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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1908)
I The Firm of I Hostone BY A. CONAN DOYLE f TTTTTT"rtl CHAPTER XIII. ( Con t inn off. 1 "1 am sorry to be late, mother," the lad r.id, kissing the old lady. "1 have I'een down nt the docks all day, and have been busy and worried." Mrs. Dimsdale was sitting in her chair beside the fire knitting when hor son came in At the sound of his voice sho glanced anxiously up at his face, with nil her motherly instincts on the alert. "What- is it, my boy?" she said. "You don't look yourself. Something has gone v rong w ith you. Surely you're not keep ing anything secret from your old moth er." "Don't be so foolish ns th.-.f, my boy," said the doctor earnestly, "if you have an. tiling on your mind, oat with it. There's nothing so far wrong but that it mn be set right, I'll lxl bound." Thus pressed, their son told them all that had happened, the rumor which he had heard from Von Baumser at the Cock and Cowslip, and the subsequent visit to Eeeieston square. "I can hardly realize It all yet," he said in conclusion. "My head seems to be in a whirl, and I can't reason about it." The old couple listened very attentively to his narrative, and were silent some lit tle time after he had finished. His mother first broke the silence. "I was always sure." she said, "That we were wrong to top our correspondence at the request of Mr. Girdlestone." "It's easy enough to say that now," aid Tom ruefully. "At the time it seem ed as if we had no alternative." "There's no use crying over spilt milk," remarked the old physician, who had been very grave during his son's narrative. "We must set to work and get things right again. There is one thing very cer tain, Tom, and that is that Kate Harston Is a girl who never did or could do a dishonorable thing. If she said that she would wait for you, my boy, you may feel perfectly safe; and if you doubt her for one moment you ought to be deuced well ashamed of yourself." "Well said, governor!" cried Tom. with ber.ming face. "Now that is exactly my own fueling, hut there is so much to be explained. Why have they left London, and where have they gone to?" "No duubt that old Hcoundrel Girdle tone thought that your patience would soon come to an end, so he got the start of you by carrying the girl off into the country." "And if he has done this, what can I do?" "Nothing. It is entirely within his right to do it." "And have her stowed away in some little cottage in the country, with that brute Ezra Girdlestone hanging round her all the time. It is the thought of that j that drives me wild." "You trust in her, my boy," said the old doctor. "We'll try our best in the Tneantime to find out where she has gone to. If she in unhappy or needs a friend you may be sure that she will write to your mother." "Yes, there is always that hope," ex claimed Tom, in a more cheerful voice. "To-morrow I may learn something at the office." "Don't make the mistake of quarreling with the Girdlestones. After all they are within their rights in doing what they appear to have done." "They may be within their legal rights," Tom cried indignantly, "but the old man made a delilerale compact with me, which be has broken." "Never mind. Don't give them an ad vantage by losing your temper." The doc tor chatted away over the matter for bo me time, and his words, together with those of his mother, cheered the young fellow's heart. Nevertheless, after they had retired to their rooms. Dr. Dimsdale continued to be very thoughtful and very grave. "I don't like it," he said, more than once. "I don't like the idea of the poor girl being left entirely in the hands f that pair of beauties." CHAPTER XIV. John Girdlestone and his ward were at Waterloo station. He gave orders to the guard that the luggage should be stamped, tut took care that she should not hear the name of their destination. Hurrying her rapidly down the platform amid the confused heaps of luggage and currents of eager passengers, he pushed her into a first-class carriage, and sprang after her just as the bell rang and the wheels be an to revolve. They were alone. Kate crouched up Into the corner among the cushions and wrapped her rug round her, for it was bitterly cold. The merchant pulled a note book from his pocket, and proceeded by the light of the lamp above him to add up columns of figures. He sat very up right in bis seat, and appeared to be as absorbed in his work as though he were among his papers In Fenchurch street. lie neither glanced at his companion nor made any inquiry as to her comfort. As fbe sat opposite to him she could not keep her eyes from his hard, angular face, every rugged feature of which was exaggerated by the flickering yellow light shove him. Those deep-set eyes and sunk en cheeks had been familiar to her for years. How was it that they now, for the first time, struck her as being terri ble? Was it that new expression which had appeared upon them, that hard, inex orable set alwut the mouth, which gave a more sinister chara'-ter to his whole face? As Fbe gazed at him an ineTable loatbinp and dread rose in her soul, and he could Lave shrieked out of pure ter ror. She p'Jt her hand uo to her throat with a gasp to keep down the sudden in clination to cry out. As she did bo her guardian (lanced over the top of the note hook with his piercing light grey eyes. "Don't get hysterical!" he cried. "You have given us trouble enough without that." "Oh, why are you so harsh?" she cried, throwing out her nrms towards him in eloquent entreaty, while the tears coursed down her cheeks. "What have I done that is so dreadful? I could not love your son, and I do love another. I am so grieved to have offended you. Yon used to be kind and like a father to me." "And a nice return you have made me. I have to blame myself to some extent for having allowed you to go on that most pernicious trip to Scotland, where you were thrown into the company of this young adventurer by his scheming old father." "You mny say what you like of me," she said bitterly. "I suppose that is one of your privileges as my guardian, You have no right, however, to speak evil of my friends."' "You are becoming impertinent," he nnywered, and resumed his calculations in his note book. Kate cowered back into her corner again, while the train thun dered and screeched and rattled through the darkness. Looking through the steamy window nothing was to be seen save the twinkle here and there of the lights of the scattered country cottages. Occasion ally a red signal lamp would glare down upon her like the bloodshot eye of some demon who presided over this kingdom of iron and steam. Far behind a lurid trail of smoke marked the way that they had come. To Kate's mind it was all as weird and gloomy and cheerless even as the thoughts within her. And they were gloomy enough. Where w as she going? I low long was she going for? What was she to do when there? On all those points she was absolutely ignorant. What was the object of this sudden flight from London? Her guardian could have separated her from the Dims- clitics in many less elaborate ways than this. Could it be that he intended some s stem of pressure and terrorism by which she should be forced to accept Ezra as a suitor? She clenched her little white teeth as she thought of it. and registered a vow that nothing in this world would ever bring her to give in upon that point There was only one bright spot .in her outlook. When she reached her destina tion she would at once write to Mrs. Dimsdale, tell her where she was, and ask her frankly for an explanation of their sudden silence. How much wiser if she had done so before. Only a foolish pride had withheld her from it. The train had already stopped at one large junction. Looking out through the window she saw by the lamps that it was Guildford. After another intermin able interval of clattering and tossing and piungicg through the darkness, they came to a second station of importance, Peters field. "We are nearing our destination," Girdlestone remarked, shutting up his book. This proved to be a small wayside sta tion, illuminated by a single lamp, which gave no information as to the name. They were the only passengers who alighted, and the train rolled on for Portsmouth, leaving them with their trunks upon the dark and narrow platform. It was a dark night with a bitter wind which carried with it a suspicion of dampness, which might have been rain, or might have been the drift of the neighboring ocean. Kate was numb with the cold, and even her gaunt companion stamped his feet and shivered as he looked about him. "I telegraphed for a trap," said he to the guard. "Is there not one waiting?" "Yes, sir, if you be Mister Girdlestone. Here, Carker, here's your gentleman." At this summons a rough-looking ostler emerged into the circle of light thrown by the single lamp, and touching his hat, announced in a surly voice that he was the individual hi question. The guard and he then proceeded to drag the trunks to the vehicle. It was a small wagonette, with a high seat for the driver in front. Where to, sir?" asked the driver, when the travelers had taken their seats. 'To Hampton Priory. Do you know where that is?" Better'n two mile from here, and close to the railway line," said the man. "There hain't been no one livin' there for two year at the least." "We are expected and all will be ready for us," saiil Girdlestone. "Go as fast a3 you can, for we are cold." The driver cracked his whip, and the horse started at a brisk trot down the dark country road. Looking round her Kate saw that they were passing through a large country vil lage, consisting of a broad main street, with a few insignificant offshoots branch ing away on either side. A church stood tin one side, and on the other the village inn. The door was open and the light shining through the red curtains of the bar parlor looked warm and cosy. The murmur of cheerful voices sounded from within. Kate as she looked across felt doubly cheerless and lonely by the con trast. (Jirdlestone looked, too, but with different emotions. The road was lined on either side by high hedges, which threw a dense shadow over everything. The feeble lamps of the wjtgonette bored two little yellow tunnels of light on either side. The man let the reins lie loose upon the horse's back, and the animal picked out the roadway for itself. As they swung round from the narrow lane on to a broader road Kate broke out into a little cry of pleasure. "There's the sea," she exclaimed joy fully. The moon had broken from behind the clouds, and glittered on the vast sil very expanse. "Yes, that's the sea," the driver said, "and them lights down yonder is at Lea Claxton, where the fisher folk live ; and over there," pointing with his whip to a long dark shadow on the waters, "is the "Oilywoite." "The what?" "The Isle of Wight, he means," said Girdlestone. The driver looked at him reproachfully. "Of course," said he, "if you Lunnon folks knows more about it than we who are born and bred in the place, it's no matter o' use our try-in to teach you." With this sarcastic comment he withdrew h'to himself, and refused to utter an other word until the end of their jour ney. It was not long before this was attain ed. Passing down a deeply rutted lane they came to a high stone wall which ex tended for a couple of hundred yards. It had a crumbling, decaying appearance, as far as could If judged in the uncertain light. This wall was broken by a single Iron gate, flanked by two high pillars each of which was surmounted by some weather-beaten heraldic device. Passing through they turned up a winding avenue, with lines of trees on either side, which shot their branches so thickly above them that they might have been driving through seine somber tunnel. .This avenue termin ated in an open space, in the midst of which towered a great irregular white washed building, which was the old Pri ory All below it was swathed In dark ness, but the upper windows caught the glint of the moon, and emitted a pallid and sickly glimmer. The whole effect was so weird and gloomy that Kate felt her heart sink within her. The wagonette pulled up In front of the door, and Gir dlestone assisted her to alight. There had been no light or any symp toms of welcome, but as they pulled down the trunks the door opened 'and a little old woman appeared with a candle in her hand, which she carefully shaded from the wind while she peered out into the dark' ness. "Is that Mr. Girdlestone?" she cried. "Of course it is," the merchant said im patiently. "Did I not telegraph and tel) you that I was coming?" 'ies, yes," she answered, hobbling for ward with the light. "And this is the young lady? Come in, my dear; come in. Y e have not got things very smart yet, but they will soon come right." She led the way through a lofty hall into a large sitting room, which, no doubt, had been the moukish refectory in bygone days. It looked very bleak and cold now, although a small fire sputtered and spar kled in the corner of the great iron grate. there was a pan upon the fire, and the deal table in the center of the room was aid out roughly as for a meal. The can dle, which the old woman had carried in, was the only light, though the flickering lire cast strange fantastic shadows in the further corners and among the great oak en rafters which former the ceiling. "t ome up to the fire, my dear," said the old woman. "Take off your cloak and warm yourself." She held her own shriv eled arms towards the blaze, as though het short exposure to the night air had chilled her. Glancing at her, Kate saw that her face was sharp-featured and cun ning, with a loose lower Up which exposed a line of yellow teeth, and a chin which bristled with a tuft of long grey hairs. From without there came the crunching of gravel as the wagonette turned and rat tled down the avenue. Kate listened to the sound of the wheels until they died away in the distance. They seemed some how to be the last link which bound her to the human race. Her heart failed her completely, and she burst into tears. What's the matter then?" the old woman asked, looking np at her. "What are ye crying about?" "Oh, I am so miserable and so lonely," she cried. "What have I done that I should be so unhappy? Why should I be taken to this horrible, horrible place?" What's the matter with the place?'- asked her withered companion, "I don't see nought amiss with it. Here's Mr. Girdlestone a-comin'. He don't grumble at the place, I warrant." The merchant was not in the best ot tempers, for he had had an altercation with the driver about the fare, and was cold into the bargain. "At it again," he said roughly, as he entered. "It is I who ought to weep, 1 think, who have been put to all this trouble and inconvenience by your disobedience and weakness of mind." ' Kate did not answer, bat sat upon a coarse neat cnair oesiae tne nre, ana buried her face in her hands. All manner of vague fears and fancies filled her mind. What was Tom doing now? How quickly h would fly to her rescue did he but know how strangely she was situated. She determined that her very first action next morning should be to write to Mrs. Dims dale, and to tell her. not only where she was, but all that had occurred. The re- D ne-tt- IAII tVinf cVl A M-ktl 111 Af f V I O nYllfA V AW lirLUUU in ext. one u'umi u' iin.T v ur'i r vi uri i I heart, and she managed to eat a little of th. ..inner which the old woman had now placed upon the table. It was a rough stew of some sort, but the long journey had given an edge to their appetites, and the merchant, though usually epicurean in his tastes, ate a hearty meal. (To be continued.) A Nice Calculation. A Flemish gentleman conceived the Idea that he would only live a certain time, so he made a nice calculation of his fortune, which he so apportioned as to last just the same period as he guessed his life would extend to. Strangely enough, his calculations came correct to the letter, for he died punctually at the time he had previ ously reckoned. He had so far ex hausted his estate that after his debts had leen discharged a solitary pair of slippers represented the entire proper ty he left His relatives buried him, and a representation of the slippers was carved on the tornb. To-day In a churchyard at Amsterdam his grave may Ik seen, the only Inscription on the stono being two Flemish words, "Effen Nyt" (I. e.. "Exactly"). As It Seemed to Illm. "Some people." remarked the demor alizer, "never seem to be around when wanted." "Well," rejoined the morallzer, "It Is better to be absent when wanted than to be present when you are not wanted" Cupid's Patient. "Dear me!" exclaimed the young lady in the big furniture store. "What a queer looking sofa! Why, It has such short legs!" "Yes, miss," replied the polite sales man, "that Is a courtship sofa. Little brothers can't squeeze under It." Long Kearh. Gunner Many of our singers go over to Europe to reach the high C's. Guyer Well, what do the European singers come over liere for? Gunner Oh, they crme over here to reach the X's and Vs. Willing to Flope. Said She If we appear together to much people will talk about us. Said He Well, suppose we disap pear together. The Influence of Feed. Linseed meal has a tendency to make a soft butter, provided the meal Is fed In large amounts. If fed In only me dium Amounts, the butter fats are nor- mnl. It Is a valuable Ulilk-stlinulating food and can be sed to prevent the formation of excessively hard fats In winter. The only disadvantage to the general use Is the price. Half or three- quarters of a pound of linseed or oil meal in a rntlon per day will exert a very favorable Influence upon the quall- y of the butter. Corn meal, when fed In large amounts with coarse fodders, has a tendency to produce a firm butter. When mixed with other grains, a bet ter quality of butter Is produced than If the corn were, fed alone. Gluten meal, a by-product obtained In the manufacture of corn starch nnd glu cose, produces a softer butter thnn corn mcnl. The gluten, It Is to bo observed, contains more of the vital nutrient. protein. Professor Harry Snyder, Uni versity of Minnesota. Keeping Gate from Sagarins;. Most farm gates are heavy, nnd af ter a little time they sag. When they get this way It takes a strong man to open and shut one. Here Is a remedy. Get a wheel, either big or little, from an old piece of machinery. and bolt It to the front end of the gate GOOD U6 FOB AH OLD PLOW WHEEL. In such a way that the gate will be held level. Now the smallest child can open the gate for you. Try It, for It Is a, saver saves your patience, your back, and the gate. N. W. S., in Form and Home. Hoblns Killed for Food In the Sonth, A million robins were killed In Louis iana during the winter of 1907-8, the offenders being men and boys who shot them for food. While they are pro tected as song birds In Northern States, it Is a common Southern practice to shoot them for the table, and in some States the hunters kill them in great numbers at their roosting places. A government expert suggests that the eastward movement of the boll weevil has been facilitated by the killing of the robins. If that Is shown to be so, the cotton growers will not receive much sympathy from the members of the Audubon societies. Leslie's Week ly- Transplanting Trees, In Revue Universelle, according to . , M , , . . . m n sv ji y rm srr rmv rttt trr r niM"A Id " ' ,' , I I practical article of general Interest oa transplanting plants In full foliage at nignt. me results or some expen ments by Rouault would make unneces sary the customary transplanting of de ciduous trees in the fall or winter. He has found that trees may be trans planted In full foliage In May or June, with little or no Injury, providing the process Is carried on at night. This has been demonstrated to the entire satisfaction of some of the most prom inent horticulturists of France. Brewery Stock Feed. Dried brewers' grains rank close to bran In feeding value, containing a little more protein and fat, but not aulte so much carbohydrates. It Is claimed that In 100 pounds of this feed there are 15.7 pounds of protein, 38.3 pounds of carbohydrates and 5.1 pounds of fat Malt sprouts and dried brew ers' grains are valuable cow feeds, es pecially the latter. Sprouts are rich est In protein, but not much relished by cows and should be fed only In lim ited quantities. Wet brewers' grains are apt to Injure the quality of the milk. Population and Food. The statistician In the Department of Agriculture of the United States es timates that in 1931 the population of the country will be 130,000,000. To sup ply the requirements of this number of people will necessitate the production of 700,000,000 bushels of wheat, 1,250,- 000,000 bushels of oats, 3,450,000,000 bushels of corn, !00,000,000 tons of hay ; and cotton, tobacco, fruits and vegeta- bles In proportion. Thls will necessi- tate bringing under cultivation an addi tional 150,000,000 acres of land, and It Is estimated that we have only 108,000,- 000 acres available for cultivation. Insert with Springboard Nose. Among the curious Insects of the Malay Peninsula is one called the lan tern fly, which Is remarkable for Its sudden leaps, made without the aid of Its wings. It was only after the first specimens of this queer insect were i carried to London for examination, that It was discovered that a curious projec tion on the front of its head, a kind of nose with a crease in It, was the leaning organ. When bent back under the abdomen and suddenly released It ent the Insect flying. Odd in Weather Forecasting;. People have learned by experience to make allowance for error In the pre dictions of the Weather Bureau, but Prof. Schuster thinks that the allow ances should be officially stated. As tronomers, It appears, are In the habit of giving the value of the "probnblo error" when publishing their observa tions. But, although meteorology lends Itself more readily thnn any other science to the evolution of deviations from the mean result, the weather fore casters have not adopted the custom of stating the probable error. Prof. Schuster looks forward to the time when weather forecasts will be accom panied by a statement of the odds that the prediction will be fulfilled. Then, perhaps, we shall read In the weather column not simply, "rain to-morrow," but "3 to 1" or "0 to 1 for rain to-morrow." A Good Whitewash. Here Is a well recommended white wash: For 10 gallons use do pounds of common lime slaked with boiling water; 5 pounds of clean wood ashes ; 10 pounds of melted beef tallow; 2 pounds of common salt and one-half pound of glue, dissolved. Add any dry mineral paint to color, such as burnt umber, yellow ochre or mineral red. Mix all while hot and appply while warm, keeping it well stirred. The Sheep Pen. As a rule there Is very little mois ture In the sheep pen from the ani mals themselves. Sheepmen say that by heavy bedding, particularly at the beginning of the eeason, the straw will absorb all the urine from the sheep without there being any softness or rotting of the straw, and the pens are often not cleaned more than once In season without Injury to the stock. Sprytnr Fruit Tree. All fruit trees should be sprayed J while dormant, with lime, sulphur and salt, as a preventive of San Jose scale, to destroy the fungi. It is also claim ed that this preparation Is a. good fer tilizer, and will help to keep the trees healthy. Quite a number of Insects at tack only dead or decaying trees, and these form a breeding place for many other varieties of Insect pests. Digested Fertilisers. Manure Is simply materials that have been softened and decomposed (digest ed) within the body of an animal. To apply such raw materials as bran and linseed meal directly to the soli would be of no advantage, notwithstanding that they are excellent fertilizers, their value being increased by feeding to stock. To Prevent Runaways. An Iron weight with a strap attached to It should always be carried In the farm wagon. The moment the horse is stopped nnd the driver Is to leave the team, the weight should be dropped to the ground and the strap fastened to the horse. This will make It safer than to allow the team to stand un hitched. Demand for If ome-Iladlab.. Annually 75,000 barrels, or 7,500,000 pounds, of horse-radish are shipped from St. Louis to the Atlantic coast, to the Pacific coast, to the lakes and to the gulf. Farm News and Notes. Uncle Sam received $11,500,000 last year for public lands of all kinds. A gardener at Tacoma, Wash., last season marketed $750 worth of celery from one acre of ground. The explosion of a cream separatoi nearly killed Earl Adams and his moth er, living near Trempeleau, Minn. Emperor William of Germany sent fifteen coach and cavalry horses to the International show. They were among the most beautiful animals ever seen in this country. Wyoming Is sending a large number of Vier tough little bronchos to Alaska, as It has been found that they stand the rigorous climate up there better than any other breed. Night riders In Tennessee who were arrested for burning tobacco sheds and shooting nt farmers were set free be cause a Jury could not be found In the county to try them. The government reports that 2,(500,- 000 cattle died In the United States last year, over half of these succumb ing from exposure. The total losses from all causes is estimated at $24,000,- 000. Farming In New Mexico has been given a great Impetus during the past few years by the work of the farmers' Institutes nnd many unproductive val leys have been turned Into rich grain and fruit fields. One of the sights at the Internation al Stock Show was a pure white Gallo way, sired by Scottish Standard, a thoroughbred Galloway bull out of a pure bred white Galloway cow. This Is a freak, btit may produce a new type of Galloway. Self-PreserTatlon. "The man who can be coerced into paying hush money is either a coward or a criminal." "I don't class myself with either an) I pay hush money." What for?" "If I didn't my wife wouia ta A me from one pay day till the nexL"- Houston Post. GREATEST PORT IN FRANCE. Commerce of ParW Has Annually llei'n Growing In Importance. Purls will soon be the greatest port In France. Work which was begun thirty-seven years ago Is now nearing com pletion nnd when this Is done ths guy J capital will have many miles of I wharves cupnble of landing thousands of tons of merchandise dally. Although the port Is mostly concerned with in ternal trallle, the Seine nt Paris is also deep enough to receive ships coming direct from London. Her commerce of this nature has annuully been growing tn importance, i Shortly after the war of 1870 tho Paris Municipal Council decided to es tablish wharves along the river banks so that boat traffic could be more rap Idly developed. A vast plan of im provement was then laid out. The river was dredged. Locks were established both above and below th city, so as to maintain the river at a nenrly con stant level. Then a series of docks was established, some of which were large enough to take Channel stewmera of moderate tonnage. Such steamers are now a familiar sight at the Port St Nichols, just opposite the Louvre. The chief feature of the shipping which has Paris as Its home port la stone, plaster nnd other building ma terial. Huge quantities of cereals and wine nre also handled. Among tha things which Paris ships to the prov inces by way of the Seine Is refuso de rived from old buildings which hava been torn down, and such unattractive material as chemical manures and so forth. During the year 1000 almost 13,000, 000 tons were shipped from Paris. Last year's record surpassed this by another half million. When the present Im provements are completed it Is believed that the annual tonnage will be almost doubled. Prnctlcally all the ground re moved In excavating for the city's new underground railroad was carried away by Seine boats. All the material used In Its construction came by the same "oute. The only port which at present sur passes Paris In annual tonnage Is Mar seilles, and within the next few months even Marseilles will have to take sec ond place. Humane Work That Is Praeflea.1. Other tender-hearted women have at tempted to lighten the burden of draught horses with varying degrees of success, but It has remained for Mrs. Theodore Thomas, wife of the great orchestra leader, to hit on a practical remedy for the evil. She is taking steps to submit to the city council of Chicago a mammoth petition for an or dinance regulating the tonnage a horse may be required to draw. It is her DOPe tnat tne ful1 IpSnl penalty may ba ! attached to the measure, and that It will be enforced. She realizes that. while a good many owners of horses might be Influenced by arguments based on sentiment, there are hundreds who can be reached only through their pockets. If she can make it expenslvo for an owner to overload a wagon, she thinks she will be able to save the four-footed animals many a weary task. Mrs. Thomas does not content herself with having her petition signed by leading citizens. She goes every day among the teamsters themselves nnd. by simple reasoning. Induces them to add their names to the plea. Her ar gument Is that it Is to the teamster's Interest to see that his horse Is not overtasked, because he then will be able to do his own work much more quickly and so, In time, command high er wages. Many hundreds of teamsters have given their signatures to tho earnest woman, and she expects to have the names of a fair proportion of the owners on the sheet before sho takes It to the council. An Old-Faahloned Tanner. A Pleasure Foregone. "Have you studied political econo my?" "No, sir." answered Senator Sor ghum. "I'd like to, but I'm afraid my constituents would think I was amu Ing myself reading books Instead of hus tling for pensions nnd appropriations. " Washington Star. Helpful Hint. "What would tie a good motto for a young author?" asked the youth with dreams. I "First, be sure yon typewrite and I then go ahead," replied the reader from Punk ton s publishing house. Kansas Olty Times. One thing may be said to the credit of the parrot: He never makes any thing worse in repeating It