The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942, August 30, 1895, Image 1

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FOR THE : : : : ;
) Prlco of one($1.501n advance) fou out
t ' t
get the Press and the Pacific Farm. ?
I Benefit of our Republican readers and
Ji. H. xL
otbere, t
others, the Pbess and Oregonlan for S2.
NUMBER 33.
VOLUME S.
ATIIENA, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY JIORNING, AUGUST 30, 1895.
ITfor the
z
ENA
I
LODCR BIKECTOKT
AF.tA. M. NO. 80 MEETS THE
., First and Third Saturday Evenings
tf each month. VisitinR bretheren cor
iially invited to visit the lodge.
10. 0. F. NO. 73, MEETS EVERY
, Friday night 'Visiting Odd Fellows
n flood standing always welcome.
A
0. U.W. NO. 104, MEETS THE
Second and Fourth Saturdays of
month. Fred Rozenswieg,
.Recorder.
A THEN A CAMP, NO. 171, Woodmen of the
World, meets 1st and 8rd Wednesdays of
3ach month. Visiting Choppers always wel
come. O. C. Osbubn, Clerk.
PYTHIAN, NO. 29, MEETS EVERY
Thursday Night .
P S, SHARP, '
Physlctatt attl Sitrseon.
Calls promptly answered. Office on Third
Street, Athena, Oregon.
D
R.I.N. RICHARDSON,
4THENA,
.OREGON.
E.DePeatt,
ATTORNEY.AT.LAW.
Athena, Ore.
TUC ATUril k 0C0TAIID AUT
lIlL HlilLllM IlLUIHUIlHll I
MRS. HARDIN, Proprietress. ,;
: : : H. P. MILLEN, Manager.
Can be recommended to the public as ,
being flrst-class in every
' particular.
w
We '.
Emcfov
White help only.
. . i T n L rr ATT TTAITIIO
. TtTTT
COr.irlERCIAL
... Iff
LIVERY
FEED
' and
SALE
STABLE
The Best Turnouts in Umatilla County
Stock boarded by the day,
week or month.
. n
FR0OIE BROS,. Proprietors,
I
Main Street, : Athena.
Furniture
Did
You
. Say? ' -
Furniture
Is
Just
What
JOHN S. BAKER,
The 2ndST
-. ' Man of
Court Street,
Pendleton,
Sells so Cheap.
t p
iDO YOU KBOW
You can buy the best
3-ply Carpet for 80c;
good Brussells for 50c
Rugs, Lace and Silk.
Curtains and House
Furnishing Goods con
siderably cheaper
than any place in the
State of Oregon, of
Jessee Failing at Fen
dleton? : : : : : :
Sewing Machines
Warrented 10 Years
For $23.
Jess'j Failing, Pendleton. Or
V.
A
r'
t'
y
ter
G. W.
sfYL - n. m and in best of
onapman, . . . style . . .
Of Thirty Years Experience,
is Desireous of Locating in
Athena. - -
Sign and Buggy painting. Charges to suit the hard times.
DON'T
STOP
TOB
AGCQ
will be sent by mall upon receipt of price. Send
Box. Booklets and proofs free. Eureka
: ; HAMIUTON &
CRAIN AND : COMMISSION MERCHANTS
i , Dealers In ; "
Grair, Grain-bags and do a general Warehouse and Commis
sion Businees; pay the highest prices tor all kinds
of grain. Handle grain on either road
. at the same price.
BE SURE YOU SEE THEM BEFOjlE YOU BUY SACKS OR SELL GRAIN.
DAVID TAYLOR, AGENT, - Athena, Oregon.
FIRST: SETiOSSL
BERK "
ofhthem:
Fays
,
h. D.
.A.. O". IPJEVSZEl, E:,-co'p3?o"box' o
THE EUECTBIC BARBER SHOP,
SliAVlJNG,
HAIRCUTTING,
SHAMPOOING,
HAIRSINGING,
In Latest Styles.
gjST HOT OR COLD WATER
Read These Prices.
11 cans Axle grease...". .. 1 00
5 gal can Machine oil 1 75
Binding twine per lb ; ct
Draper 12-foot Hodge Header .......... '. 28 50
Spout draper. . . . . 10 00
All Kinds orextras roriue ionowinie mmuiura, '''-' "". ""i,
VlttK I iue and Woodbury. Headers-Pitts, Case, Randolph, C raver, Piano, Oregon Haines
..... .i ..i t
Mowing machine extras for Champion any style, Whltely, Empire, Woods, uucneve- Binoors
Whitely, Buekeye, Deerlng and Piano. Draper and draper-sticks for any kind of ma-
We can furnish repairs for any machine if
lowest possible cost- lr you ao noi see oi j uu munu mu wn. w . u.
THE C. 1- BA'EEETT CO-
-
W. P. LEACH,----
cnorlcecno T0
-- N. A. M!
THE
LEADING FURNITURE DEALER
IF YOU WISH TO borrow money on real estate,
Sell or buy farm pr city property; have your life in
sured; have your property insured against fire in
the best companies in the world; invest money at
trood interest and have it well eecured; have Deeds,
Mortgages, Contracts, Leases, etc., drawn correctly, call on W. T.
OILMAN, Athena, Ore. He represents the following first-class
fire insurance companies: Phoenix, Home, Royal, "Ger
man. Caledonian and Northwest. He writes
his own policies and
and at the lowest rates at
' paniea will take risks,
kquitafcle Life Ins
All Jobs.., .
Entrusted
to him will be
done honestly
Satisfaction is
guaranteed in
all his Work.
Plain and decorative
paper hanging, house
Its Injurious to stop Suddenly and
Jon't be imposed upon by buying a remedy thut re
quires you to do so, as it Is nothing more than a sub
stitute. In the sudden stoppage of tobacco you must
have some stimulant, and In most all oases, the effect
of the stimulant, be opium, morphine, or other opi
ates, leavesa far worse habit contracted. Ask your
drusglst about BAeO-eU'RO. It is purely vege
tab.e. You do not have to stop using tobacco with
BAO-etHftO- it will notify you when to stop
and your desli-e fof tobacco will cease. Your system
Win DC as I ree irom nicuune an ineuay
before you took yotlf flint chew or
smoke. An iron-clad written guar
antee to absolutely cure the tolBtcco
habit in all its forms, or money refund
ed. Price J1.00 per box or 8 boss (80
days treatment and guaranteed curej
MM.
t or sale y an aruggisi or win
six two-cent stamps for Sample
Chemical & M Tg Co., La t,rosse, win. .
ROURKE CO.
South side Main Street.
CAPITAL STOCK,
SURPLUS, -
$ 50000
$21,000
interest on time deposits. Proper attention
given to collections. Deals In foreign and
domestic exchaoga.
Lively. Cashier,
Athena, Oregon
Suaii
BATHS, 25 CENTS. 0
,. rrt . v, f,. IX,,.. f '., an A .( i .. i! i Pnur.i
not on hand at shortest possible time and at
guarantees correctness,
which responsible coro
e has the agency for the
. t t a . m
ace kJO., ine tit-si ci an v
REGULATOR
Reader, did you ever take SimmOns
Liver kexitjlator, the "Kino of
Liver Mediceses?" Everybody needs
take a liver remedy It is ft sluggish or
diseased liver that Impairs digestion
and causes constipation, when the waste
that should be carried off remains in
the body and poisons the whole system.
That dull, heavy feeling is due to a
torpid liver. Biliousness, Headache,
Malaria and Indigestion are all liver
diseases. Keep the liver active by an
occasional dose of Simmons Liver Reg
ulator and you'll get rid of these trou
bles, and give tone to the whole sys
tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver
Regulator is betteh: than Pnxs. ' It
loe3 not gripe, nor weaken, but greatly
refreshes and strengthens., i ; '
F.vM-v nockasre has the Red. Z
stumn.-on the wrapper.. J. II.
Scilin & Co., riiUadelphia.
IN A TIGHT PLACE.
Ten Minutes of Terror TJnaer Stam-
. peded Cattle.
Tha. PrOTldentUl Escape of Four ttan
Irom. Welng Trampled-to Death
' by m Madly KushlDg
Herd.
"YeBe we Have an adventure now and
then out in our country,": said Judge
Thompson, of Wyoming. ; "If you'll
come out and' see us I'll refer you to
five or six men whose hairbreadth es
would fill a book. , As for me, I
haven't had but one close call worth
"That's the very one I'm after," said
the Detroit Free Press interviewer.
"Well, it didn't amount to much as
an adventure, I'm afraid, though I'm
fn ia sjiv I was never more frightened
f.ir ton mirmtes. Between what is
called the Granite ridges and Bad Wa
ter creek, in central Wyoming, is a fine
cattle ranire. I was out witli a small
party last summer prospecting for cer
tain minerals, and had to cross this val
ley at about the center. There were
four of us on horseback, with our outfit
packed on the three lead mules, and at
about two o'clock in the afternoon we
fiitrhted Knmethincr ' to make the hair
lift rair hats rio-ht off Our heads." '
"Indians or-grizzly bears?" queried
the scribe a ' ..,'
"Pish! Tha Indians were all right'
and crizzlv bears vdon't wander down
Into the vallevs bv davliffht. What we
e Kifrhted was a herd of about four tllOU'
sand cattle coming our , way, ami
they were ooming as if every critter was
carrying one huudrea pounds oi sienm.
Two or three herds got mixed, and in
trvincr to separate theru the boys had
started a treneral stampede. In the
old days the buffaloes used to be some
on the mad rush, but let me tell you
that the wild cattle of the west can run
a third faster, and when they once get
started they will charge a flaming
mountain. The front of the herd
wasn't over a mile away when wo
siirhted it. and it was no use to run be
f oro it. turn back, or ride ahead. Our
horses were scrub stock and had no
Boeed." ;
"And there was no convenient grove
or rock to shelter you?"
, "Not a tree nor a rock for five miles
around, but just where we pulled up
was a natural ditch about fifty feet long
cut out bv the rains. It wasn't over
two feet wide bv twenty inches deep,
but it was our only hope. We slipped
oflf our horses, cave them a slap, and
piled into that ditch face down."
"And the herd passed over you?"
, "Exactly. I hadn't drawn three
long breaths when the front of the
herd was at hand. Let me just tell
you that I was never so scared in all
mv born davs. Every critter was
bellowing, horns clashing, hoofs dig'
ping up the soil, and as each one
jumped the ditch he caved the dirt in
on me. I felt fifty different hoofs
scuff mv back, and every instant CX'
neeted to be stepped on. It took the
herd only about ten minutes to pass,
but the time seemed hours lonsr to me.
When the last one had come and gon
I was regularly covered In and had to
be dug out. Two of the party were
stepped on and badly hurt.'
"And your horses and mules?"
"Picked up on the horas of the cattle
and tossed about and stepped on till they
were reduced to pulp. Juw cleaned uh
out as slick as a whistle. ' If we'd been
in our saddles nobody would haw
recouized us us having once been hu
man beings." ; '
"Seemed like the band of providence,
didn't it?"
"Of course. That's what we look for
Mid depend viixm out in our country.
Come out sonw time and wee how the
old thing worUfi when we are going to
have an avalanche three miles long ly
a few thousand feet wide.
WATER COOLED WITHOUT ICE.
Poeblo Indiana Baeor tha ! Irad itaaolt
. , fey JI wm at Enporatioa. .
Of course, everyone likes ice v iter.
It is an American habit, and, p,v. . otic
ally speaking, all American ha); . are
good. But if people only knew It. -ays
tha Washington Post, there are , .iter
ways of keeping water cool then put
ting Ice in it And the water tit Is
eoo ' Vrot b '"fro'' 1 twi'-u t
x.1-
of
ins
vri !,i;
s!c . several times as good for the
stomach into which it is put. One of
the simplest ways of cooling water is
by evaporation. , The Pueblo Indian of
our southwest,- with his untutored
mind, discovered this fact hundreds of
years ago, and has been using the dis
covery in his quiet, 'unobtrusive way
ever since, while we of the higher civ
ilization have been buying ice, deplet
ing our pockets and spoiling our diges
1 ion at the same time. The Pueblo In
dians never discovered the art of glaz
ing pottery, and the result is that all
their . earthenware is more ' or . less
porous, and when filled with water ab
sorbs it sponge -like, keeping the out
side always nioist. This moisture
evaporating coals the .vessel and the
water it contains, just as one can feel
the coolness that comes from a breeze
on the body when wet- with perspira
tion. In the dry air of the southwest,
where tha Pueblo Indian finds his
home, this evaporation is very great,
and the result is that the pottery ollas
are used by whites, Indians, and Mexi
cans alike to hold cool drinking water.
Anyone who has traveled through
the southwest cannot fail to recollect
the old brownish buff-eolored olla with
its curious Indian decorations, in con
ventionalized pictures of birds, beasts
and fish that were sure to be found in
the fork of a dry cotton wood branch
standing just inside the door with a
yellow calabash, or if, in a very modern
house, a tin cup hanging from a nail '
on the door jamb. And water from it
after a long, dusty ride in the boiling
sun tasted many times better than the
coldest ice cream soda he ever paid ten
cents for in the states. - It may have
been what Col. Tom Ochiltree terms
the large, elegant thirst that added to
the supposed virtues of the olja as. a
water cooler, but the scientists of the
National Museum will tell you that the
cooling qualities of ,-the porous pottery
are quite as roal as imaginary. In the
better class of Mexican houses the
chipped and battered olla in its pictur
esque rustic support will usually be re-'
placed by a more daintily ornamented
earthen one shaped like an army can-!
teen, suspended by a gray Mexican
scarf in the dritught of a window, or a
highly ornate lowl of a couple Of gal
lons' capacity, .swung in the same way
in a netting of twisted yucca fibers.
But the cooling principle is always the
same. i . "'"- -' ' '
Tha Witty Kepty of an Irish Hofpltal
-.. Patient.
A doctor should be a master of push
and parry, if he would get the better of
an Irish patient, intent upon conceal
ing more than he reveals as to the cause
of his sickness. Dr. Boose 7elt, in an
article, "The Hospital," published in
Scribner's, tells how he was once
worsted in a professional interview at
the Roosevelt hospital with an lrisn
laborer. ! The doctor writes!
I was struck by the humorous look in
his face, but even more by the unmis
takable evidences of hard drinking
which he presented. After asking some
other questions, I suddenly said:
You have been drinking pretty nara,
have you not?" -
He looked at me witn tne most en
gaging of Irish smiles, and gravely in
formed me that he bad not done so to
any extent, adding: "Well, you know,
I'm a longshoreman, and av coorse
we've been on a strike, and that manes
that ivery wan had several drinks i
dav. so perhaps I did take a little."
After awhile 1 told mm nrst to noia
out his hands, which were shaky. Then
I asked him to put out his tongue.
This was very tremulous, and I said,
rather sharply:
"What makes your tongue snake so
much if you have not been drinking?"
Looking at me in the most humble
manner, he answered wimous nesiwr
1 111 ...i AA
iuc:
"Well. I don't know, sir, unless it s
the modesty of that organ at oein
thrust into prominence in the sight of
such a foine gintleman." I changed the
subject. j
TRADE IN HUMAN HAIR.
Tha
Custom of Banting the nau
Whola Familial by tha Taar. -
There are wholesale firms in Paris
which send around agents in the spring
to various Breton and other villages.
These gentlemen, says All the Year
Bound, are provided with ribbons, silk
laces, haberdashery and cheap jewelry
of various kinds, paying for the
maidens' tresses in these goods or in
ready money. So tar as personal
beauty is concerned, tnese xireton laces
do not lose much in losing their hair,
for It is the fashion in thatpart of
France for maidens to wear a close
cap, which entirely prevents any part
Of their hair being seen. ,
Some years ago the light uerman
hair was held In such esteem By tne
hair merchants that they gladly paid as
much as eight shillings aa ounce tor
small quantities of it-nearly double
the price of silver. Light nair is col
lected from Germany by agents of a
Dutch company, who make yearly visits
to various parts of the Germania states.
The black hair importea comes mostly
from Brittany and the south of France,
and is, as a rule, very fine and silken.
Whithitt the present century the
heads of hair of whole families in
Devonshire were let out by the year.
An Exeter periwig maker went around
periodically, cut the locks, and oiled
the ground thus left in stubbla to
stimulate a fresh crop. '
With the turning of the leaves it is
supposed the flowers disappear, but In
northern New England, and over the
line in Canada, the - asters are
never more gorgeous, the daisies big-
g or tha chamomile more abundant
tl.a- fust on the eve of frost time. .In
to . vo cr three hundred miles north
oi . v .v. , crst tni-.snort Dut warm sum-
m' m y havw its fruitage after the
q ,! s nd the parks and gardens in
tlte. -ivns oro brilliant with msrl
ebl&K, zinriins, asters, eosna, and tven
freet pa, long gdne by in tbes lutl-i
jh.":e. Melons aru in their prui
Mikiae when thoy!"-'! )- oa t
Highest of all ia Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Li irsOT a
n&O.HU7I38Y PUCE
DOWN IN" A CEATER.
Wonders
Witnessed by
tain Explorer.
a Mouzi-
Indian Legend of m Famous Extinct Vol
asno la tha Wert Strange Ani
mals Found In tha Snbter
, ranean Cavcrna.
Crater mountain is one of the Uma
tilla Indians' great spook depots from
ancient time, says the Baker City Dem
ocrat Bucks that are now white with
the hoary frosts of many winters rec
ollect hanging in tho trees tightly
strapped to their nursing boards, while
their mothers roamed the forests in
search of game for the lords of crea
tion or wood for the tepee, and from
infancy love to relate how the great
spirit spoke to them with the awful
voice of terrific thunder in the bowels
, of the earth. Many are the stories and
legends of Indian lore told of Crater
mountain. One of the favorite ones is
told of a great war between tho
Shoshones and Umatillas. When the
Umatillas had conquered their foes
they proceeded to slaughter old and
young, regardless of sex. One beauti
ful Shoshone maiden, seeinp; that
death was inevitable from her pursu-t
ing foes, plunged headlong into the
burning orater, and instantly the vol
canlo eruption ceased, much to the
consternation of her pursuers, who on
the following day found, on looking
down the chasm of inky darkness, a
resplendent light with the form of the
Shoshone maiden In the midst of the
apparition. Thoy told it to their dusky
warriors and to this day Crater moun
tain is looked upon with reverence
from an Indian point oi view. !
The following is from-the diary of J.
A. Wright: "Crater mountian is located
some eleven miles from the Camp of
Cornucopia, on the south side of the
ranire whose caps are tipped with
eternal snow. Many chasms and fls
sures have in the misty past cleft the
mountains and left them in. the most
fantastic shapes. Vegetation ceases to
grow after a certain height is reached,
and close under the base of one of the
trreat peaks is the famous extinct vol
cano. Ashes and lava are found in
great profusion and in such Indescrib
able masses that it makes the ascent
one of peril and great difllcultyi How
ever, once at the top, a peek down into
the blank, fathomless abyss supplies the
most morbid minds with all the sensa
tionalism necessary for a lifetime. A
favorite amusement was to throw rocks
down and listen to the sounds as they
struck on the projecting sides of the
dark chimney until the sounds died
away, leaving nothing but for the
mvstified explorer Kb guess it had
reached the bottom." -
Many have been the stories circu
lated of tho wonderful cavern that ex
tended from the sides of the great
chimney. A stout cable was provided
and a basket swung from a pulley
Hon. Joseph, with camera and note
book, was carefully lowered some
three hundred and seventy-eight feet,
when he noticed an aperture in the
aide of the chimney, and. by signals
agreed upcti, a halt was called in his
downward career, and he crawled
through a cleft in the great chimney,
and the work of exploration began.!
The first sight that met his astonished
gaze was a most, stupendous chamber,
from whose mighty dome hung stalac
tites of great beauty, which were en
hanced by the light of the pandle, and
fairly struck terror to his heart, as the
flickering candle seemed to possess the
power of some unseen hand that made
millions of the brilliant stalactites
dance in resplendent beauty. -A great
snowy owl blinked at the astonished
Joseph. . . - , , ,
Tho explorer groped his way to the
far end of the chamber, where he
thought he heard tho sounds of falling
water nor was he, mistaken, for
squeezing himself through an opening
he found himself in another, cnamoer
of rreat beautv. with a5 stream of hot
sulphur water running into the earth.
The incrustation from , tne suipnur
water had transformed the cavern Into
a coral-like substance and, left, it in
such fantastic shapes. lie found in the
water some lively little lizards and
some frogs that change color on the
slightest provocation and two large
rata, who eved the explorer with a cu
riosity that seemed to bode no good
and he longed for his little gun.
THE SPARROW AND THE CLOCK.
A Strange Story Told at a Paris Faly
1 technic Hchaol. "
A French paper tells the following
stranire storv of a sparrow and the
clock at the Polytechnic school of
Vm.rl: ' ""
- in I8i the Swedish scientist, Bcr-
selius, during his stay in Paris, went
to the school to make some experi
ments in physics and chemistry before
thi pupils. ; To show the necessity of
alvin the- respiration of animals
plaeed a sparrow under the receiver of
the air tsuiap and created a vacuum.
' At th. -moment when the bird was
about to die for want of oxygen, the
crv of "Mercy! McrcyH echoed Irom all
aide if the amphitheater.; Bersellus
aeqttjeaed in, -l'l
decision of his hu
mane Midienr
which flew
n Aft-
released the Ja"'
out of the half
t fttraitffc turn
penei
a happening
3h
uoday, attha
ml ci l lie i
ten, Wjl
HE
mm
and the astonished doorkeeper noticed;
that this last minute had an inconceiv
able length.
, The fact was noted again and again,
and a watch was set to discover the
cause. 'Then it was ascertained that
the happy delay was caused by a spar
row which, at the precise second, had
lighted on tho hand of the clock. Of
course it was Berzelius' sparrow!
Now comes the sad and unnecessary
part of the story. The doorkeeper one
day covered the hands with some
sticky substance, caught the grateful
bird and put it to death. ' The school
gave it a superb funeral and it was
buried in a corner of the great court.
That day the clock, which had evident-"
ly been a party to the conspiracy, re
ceived the name of Berzelius. f
THEY ENJOYED THE JOKE.
Tha Elephant Appreciated a Uood Thing
When Ihej Saw It '
A number of years ago, in a book
which was called "Leaves from the Life
of a Special Correspondent," Mr.O'Shea,
the author of the book, gave the follow
ing description ot an adventure he had
with a herd of elephants. Said he: "A
young friend asked mo once to. show
him some elephants, and I took him
along with mo, having first borrowed
an apron and filled it with oranges.
This he was to carry whilst accompany
ing me in the stable, but the moment
we reached the door the herd set up
such a trumpeting they had scented
the fruit that he dropped the apron
and its contents, and scuttled off like a
scared rabbit. There were eight ele
phants, and when I picked up the
oranges I found I had twenty-five. I
walked deliberately along the line giv
ing one to each. - When I got to the
extremity of the narrow stable I turned,
and was about to begin the distribution .
again, when I suddenly reflected that'
if elephant No. 7 in the Vow saw me
give two oranges in succession to No. 8
ho might imagine ho was being cheated,
and give me a smack with his trunk
that is where tho elephant falls short
of the human being-so I went to the
door and began at tho beginning us'
before. Thrice I went aloug tho line,
and then I was in ax. 1 hud one
orange left, and I had to get buck lothe
door. Every elepliBiit in the herd had
his greedy gnze f ocussed on that orange.
It was as much as my lifo was worth to
give it to any oue of them. What was
I to clo? I held It up conspicuously,
coolly peeled It, cud nto It myself. It
was most amusing to lm'J.ec the way
those i'lephunts nudged cn' ii other and
shook their ponderous sides. They
thoroughly entered into tlu humor of
the thing."
ONLY A QUESTION
OF TIME.
How n liii-ii'cunliiu, Vhii.!
l!urtook
ft ! Pl-llt
"That' lit tl bill?" said the debtor,
pleasantly. "Oh, yes, -of c iurte. Well,
you need nut worry abO'.'.t inut any
more. I'v.i go: things down to a sys
tem now."
You've been a long ti nio doing it,"
suggested the creditor.
"I reuliM it," returned tho debtor,
but it's oil right now. Yon see, thir
ty dollar h more than I cun afford to
let go of ul any one time, but now I
can get it together without missing it.
You see, a man never misses his small
change, so I've bought a little bank
that I can drop it into every night.
You've no idea how fast it accumu
lates." -.
'I've heard of the plan before," said
tho creditor. "If a man lives up to It
and doesn't hold out on the baak it
mounts up rapidly."
'Oh, I live up to it," protested th
debtor. "I put every cent of small
change into It every night, and it's all
for you,"
"I may hope then"
"My dear sir, you may more than
hope. The system makes the paymen
In full an absolute certainty, if. fy
comes all obstacles and it's only a qu
tlon of time" '
"How much time?"
"Well, that's rather difficult to
You see, the amount of small eh'
find in my pockets varies, and
"What do you call small c
"Pennies. I what's the'
sue if you want to. That'
geta for trying to do th
CHANGED
What Aftceted t
Ihl
"Some perso
detective, "sr
man we kr
because h
had a fi
opposec"
talk a
pursul4
rightr
bla'
whe
on 1
wato
lean
intT
he
3
If
. -J
J
J
Itcad the Fui.