4 same cigar! Tell me the story | Gypsy Wordless Language ,Cypsy Fortune Telling. and clim upone To communicate with one another| The fortune telling of the Gypsies now use letters—and they use the we Fortune SI Ol he va Te, Jelagraph, too {Fhe HiccRssasy especially a wonderful and a power undeni- in country. But the mc Romany | ably which reads “past, . iso follows “patteran, LER the | ent Jovuce, Vet with al ye want footsteps, wagon Sacks, ends | to know." though on the Toad by Sie ethod employ. | i Remany's prototype, reading directions | be said to be to physical phenom- me stopped 8 where no words are written as clearly as | ena, Yet a Telated to ED em A ‘Gineral,” he said, the gorgio does a roadside signboard. But delightfully human, and as myst ©o' mine who took a the patteran can be read by the Gypsy Mountain, and then had his onjy—it is hidden and secret, although it| The out. 1 thought you might may be in plain sight, as a signboard is | ing the future is by the palm, though it him. and felt some one ! : 7 1 i ft 3s fi Bellefonte, Pa., August 5, 1910. seemed to hear troopers - es he [ress crashed together in the Sindy SOME UGLY LITTLE IMPS. dark ; M jeaves rushed up If you don't believe in faries, and the elves are | 1 i far as I could imagine things, and not your friends, ; A ang: with. in brownies or in | 103 0’ the way I could see only j glimpse came to the sta Lat me give JOU Just 2 could have seen great pictures in his | be : i i: g fe He g 38 sssskalgf Ii i rt 1H E51 Eff R £3 i fe : i FR » FO. 7 g gE g Egil : & i & i = { Y Of the ugly little IMPS ‘That invade to-day many happy homes. Asl was IMPolitteness is an IMP whom every child | called, the Superintendent came ato the should try to shun, office with a strange gentleman. Ben,” And older people, too, without a doubt. he said, be hard to rout out © IMPatience is another bed this kind 0’ night. : ol Who will cause you lots of bother “I'll go after ‘em like a stormin’ party,” | One day I told him: “I can see "Less you send him quickly to the right-about. | I answered. : in'ton so plain since I've been here IMPertinence and IMPudence are naughty pa Saghed. That old uncle O° yours Jou this time; don't you Sumic we you hil : i § g 528 Z feeds. § fil : i i Ea i 2s i i ; Z i od i ay such manner that only a Gyps” would in- | varied by trifli i “hand . his voice broke down a lit- geantly notice and understand. To him it | SR ~ iting Sleighi-of pesto did was to put a cigar int0 means much; first of all, the direction | no book learni ittle " ( : mi ng and little “science, his eves was out he held taken by Romany predecessors.—From | although she professes to attach some im- a Beirne Riley M. Fletcher s “The American portance to lines of heart and life. im.’ went on my frien’ Gypey™ in August Century. { For the lines and mounts Gypsies have wanted to give it into right their own explanations, which sometimes a | A Curious Nest. happen to coincide with those of the or- “The Gineral started to speak again, ! dinary gorgio palmist, but which for the I would be. rble | but he didn’t have any better luck than From “Nature and Science” in July St. Nicholas. | MOSt part are not to be found in any Their comrade I would never, never Epic isa flamin’ flags. before. ‘Have another cigar,’ he said, = Last year, early in June a beautiful pair] It is al tirel £ : One little IMP will sit astride a pencil or a pen, ) “What I want is a sight of 'em,” he ex- ' quick, like that, and with another strong ©f wood thrushes or wood robins as we | ~ most upon face-reading Whene'er there is a problem hard in view, Then] knew this gentleman to be the | plained, “so I can take it along with me shake he galloped on. often call them, began to build their nest | 20C 2 cultiva een, ready percep- ‘And draw lis mouth "Way own, General . and looked up. He [to the other boys. Maybe it ain't owin’' | “The Gineral,” he went on. lookin’ up, , in a pear tree within a few feet of the {on - © general ance istics that And whine out with a frown: Wasa stall, g man, with hair | to me; but I dunno." “was Old Grant. And I'm the last com. house and twelve feet from the ground. It | YOY er ng Shsapes very brain. The more 0’ the i = E 38 3% 8 § £ chargin’ up Lookout Mountain Nctle twina, again. Does he still think the country Aigo di. 4; ia astonish i owes Washin’ton to him?” But he And, my dear, if | were you i gs W i 3 =i Tr fin: ir ® ite : tH : il Bh x Rog gif En : | k eye : “IMFossible, IMPossible " eyes. “1 think rather | This was sure hard luck to him, and | rade to have a smoke with him. | was one of the most public places they | GUC 4 Sedo’ General Manager came back to | “Well, well," said Mr. Winslow; and could have selected—close to the door | SiTanger, ihe rest, Speech, oud manne, IMPrudence and IMPenitence and IMPulse | who saved the country,” he said, ina dry | t our house and said, | then he was perfecly still until Uncle which people were constantly using and | co = SA ieetion 4 Ine o eatufe a are three more way. “Ben, tell me what you want,” I answer- | Epic finished his cigar. Then we went within ten feet of the street with its bus- | Ha wv < on) over- (Though the latter is not always under ban;) Maybe the Superintendent saw that all | ed, “Uncle and 1 want to go to see Wash- | toward the last place of all—the Capitol. tle and noise. | count with Aimportan by a gorgio, And there are more, no doubt, this made me look ashamed—though it! in'ton.” | | “Who thinks I can't see him,” said | The nest progressed rapidly to comple: | ge 2A many. ' bed Who are hovering about wasn't for Uncle Epic. “Umph,” he said, and thought it over. uncle, lookin’ back for one second, “there tion through rain and shine. The bulk of | than Jeftgses = Bek: ti ore mare To get us into mischief if they can. “Ben's father was the man who stayed | “I've got to run down there next week,” | among his crouchin’ lions, reviewin' a it was made of course leaf stems, gras | HE CL Phe be iilia, possibly on A Of little foxes you have heard, who spoil the | Dy his engine in the ‘S' wreck,” he spoke | he went on then, “and you two can go million fightin’ men, as we clim past him and strips of bark. All were solidly fast- | Wc, "cL tal ong: 0a at Srier up, layin’ his hand on my shoulder, and | along. I'l take Alice, too: she wishes to | down the other side o' the hill ourselves? ened together with mud gathered from | WICH Torhics it. or that a a These ugly IMPS are dangerous, too, you see. r. Winslow nodded. talk over the trip you took her on. | But we leave the country safe on top of the street. But they ed from their Sch FANDS] would jot fome true. Those \ Let us aise + battle shout! “There ought to be good stuff in you,” | Well, after that maybe we didn't have | it." And Mr. Winslow did not say any- usual method of nest-building by weav-| "0 oo 0% ie “orin J abpetizing, We may put them all to rout. he said to me. Then they went over to | a rousin’ camp-fire at our house every thing. ing in a large number of strips of white; 218 AE aod Is vals Oh, what a glorious victory that would be! the dispatcher, and I started out after the | evenin’! ! We walked up the terrace and under | cloth, a foot long and about one inch wide, | |} 0 ot Fon on Re atten —By Pauline Frances Camp in July St. Nicholas. | first crew. : “We know you're tired: still you mus’ go! the great dome, where for an instant Mr. | $0 that one end was firmly fastened in| CGC" oC its of con in Srder so et HEROES. t afterflight went out in the . y . he knew. turned around, for it was Finally the inner lining of rootlets was how frto yoy. jt ho ula e — Uncle Epic would call like an old rusty | the first time he'd left us, all day, and I, finished, and the eggs, three in number, | 0 considera atmos- After Dad had stayed to shut off steam, sick people. But | bugle; and he got out his uniform. “Tve | was afraid. of a greenish-blue color, were laid. Two | Phere of skepticism which is apt to sur. the time his engine jumped the “S” was lonesomer than. ever. | patched ‘em in the evenin’ when the big | "Benny," said Uncle Epic, “I'll see no | of them were hatched and the young ound a gay party of curiosity seekers is curve, I was kind of by the rail- doctor the - | guns boomed aroun’ Chickama "he more; it's too strainin’ on the eye. birds safely raised. sin (COM Seve 1 Success in the exercise road company, and the ntendent streets, and grew afraid; | aid; “but the moths are the only things | sight Tell me, who is this marble man | A few days later another nest similar in mY oh. made me t call-boy. t it ‘was » | which have gone up-hill from the stock 0' | in front of us?” | every way was begun near by and decor- |, LH N: ortune teller is an adept Uncle Epic who gave me a home in his |" "62. Tl have to wear plain peace clo‘es.” | I hesitated, and my heart was leapin’ | ated with its ornament of strips, but the | in the art of flattery, for there are few house at the e edge o town, where, On the last Fr o sat wile ! at its strings. birds abandoned it before completion for froeptions oy thes File tha nothing La s0 tween his’ salary wished that | marchin’ orders, he was so long ‘ ’ NOWN reasons. . both to keep ae line open, Ls I began to scare. “S'posin’, Benny,” he IY Goi You smewer:” Be asp — knows how to draw out unconscious ad- The old, torn piece o’ battle-flag hung on the wall of the parlor, which was in two rooms, and one an Ly. uickly. " ei said at last—"0’ course it ain't likely, but | © “I¢'s Gineral—Gineral Jackson,” I told | Poison Ivy Should be Known by A og Dove confessions by her oft-repeat- morning Uncle Epic told me: “At the i g 2 : £3 8 2 PRESTR §e-85 82~F ee 2 g ° 7 g i g 8 aa 2 I i i i ol i g 8 g 5 : gE 3. i «ff fly Be ad s'posin’ that I can't see when I get there, ed, “Do ye on’erstan’ me?” and “Can ye and just have to roos’ around ike anold| me stood quite still, as if frozen, and Rural Visitors. ‘look me in the eyes an’ say it ‘is not only hear | hootin’ owl.” | then he gave a bitter, broken cry. nn ‘ truth I'm a-tellin’ you? he forces the he'd feel| Iwas a deal troubled over one | “Benny, it is the head o' Lincoln; I can | An excellent service would be done for | acknowledgment of truths at which she thing already, and thie made, it his om i feel the look on his face. Why did you Jatin hi fhe deadly Joison 9 could | pi giready Saws Susser, ag such away from ‘em and marched on; and | I'd always tried to imagine that I was | “Why, you can't help but see," told him. | say Gineral Jackson?” I heard him come | D€ EXPYREEC [TOW Or TOF, a accord- | wv fa away up one side o' the hill they clim | a kind of sentry, callin’ out soldiers who Well, sposin' I can't; do you think | on me, fumblin'_ with his stick. “You | ing to the opinion of a nature lover, who | Which her ‘knowledge grows from more down on the other—" were to see that the night went well for | You could tell me everything, just exac’ly | traitor,” he whispered; “you've told me declares that he is poisoned every time ih Te. e can, for instance, recog- 1 ashamed to find myself | the nation. But now I felt that nobody | as it is? [can't stan’ for any mistakes, | jies; lies, before Old Grant and Lincoln. his manual of botany opens at thus toxi- | Wise Bt 8 glance the tokens of sadness to in’, with this history bein’ told, but | cared whether it did or not, and almost | You know, ‘cause these is matter o' his-| “J wanted you to see the partic'lars; I condendron, the extermination of this W ch the casual observer is blind, and it seemed like I'd walked a hundred miles | surrounded the whole thing. Sleet began | tory and I've got to take ‘em song" | did the best { could,” I cried to him, and | Poisom plant would not be difficult. He | stalls Samp & rom the night before, callin’ out train crews; | to patteron the panes o' houses, and I| Tl tell ‘em exac'ly," I a . then hid my face against Mr. Winslow's | Suggested that some one ought to take a SOO WW WISTEE OR OF eae and I thought I conld see Uncle Epic |! behind time, like a blind man who | “Well, then I guess I can smoke there | arm, bunch of the poisonous stuff to Harris- | 200 © i dy disappoleent; the under the with a lanter in his hand, n't a single picture to remember or | just the same,” and he put the Gineral's| “Ben told you truly,” he said, quietly, burg when the Legislature is in session | a are at the Gypsy will make the havin’ a battle to get the men o Number hope for. | cigar into his tbag. “everything as he has seen it.” and inoculate every member of that ier te er without being aware of Sixteen out o’ bed at two in the mornin’. fter makin’ the last round at daybreak e next mornin’ Mr. Winslow called | "Uncle Epic thought a long time, and I body with it. If the stuff “took" he offer- | re one oa h id He thumped his cane on the floor like | I went home and shook the ice off my for us himself, and in an hour we'd start- | felt the breath goin’ out o’ my body; then | €d to wager that inside of an hour the | . a rule, as I have said, she flatters cannon-shot. “You'd sit and go to sleep | coat by the kitchen stove. “Yes, yes; it’s ed for Washin'ton in a private car. softly he felt my bandaged eyes under legislative body would have a bill on the | with brave promises of fair future, but if if Old Grant was tellin’ you about the | all cheerful and light to you," went on “I'd just as lieve,” said Uncle Epic; | the hat brim. way to the Governor making it a 1 y Sispl eased she may so threaten with the battle o’ Lookout Mountain,” he said. Uncle Epic, "and you oughtn’t to mind | “though I wasn’ a private when I quit.” | = “] wondered that you saw the pictures offence to harbor a single sprig of the | bi, Jv Sompelfing. dramatic ui o “You just tell about it and see," 1 an- | sleet and storm any more than we boys| The General Manager said “Umph” | so plain lately,” he said, in a brave, clear | PO1Sonous stuff on a man's premises. | WICH SA® 18 COMP ete nt at t swered, and did, till I was wide | did at Donelson.” again, which worried and hurt me, too. | tone, as if proud o' somethin’; “but I was | The thing that does the work is a ) imagination stan g ; ig gE : ; I 8 g E : ? : g : awake. My teeth chattered so I couldn't an- | For he seemed to have got us mixed up, | only jokin’; why, I can see plain enough | volatile oil secreted by the leaf. It is in- | out before the “doomed” hearer with the he > hind : ! real effect of a curse.—~From Riley M. ain't any these days like | swer, but I thought o’ that General Mar- and while treatin’ me as kind as possible, | for both of us, and, Benny, our pictures | soluble in water, but completely soluble | Ten ‘es ; " nena '62.” he poi ager who didn’t take much stock in he- | he didn’t take any stock in Uncle Ryic were all true; I can take 'em along with- | in alcohol and ether. This latter fact, Fletcher Burty's “The American Gypsy ; blue tof " For | roes that had fought over forts thro And it was the same when we to | out changin'—" offers a possible means of escape to those | rd Pe at with ut i in August Cenfur. to live : | storms of ice. “I bet he ain't even a Un- | Washin’ton in the evenin’ and went to| His voice died away, and Mr. Winslow | who are willing to guard against innocu- ————— rea men like George Washin'ton and ion man,” I thought, and then asked Un- the hotel. sip ke as softly as if we were in a church: | lation by taking the necessary means of | Mourners in Jerusalem. d Grant; but they'd uone about every- | Se Epic Whether the country was goin’ th Thete ne oe She yin Song 3 i to lok o ‘em, u0-forever~- prevention. | — thing there was to do for their country, | down hill. ne | " 1 the same sight as you and Ben.” Upon returning home from the woods | 1 5 in ; leavin’ us nothin’ but to stand still and | “Its goin’ down along with the old | didn't take much dinner. Instead, he | His arm wasover my shoulders, and 1} the Bards and lane should be immediate. | oii phan Bagi oy look back. stock,” he said. Then he went into his. | was strainin’ his eyes in Sve direction. | felt him draw the old soldier toward us.||y bathed in a mixture of three parts al- increases its grip upon you day by day, «If anything good turned up, don't you | tory, while I drank some coffee and went | “I dun'no’, but I believe Tm goin’ to| “Ben may see again; But I' claim him | cohol to one part ether and the exposed waking up the intellect, stirring the fac: think we'd march out to battle in ar- | to sleep and woke, by turns. But history | make it." he w ispered. “Ain't that a! whether he does or not,” he said; and | parts of the body should then be washed | ulties to an almost untiring activitiy—an mies?" 1 asked. now seemed dead and distant, I couldn't | gentleman over yonder, with a full beard, | Uncle Epic; I understan’ now; 1 wish— | with some good strong soap. With ordi- | activity that perhaps becomes feverish oy ight march a little.” answered | see Hs, Piitures Jy. Hore, = once I gna stock, and 2. long coat with em- | oh, ou ust know how] feel about it— | nary exposure to poison ivy washing with | at the feverish time of Easter. In Jeru- ncle Epic; then he t his way out | drea n't have any country. x won't you just have another cigar?” I was d wat bb: ith hol | * o doors wih his stick, for he would ever Two days crawled by like this, and | I laid myhand on the General Mana, flag to hear this; but gladdest of all for Soap and water and rubbing with alcohol | salem surely the most sleepy mind must , r- y 1? ether will effectually ward off an! i sight over a gun no more. Under the | Uncle Fpic seemed to be gettin’ on very gers for a second. "Well, if it ain't! y wake, the most phlegmatic temperament r. Winslow. attack of poisoning, but the safe way is to ipped ndow 1 heard him stop and sigh, and | porely; talkin’ less and less. I knew he | I answered. We stood still a minute, listenin’ to | give the stuff a witje berth at all Bes | a DE Hg : .s “ " ‘ , flict seems in the air, a turmoil proceed- though I got the war book down on the | spent his time just seein’ things, and | “Ha!” he said, “you won't have much | footsteps’ die away along the corridors. i : : RE ovis 1 couldn't | when on that last evenin’ he sat almost | to tell me about Washin'ton tomorrow.” | Little Alice took hold o' my hand, and GLvety chlld who oe Ie the ay i ihg Father from he Sols than from fhe forget that sigh. For I understond what | still I was pretty well scared. “I must be careful and not strain my | heard Uncle Epic say to Mr. Winslow: | 5 ou Srv OW 1 oy i5%, Dogon J il day af : d on rE he was dreamin’ of, and seein’ in his, I believe he felt that I didn’t take inter- | eyes, or I'll be seein’ things before Icome | “Stock 0’ "62." ivy vine and be impressed with the wis. oS va) ay hier shod I ey weep for blind way—the Hero City, with its mar- | est in the war news any more, and since | t0 em,” he told me after supper, and, | And I was proud, and ashamed, too, to Goth Of, keepilig away Irom The so- Yan pig ND Gg ena bles and woods, and the great dome o' | I'd come to understand that even Gener- | bein’ tired, we went to bed. .. | have so much said o' me, before the face | ; yt CTSNET | NUCH else 10 weep for Jn the Gly athe the Capitol shinin’ under the windy |al Managers didn't care about their coun- “] can see already that it's a fine day," | o’ Lincoln, in the house of the old flag— | 15,2 Perfectly harmless pant whicdis =o f Pe h ity y flags. | ager di tr Then what's the | said Uncle Epic the next momin'. “Now, | By Calvin Johnston, in Harper's Monthly | Siten mistaken for the poison vine. | S000 Hot Mosims Keep the gate. of “If I could take him there once again,” | use of only asmall boy standin’ by it?” So | let's start for the moniment.” i They are both found in similar peace, where ems keep the gate of t ) agazine. : : i | th : : o 1 thought, for it's hard luck to have such | in spite o' myself I was a deserter from : Wa walked vrolgh athe. sovesel ith - . Sitaatione and use: | put he lier i | the Holy) Sepulcher, and Turkish soldiers a place built by the country, when the | the old man’s thoughts. [eS Ll Ne ome 1 ai huenp From Smithy to State House. son quickly and to prevent its spreading | furious passions of Christians. country is your own savin's and then not | I remember, one mornin I was comin te a Re ig og Sg —— is ana the affected parts with linen or | From the Russians who weep in Geth- i | a Epic in Wash a Jost Cian Tip ig “Sei, it ain't a a Strang 10 oer to the | , About thie Jest Jute Sukh figure in cotton rags saturated with peroxide of Jemane one ay igo down into the city , , 4 : i Colorado today is y Kenehan, | h ; | to ews who w in their wailing- in'ton, and wonder why he ain't been | o’ the depot. The engine had just made | top, this way. How, how high would YOU | erstwhile ith and today State Au- a like all outdoors for a while, Place. Itis strange and interesting 0 there,” I thought, and was ashamed I was | a flyin’ switch far up the and a int y ko had as ditor, and Alice Rohe has a vastly inter- |, (HHS fee 8° OWES or an | compare the two griefs. Nothing in the too pore to take him. Then I fell asleep | freigbt-car comin’ down at that minute, r. ow, who me by the arm, | Joe: of this unique character in | ou "peP0 an ou ie bandages S| Holy Land touched me so much as the 3 esting on the war book and dreamed © heroes | I boarded it in front by grabbin’ the | started to answer, but uncle whispered ; quarrellin’ with bayonets, in a dim way, | brake rod and settin’ both feet on the | to me: "I'd rather have you tell me what Human Life for August. i simple fai the d reverence, the but I couldn’tdo aswell even when asleep | beam. The car was runnin’ very slow | I can't see for myself. We history folks No man ever entered a State office effectually killed. When the land owners | 3TP th, eep reve P . unite to eradicate the miserable poison | heartfelt love and sorrow, of the Russian ; " ith a greater handicap than did Roady : | pilgrims. Totally free from self-con- : have got to work together. wy | ivy from the countryside it will be a Ei eS ions | Dad 1 feug RANID 10 3, SDOY Hi ew | “Way up; about two hundred feet,” I | Kenehan, and certain other officials look | happy day for those who love the woods | sciousness, like children, they show al colors, which was wonderful for a blind | the wheels, when suddenly I heard a soft | told him. SoOrA Spon and the fields, but dread to go out for | the feelings of their hearts. In all the a Was 0 eh ; y “That's what I've always told 'em,” he | Shoer- But he immediately proceeded to | goa of pei poisoned holy places they kiss the ground. Wher- man; but mine just crumbled away into | cry behind me. : : and 1 high iy the | Show the people of the State a few things = JouN HENRY Frome. | ever they think the Savior suffered or smoke, and when I woke it was too late | As I turned my head | saw a fete gin Fhswered; an hh a that keen wit and intelligence could ac- ESE. | was sad, they v today, men and wom- tory dram em over again. | sand’ quite sil in the cence © the | Whi Noung, where he Sq | compih without ecaton, TOM | gun mesute Shown tna Test with | 0, ks, The Jews are prover, are field instead of the kitchen floor: for the ward me, and o' course I caught as tight | tear down those darky cabins in the BR , to wield Dura, Gray Perch. {ote self co yet time I vis- northwest wind,all coated with leaves had | a hold of her as I could get. “But my feet | groun’s. Am I right, Benny?” with telli ect, observing the rule of | Even the fishes of the sea have plc- item eir wailing I felt that their begun to prowl like the wolf at the door | slipped, and instead of liftin’ her up, I} “Yes,” Ranawarel; *It's a ‘shame to Donnybrook Fair— "Wherever you see a | tures on memory’s wall. Experiments va hn Here 5. Jess touching durin’ the fall evenin’s, and blew his cold | sprawled on the track beside her. nT Te, ain't used to seein’ it head, hit it,"—onl thE rate Cr Roady | have been made with several fishes | The wailing-place is a rather narrow breath thyough the crack. il y iu Ihe beaiea ham Souchen ny fost, and all at © Toes ed, “so you go was after the shoulders of graft- | oo +0 their faculties for remembering, | Paved alley between a whitewashed wall a ‘Epic 3 Stam Yor mnt 1 ve vf of the little girl if | ahead and give me Tos: urs Brent and pi he swatted them | ho most striking results have been | Snel a piantic ancient al Sormed of the table for su hich he could cook | I'd wanted to, for I tell you I was stiff Then told him it was all like one of | “yrg investigations revealed | Obtained with the gray perch, which J a TE Ta: Weeds as well as a seein’ man; “then me and | all over—my fingers holdin’ to her like Beiown picires; with he diver Shiny an astonishing state of affairs. The Steel | lives chiefly on small silvery hued |gprout in places in numerous crevic- the boys marchion and on, with he fag 2 TO AAW, rr barely mov. wig phe dged Li Ly Trust and Standard Oil were among the | sardines. Some of these were taken | es and cracks. In the alley are wooden 1 the skies there is like one. great flag | that T was scratchin’ over the ties and | and the great dome o' the Capitol soarin’ ea Ter. ool |aut wlored fed 5d Sore UE UE FE ir Broo broks out; | just knew 1 d see that Siders, tryin to hold my head up, and Big rer the iY flags?” resultant graft scandals that ed the | with several silver colored sardines. | the days of the week. Standing in rows city again if I was ever led to it. But I'm thinkin’ a lot of anothercar just ahead. “Yes, with the windy flags.” public, and officials who ha joy- Of course the ovmal sardines were at ; close to the t wall, with their faces marchin’ on fast, and it "ll soon be left far | I heard the town clock strike, the little | iT TY en all” he | iding for years at the public expense h 1 t | foward it and almost "touching it, they behin’ to old Comrade Epic.” | girl's Aress tore; then I got a rap across Sure ’ h suddenly found their junketings cut short. | Once seized and eaten, but it was not | ...4 their. Hebrew books of prayer, mur- He found | was awake mow, and with Sivg oreliéad) from the brake bea of the sad. wandered: ‘around ull altepnoon, Tl show the Pople of the State that aut hmngey Fuat the perch Suge 2 | mur the words aloud, weep, , some- one last word mself : ahead. : : 'm on iob, declares, unmindful ve mea one of the - | times almost to earth, and often but Id turn ‘round square in the face o' | Well, it's « wonder | wasn telescoped; | 15, 5, {Toe ain't changed” much.” | Of he anvil chorus of protests from red victims, es her tis fervently agninet_ ihe it; in og rdine flavor, ' blocks of stone. women wear oie they can make the most | second. ‘So it came out all right, | ES 0 "helo" the. Capitol; “Te been Ro out Bower, he promptly demolish od the | 307 esp by, So ee at the ends of ’ a are . alley. men in the mid- As I couldn’t comfort him any, I did- | when I got over it; 2rd 3 un It voila be the recognize beneath his rough exterior that | Femainder. Later the PED dev thus | dle. Behind these rs aed Bt Jet him know he'd heen eaves </ropped, there, and so was his little girl, who RIE he od connade to talk over: Look: noblest work of God, an honest man, and | the sardines irrespective of color, thus | njogiem conducted by a Jew, often goes and we ate supper without talkin’. kept tight hold o’ my pe tain.” the Soughty blacksmith’s name is men- | Showing not only traces of & memory, | ¢, and fro demanding alms from the on- it was dusk, and i out Mountain. but also the power to differentiate lookers. The wailing place is in the Ty- an i color. ropeon Valley, e great wall is at veille on the window The General in oY | veiled.” comrade Subsequently sardines colored red | the west side of the temple area. Where- nos revellle fo ioe and blue were placed in the tank to- as the Rustian pilstims Reve: even glance t is the railroad gether with the silver ones. The same | At those who watsh their tears—such at A scene was repeated, the blue sardines EE es It was black not being attacked until the others igi m creates. 1 have seen but ©’ course he were eaten and hunger compelled 1n- | them peep round to take obser- ence; I guess vestigation of the newcomers. After | vations, and return to their lamentations and erou rr this introduction the perch ate the sar- | with what seemed a greater zest when I couldn't leave i and dines of all three types without any | they knew the eyes of strangers were last did somethin’ difficulty. ¥pan them. Nevertheless, many of them 1 the Gineral ; eggs weep, earnestness J brought its case in the front | this, and lay still; then the doctor ig by than anything else; he gave me the cigar i of $5 for each violation. Some Spiues vol ogee Ti rock themselves to and fro as if genuine for aad said, “Take a whiff 0° thin in to look me over. himself. —While a mule costs less for keep and | ppege were at once avoided by the ae he ew ivi He sat still a minute and then answer-| The railroad company gave me alay-| “The same cigar," I said. will do an immense amount of work, it bh, which promptly got out of the | about S32 fe ihings 1, people ed: “Benny, you oughtn't to tempt me. | Off, and I stayed around ‘the house with “Umph; Umph,” said Mr. Winslow; must not be forgotten that the brood | POTeh. TF) © nes. This showell | =Fom Robert Ho iam *Tain’t been over since I | my head up ina rag to please the | and after uncle had lit the and sat | mare will also do a great deal of work | W&Y neweo IA . smoked the other one. T'll whiff on | doctor, and durin’ those few days how | down on the steps o’ the ent for a | and raise a colt every two years besides. traces of memory, as the results of August it aminuts, though! won't light it til 'm Uncle Epic and I did go into history! quiet smoke, Mr. burst out, as | The mule’s usefulness is confined to his contact with the sea nettle were shown in Washin'ton.” “1 allow that bein’ slid along the track | if he tried not to say it: work. and recognized.—Chicago Tribune. | _gybscribe for the WATCHMAN. ‘
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers