of a portrait by
The W«»r«l Hiblr.
otherwise tortured, and tin* brim I m was already 4,000 paces high when
proprietor ami demanded nil cxplana- Rembrandt.”
The word Bllde furnishes a striking
caught up in plaits or pushed up by (J od came down to stop the work. A
lieu.
"Is that so? Which one?”
bows of ribbon placed beneath It. pace is about two and one-half feet; Install) e of a word's rise from very
The man, an Italian, recognized Sir
“Oh, any old one. They nil look, White is the favorite beaver, as it was therefore I. ihhi paces must I m » 1O,(MM) low to high estate. To the hulk of
Arthur as an Influential client and when you get close to them, ns if the last winter, but deep creamy shades feel; consequently Babel was twenty English speaking folk It now means
was profuse in Ids apologies. ¡I»» ex- paint had been thrown on by the
look well with ribbon and velvet of times as high as the pyramids (which tlx' Issik of books. In Chaneer’a day
plained that tin* mistake lay with the handful.”—Chicago Hera Id.
are only about 5on feet). Father Cal* it meant any l.ook whatever or aeroll—
oriental colors.
cashier. Doing over the Items to which
met says Hie tower was 81,(MM) feet to speak by tin* card lest equivocation
exception was taken, tin' proprietor
A Serene Teinperninent.
VVnlkliiK Sl*lrts Are Short.
high and that the languages were con­ mnlo us.
Tracing the word Bible
snlil: "The I'oiivert I take liiin off di­
“Mike,” said Plodding Pete, "don't
New walking skirts are made short founded bo<aiise the architects were straight home, we find It as bublos, but
rectly. and tin* butler I charge him Io you wish you was rich?”
enough for easy walking, but the tisre confounded, as they did not know how a tint her name for the papyrus reed of
tin' grand duke. Hi* not notice it.”
“Kind o’.” answered Meandering about the bottom Is much exaggerated. to bring the building to a head. More­ Egypt. National Review.
The l.leri of charging to the grand Alike. “Courae I couldn't eat any Jiew coats ti go with them are lined over. it is understood that the Chinese
duke an Item against whose extortion­ more dan I does, but I’d be saved de with figured silk of soft finish Nor­ language of today was originally the
Grandma*» Object I. crroh .
ate price another ciiatomer protested trouble o’ sayin’ ‘much obliged' so of­ folk and tight tilling Jackets are also same language as the high German.
“My. my. my!” said the little girl’«
always struck thi- great eom|a>a«r us a ten.”'—Washington Star.
mated with walking skirts.
grandmother. “You mustn’t make so
decidedly humorous way of getting out
A Pretty Caatom,
much fuss when you have your hair
rirHslim Him.
of tin' dltfii'iilty.
South American lovers have a pretty <-omb«>«l. When 1 was a litth* girl, I
llryoiitl Him.
Mrs. Gny—Yes. I know my husband
Vnrle Josh (at the theater)—Be gosh can’t afford all these things, but I'm custom. It is well known that when had my hair «•oinbe«l three or four
A Serien of FnllureN.
the p«»tsh of the grout laurel magnolia times every day.”
diirned! Ef they calls thia yer blood buying them to please him.
A coroner’s jury in Ireland delivered ’n’ thunder stuff mellow drama, what
are touched, however lightly, the re
• Yen.” said the child, pointing nt th«*
Mrs. Schoppeli To please him?
the following verdict on the sudden in sufferin’ hayricks do they think is
there's nothing that suit Is a brown s|M»t which develops in poor litth* gray knot on the back of
Mrs.
Gay
Yes:
death of a merchant who liad recently real ripe stuff? Town and Country.
a few hours. The fact is taken ad tin* good old lady's lira<I. “and see
pleases liini more than a chalice to tell
failed Ig business:
vantage of by the lover, who pulls a what you’ve got for It!”—Chicago Rec­
martyr
he
is.
-I
’
lrila-
his people what a
"We. the Jury, find from the new doe-
magnolia flower and on one of its pure ord Herald.
Marli In ■ Marne.
delphia Press.
tor’s statement that the deceased came
white petals writes a motto or message
Beitig informell tlmt he was to be
with a hard, sharp pointed pencil.
to his death from heart failure super­
4 Mu m ’ w Word.
A Fair Offer.
fttken
beforc
a
Jmlge
w
hose
natile
was
induced by business failure, which was I
Then he sends the flower, the young
The arcati*-! liar »11 earth tells the
Tim
Tuff-Aw.
1
cud
lick
youse
wld
caused by speculation failure, which Justu-e, a tlcorgla negro exelallued:
lady puts it in a vase of water, and iu truth to Ills lis ter. The most truthful
“De goodness en gradone! Ef he both nie hands tied liehiml me.
wua the result of failure to see fur
three or four hours the message writ­ man alive Is tempted to lie to the as­
gimmo what nls mime cali f,.r. | „po­
•w
i Mull I .n Will 1er let tue
enough ahead ”
ten on the leaf becomes visible.
si ssor. Suu Francisco Bulletiu.
tieem? Ohio State Journal.
is gofie!"- Atlanta Constitution.
'vVî’lî'li^r'a'mi PAPERS
A CITY
EDITOR
Save the Baby.