Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, March 15, 1883, Image 6

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    She Crnttf Amount.
fiO
DELLEFONTE, PA
< For Cotre 1CIDIK rat.)
Communication.
DEAR EDITOR: —The cold and live
ly snowing changed my mind in regard
to starting for Philadelphia, notwith
standing my satchel is packed. Hav
ing no dental appointments I shall
follow the article on grape pruning by
telling what shall be done with the
prunings. It is a pity to waste thetu
as each bin! under favorable circum
stances may produce a vine that will
yield comfort and food to the yearning
appetite. Grapes may be kept as
easily as apple* for winter use, too.
and what a comfort it would yield to
set out to entertain yourself and
friends in the long winter evenings
than a plate of luscious grapes. N<
farmer should have less than an ncn
of them, ami no garden need be with
out a liberal upply. No one cat
conceive bow many grapes a l'imil*
will consume when i: b - free access
to full vines. And when filled ti|
with good healthy grapes other food
is in proportion not needed. Grapes,
unlike other vegetables, may be raised
high up out of the way. Sunshine
and air are requisite. The south side
of buildings may as well be utilized
with trellises either bracket or pole*.
Grapes do not readily consent to j
divide the fertility of the soil with j
weeds. They may Ire planted to trees
to climb on but should be awav from
the trunk and trained up to a limb.
Only * single vine must then prow
from the root as it will be more vigor
ous and reach the limb sooner.
Branched piles will guide the vine up
and will also serve for trellis three or
four years.
The common way of preparing eut- |
tings is to take well ripened vines and i
cut into pieces, leaving a bud at each j
end. Those may lie kept in moist
gr< urn! not wet till planting time.
For out door planting the ground ;
should be dug deeply and trenched I
two fact apart, ami the cuttings la d j
-lanting with the upper bud level with ;
the top earth when covered. The
slope allows the roots to have the
b nefit of being nearer the surface
The slop- should IK- about as great a
sloping penmanship. If the rutting;
is buried to the upper bud it has th> ;
benefit of more moisture nnd grow- ]
better. The top starts long be ore th.
roots and strong <uu.hino will often
kill. To be suro of growth it is weil
to shade them some. I use hemlock j
branches. The shade must not be t<*.
dense; hemlock does not shade dense
ly. As quick as the ground can b<
well worked in the spring, the cutting
may be set. To tboie wishing to
hurry them a box holding six or sev n
inches of dirt may IM? planted now.
One bud nnd three to six inches ol
vine is sufficient, stick them in -lam
ing, too, and about three or four iuches
apart. Keep .hem well watered ami
the sun must not shine on them, th<
leaves will be killed right off*. They
may be planted out when the fros:
season is over and shades! with hem
lock. Delaware* and other varieties
yielded a nice little crop to me last
spring that had the box culture. These
were rootless one eye cuttings only
three years before.
Cuttings may bo stuck into the
edges of a fiuished planted garden bed
Those that grow are clear gain as the
cuttings are thus saved wasting. These
may, if not wanted,he given to friends,
and they will think of the doner every
time they eat the grapes.
When more than one vino starts
from the cutting all but one should bo
nipped off, one vine is about all that
will thrive and mature well by fall.
C'arboodale is located a good deal
further north than liellefonte, yet on
account of loss altitude the climate is
milder. It is 1000 feet above ocean
level. Centre county is stuck up the
sides of the Alleghenies too far to
raise grap-s easily. Here no laying
down and covering of the vines is
needed.
I forgot to say that in dry season*
the cuttings need copious watering.
The Concord is recommended as the
roost popular grape, but it is not a
keeper for winter use. For our
climate for early, Moore's Early. It
is said to be as good as the Coucord
and ripens three weeks earlier. The
Frentiss is said to stand fifteen degrees
Itelow zero without injury and it is a
keeper for winter. It is a yellowish
fruit and when ripe does not look su
|to the nocturnal fruit gatherer. My
; pet is the Brighton. It ripens about
the same time as Concord, is as sweet
as the Delaware with au additional
vinous flavor. Its color is red, when
I fully ripe nearly black. For 25 cents
i "Green's Fruit Grower," a quarterly
publication from Rochester, N. V.,
may be read a whole year. The April
1 number will now soon he issued. Semi
and get it, you will not he sorry.
Very truly vours,
.JOHN I). WINOATE.
TIIE TAIUFF.
SPEECH
HON. A. G. CURTiN,
OR I- K.N NSVI.V A N I A.
I.N TIIK IIOI'SE or ITZRATSKNTATIVKS,
•Saturday, March, 3, I 863.
On th* Mil (II R. .V >) t< iutrrnnl
It LL.LTD It.
r. CntTlN said :
Mr. SPEAKER : It it were uot for
the reduction of the internal-icveiiue
iixatiot. this hill would not receive
lioseri tus consideration of this Ilou-e.
I had the honor ut the last see-ion
it' Congress to address myself to the
House when the hill was on passage
•or ihe reduction of internal revenue
417,000,000, and to say at ilint time
• hut I was the advoeate of the entire
abolition of internal taxation and the
discharge of the public officers who
are engagid in its collection, except
the taxation on whi.-ky, distil Its I
spirits, and tobacco, and whatever rc
i ve: ucs were necessary in that way
; -hould he collected u- the < rdiuarv
(axes are and by processes to which
the people of this country arc actus
1 turned, and thus he relieved of the
I espionage and inducement to fraud
which surround allot the law- now in
existence in the collection ot such
revenue.
Ibis hill makes a much larger re
duction. hut does not in that respect
approach the expectations of the peo
ple, hut it i- no doubt *ho inducement
t" the pt<n*ge ot the hill m h-t hu-te
mil without the consideration due I •
a measure of such importance and
magnitude. It i the sugar-coating to
the pill more than one member ha
deelaied nauseous ami hard to -wallow .
I will refer especially to that part • •('
the hill which treat- of iron in which
charcoal is used a- fuel ami a- found
m the metal schedule, ami leave the
examination of other items to the |>co
pie o| Pennsylvania. That part of
the schedule in the Hou-e hill, which
was abandoned, gave comparatively
just protection to that production of
Viiierieau imlu-ti v, capital and labor
It was provided that a dutv of a
ton should he laid upon iron in which
charcoal was used a* fuel, and it fe I
• i tier the clause in that 101 l which
provided that in no #-v nt should the
fitly fie less than 35 |sr cent, ad va
oretn. It was further provided in
hat hill where two or im<r> laic- of
Inliea shall he npplo able to one no
ported article it -hull lie da--die I lor
lu y under the h glicst of such rates.
Ihe citiz-lis who were in Washing
on representing the chart out iron in
rest find r> | uted interviews with
• aiding Senators during the consider*-
ion of this hill through that body
I hey found in the Senator from
Michigan and in tin- senior Senator
ironi l'eim-vlvania enlightened and
zealous advoeatisof a jut protection
io their industry. The S nntc hill a
t PASSED that I* M|V provided that on
ill iron tnaiiufaciured with charcoal
is fuel more advanced in inauufui'turt'
hail pig there shall be imposed aduti
••I $3 a ton more titan on the same
manufactured with other fuel, ami
iliat II iron in slab*. hliMinis, loop-, or j
•iher forma more advanced then pig
ron shall not pay a less iluiy than do
|er cent, ad valorem, ami then pro
vided that on iron in which charcoal
is used as fuel further advanced than
pig there shall IN- 83 additional to iron
manufactured with other lucl. That
was all that was asked, ami to such
moderate demand the Senate acceded.
In the report of the conference com
in it tee, the provision that there *hul<l
lie an additional duty of $.! jer ton on
iron manufactured with charcoal as
fuel is stricken out of the S natc hill
in the hill a- reported by the confer
ence the provision that all irons more
advanced than pig except castings
were to be rated as iron without any
reference to the fuel used and to pay
a duty accordingly, ami that none of
the above shall pay a less rate of duty
than 35 jwr cent, ad valorem precede*
the duty of 122 per ton a-settled ii|M>n
iron manufactured with charcoal as
fuel, as will he found on page 29, line*
562, 563 and 664, and can not be an
plicable to charcoal iron. In line 549
iron lee* than one inch wide the duty
is eight-tenths of 1 per cent pcrpoutid,
but to line 553 iron not less than three
fourth* of one inch square, 1 cent per
pound ; and in linn SoH iron I ** than
seven-sixteenth* of one ioch in diame
ter or less than one inch square 1.1
cent* per pound. On the firt the
duty would be 817 92 jier ton ; on the
second $22 45, and on the third 826 76
A portion of them as provided in line
5 .2 shall pay ales* rate of duty than
35 jer cent, ml valorem, that saving
clause not being applicable to irou
where charcoal i used as fuel. The
Psenale bill as it pium.-d that body gave
to iron manufactured with charinwl a*
fuel an additional protecti HI ol 83 |K*R
mil ami the lieiieffi of the 35 |s-r cent,
ad valorem clause, which the conferee*
on the part of the House have aban
doned.
In line number 075 it will he
noticed that iron roils lens than seven
j sixteenth* of an inch in diamuter whitll
'pay u duty I 2 per pound, and the
duty would therefore he #2<i MH per
ton. Tliua it will he noticed that
charcoal iron, the most expensive to
make and which command* the high
e*i price in the m rker.the line-i kind
of ir-Hi manufactured in the United
'States—the pioneer iron business, and
the cost of making which is nine
tenths labor, is denied the ju*t protec
tion which is only nked in the differ
j i nee 11 Ihe price of labor here and in
the foreign countries where it i# pro
; dueed. It only asks the protection
j wlii.-h meeta the difference in the
wages of liiiior in this eoimlry and
I' lirope, It does not uk that there
shall he duty to prohibit importation,
but it does ask, and ill justice, that it
: should have a protection ad< ipiatc to
the price of production and let com
! petition lessen the pi ice to the eoh
j MI titer, no matter whether that coupe
! tit ion is in home or foreign producii ai.
This interest is largely diversified in
this country. Charcoal iron i- pro
• lured ill many of the States. It is
j not monopolized ;it is n>>t coin rolled
j hv large capital centralis. d or shielded
I by incorporated privileges.
The American eili/.-ns engaged in
j this business only ask a just tax and a
I tair protection to their industry, and
i in this hill now pending before thi*
House instead of pr lection tin-re
I weiiw to he a disposition to have that
j interest, its Usi-tiilm-ss, its employ men'
j of luh><r it) addition to its wealth and
power in this country to the ien.hr
' mercies of the interest* which I lear
: have controlled thi* revenue measure
| in all the stages of its progress through
Congress.
There are other interests ~t' |Vnn
-vlvauia which, in my judgment, are
• ell proper! v protected in this hill,and
I ii i- to lie hoped that inasmuch us the
eounirv has been waiting in xpeeia
lion oi * me measure ot relief, that
tin-inter, st | now advocate may strug
gle through I'll* coming -aoii and
that the next Congress will correct the
neglect of their interest* in this In i
and provide for them a fair and rea
sonable protection. In justie. to mv
constituent*, in jtt*li--e to liie charcoal
inter' -t of niv State and "I other
State* of this Uni m. I protest ugaio-i
the iiiji|slie<* thi" bill doe* tff-ni. I
would he unworthy to he their lb-pn
■Kiitativr if 1 reiuain.sl "ili-nl when I
see, through ignorance or design, siieli
a heavy blow -tin. k at tie u interest
and the pm-|M ritv ot lie bx-ii 1 itie- in
which charcoal-iron is a staple pro
•luelioti.
The Senate hill, although the dulv
oil chare al ir>.u i- reduced b. !..w the
rao-s of the existing tariff, s. cnt-d lo
la- jus! mnidering the general re lie
lion, and with it lie -, engage.| HI lie
business were -ai-li-d ; Inn when i
•sinlernie.- eoiuniiio • r> |H*rti l I i this
House tie- lull under deration
and virtually p'a< •• tni- production
In |..w ihe rat ->d protection g veil to
the i-narser ami cheaper •potlMi l -" ot
iron it i" i ot si range tle-v should cm
plain of such uni.i"l and uowi*edi"
eriuiiealion. or that meinlwrs of thi-
IHSIV should he-iiaie lo tail into nov
• ■nil liiiHiiott ot other interest" a* to d>
as, | i.llls injury !•> a large and u*• fnl
husiii's.-. IV-nnsylvauia is not iff
only Slate to -uff-r in i oil-' •pl-lire of
ihis legislation. Nearer the market*
•>f iho country, longer ami m<>re -killed
in the hu-ilo—*. le-r people engaged in
it may survive wloit in my judgment
may prove a calamity in other Stan*
where the business i" now nmredistant
from luaikda and l.~* otidcfwiood.
1 h ve said that nine tenths of the
prisluetiou of eha <• >al iron i" I im>r.
The ingenuity which ha* so reduced
c.*t ot production ot inferior ipialiio-s
ot iron by manhiti. ry ha" mil reached
this production, which is a neceioiiv
It i* pri ductal now by the same pr -
ceases a it was when our raw man-rial
was utilized wilh scarcely a change or
material reduction ot the manual labor
employed in it, and I only a*k for this
iuteri'st an equalization of the laff.r
here and in foreign countries where it
i* produced. Iron is one great staple
production in IVoiisylvania, and n*
our capabilities do not approach those
of other States, the ek • 1 1 and enter
prise of our people should excite ad
miration and challenge to the |H.int of
coni|ietiiion at home, instead of pro
voking the manifest injustice which 1
attempt to demonstrate from the pro
visions of this hill. I stand by the
truth of rny statement* and believe in
the logic of my conclusions, ami await
ing results can not but feel that my
position will meet the approbation of
my constituents.
The Emperor's Bottons
As King aud Kmpcmr alike, for
many JVHIS past, William I. has not
appeared in public except while uiider
going hi* annual water-cure at Hast, in
and Krns, drewed ill civil drew*. He
invariably wears uniform at home,
even when writing letter* in In* study,
which overlooked the Linden avenue,
Berlin's • hief militarv wild fashiona
ble thoroughfare. While actually
silling al hi* writing table lie is no
customed to loosen three or four of lire
upper hultoua of his double l<rea*ie<i
tunic, and to turn Imek its lap. I*.
Whenever, however, a h-sly of tr<sqw,
small or large, is heard approaehing
the palace, he rises from hw sea',
hastily bullous up his uniform to the
' throat, aud adjusts his cross of the
"Ordre pour le Merite," in audi sort
that it hangs down over the coat collar
exactly under hi* chili. This opera
lion, which long practice enables him
to perform in n few second*,concluded,
I In- walk* lo hi* window, and stand-.
! there in full view of hi* soldier* while
th.-y ma eh past. One day an exalted
pelsoiiagc, who hap|M'tiei| to lie ill c ll
ver*Hiioii Willi the Kmpernr when the
sound ot .listiint drum* ami lib-* lim
ing aoiiouni-eil tlie approach o "f iraod
(ioaril-," lli* M j.-iy hurriedly w-> m
through ilie above described "rapid
a< t, took heart of graeo and iiskcd
the K i-er why lie was so | articular
ahoui hut toiling the top I uitnn ot his
uniform In-ture showing liiitisell to lo*
guard*, "who, after all," added Prince
| . "enjoy almost daily an opporiu
lllty ot seeing Ymtr Majesty lace lo
lace. I should have thought, Sir--,
that von would have seureely deemeil
; it necessary lo stand upon ccrciu'-ny
with them." "That i* not the one—
! lion at all," replied the Kai-i r. 'A*
the head of the army, I am hound to
show my soldiers an irreproachable
example in the way of teuiie. They
: have never seen me with mv enat un
buttoned, ami I do not intend tff-y
ev> r shall. For, let me tell von, it i-
I lie one hot ton left unbuttoned thai i
the ruin of an army !"
Ancient Ruins in Sonora, Mexico.
jT. .. AO, .... I-.11/ n.
A orient ruin* have recently IMVII
discovered 111 Solera which, if re|mrt*
;ire true, stirpas iiuyihing of the kind
vet found 11 ibi* continent. The ru
in* nit- -aid t > lie abont four league*
-ooih'-a-t of M .g.luVou Ilure i- one
pyramid which ha* a lia*e of l.v'ip
t.-et, and r : *c* lo the li<-ight ol 7ln
feet ; ilu-re i a winding roadway from
the bottom leading up on nil ea-y
grad- to itn top. yyi.il- enough lor ear
ri:<gi-" 1,, (.a-- in. r, which i* said to lie
twenty thiei mih- m length; llu- ■ ut
er walls l the r- :dw iv are laid ii.
- ■lid ma- >nrv from huge block* of
graiiili- in rubble work, and the ci -
• le- are a- uniform an I the grade n
r.-gular a- th-v c> i I h made al tl i
■ l.ir • t.v -air ff-*t eogiin-r-. The wall,
h w.-y.-r, i* •>• -a-i .nallv <-xp"-'-d. be
ing covered over wi'ii d.-hri- nnd
• arib ; and in mnnv place* tin -a). ..r .
.ind otln-r in iigeiioiis plants and tre
have gr wn up, giving the pyramid
the n| |o irnio-i ot u iu"Uutai.i I >
t:i .-.i-t of the pyranni a -h -ri d>-
lanee i- a sinnil iiiouutH.il ao-uit the
-arm-*i/ ,whe|i ri- - lo al*>ut tin
"Bine height, and, it report" are true
\yill prove more interesting to tin
ar. - ,|,.g,st than the pyramid.
Th.-re 11* in be a heavy la\r of
it -p. <a ~ of gyp-oni. about hail way
up tin mountain, which i a* white ti*
-tuny.and mav i .-cut into any omieeiv
able shn|u-. \el stllfi- ielitly haid to
iviaio ii* shape all. r l nig cut in
'l.i- layer ot *"onc a pisipl. of an no
knoyttiage have cut lumdr<*l- ii|*ui
lion Iri-.l- .1 to . a-, tr-.-u '• l'l to lli or
1* Pet -.j.mre. I'ln—- r i- are cut
•iit ot lli.. so|nl -I an, ;in I i even and
true are tin- wall-, tl • r and ceiling lo
plumb and I vi la* (-• d tv variaiioii.
Ilu r-are II • win low- in llu- ro-on
•od Inn on* eoiraiM-.*, which i* alwav-
Irolll 'he lop. i lie r-> Oil* lire illloill
•ughi Let high fro o l! ->r !<• <-• iliug ;
ihe "lone i- - > while thai it -•* in* al
in .-t Iraii-pari ul. and the r . un* ar--
not all dark. Ihi tin- yva!|* ol 110-.-
II* nr. nuin r..u* Inerolvphi. and
r- pre- utat'O i- • I human form-, wi h
liaiid* inn) t"ei of human l>< ing* cut
111 I (it- stone in different place*
Ibit strange to *HV, all llu haul"
have five finger- and one thumb, and
Ihe feel have ix I <••. Charcoal I
found oil the tl sir* of many of ilu
rooin* which would imlieaie that lln v
I• 11111 tire* in their houe*. Stone ini
plemeiit* of every dwriplion are to
•w touml in gieat nunihera in ami
ah.rut the room*, ihe h-.u-e* or room*
are one aleive the other to thr-e or
more storie* high ; hut lietw-eeii • aeli
story there i* a jog or the full
width of the risen below, so that they
preseni the ap|e-aruiiee ol large *trp<
leading up the mountain. Who
these people were, and what age iffy
lived MI uui*t Im answered, it answered
al all, hv the "wi*e men of the Jla-i."
Sime say they were the ancestors of
ihe Mavos, n race of Indians who "till
inhabit Suit hern Sir-ri, who have
•due eye*, fair "km nod light hair.and
are said to IM- a moral, indiisirioii* and
frugal race of people, who have a
written language and know sotneihing
of mathematics.
Potnpy's Pillar.
A bimme A'rp/f/r'* ,Yiv.* ('ari ICM iht
H-fk IM 'k( ILat'tUmt I'ark.
ftn Rrturisnu Kl< hang-
On the so th hank of the Yellow
stone Kiver, IM-tw-*-ii Miles City ami
liillings, stands a deiaehdi ho.lv of
yellow sandstone, which rise* ahrupt-
Iv on three sides lo the height nfaffiul
400 feet. It* base occupies almut one
acre of ground. The fourth side is ir
regular and broken, and afford* away
by which ascent niav be made. The
rock is kn >wn a* Po*H|y's Pillar,
having tn-eo i callvl liv Ihe explorer.
William Clark The um*t m-tieeahle
iliing al oil it a Clerk'* nam , carved
deeply on the lace of the rock, about
half way up on the north side. At
this pla<-e. which may fie easily reach
ed tyr c aaa <eri ig up over the h av
hi *as of -au Ist'.ue broken down f. II
the fn.|y of the itliff, the lace of the
r ck is protete<l by some overhang
ing porii nis from the sun ami storm,
and iff* inscription "William Clok,
July 2d, 1B00," is tracimhla through
M
t out. It i* in old-fa-liioued script, ami
r is uiidotihledly genuine. A modern
i- vttmlal, w lioevidently hml m-ver heard
it ot the explorer, hn* registered hi* own
I, worthless name in uncouth characters
• over a part ol the original inscription,
• j Bill (jciieral Aiidcia-iu, Chic Jvigun-er
I [of the iNortlieru Pu ili • K iilr iid, I,a
- I given order* to have the humpkiii'*
e mime rem ived and u liame covered
•yiili gin-* placed over tin- name ol
I W 111 its m C'la k to preserve it. It wu
• on hi* return from ihe mouth of the
I j Columhi i liivi-r that I lark pa—ul
' toi* plaee. Ihe exploring party lutd
t dividi-d a short lime In-fore, ('link
- having taken thi* route while U-yvi
- pursued another. I/t-wi* uiiou In- re
itiiro to the li.ist wa* made <i -v> rimr
lot Louisiana Territory and died h\ !
• ' hi* <>wu ■ nil.l iieni NII-IIVIIIh ii.
, her, 1 siifi. ('.arke VVII a IllUflc ( I v, I j
I nor of Mi—otiii T'-rriiory un-1 liv.-<t
f till September, ) 8-IM.
Phenomena of Death.
A I'llllikli-IpLin physician lot- mil. .• 1
.in "pecial studv ot the phenomena .•'
j death. Ii >tli through hi- p. r-onal oh
*• rvuiion* and inose of otlu-r*, and hi
, conclusion i- that dissolution i- pain
, le-*. "I mean," he explain*, "thai i
nppr.-afhe* an iMieon*ei..u-lv a- *h-'|-.
Ihe soul leaves the world a* poinle—- j
Iv a* it i ntei* it. \\ hutevi r tie tl.
| I'/iiiscM of death, wle iher hv lingi-riu,
I nmlailv or sudden violeiev .I i lin
i c unes either through syncope or
Msphvxia. In llm |mi,-r ran-, win
' ! resulting from disease, the "truggl i
long protracted, and a. ■ .iiipniiii-.j In
- till the vi*ihle mark- of agony whi'-h
the imagination a-*'K-i:iti. widi th>-
1 clotting -I' ll' of life Death <|.*-s not
1 *'l ke all the organ* of iff- b.tv a
' the same time, and tin- lungs are t; e
hist to give up I It- pll rim- o!
tin ir function.. A.•!■ th approm-ff -
tie latt'-r gradu-illy tireoue more and
more oppr I ; le mi tin ratil..
No, i* tie- coiiin -11 tf, i.-titi y | r fi t
! t 1 < h.itlge the lilai k V.'lioli* into iii
r--i 1 arterial liloml . an tiuprepar.-.l
• tl-ii-l . 01-i jii'-nily issue# Ir on tin
• I llig'* into the In .if!, all.l t- then. •
. transmitted to e\ rv ntln-i organ of
thi-ffely. He limit) r. i l ive* it, H1.. 1
I it- em rgie- app* sr in IM- I ilh I ilien In
. iiit . -le. p get., rail* Iran juii *!•-. p
■ tii!.-l yy 'li • t r. .i i.* whici. I.op- i th-
I dying to murmur . the tr. .. -■;
• iii- ml- and it - . en;iaiiou* and no!
h ' tioti* of pa-t lib "
" T !;.\ii I T'. hx, ! "
n- J. .. i - c ')■ f .V.
A yxi it< rin a Phi* dclphia p-t| >
,r* late*the legend ol i ln naue-" I xs-,
a* tool to her by D -in-ral >*m llou
; loi. yy hen • •■ yy i- II little .-ul. (im. mi
II ots' hi had it to. o ail Ind..til ( lit# f,
a. loll.iw- :"A long linn- ago, wti.-i.
!'• Spatiiards ovt i rati e l plineler.-d
M xieo, soiiie lit till- |,-.i un-11 lell I hem
aiel et me toward* the ti-itig sue
I tii-t rr-i—i-d lie Kin f traiele, and not
knowing wh.it lay Is-lor.-tin-in. i ini'i.d
, 11 j* i u ilte gri at .ait mil-111--. Tn.-x
trMVell.-d Oiaiiv day* met l-oii.. hot
liltle >,.t yy a ti-r .. rgn in I in- Wi a: h
• r grew hot au l the little r. am
dro-d up and the gra-- wither.*! no t
i.any old in. II nie l yy.nii'ti ant .i d
•lnn i| •*! ol thir--.. tlin* 'lay, atn r
many wet-k* "I w.-ary walking, a par
.y ol vmiug hrav.**. xv 11- •im i h-su nt
ali* ad to r eotiiioitre, en tin# running
•a. k and -aid: "We have toiind
>t< t , • .'llie .'li 11 i • ll' w
, inn in-w lite into tin ir vein*, and al
t lough iio'.l l-ig f*.ttld he wilt hut a
dry. flat, hdd prairie, the -..0n- were
standing - ill. calling ami In* kotiing
i I" I hem and |s. tilling toward* -otiie
thing tippari-tiilv at ilnir feet. At
length they rear lit* I the-(ml where lln
lira Ve* were standing. Kitty f'-e( IM'
low them the limpid water* of the
t 'olorad't *ang a Itielielv to heaver.
Beyond, tar ■ evr-n an IndiMti vi-iou
could r-aeh, Mrriched a green ex pause.
1 fin-tall uieoptite gn.-#. yu-l ing to
(lie hn Bill of the gentle south wind,
- foiled in vast billows of verdure, UM'I. r
j the ardent summer *ut) Little 'island*'
of mesijuite trei* dotted th * gmv
sea, and herd* of liuffaln no<i ih-'-r ,
i gr*X'*l in |uae-lul ig 'trance of an
enemy'* app oaelt. Forgetiinghitnger,
I fatigue nod even thir-t in thi*delieioit*
vision the red men fell upon their
j kit'T' and criednti : ; ' Telia* I Telia*!*
' Teha"iathi nearest appma h in
Koglisli to the correct pronuneiatin;
of Toxa. and it tru-an* —so the narra
tor explains —Paradise,
Mrs Brewster
I loir Sh, ('am* la tf irrv lh* Atlamnj Grn
traf.
Mr* Brew*ter i* the l<and*omest
woman in the Cabinet parterre. Per
'l hap* vott have heard of the mmautie j
i lite of thiaelegnnl woman, who wuhl j
shine in *• M-i.lv in stir laud. She was
j the daughter of Robert J. Walker, at
one time Nvivt*av of the Treasury.
She accompanied Admiral and Mi*.
S nme* to K'trop". and fell in love
with a French geutla nan, one M. I>e
l-m. A marriage followed, and rr-j/en- ,
tanee came only ton sen, hut not lw ;
fme a daiight.-c atid tw > son* were
hrn, Tne unhappv tnarriage was
t o initiated hv Dehm'a death,and the;
w hiw. |-Mir in puta \ wa* gix'ett a ise
a inn the d- |iartm. ot over which
tier fath' r once had emit r I
The pr#eiit Attorney tt tteral —al
wav* an admirer f ff-attiy in Women
—met hT and "ff*--rd her hi* hat d
and hi* w-ial'h and I.U name f>r he:*
aclfaud her children. "You are beau- I
Jtt . -
TIHIL, HE *■ H<l. "AND J AIN HIDEOU*, HUT
IT WILLIK.I U IHI-LIR-T M-TAMC t,f DIE
IIIUIIIIJI lit IH-HIIU HO'I THE LIEA-L, MIL!.
ALTHOUGH YOU MAY NEVER LOVE ME. VOU
"HALL NEVER REGRET MARRY INY; NI"." THE
THREE CHILDREN TOOK THE ITEPFATHIR'
NAME. ANDRE HEMMI ANDR- W, \F UC,
MAMIE. IIII THE y>nn%'- t HIY - NAINE
HA- C*EU|>ED MY MEMORY ILL ILLI. RIT
I■ K'■ AIL HAVE LIEEII U II EARED FOR
AND HAVE HAD EVER, KIND Ml* HRR|N*> *
ED II| MILL DIEM. THERE HA- 111 111 OLD V
ONE I--UE OF DIE PN-ENI IT ARTIGOE, U
HOY. OL WHOM HI- LAFLI R I- . XIIU\A
VAINLY FOND. I -AW A PICTURE • ! THE
TWO INK- II LOOITHER DIE FACE UF DIE
BRILLIANT NA WITH THE 11-RRILDE HUM
WHICH HE WILL HEAR IN HI- DYIIIF ILAV.
HLNL DIE IRTPII, RVV. I ~I . |,OV'
HE.JDE HIM
ARE TILL I LYNT'IAI'IIFJI.
] MCNNSYI YANIA
STATE COLLEGE.
WTFTLNR HTM JJRUJF, J IHHI.
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REPAIRER OF SEWING MACHINES,
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NOW 13 7 CUE TIEE.
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AND THE REM IN AR.C! DM!., AT RE
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U\ MAM* FACTO IN
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