Wallowa chieftain. (Joseph, Union County, Or.) 1884-1909, January 02, 1902, Image 6

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    WALLOWA CHIEFTAIN.
kOCIt KOI, Fabllaher.
ENTERPRISE OREGON.
Distance doesn't lend eni'liantniont to
one's view of the almighty dollar.
The stork should have been given a
hint that Papa Zimmerman's purse
strings could be loosened only by a boy.
Eighty-two per cent of the house
keepers of the country get along with
out hired girls. The eighteen per
ceut
Love, like lightning, seldom strikes
twice lu the same place. That's why
widows usually marry for money the
6ecoud time.
- Countries having the American en
gine only need a supply of American
coal to make them happy, and the coal
Is rapidly reaching them.
Girls, If you haven't found the right
one yet, don't be disheartened. A Chi
cago woman was recently married the
third time to the same man.
It was the Irony of fute. A couple
of burglars broke Into a building at
Rochester, X. Y which they supposed
was a warehouse. It proved to be a
Jail.
Bad grammar may be cured by medi
cal treatment, acordiiig to a German
specialist. This discovery will be a boon
to some of our statesmen and would-be
statesmen.
The Supreme Court of Michigan has
decided that bicyclists ltave a right to
ride on the sidewalks. There seems to
be nothing left to pedestrians but the
right to trust In Providence.
Sarah Grand, author of "Heavenly
Twins," says American gentlemen are
the most chivalrous in the world. Ah,
there, Sarah, Just tell your manager to
forward a list of your lecture dates.
Hardly has the twentieth century grot
well started before a speaker at a wo
men's club says the nineteenth cen
tury, of which those who lived In It
were so proud, was crude and unciv
ilized. What a woman can't understand 1r
how a man will stay up every night
for six weeks running all over town
trying to make votes for a candidate he
doesn't know, but getting hopping mad
If he has to run across the street to
get some paregoric for his own baby.
"Don't watch the clock," was Mr.
Edison's advice to a young man who
recently asked him how to succeed.
I'rofoundly slgnilicant Is that old joke
about the laborer who left his pickax
hanging In the air at the stroke of noon.
A hanging pickax Is the fittest emblem
for a continued clock-watcher and the
pickax hangs always lu the air, never
digs out a path for him to advance
upon.
Juliet's "What's in a name?" might
be asked regarding the vessels of the
British navy which have borne the
names of reptiles. It is said that four
Vipers have been wrecked, the last of
the name but recentlj and a Cobra
still more lately has broken in two
and gone to the bottom with officers
and men. Also four Serpents, three
Lizards, two Snakes, one Alligator, one
Crocodile, one Itattlesuake, one Basi
lisk, and two Dragons which are not
reptiles, have at various times met with
disaster. British tars, it Is said, have a
superstitious feeling of dislike against
sailing In vessels bearing such names.
Lucky or unlucky, the names are need
lessly disagreeable.
The decision of the Michigan Supreme
Court that bicyclists have a right to
ride their wheels on the sidewalks un
der proper restrictions Is likely to cause
a great deal of trouble lu Michigan
Cities and in those of any other State
which adopts the principle of the decis
ion. If bicycle riding were permitted
on the crowded streets in the business
sections of a city it would amount to
an intolerable evil. Their total exclu
sion from sidewalks of this character is
based upon the principle that the side
walks, as their name Implies, were set
apart for pedestrians, and that vehicles
of any kiwi which would interfere with
the free ami safe use of such sidewalks
have no right to be or to be operated
there, except as such right or privilege
may be grants by the City Council.
City Councils have, we believe, been
usually disposed to extend this privi
lege to sidewalks through sparsely set
tled districts where there were uo'bicy
cle paths and either no pavement or a
very bad one. All the Just claims of
the bicyclist to the use of the sidewalk
when the conditions exclude him from
the street can be tar better met, with a
duo regard for the convenience and
safety of the pedestrian public, by start
ing with the principle that he has no
original right there and must get his
privilege from the Council, than by as
suming that he lias an oroginal right to
go there and that the Council can only
restrict the manner of Its exercise. Wc
do not believe the Michigan decision
will be followed by the courts of other
States, or that wheelmen generally will
regard it with favor. As a rule they
have no use for sidewalks where they
are liable to come Into collision with
pedestrians unless driven to them by
the bad condition of the Btreet,
Life imprisonment Is at its best a
punishment go horrible that only a
sense of its absolute necessity can rec
oncile one to the infliction of it upon a
a feTlnw human being. To spend year
after yeur In close confinement, living
only In order to wait for death, Is a
thought from which the mind recoils,
and the strength of the Instinct of self
preservation is nowhere more clearly
displayed than In the fact that men are
willing to face this project rather than
shorten their tortures by submitting to
the uoo.e or the electric chair. If. then,
life Imprisonment Is in any case terrible
to contemplate, how much Is its terror
heightened wiien the person who is con
demned to undergo It is so young as to
make It seeai probable that four-tifths
of his life will be spent within the pris
on walls! Smith Jones, of Warwick
County, Indiana, entered upon such a
term of detention a few weeks ago. He
is at present 13 years old, and has been
guilty of so cold-blooded a murder that
the Judge who tried his case, conclud
ing that he would derive no benefit from
the reform school, sent him directly to
State prison, there to remain for the
rest of his natural life. If the boy Is an
ordinary boy, betrayed Into an act of
murder by sudden impulse, the sentence
passed upon him is certainly unjustifia
ble. A certain number of years in the
reform school would probably send him
back to the world a steady and respon
sible citizen. But It seems likely that
the boy had shown tendencies that
made his reformation impossible. He
was probably what the sociologists call
a "degenerate" and what medical men
call a "pervert," with a physical and
moral nature so hopelessly diseased
that the only possible course of action
was to separate him from his fellows
and to put him in a place where bis de
praved Instincts, altogether
able under other conditions, might be
conuneu and repressed. It is a life lost,
but the loss seems inevitable. The most
careful Investigation should be made,
however, and the boy's case should not
be abandoned until it Is altogether hope
less.
The other day a young man, son of a
Xew Yorker, who left a million-dollar
estate, was In court. Insisting that he
could not pay a Judgment of $o30, or,
In fact, any of his debts. He declared
that he had been reared In Idleness, in
an atmosphere of wealth. When his
father died he left the son $0,000 a year,
and no more. He also left him as help
less as a baby, with a mind unstocked
with a single thought that would sell
for money In the business world. Mus
cle! This young fellow had It, but he
couldn't compete with the poorest man
In a sewer trench. The $0,000 was noth
ing for a man who belonged to several
clubs and associated with people who
could buy him and sell him and never
feel it. Viewed from a moral stand
point, he Is a good deal of a coward.
The man who buys things knowing
that he can not pay for them Is a
swindler. You can not call him any
thing else. If he has anything more
than water In his veins he will work.
He will dump the clubs and high-living
associates and get down to business.
He will learn, and find no disgrace In
toll. But what of a man who allows
his son to grow up in idleness? It is an
Imposition. It is not fair. It is in
viting disaster. How easily fortunes
take flight In this country! There is
history for It. The millionaire of to
day may be the poor man to-morrow.
The moving van backs up in front of
his stone palace and he goes to live in a
tenement. There is nothing certain
about riches not even their paramount
desirability. It It often easier to make
money than to keep it The youth who
grows to manhood without any greater
Idea of the practical side of life than
how to order a wine supper or guide
an automobile may have to wear his
tennis suit In lieu of underwear In chill
December, and the world doesn't offer
him much sympathy when trouble
comes. Every man should teach bis
boys to do something. His bank bp-
count isn't a part of the issue. The
real independence is called trained abil
ity, and it Is capital that Is always
available. Every man should have
some of it, for when he does need it
he needs it badly.
Ambushed, Poor Fellow !
"When does the next train that stons
at Montrose leave here?" asked the
resolute widow at the booking office
window.
'You'll have to wait five hours.
ma'am."
'I don't think m."
'Well, perhaps you know better tlinn
I do."
"Yes, sir! And perhaps you know bet
ter than I do whether I am expecting to
travel by that train myself, or whether
I am inquiring tor a relative that's vis
iting at ui.V house! And maybe you
think it's your business to stand behind
there and try to instruct people about
things they know as well as you do,
if not better! And prehaps you'll learn
some day to give people civil answers
when they ask you civil questions,
young man; but my opinion is you
won't!"
"Yes. ma'am:" gasped the booking
clerk. Loudon Answers.
Occupations In Norway.
Sixty per cent of the population of
Norway live by agriculture, 15 per cent
by manufacturing and lumbering, 10
per cent by commerce and trade, 5 pet
cent by mining, and the remainder are
In the professions and the army and
navy and engaged in different employ
ments. Mistake Somewhere.
Mr. Sezzlt I never can understand
my wife's letters. She doesn't punctu
ate them, and you can't tell where a
sentence ends or another begins.
Mr. Asklt-But I thought you married
a girl of the period. Baltimore Ameri
can. Some poems show considerable feel
ing, yet they fail to touch.
LUCK 01' FIRST-BORN.
OCCASIONALLY A LATE COMER
ACQUIRES FAME.
The Mrjorltr of the World' DUtlno
tions Are (shared Between the lint
and Second 8om, the Lion's Share
UolnK to the t iret-Horn.
The law Is by no means alone In fa
voring the first born of a family and
comparatively neglecting later comers,
for a ca.eful examination of the biog
raphies of our most eminent men will
prove that quite a preponderating uum
ber of them owe their fame largely to
the fuct that they made their entry
Into the world in advance of their
brothers and sisters, says London Tlt-
Blts.
To such an extent does this appear
to be the case that, If a dozen names
of distinguished men are taken at ran
doui, It would be quite safe to assert
that four of them (or possibly live) are
first sous; of the remainder three are
second sons, while younger sons, rang
ing from uuuiber th.ee downward, must
be content with dividing the small
amount of celebrity among tbem.
Occasionally a very late comer ac
quires fame, but the odds are all
agaiust him. Thus, Iteiijamin Frank
liu, the great natural philosopher and
politician, had no fewer than thirteen
brothers and sisters lu front of him.
Sir lilchard Arkwright, the famous in
ventor, was the thirteenth child of his
parents, and Sir Joshua Heyuolds was
uumber seven In his family.
But by far the majority of the
world's distinctions are shared betweeii
first and second sons, the lion's share
going to the first born.
Fame In the world of letters has gone
In quite undue proportions to the eldest
born. If we may take Daute, Goethe,
Shakspeare and Milton as the four
greatest names In the history of the
world's literature we shall find that all
four, with the exception of Shakspeare
the greatest. It Is true, of them all
were eldest sous. ,
This privilege of the first born Is
claimed for Shelley and Byron and
Heine, and In modern times, to mention
names without regard to relative mer
it, by Ruskln, Max Muller, Lecky, Prof.
Jebb, Sir Lewis Morris, Frederick Har
rison, Sir John Lubbock, Sir George
Trevelyan, Mr. I'luero and others far
too numerous to mention.
Confucius and Mohammed, Talley
rand, Rossini, Charlemagne, Luther
and Raphael were all eldest sons; as
also are such eminent statesmen of to
day as Mr. A. J. Balfour. Mr. Cham
berlain, Mr. Broderick, Lords Itose
bery and Goschen and Mr. John Mor
ley. Among the great soldiers we have
Lord Wolseley and Lord Kitchener;
among lawyers Sir Francis Jeune and
Sir Edward Clarke; In the church, the
late Bishop of London, and on the stage
Sir Henry Irving.
Of famous second sons the list Is dis
tinguished If comparatively short, for
we find such giants of the past as
Michael Angelo and Beethoven; the
Pope, Garibaldi and Pascal; Wallace
and Sheridan; John Wesley and Mon
taigne. Of famous statesmen of our
own time we have Sir William Har
court and Mr. Asqulth, as well as Lord
Salisbury, to mention only three
names.
The list of second sons contains a
great soldier In Sir Itedvers Buller, an
eminent Judge In Lord Alverstone, still
better known as Sir Richard Webster;
a clever actor In Mr. Beerbohm Tree;
an artist In Mr. Phil May, and men of
letters in Grant Allen and Sir Edwin
Arnold.
Xor are the third sons by any means
to be despised In point of quality, al
though the number is relatively very
small.
They Include the greatest 'soldier of
modern times, the Duke of Wellington;
the greatest author of any time, Shak
speare, and the most famous fiction
writer of the last century, Sir Walter
Scott.
Voltaire was a third son, and so were
C. .1. Fox, the famous statesman and
orator. Lord Lytton and Sir Robert
Walpole, while Lord Halsbury has
proved that a third son can fill with
uistinction the highest place In the law,
and the late Sir Walter Besant that he
can win laurels la the field of letters.
GREAT BRITAIN'S SNAKES
Only Three Kimla in the Island and
One In Pnlnonous.
Only three kinds are generally recog
nized in the British Islands the
smooth snake, the ringed snake and
the adder? Ireland, indeed, has always
claimed, by favor of St. Patrick, to be
free from these reptiles, though last
autumn two specimens of the ringed
snake were actually found In County
Wicklow. Probably they had been Im
ported, and as they were killed, the
saint's ban, after all, may have driven
them to their doom.
Of the three British species, one, the
smooth snake, named by zoologists
coronella austriaca, Is rare. In fact, It
was not observed until 1853 and has
seldom been found except in Hamp
shire, Dorset and Surrey, perhaps most
frequently in the Bournemouth dis
trict. When full grown It is about a
couple of feet long and might at the
first glance be thought an adder. The
ringed snake is less likely to suffer
from mistaken identity, for its mark
ings and general tints do not resemble
those of the latter. Indeed, It deserves
encouragement, since it has been
known to swallow an adder, though
mice and voles, water newts, frogs and
toads, with the eggs and young of
birds, form Its usual diet. It is the
largest of our snakes, for specimens a
yard long are not uncommon, and a
fflnnt Of Its kind, measuring Cve feet
eight Inches, was once capturwl In the
New forest. In September of last year
a house at Cefncaeau, near Llanelly,
was said to lie suffering from a plague
of snakes. The story has been care
fully lnvestlga ed.
In one house no fewer than twenty
two were found, which, however, were
all small. But very soon there would
have been many more, for lu an old
back wall from which they had been
eeu to Issue about 1.20 eggs were
discovered, each containing a young
ringed snake Just ready for hatching.
The hunt was then carried further
afield, and those reptiles were found to
be extraordinarily abundant lu an old
quarry a short distance from the gar
dens behind the house. They are not
the kind of visitors timid people would
welcome, although, whether big or lit
tle, they are perfectly harmless, and
the only serious objection to them is
that when disturbed they are apt to
emit an Ill-smelling fluid.
The adder, however, says the London
Stundard. has teeth fitted with poison
glands and is really dangerous. It does
not use these to secure Its ordinary
food, but only If the prey l larger
than usual, or in self-defense, as. for
Instance, if It is trodden on. The ven
om Is frequently fatal to dogs, not sel
dom to sheep, and It his been known to
kill n bullock. The cause of death In
such cases Is failure of the heart, but
If that Is averted rather severe local
blood poisoning may ensue. Grown
persons do not often die from the ef
fects of u bite, though a few such
cases ore on record; but the poison
causes considerable suffering, and re
covery may not be complete for some
weeks. With children the danger is,
of course, greater. "The bright day
urtngs forth the adder that craves
wary walking." It Is smaller than the
ringed snake, for Its length seldom ex
ceeds a couple of feet.
WHY HOWARD DIDN'T DROWN,
Experience of an Old-Time Reporter
in a Khawneetown Flood.
"I remember a story nbout Fhoelan
Howard," says Senator Mason, "which
has never been printed, and which I
have always thought good. The city of
fclinwneetown was undenroinz Its lie
rlodlcal Inundation from the floods of
the Ohio ltlver, and Thoclan Howard
was sent down by a Chlcaco Dauer to
write up the calamity. This is the story
as Phoclan tells It:
" 'I found everything under water.
and I hired a one-legged, stutterinir
boatman to row nie over the town. We
got along all right until we came to the
cemetery. Then, In trying to read the
inscription on a monument. I lemied
over so far that I lost my balance and
tumbled Into the water. Down I went
and came nn again, and struircled to
reach the boat. I could not swim a
lick, and the boat was out of reach. I
saw the boatman wavine his wooden
leg nnd struggling to say something.
1 went down again, thinking to myself,
"Here 1 am, a first-class man In n sec
ond-class town, drowning In a third-
class graveyard. Too bad." I came up
again, still out of reach of the boat. I
knew that I was sure to drown If I
went down again, so I made a desner-
ate struggle. The boatman was still
nourishing his wooden leir aud wiir-
gllng his mouth, trying to say some
thine, litis was kent un till lust m
I was trolmr down airain. when hp limu
the puckering string and shouted:
"St-st-8t-stand up." I stood ud and
found that the water came about to my
waist.' "
Pleased wtth the Hour.
Lieut. Heffernan was saying the other
day that be had hardly ever seen an
Irishman who wasn't ready with a
quick retort, no matter what the cir
cumstances might be.
"It was about three years ago that
I arrested a certain fellow. He was
about the drunkest man I eVer saw to
be still standing on his feet. As soon
as I got hold of him he wanted to make
trouble. He was just like many others
from the ould sod when they get full
of bad 'booze' and they think there Is a
chance for a scrap. He made a pass at
me, but I reached over and tapped him
once on the head with my stick. He
became quiet right away, and he looked
up at me and said:
" 'And what tolmels It?'
"Of course I couldn't help but answer.
'Just struck one.'
' 'Well, if thot's so,' he answered.
'Oi'm dnm glad yez didn't hit me an
hour sooner.' "Louisville Times.
Matrimony Follows the Flag.
A good many formalities are nece.
sary for the women of Sumatra before
they can lay aside their widow's weeds,
says Womanhood.
Immediately after the husbnn.r
death the disconsolate widow places a
flagstaff in front of her door, and nn
this a flag Is raised. As long as the
flag remains tintorn by the wind
etiquette forbids her to marry, but
witn the appearance of the first rent
she can lay aside her mourning garb,
begin to take notice and to receive of
fers of marriage.
It would seem, therefore, that much
depends on the strenuousness of the
season, the favorableness of the gales,
and the quality of the material used in
the construction of the flag.
Scotch Mist.
Thomas A fine soft mornln', Andra.
Andrew Oo, aye; but why dinna ye
pit oop yer umbrellie?
Thomas (aghast) Sosh, ye were al
ways a wasteful mon, Andra; can ye no'
see It s a new one? Loudon King.
Ttia IntA afvla In hmicu. 1
architects try to give new houses the
squally eueci.
Lettuce is so easily raised; it's a pity
it is not good to eat
LET THIS BE
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..... i , i.
MONKEYS DEGENERATE MEN.
Trofeejor Hneckel G'vei Out a New
Kvolntio-' TlieirT.
That Professor Ernst Haeckel, the
distinguished German naturalist, and
the world's sr-oatrst living advocate of
the biological the
ory of evolution,
has reversed his
views of half a
century and taken
a stand with Prof.
Rudolf Vlrchow lu
opposition to liar
w I n I s ni Is the
startling announce
ment made in
tu.sai iiAi.tKti.. Paris.
It Is stated that during his expedition
to Java, begun last year, Prof. Haeckel
hns found striking evident in support
of the theory, advanced for the first
time only a few months ago by Vlr
chow, that monkeys are descended from
man, and not man from monkeys. That,
In fact, monkeys are nothing less than
degenerated humans.
Ernst Haeckel, now professor of
zoology ot Jena University, was the
first distinguished scientist to fully ac
cept Darwin's theory when the "Origin
of Species" was published. The scien
tific world was trembling on the brink
of the revolution he caused later by
the publication of "The Descent of
Man," when Haeckel anticipated Dar
win in his most far-reaching conclu
sions, and in a measure prepared the
world for the startling doctrines hinted
at in the "Origin of Species" and fully
promulgated in "The Descent of Man."
Since then Haeckel has been the most
advanced among the evolutionists. He
has long asserted that the history of
man Is complete in all lu essential de
tails, and that all that now reimitna tn
be done is to fill in here and there such
concrete evidence as zoological aud
paleontologieal research shall reveal.
In his "Systematic Phylogeuy," a
monumental work In three volumes, he
made a theoretic systematic arranire.
ment of the veeetable and iitilmnl
worlds living and extinct on tUa h;
of the law of evolution. The work has
been called a vast pedigree tree, with
man at the ton and the lnu-uet i,
nucleated cell at the bottom. In 5his
pedigree there were no emntv r
accounted spaces. Haeckel .(.notn,,
ed hypothetical animals and organisms,
ana to mm. in theorv. there ..
missing link.
Twenty-five years before tho ,1
ery of Dubois' pithecanthropus Haeckel
una ioreseen in his phylogeuy such a
creature, and he had christened It "pith
ecanthropus allalus," or the apelike
man before language. He gave to It
a place midway in the order of life be
tween tne highest aDe and the in..,
- - - "coi
human.
In 1809 Dr. Eugene Dubois
army physician, traveling In Java, un
earthed the fossil remains of a hitherto
undiscovered creature. There were only
a thigh bone, two molar teeth, and a
cranium. Scientists hailed the creature
reconstructed theoretically finm ti...
few fossilized bones as tho
missing link. The size of tile r.t.,,,,1.,...
showed that the creature hiwl
capacity for exactly 1,000 c. M. 3 as
against the cranial capacity of the high
est known gorilla of 05 c. f a n.i '
i uuu liiH 1
cranial capacity of the lowest form of
uuiuuu, me eauan woman of Ceylo -or
the bushman of Australia, with I3wl
c. m. o. iue inign none and teeth were
those of a fully developed human of
medium height. .
Dubois called his discover .
canthronus erectus. or tim o,,m
undine man
Scientists differed as to the origin of
jnucv-uiiiuropus, auu the bite Prof
Cope, of the University nt r
vaala,1 was of the opinion that it was a
species of the homo neanderthaleusis
and about 17.000 years old.
To Haeckel the discover ,
- - j --..a ui im
mense Importance. In Kenton, 1..,- .
year, he organized a smnti ov.i..,
and set out for Java In the hope of mak
ing fresh discoveries corroborative of
his systematic phytogeny. He, with all
otner scientists who had investigated
Dubois' discovery, reenrdort ,
canthropus as having Indisputable vis-
un cvmcuce or one or the most Import
ant steps in the evolution of man
"If Prof Haeckel has made any such
discovery said Dr. Edgar Grant Conk
to. professor of zoology at the Unlva.
ir--Mii'"hfti
A WARNING.
slty of Pennsylvania, "or If he has re
canted his former multitudinous writ
ings and lecturlngs sufficiently to make
any such statement It means that one
of the most remarkable revolutions lri1
biological science has taken place. If
he has made discoveries there," contin
ued Prof. Couklln, having explained
Haeckel's position with regard to evo
lution, "which would cause him to re
verse all his established views, to re
cant the preachings of a busy and a
long lifetime, they must be of an Im
portance I cannot pretend to calculate."
PROFESSOR WALLACE PAYNE.
He Hji Comp eted Thirty Yeara' Ber
v'ce nt Carletnn Colleze.
Prof. William Wallace Payne, who
has completed thirty years of active
and valuable service at Carletou Col-
leg e, Korthfleld,
Mass, Is one of the
best-known astrou
oniers In America,
and has done much
to popularize his
science and to
build up the as
tronomical work In
the Inst It ution
with which he has
been so long nnd
i-uoi-. rAV.NE. so worthily con
nected. He was born lu Hillsdale Coun
ty, Mlehlgi, in lfl7, and was gradu
ated from Hillsdale College lu 18IJ3. In
1871 he came to Carlcton as professor
of mathematics aud natural philosophy.
After several years of faithful work he
succeeded In his long cherished desire
of building nn efficient observatory
here. In 1882 he perfected the weather
service, for which Northfield Is famous.
Prof. Payne Is lu excellent health, aud
looks forward to many years of useful
activity.
Death Missed Mis Mark.
A group of railroaders sat and talked
on narrow escapes. One of them said:
"On a certain afternoou I was walking
.w o uutruucK trestle arty feet high.
A train came on me and I had to step
off the track and stand on the little
space-a space less than a foot wld
between the track and the trestle's
wise. I stood there, facing the train,
and as It went by, to keep myself from
losing my balance, for only my tow
were on the ties, my heels unsupported
il l , 71 haU t0 take h0'1 and let
go again of the various parts of the en
g ue and of the couches. Of course the
hontn" ,BOll,Kfast' Otherwise I
should have been shaken off and killed.
slJ, t'e W?y f st',u'tls 1 llllve my
sn k; .0,,bUt0Ue of u,y ateBt.
our divlsf t'mr,y "l lf' We ud o
u';rv y,,s an e"gl,le ma
?or fai7 w nlerfUl "WOl""e ue
he t nt, ,0,'e,luyI w,ls diking
in Z th,nk,,,K- Vleat
Xuy ri(Kbt bI,lml me murmured:
for 1 h I, m 1 t,Ur"ed 1,1 BHtoiilHhnient.
5uc,: Halted with her
back Ti r,ly a yur(1 fr y
Sded down 8lmt 0ff everything,
h wnel t " U'e aml trk'l to see
lot can be co l e, Utn iT? f th0
'. excei on 8tho!m, Swe-
tLree-fourlTs
der of 11,0 1., "u"eu- -The remain
Alumi, to,?'," '"""'Ho-. A"
, ulJ- -Washington Star
the wage! of ,,a f,niment 18 ls-theextenu-P'
VUasTof beTneBet thUt the man
anything of the
kind. nUen,aa Isn't
A K'rt that cunTT
1 be ouS "lnB aDd "ill sing