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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1891)
A FORTY DOLLAR JOKE. Hnw a Tiiyotitlaii ttetft with Pnw Ci Joker. If a romineut oh ysician over in the north west hasn't got even with one praotieal Joker then it dtiesuH lie in ttus U-lluiji. Tlw physi cum lives in a vesy modern establishment, .fr only t there a special night bell, but a mneakni; tube conneetB the doorstep with itlte head of lite bed. TUu practical joker has iliad fun with Ibis. Ho has heeu coining aioiiK about half past 1 a. in. and standing on rite opposite corner aiui lauKhinj? until his ached fhinkiujt how funny he was ami -what a good time he was having- Then he .7 won Ed cross-over and rmg the mut heu aim bowl up the spwUdnjrtube as if a whole regi .inent of mothers-in-law on the uext black had ten minute cholera and were dying by the wugou load. And the poor, tiretl doctor would rouse out of his first, swuet sleep and "hollo" down the tuio. Thtm the funny man -would snv: 'km Or. J live heref". , .... " .''Yak" ' ' " V- fe '. "Have you lived here- lner , , 'For twenty years. ho arewouj Vhat vtbe bhue do you wantf.' . . - ",let want, in know why you don's move. 'That- ali. Tn!iu!v ., And then thefniniy man bouueesdowu intv tiie titrwt and scoots hoiiiel where he hmghs fir half an hour struinbt. - -.: He didn't laugh half so much the other inht. The dwior was loaded for him. He - knew that lauii mid that veil, and he stuck a funnel in.the tube and fwiured in twoquarts f aquafortis. Stafford's indelible ink, liquid Ive and a few chemical whiffs of twrmenL It .fTirM and guralwl for one secoud and then ; fttnn-k Dofuuny iu the mug, just as he opened Lw mouth for another howl. It came with a thirty foot fall and a ten pound pressure to xnn square inch. He swallowed a pint before lie could get Ins mouth shut, and the impromptu hose 1 flayed away all over his face and silk hat, and hbirt front, and drew suit. It was a roof - Toiwr. and curled bun like a cockroach on a hot shovel. ; ' Jr will cost die doctor MO for plumbing, but he grins -every time bethinks of. it. "W asaiugtou Post ; - . Fran Vou Malhof, wiiowas noted Tor jiarsi mony, one day met it ho renowned lr. Lind uiann on the pronttimde. 1 Eagerly availing beivelf of the oppuruiuity thus aftonled of pftrmg a little ath it.-e gratis, site exclaimed; "How fortunate 1 am in nteetiog you, my dear doctor! I have felt so very weak of late, and every time 1 go out I am overcome by fatigue. .Pray, what would you recom nvnd me to takei" "A cab, madam," was tin? doctor's laconic replv. as be turned on- his heels and walked aay at a hruk paee. Blumeulese. A High Liver. JlendicTaiit-li tbat you, Tilryl Tilly Yes. father. : Mendicant Well.run home and tell moth r nft U forget to dturit the money I left wttb bar Uiis morning, and to have dack and jfrai eas for dinner to-night. (Hearing a airange footstep.l Pity the poor bliad! Life. Bfllly Quite Careless. A Wt Side church U in process of reno vattua, and the pastor is dady engaged in raising fiiwk to pay the expmne. One means tlie pastor t.:!ros for that purpose is to call on his parish lt i..'i-s ami ask for subscrhitioas. la one case t!:" good man aiiproacuet) the front door of & parishioner's house, rang the bell, In door ojieiied and a little girl appeared. ' faster Good afternoon, my child. Is your -toother at boaie) , ' Little Girl No. sir; mamma i down town. Pastor Will she hack soonf . . Little Girl I I guess so.., Vttstor Then I will come in and wait a few niomtes. Pastor enters and takes a seat in the par lor. Being desironsof knowing what kind of hiasB bis people provide for their families, tint clergyman looked about him aud soon discovered a pair of feet protruding from ouder a curtain. A little further optical in vestigatiiai satiihed him that the feet be loiwed to the little stud's mother. Byaad by lite child appears agaia aud said that she thought her mamma would not return for an boor or two. : "Well," soys the pastor,'"! will not wait; but, my chilii, bo kind enough to tell your mother the next time she goes down town to take her feet with her," Buffalo Express. Hla Venloa. It is the excellent practice of the teachers ia the Washington public schools to give out to thyir pupils brief extracts from the best poetry and to ask the pupils to reproduce the idea in their own language. This not only tauMitarira the pupils with o.jr best litera ti re, but teaches them to read uuderstand ir.jdy and to write each in his own independ ent style. Tho other day (so a gentleman woo vouches for the troth of the story in forms usl a teacher gave oat the following iinesfrom Lonitfellow: - 1 hfanl the trailing- garments of nbrbt Rueep ttiosixli tier uisrlile lialls. Isaw lirsiihUsKlruiall fringed with light t'rom the celestial walls. One little fellow brought in his translation, 'fr:gm&iiig: , I llflsrrl Uie lotlv tails of her Bight shirt - Scratch afewitr the swns ftoer. ,m Washington PosW mtrualoe RxtrnvRirsEM). .lua Miimewitaman, eras digging i it cat-co in on him. Two men to mi up the well for and the t ,N,we (lnd Ituned the fimera! ex- m; k f,-imt,,aay.(,.uj. as .. A, Ynra Itoot. OHUG WILD CATTLE. Tlicmculy substance of the pohonow mnuigv HrwdTlmi ihhabtts thmtnp ywu iiwt, or cassava, tarnishes the flour j Mf tHO tmpqim Mountain. otlRM'otiatryyuca starch. This is the Calirornm sportsmen can now ROM. Bum root from winch tit tapioca orOnu m)1 Bhoot wna -cattle.11 mud commerce m proparcU. The li.au.iis, who Jo,m an TJm,M1.m mountain pioneer, an tlw httkwxof tiro country, grate tlie rct'cvhi'toti'coiiijilctionof the railroad, yuca toot ami squeeze out the poisonous ,.lt i(i ft fuct tlmt thlW ftM mmirwiH 0f juice with their hands.' They wiu.h tlP wu,l cattle in the hi-h hilb wlrirtuig the aniistanee ami take it hctoro tlw Are. , t'mpmuvvallov, and some irf them are This final process driven away any rem- f m Juore tlum" a couple of mill from the mint of poison that itmy remnm, a the ; 14 Xrwk. Someof theaeeattlo, too, VoisonoiiH element of the plant to mmw j un) Veunt oll or inori, llt tlt, M0Un. I ctuyu vwrame ensiiy expei. u.. , heat. in some iituian mix ine juice oi the yuca root t ush! as a uiodo of jmhlic execution, ami twenty six drop are saiil to le enough to kill a stalwart man in six minutes. Yet even tins deadly juice, when boiled, becomes haruilww, and it fe ctinmiouly fermentwl to make claclia, the favorite tieer of the country, Tle ludianx make a delicious snow white bread from the yuca. which re sembles the jwssover brtnid of the Jews, Tins bread they retail in KUitmbas or Lnetted boys thrown uenws the backs of donkeys. Yuca flour is tmported to our iwun junvl-ara iinilnr tbo nnnin if tiitiiiM'ii anwroot. 1 think the Brazilian arrow- root is all made from the yuca wot, 8mith American cisiks make dciicinu? tittle breakfast nnffa f thie yuca starch and cheese, which are served with cuffec in the shaping -room before the regular breakfast hour. The root of the yuca is boiled Hiid takes the place of our snato, and all the clear starching of the house hold is done with yuca starch. 'Amy C. biianks in Good Housekeeping. tier Itaflned Itavengw. A young man and his wife, who have not long been married, were intending to qiend the night at her father's house in a neighlioriug town; and as the husband could nut get nwuy until late in the af ternoon, he escorted his wife to the sta tion and put her on hoard of a somewliat earlier train,. an accommodation train, as he bupKised, just before it Uurted. And it so iniiiiieneti mat in tne same car. m the next Beat to his wife, was a young man who is cenerallv believed to have lieeti Sh unsuccessful suitor for her hand, The train had scarcely left the station 1 before tlie husband, who. bv tlie way. is of a very jealous disposition, discovered I it was air .exnress. makinir its first ston forty or fifty miles from Boston, After 1 a good deal of telegraphing to one person I ami anollier. includiuc an exiilanatorv dispatch to his mother-in-law, the morti- I tied voumi man had tlie pleasure of meeting Ins wile at tne proier station i nere is goou grazuig u uie uiouiuunra about ,two hours late for dinner. Hue all the year round. A KCtiliarity uUnit could scarcely have lieen otherwise than these cattle is that their eyes und horns fatigued, hungry and irritated; but mark are jet black. The retina, iris and tho the cliverness of the woman! "Tired, t whole apple of tlie eye are one mass of worn out? Not in the least, r suppose ' black. Von can't distinguish any differ 1 must lie hungry, but I really hail not ence in any part of it. The horns, too. thouirht of it. I have had "the most white being black us ink, are long and charming afternoon. Mr. very j kindly waited with meat junction, I and 1 never appreciated before how en- renaming he is." This is what 1 cull civdized revenge. Boston Transcript. Turks (lathering 3liiniia. Mr. Cole, of Bitlis, n mkwionary of the American board in Eastern Turkey, in describing a journey from Ilarpoot to Bitlis, saya: Wo traveled lor four days uirouch a region wliere bad newly taiien a remarkable deposit of heavenly bread, ns the natives sometimes cull It manna. There were extensive forests of scrubby oak, and most of the deposit was on the leave. Thousands of poor peasants, men, women and cliildren, were out upon the plains gathering the Bwect substance. oome-of them plunge into Kettles ot nou ing water tlie newly cut branches of the oaks, which washes off the (tepostt, until ' tUn urntnr liuwmui an mwetti ua Ti, niuii ml the Yankee of a veritable sugaring off in the old Granite state us he takes si of it. Other comi-anies of natives may be seen vigorously beuling with sticks the branches, winch, from having been spread upon the ground, have so dried that the glistening crystals fall readily Un the carpet spread to receive them. The crystals nreseirated front the pieces of leave by a ave. and then the manna is pressed into cukes fin- use. The manna is in great demand among these Oriental Christians. As weweretruvelingthrough a rather dry region, tlie article came in play for our plain -repast." Chicago Journal. : '' Society In Tahiti. A Taliitian gentleman or lady ia a charming person to meet. They ore cul tivated and refined, the men have been educated in the best universities in Eu rope. They and their wives are trav eled, they are thoroughly cosmopolitan and they meet tin? stranger with a knowl edge of his customs as well as of his Ian--image, and with a hospitality, simple, generous and delightful. What with 8)ieariug fish on the reef by torchlight, picnics in cocoanut groves by the sea, drives on the beautiful Broom rood un''er the cliffs and across the lagoon by l'luv raoh's caves, dinner jmrtiea under a ! nana leaf roof, and reclining under the trees on moonlight nights, the happy davB slip by unnoticed. But Tahiti ex acts an expensive tribute from the stran ger for the happiness he has felt he can take but the memory away and a long ing to be buck in "dear. Inzy, minny Tahiti." Cor. Now York Tribune. ; Blue Kyes the Best. ; There is some reason for the admiration generally felt for blue eyes. A connois seur in eyes states that nine-tenths of the railroad men, pilots and others who are selected for their keenness and correct ness of vision have blue eyes. Brown eves are .IwnntihU. -Gray eves usually denote intelligence, and -basse! ayasj bi- st t.k Ko-ed fur n uj ;. Ihe eonim "' rai y' tiiina near RuUlIre nwl liowelmd they ore nnihiihlv the tliiektwl, but tliT ilo not venture) down in the valley much.. Xhoy Btiiy iu the to of the liills nml get water Iro'in the living spriiiR which rimi there. I'or the most Kirt they ore coneeuleU in the dense growth of out imu in in tnemj nioumani!.. There i lieavy uniiermmn. too. au'tliut it i n hmd matter to cet nu to them. They go ill buuda of ws or eulit usuallv. Inn, at iiKlua lienlottorty or lifty get together and lie down in the sumo yard that is, they slwp on the name spot, winub 18 twuuuy u khmuiiihi nlaec among the trees. A hand of wild cattle have Urn known to get together on ii eleared place liUe this every night for a com ile of years, "When feeding theivnre aHvays a few hulls to net us sentineU. While the cat tle mum in bands of half a down or mi, Ihev are iievertl'len:ltisutoilnu'l)aiHls, m that at any alarm fruui any one of the hulls, which leisurely feed on higher ernund. thev all run away together "The cattle are of all culannnd wilder than deer. It in a hard matter to get a ehot at them fur the ronton that their cent is bo keen. They can smell n man a hug distance off. They got wild in W,i ivhen the old man Kiddle and two or three others of the lirst settlers came to tlw vidlev. Their cows wandered off and could not he found. After two or three years, all tho pioneers iuul to do when they' wanted beef was to rig out two or three puck nninmlsmul go up into the mountains. The cattle hud to lie killed on Biaht the sumo as deer or bear, for thev could no moro ho driven down than deer could. Ont o kilted they wen) ouartered. tracked on the horses, and cur- ried down. They have been huntiHl a coral deal of lntcveare, so that there ure not as uiuny as theie used to lie. Some ot tlie cattle aro very large aou fat. I have caught glimpses of bulls in the top of the Umpnuu lulls that union' islied me. A bull 1 saw in the full ol '7B on the head of the Kugue riviw 1 am certain would weigh 1.4110 pounds, very sharp. Brought to bay, the Oregon wild cattle are very wicked lighters. " Ban rraueisco hxammer. tlld Times In liulslana. Those "society balls" weiv conducted with great propriety and reserve. Tho claim of every person of both sexes to be admitted having been -previously deter mined by the responsible and trusty com mittee, tliere win a sort of tnimrury and coiKentionul equality on the tei Bichorcun flir. and. therefore, every gen tleman had the privilege to invite a ludy without the formality of an introduction to iigure iu the dunce us his partner. After it wan ,over he escorted her back reHpeotfully to Iter scat, without presim ing, if unknown ami not duly presented, to remuin standing Is-fore her, or to sit by her side, to continue the conversation or prolong the accidental neuuttintflnee. During the Intervals of dancing the ' gentlemen walked tip and do-n between the rows of ladies that densely lined the hall, sonic merely bowing us they passed to tlKjse whom they knew and others stopping to converse. No woman, mar ried or single, joined in this promenading with a male ctiuiXttiion, as Is the custom in these present days, and the eye of ft lynx could not have detected the slight est flirtation. The word itself was not known, for the thing it means is for Louisiana a modem invention, which had not then been patented and brought out for public, use. In fact, this peculiar pastime would have lieen impossible to attempt. It would have produced a so cial eartlitjuuke. American Magazine. The tolor of Ilie Ht. Artists always seem at a loss to deal with the color of the sea, ami few lira those who please the public, rrofessor Tyndall has cofue to their aid. lie recog nizes tnree principal hues in sea waves blue, green and yellow. Solid rticlesj held in the w ater act as minute mirrors reflecting the light which penetrates, the liquid. Tho rays which aro sent out, aflcr having traversed only, a thin stratum of wutor, preserve their yellow parts; but if the reflection) are attenu ated the water appears green; aud if they do not exist at ull. the sea being clear and free from muddy matters, the color is deep blue. In an indigo sea the crest of the waveg will appear green on ac- count of their lack of thickness. Sea weed, aniiiuilcules and other local or ac cidental causea may have much liuiu ei j on tho color of tlie water. Court Journal. ; i Finishing a Buffalo. I saw an old Indian, over 00 years of age, apparently, following a buffalo that was just able to urug lunucit along wnn three arrows in his side. The old man's quiver was empty, and he was impatient to finish him. He slid cautiously from his ponv, ami, stealing up behind the biilT.do, sprang forward, snatching ,ne of the arrows Iran his side and senain;;. ',H uuick aa a flasn into ha heart, L. 13, A Heaven on Karth. Mrs. Ouiihinir Oh. I am to charmed with your borne, Mr. Quiverful. Buuh a beauti ful mum, and fttn:h pleasant turroundingK! anil tlmn uoh dHUKbteni, too. I hope the yotmt; ladies realise that their home w a per f!t paradiiie. Uucle Joe fa mean old tlmitri-OH, thay live up to it. Mm. MuHhlim. I nwure you there hi n inuri'vmic or giving in iiuuriage uero, duusuy's Weekly. WmiIIiiit (lUaiiuaa. George How much raldw It's gnttingl Viuhit Ym. hut It will lie wurnwr non. for lit'ln com nuiM. Munwy's U eokly. t'nulil. In Com. tn sn Uutleratatiillna. Pisrtwul iprMoiithur nlstnli-Knrkover your rliiao, and hu qaiek slsiut It!" Near Hightwl llustolilan lleg pardoilt (Htwalvi'-Niininukeylngi (Julmitiorl Pn- duc the hciuIs!" Pardon me, but I do not exactly appre- bond tlm drift of yimr" Clisme jour puttw! uou't you I've got die drop? llnlomi ynar btMsllel"' 1 mil Uitultv at a lorn. Illy uisir sir, to per ceive the relevancy 3'""'' observations or to" "Clap a stopper oo your gab and whack up, or I II let or akl Turn out your bun dle quick I iht a squirm aa yuu !" "Is there anv peculiarity 111 the external seeming of my aptiantl or demeanor, sir, that hnnels vou. a total stranifer. to - "Ouce more, you dash ttedashed liloke, will vmi uncork thalswuirr' (Hoiielw ih ouwUilKmu "llv trieiia, l cna- fens my utter luaimity to gauisr anycouer- it idea (rem the .fragmentary olmrvatlous . ... imijAvruii Thim l anmAlhtntr ra.heallylrrefoaelluWeaiid ii.mpahteof cor- nlso the unusual depth to which thev mlaiiou la the vocabularies with which we have lawn hollowed or sc(isl out. This endeavor to make tlm roiirooal or corre- ; depth shows the unremitting toll, elierny isuiileatlal iiiterchaiige of oar idens intslllgl- and sitience of this primitive race, who, bio. Yoa will urdon me If I suuitest that with but auirthcr stone as a tool, gradn syiielironiztttiou of nirHMe is equally ludis- ally hollowed out. by hours and days of ' pensable with hoinogmislty of corshral lm- lnUnr. a block of stone of the Imrdi-Ht presiioB, as well as parulleiisui of Idiom y,,,! ui a depth of several iiojlies. Kach and"- 1 mortar is accompanied hy several pestles. Hut the highwayman had fled In dismay.! Chicago Ti'lhaae. The l'er of the Press. , "1 don't want that young fellow to come round here any more," her futhergave out Ueelstvelv. "All right, father. He is only a iiew,rfr resrtor, and" ".A reporter! Oh, woll, In that case I don't think It's any line, 111 the first place It wouldn't do any goul, ami we'd ouly bo liav hur him mmluic down the chiinnayorthrough the wiiidnw, so I guess we hod hetter yield flrueefuilv." And that evening, after she told him, It was a plcusure to them both to acknowledge the great power of tlie press. Philadelphia Times. Th. rw rosehman. Lady-Aud want l your Christian namet C1ch,nn-N,-..Ucli,lZzor.muu,. Lmlv-What a dreadfully long name. I should" never lie able to pronounce It If I wanted vou in a hurry. I ' Coachman Yer don't need to pemoline notion', imiiii.. When yer want um you've only u stick yer fingers in yer mouth and whistle, and I'll 1st iiroimil afore yer can say Jack UouhiMiii. Yciiowtiars News. Nu NoiuHtiiM AlHiut Hlln. Tliey were talking of death when oae man shedl "Wliat were his Inst wordsf lie didn't ny anything," was the reply. That's jast like liial," said the first man, with an approving nod; "there was no gas about him. He was all bunius" Texas Hiftinsis. - , Oveeworkeil. Customer Does the eilge Improve on a razor hy laying It away for a time after tinning! Barber I believe so. Customer Yon ought to put thatoneaway for about two thousuud years. Busuai Her ald. Too Costly to Trlll'o With. Caller Why don't you try' Christian Sci ence for Pidof You know how much It did for our baby. ' Hostew Yes, hut 1 can't afford to fool with the life of that dog. Why, he cost (461 -biHtuu Gasette. '':1i ? . Native VegetAhlft Proilaets. In visits to nearly forty trilies of Amer ican Indiana, Dr. J. 8. .Newberry hog found twenty .three kinds of native vege table products included iu the Indian dietorv, besides a great variety of nuts of the strongest muslurd (awls, then sift aud veirotableaArkansaw Traveler. i Ing itund preinng it forthotrntle. We and. vegetables. Arkunsuw Traveler, Heparnte Pleees In a Wateh. ' k Tlie average watch is composed of 175 different pieces, comprising upward of 2.4(10 separate and distinct ojicrations in its manufacture. Tlie bulnnco has 18,000 beats or vibrations per hour; 13,000,080 In thirty days. 157,01(0.000 in one year; it travels 1 43-100 inches with each vi bration, which is equal to 0 8-4 miles in twenty-four hours, 2(2 1-2 miles In thirty days, or ;l,oT8 114 nidee in ouo ytiar. Chtistutn Union. T.f yer j,He,lo bread pan do yenflt Vt rise, dip-; so "twon't do tr CLIFF DWELLERS OF ARIZONA. A l'lne rolleeMon of Itolln, Rhowll'i Their Life aud HsbllK rrdfessor Alla-rl S. Hick more, the stt iwrlutendent of the American Museum of Nuturul History, at Seventy-eighth street anil Eighth avenuu, the other after noon showed a reporter an exceedingly interesting collection which was recoived nt the museum within a few days, It is an assortment of over 8,200 distinct Bwci mens illustrating tlie mode of life and of death) of I he ancient Pueblo Indians. The collection was made and donated to the museum by Dr. Edgar A. Mearns, assistant surgeon in the United States army, now stationed at Fort Verde, A. T. Here ho has been for nearly three years, and has occupied himself with searching for and exploring the wonder ful clilf dwellings and other ancient re mains so common inthat region. The ntMectiou which he has wait on to the museum is exceedingly line und interest ing, It embraces articles illustrating tile art of war as carried on by these ulKii'igi- nal inhabitants of. America, their various domestic uiauiifaciiires. their munhcr of . huutjng and tho food Un which they II.Vl-U, From tho irrenl depth at which the articles were found, the immense la;tse of time since these villages were in nr.tivn operation and teeming with life, may lie estimated. Home of the articles were found at depths ranging from two to feet; in the caves they were covered w itlt dust and guano formed by tlie niiUti.msof bin which inhabit these dreary recesses, while out in the 0s'ii plain, they were covered with 'volcanic dust and scoria washed down from the neighlsnr.i-; heights. The eaves are Bittiatcd fur u;i (sometimes hundreds of fiston the shies of the canyons in which ull the streaips of that region are found, They are- prob ably artificial and were mude by. the ancient inhabitants as protections against wild hcnsln and their human enemies. Aiiioiii; the most interesting sscimenB in the collection just received are seven large lava or KnudBloiie'tnorturs, called mclutcs by the Indians of the presen day. They were und are still used by the modern JlexicmiB for grinding corn (maize), preKirutory to making it into .cakes. The method of grinding was exui'tlv similar to that of the common uiortur and pestle. Hut the chief in terest nttnchiug to them is their great , , , ,. Bixe sl.eiiil . n g one ana a alt ot l' f't HI length lllld a foOt 111 tlllckllC-s; aM, ,mle of lava, sandstone, and some of lit'eeustono, a varietv of lava. Another exceedingly interesting ant of Biecimeiis are the axw, of which there ia a Inrge nuinls-r of exaniihsi. Among them are a lew. which rt'ofessor Itifk more states he considers t, 1st prolstbly nuiipie. These arc stone Isttlle axes, with a pointed end like un awl, instiad of the usual Hat edge. In the collection is an assortment of cloth fabrics, and among them is a needle, found in a piece of the loth. 1 ins, unlike our modern needlw. although yet very Bharp, is of wtsal, Iwing nothing more or less than the sharp, needle like leaf of a member of the pine family of trees. The threud is still in position just as it wan left by K""e nlairigiuul lady of fashion, long n','1"1 f'"1 """'', , , '"" ,. . I Besid these ar .cles ulreatly noticed, the collection includes pusjes of wicker and bnVket work, almost us it came from the hand of the maker, siccinieusof com grains and colis, ends, hoiienwls and pins, stone umivv and sH'iir jsiints, fashioned both from splinters of dlisidian (volcanic gluss) and troin ciittlcedouy hammers, ! arrow ahnriumers, stone knives and i many other articles made both from . Btone and bone, , whose uses are sometimes ntit wholly , clear even to the skilled ureliieologist. j Among the various tools there is a small, round piece of wisid, vw -Professor Dickniore explained was evidently in tended to produce fire. A soft, pithy Btick, Isting inserted in n hole in the first I piece of wissl null quickly twirled back I ward and forward, tlie rapid motion noon seta it nllrc. j Besides the corn and sts'tls the food of I the ancient I'ueblos is also shown by a large luwortinent of bones some whole, some frat'lurcd. and some mere sidinters. When found they were iu sttclia iiosttion and condition ns to show that they were the remains of feasts. Other bones, such as those of mail, have also sometimes become mixed with them. Homo of the animals whose bones can I recognized are the elk, mule fleer, antelope, beaver, S)ienuophil6 and gopher (both species of rnt), turtle, -snake, turkey, cottontail and jack rabbit, mouse, musquash, undmany othors. New York Kvening Suit. -Working- Iu a Mustard IttHL- I am employed In a niuslnrd mill. wliere we dully grind hundreds of bushels klso grind pep)Htrs and apices, occasionally prepuring cuyonne s)ppur. I work eight to tun hours a day in the fine dust that floats iu the atmosphere of the room. You couldn't hardly come inside without sneezing for hours after. Yet I am fat, hearty, and do not know what sickness is. I make good wages and have worked many years at it, but there is one draw back. Wherever the creases in the skm made by the joints, etc., are tho mustard and i'pier get in, the first acting the , same us a inuslurd plaster and the iepiier irrilatiitg until :bonielimes the tnlhimma- ''' mi or0 V wM.-VMMyb it, .., '