TamfiTJTTTtroinsBygrAicHj former; who possessed soma property i comfortable little cottatre ai-tha foot high mountain, had a daughter who cexylteautifal, bciat-theisamo-timo sot; ind dreamy that she wonld never do- : of -any kind. If Bent to draw watery, rould let her pail fall upon the ground ien stand, withclaped3ands,gazing at own fair image reflected in the clear' S. The buzz of her spinning wheel dbe heardbnta few minutes, when hread would fall from the girl's-hands f .he -would sit dreammg of the fairies siiches of -which she had -read, e good mother's patience was-sorely lbyheidaughter's ways; but scold a might, the fair Ursela, 'whose beauty kindly Trays endeared her to all, did earn to love her duties, and all labor unpleasant to her. One summer morn i father said to her: "Ursela, to-day aiust tend the sheep In the field, and . that you do-not let them stray too e girl did as ha was, told; bufc-when. eached the field she gave no farther jht to the flok. Throwing herself ton the Bolt grass in tne shade 01 a. tree, she listened for a long time tot wittering of the birds and the humming' e bees, and then tell last asleep, leaw he sheep to wander where they would le lay there, rurrounded by flowers and the gentle breeze playing with her hair, there was a slight rustle among bushes. The branches were pushed! and the-head of a beautiful woman ap id and a nair of launhmc blue eyes sd. with admiration on the sleepingJ . --.a. momens laiec a quici siep iun "W yg5sZ)i. WW&aJ'f' Sclg &r- -,-r -' THE CLOCdAXJ3I02R3ZD-BEBKCO--'WDB& 3, and the stout form of the farmer in signt. iie gazeu witn surprise ana, r at TJrsela. then shaking her roughly, , ud: "Did I not tell you to watch the. p? Thev have now strayed so far that ast take my time to search for, u Why do jou cause me so much, ble? t wish you were some placer e I should never see you again." n th ngure sicppea irom Denma tnei jmy lile must be spcntiin sorrow. ies, and said: "Let TJrsela go with me; "No. father." cried Ursela, running to iii care for her, and she shall live with- Jhrm, "your life shall not be spent in sor woriv." row;!f or your daughter has returned to you. th Ursela and her father looked with- . . i. -, A.: . S ..1 lisamem. m tue iuir bi ranger, ami iuc .aaie-H-ays. r repliedi "You may take her in wel- Ursela thought-no more of Bniryland.She e, for such an idle child is onlw-acauso. bdde her friend, Walla, foreweU, and re-, utoyance to me' -named in the little cottage, as the joy and le lather then, went away and left Msk-comfort to her parents. But many times on bter. When he returned home and moe-nlight nights, the Eairy Queen, with tils wue wnat na-a nappeneu, ne poor mn wept pitteriy, ana saia: -wny s you ariven TJrsela from her home? s, Ehe was idle; but she was our only i, nid we loved her. Now when we be e eld we shall have no one to comfort le father, too, having recovered from :r, repented his action, and hurried b to the field, that he might bring his d home, but Ursela and the stranger vanished, and no trace of them could oa&d. And the d couple mourned the of their beautiful daughter, eanwhiie, as Ursela walked through the is with her new friend her companion ' j "I am the Fairy "Walla. I have dis- ised our Queen, and have been banished vWe-JI. GrAOBonrcs, Lazvttm, Maine. a .fcairyjaua. a. lew oi my laithlul lids follow ed mc, and we live in an old lo on the other side of the mountain, were not permitted to brin our treas with us: but we have enough to supply rith foed end clothes, aud that is all we re, Xou shall live with us, and our tsure will be to provide for you." rsela'vas reciedwith great joy, and fairies waneii upon her as if she were a sen. Such a l'fe was most pleasant to little girl, find the gave herself up to enjojinent ol it. Day after day, at- ded by one or more ot the fairies, she jld wander through the woods and fields, never tired of hearing of the beauties. !feirfktHd. im uiorning the Tairv Walla came with fece and tearful ejes to Ursela, andj 1: "jly tieautuul ursela, we are in at trouble. Our money is almost gone, we know not where to get other. What 1 leooae of u- I fear we shall starve." Trseki was greatly distressed at this ; but sbe had no words of comfort to r. At first she thought of returning to father; but when she remembered his . -words io her, she abandoned the Hght. All day the little fairies' were ely grieved; but while berries were to be nil in such quantities, there was no iger of them uli- ring from hunger. To r3 sun"!, as Ursela bat at the window of rnojs, a lutle old i oman, vellow and nkled, suddenly stood before ner. lie going to give you a present," she 1, "one that will make you rich. Xou 1 find it in the hall to-morrow at break day " .lie old woman then vanished, leaving vela te wonder at htr w ords. Por the t time in her life the little girl rose be e furc She ran into the hall, and to disappointment, lound hanging on wall a huge clock with au ugly wooden e. The hands moved slowly around the L, and instead of the usual "tick, tock," ud, a shrill voice seemed to be crying, ork, work." How ean this homely clock make us hV" said Unela, and all the fairies won- (J 4edoT--Ttie-trang. gift Affdayjrtefi the dock repeated "work, . workf" until, I 'Ursela hated tne souna, ana ran mwum garden to escape it, but even mere tne-ciooKr, -made Itself heard. JSor waslt qule? wnov TLA J 2 L.. Jmmh TTwiala flBflW Tiiirni came, OOU ill UCi uxuua -lao-s uww TxuuraiiR worn wiiiuii whs eu uuuubuui -.- r. Tn 1ia TTUiTnine- ithe said to "Walla i fTfwA a1w lia? a cntnntnff nr-WI T H-JY sure its bummr would drown theound of HD Ulllf UAIX 4 CLJ1UUUJL. r "H the clock." rr i ;.i .Am. an. v aw . ki, castle there fa an old spinning whee" sai Walla, "and great quantities of flax'r great auantlties OfnaXi Ursela had the wheel brought down.-ana; . . -v. . - . . . afe once put into practice the many lessons- UJier motUr hA i-Ti h A. lonV W . .. . . --- T-n. ttss owwe aocs. seemew sueav-ouj, uto we EDiuoia fiKwu bujli. tne wors. wutjk. 4would begin. The little girl applied Tksk elfdilicentm and was. surprised, alter a.i 1Trrr tvrn rnlmrl that Rhn rn.l Itr PTiinvmTi .- .' . .. . , i - the work. And the linen, which she spun. was so fine-that the fairies did not cease to- admire it "Walla said: "I know now how the old clock was to make ns rich. Tour linen is so beautiful that weoan sell it fori .much eold. and we need no longer be-ooor.- xnen me lairies carriea me unen inco ino' city, where they received such a good pricojtR .for it that they almost forgot their 'sorrows), oiaiewdaygbetore, and asrain felt them selves quite rich. But Ursela did not cease from her labors, she now enjoyed spinning-; and was found early and late at her wheel One moonlight night, when TJrsela andV tne tames were roamingabout the castle garden, they heard eoundaiof music, and saw aporoachinjr throuch the forest, the Fairr Queen, and hundreds of her loyal subjects., They came directly to the castle, and the- Queen announced that,she had come to take. jhnpk tn T?niraLm( Walla nnd nr frii1 jTho bcautifulJJrocla,-too,'.wa3'&nvited to go Qs- with them, but the little girljaid "IshouldJ UKe to once more see my rather ana mother; rthen I shall go with you." "Walla then.conducted her friend to her "home. Before the cottage door sat the old couple. Their faces were marked with grief, andtthe father was saying: "Why did I give my-dantrhter to the stranerer? Never '.again shall I see her, and the remainder of and vou will-be troubled no more by her-) fjl.! Mm .suDjecis, ana walla ts always with them, Tisiii the farmer's humble home, and bear "rUch .gifts to the beautiful Ursela who has now jbecorue as industrious as she is fair, and hthe Queen of the land, and her ladies will wear only the linen which the farmer's jdaughier, Ursela, spina. Paysie. SODIEENIGMATICAL NUTS. UPnzzlee ror-th&Uttle Folks That "Win Keep ThoiqiBialna Busy for Most of the Week if Tfctcr Solve Them Correctly Honu Amusements. I Address communications -far -(Mi deoaxtm-nt 159i ANAGBA1I irr.USTKAIHD, .d y wJiiMffl . ,, vul j.l.l.U, nil.. .J.iii til l;o u, A btalw art youth, so tall and bold, Met at a rustic wall. He gently whispered, half afraid, A question low. That pretty maid, "However, granted aU." F. It. 1595 THE KCTO AKD THE BISHOP. In Cockneyland a King did dwell To whom much fame attaches; THE -- Ameasure, beast and river spell SJF?8.$t0l:s .? Aw same as well) This "Kiiuj of shreds and patohes." How oftentimes some wicked was TV ould make his majesty a peg 0TV1LC,11 ianE some puny pun Or fable he would flsh up: An article besot from one JIado royalty a Bishop: A Prelate of tyrannic ways ASS yeti2mS 'i111 ta no praise, Though ffctoe be but a bubble. Of Iron will andlof ty mind, He was but one among mankind. Ttet whcnaeveised-lns double W-WlMOS. 1696 OOEXAHaiESIT. P"Taulwas born on, the first of May." " wuwi w, w caul, uuo u&yi "An ominous slim of oominp clorv." "0 yes," said Sam, all a leer analign, p"A veiy ominous Slay-day sign nooms to iet an too upper story.' " ft "Tourprf mV sattl cousin "Ivhold as law I .Although to the second Etory you go Tn vaor ifitup iAVna on nlm t But-the May-day nowersbloonaU'thsme .. A nnnfVMll4lui wOnw .- "" j auwkuo.jwimj jjai nco uitt lutiuy B ptmg .v0.wT.- .... .,-. hu ibuy, Aspnto, - yfc-AjrtrKATm.rAHD3BAin. t VWhatado you.suppose I found In the lit wtiaToom wuere we J e Keep our ciotnesT" asK- SrSx4rtt mou. rskippiJig intoa chair at wiie ono morning T inn " flfin -Wort .nMTinlnir intnui ehuir atrhfi hum thnnirT, r,f r . -- u . -r z o"-- w?-.i "It. "No, not that," no answered, "but I found one orthe young animals that belong; o the bam, theiottomora shoe, a cabbage,,' Home of the old Inhabitants or Gn.nl. a Kticwi .gestlon of robbery" Mr. Jones wont no J irnrtiiAr.jm aitil ju he tmnnmnt itava n innfL shriek andxalntedaway, and Mr. J. learned' "" tnerevU4oJn-waereaoos:,ceases to hnnanra (.wtttt. ,wvr- 1598 c&ABAxra. One manhood, last and vigorous. Should be this house of clay Only can maa by being thus Live "weUiils-little day. "We look for age to be entirt, With Blow and feeble galfa " Tis nature's law, when youihfatflre And-vigoP'does abate. Disease and accident may-cane E'enyouth to be entire; ,Sut, ifthe heart keep righteous laws, Theraare states far more dire. A. I 1599 DEOAPirAnCOTi If you are in the UuU Let no one all you thenoej Tear has no power to oast On'lnnocenoe. Zfyou are In the last. Stand like a wall of rook Gainst error's cruel Dlaet, Or totaCahock. BXTrES-SWSE& IGOO'-THBtHOTJSIASrDiXXS ovrcniB. .AwMrfcntverv skillful seamstress lived plil an old tumble-down house In a certain city. So old and delapldated was the house that It detracted much from the beauty of the Ma-ftfit on which it was situated, and many times had people to the, vicinity uxsed ner to nave it ta&eu uowu; uui ie wm hoi home, and If that was demolished she was too poor to buy another. It Is true her great skill with the needle brought her a constant Income, but that must "be used In helping her only son through' college. TVhat ro Tnnrks mteht be made, applicable to the lad v and her house, being complimentary to the one, and uncomplimentaryto the othertJ 1601 TRAlTSPOSITIOTe. LAway to therrfrinanrfwhatarejKm-tMnS Away, fortheooSklo-sheIlboatls'fasaj!mfcJ ing. iXbehole In its side -now the salt waves Is, drinVinar. Away, though the winds and'-tho- tmveaj ipuuiy nu& Uow pull with a will, boys, andjuIU-anto4 getner, True sailors win stop not for-wlndtnorfor-l weather; The boat skims tho foam, as thongb-llghbas. Hurrah! we are all two and eafe crsv thel Shore. MH3E. 1 a leather. 1602 Mtn&ximr. A-eong arises on the air, Like a glad lark oircllng into the skyj And the yoloes soft, and puro, and rare, Rlnnd Ilka colors "jmkI" and fair: And they tremble a moment, suspencMU Then fade,an&slriTiwvnftdle. -But te that momentnnoarthly Tjrhrhft, fhlle the songTrang like a qnivorlnpBtaivj With hnes of blue and gold and white. Become radiant with a sudden light, As of- glory that oame from afar. ium, 1603 IS MODEBJT UFB. A maiden dressed In dainty wbole. Upon the porch was sitting; She balmy breezes fanned her oheek, And "birds were round her flittinjr. Her mother in the kitchen stood, By tubs of soap and water, Ana toiiea aiono. Decause ino worz Would two her lovely daughter. The daughter one a boarding school Had. learned with paints to bothert But ne'er had learned poot foolish girt Tho way to help hermother. Mas. E. MAT SOLTXStJ. Prize ctnntT. Oliver Twist, Pltttbi Pa. 8. Margaret Blair, Pittsburg, Fa. 8. Florence Weber, Plumer.Pa, lorence Weber, Plumer, Pa. Botl of tumor Lottie "Hughes, Amos II llellen. Olive A. Klino, Beau Belmont. Sarah.. Thomas, Matilda Ohambordan, Inez, Charles H Sfoson. Ella A. De Vicne. Jiiaua Teajorue, Marion B. Doyle, O. D. Bprague, guile jianon it- uoyie, u. jj. cprague, ouue Alien, i John McBryde, Arthur Kent, II. J. D., L. 3.1 Bice. ASSWEB3. 1583 Anyfl, tongs, bellpws, Are, shoes.nall and Iron A blacksmith. 15S6 Beau-1-deah 1587 A sponge. 15S8 Ass-pen (aspen). 1559 L Pearl, paler. 2. Leper, repel, a. Mythical. 1 Vo G oat-mar-l o-ram. 1591 8 PED - LAMER - LO EI MER PA BAD 1 SAL SEM IDAL ITES DEMILUNES B E 8 I N AB BAT E K LBS S 1592 L Z sigh for j ou. (L cipher, XT.) JU Tou are too backward. (TT B 3 backward J 1593 Mary, army. The Screech. OwL rwnmss ron tits ntsrATcii.i What a very queer bird Is thellttlo screech owl, And is mostly heard When the watch dogs howl. In day time he hides from you and me In the hollow trunk of an old oak tree, But when It comes night He descends from his height, HITAnd hunts about for something nice. A chick, or else a few young i mice. Oh, well I remember, One night in September, Be came and sat on the cherry tree, Close to my window, and sang to me. "Hoo-a-hoo. Tu-whlt. tu-whoo, I'm hero by the window waiting for yon: Come out and see , What fun and glee We'll have In scaring the eowardly: From the high church steeple We'll hoot and halloo And frighten the people Away down below. They will think we are ghouls, Or a spirit that tolls A solemn dirge for their dying hour. Or else a witch with evil power." But I thanked him and said: "I have oftentimes read That tho biter is apt to get bitten, ho, ho. Im' afraid of a witch And of ghosts and all cA, . And I never could ride on a broomstick, you know." Since that time--I'm out of rhyme he has neverbeen back coaxing me again, but on dark nights Isometimes near him around inviting the neighbors to go serenading with him, and I thizik they go. AUKT CLAKE. : PITTSBURG-, ' DISPATCH; LANDING THETEOUT. Feat to be Proud of if the Fish the Eocky Mountain Kind. Is AN EXPERIENCE ffi- COLORADO. Borne -Adventures of a Journey on Foot Across the Continent. THE WEATHER AND THE FINE SCENERY CwarraH ros Tin: disfatch. i) ECU an ipereased and .decidedly irk some load I walked south from Denver, planning to reach Colorado Springs as speedily as possible, and thence make numerous side tours; but at Acequia (a town named after the Spanish irrigating ditch, nd popularly pronounced Saky) an accidental chat with the section foreman threw me a fortnight out of my course. He said there were "trout over behind. yan hoc-backs" pointing to a long, rocky wall at the foot,. ot the range, some "0 miles away. Trout? Trout? Why, for three years I had been fairly starving for a bout with those-beauties a hunger which the catfish land "lamplighters" of Ohio had utterly lulled to satisfy. Hardly pausinz to thank :the herald of Joyful tidings, I took a bee fline across the rough plain at a five-mile gait, forgetful of dinner, my load and, in deed, of everything save my polka-dotted ddols over yonder. irfmger Vi alii Than It rooked. Theranee looked but two nr thrnn miln. away at the outset; but when I had walked rapidly for three solid hours and the dusk was closing in, it seemed farther away than rer, and the wolf began to gnaw at my MKB3PEAK-Iir l.telt Just In the edge of night I found a shabby little cabin on Plumb Creek, whose J kindly, inquisitive folk found a good supper 1 end b. irood bed for me. But mv heart sank when they declared with great positiveness -. thmwrn nn trniit within two davs" bein's they'd lived in them mount'ns gois iuoivuj, auu bucy icu&uucuuii;)wuukjuiuni oa ao year." So to-morrow 1 was to have no trout, but J'only that pretty tramp back to the railroad. a. are.irm tnat night that a. monster trout was swallowmir the second foreman: and I jheartily wished the dream might come true. .out wiui tne morning came Doner muuguio, X would see for myself and sunrise found me scrambling ever the steep, rooky foot hills toward Turk's Head. At 2 in the afternoon a sandy side ravine brought me suddenly out into the bottom of the Platte -Can on, beside the shouting river. A Typical Stream for Trout. A clorlous little stream it is clear and i neonfident and headstrong as youth, cold as 4 Ice, swilt as an arrow, roiiicKing noisily down the tortuous, boulder-strewn channel it has chiseled down through 1,000 feet of granite. Two minutes later I was trimming the branches from a long, heavy young Cot tonwood, and attaching a line. Grasshoppers were plenty in the canon and soon plenty in the case of my harmonica. Just where a huge ledge jutted 20 feet Into a deep pool of delicious green I made the first cast Just as the 'hopper came within a foot of the water, whizz! came a flash from the depths high into the air, smote the bait with dextrous tail, and drove it straight into an open mouth. Splash! SwishI Off went the line, sawing through the deep water, while that 20-pound The Garden of the Gods. mollusE of a pole bent fairly double. What a glonous electricity it is that tingles through your fingers at that first strike of a trout The pickerel of our lily-flecked New England ponds seizes his prey with a barely 'comparable rush, but then ho goes loafing away, mincing at the minnow critically, dubious whetherto swallow or no; ana when you snub him he soon pulls in like a limber stick. The bass, be he green, striped or black, fights doggedly to the last, but he is too clumsy. The Acme of Pifcatorlal Sport. But when King Trout the athlete, the sage, and the hero of fish makes up his I cunning head that he ll nsK that specious fly, then iook out lor musici jfc'rom the in stant he first touches the hook, until you tear him still fighting from his rippling kingdom, there is no time to breathe. Your line hisses down stream as if tied to a bullet. Then as swiftly it tears up against the cur rent. If there be a snag, a root, a tangling rock in that whole pool around which Sir Trout may tie your line in a double knot rest assured he will do it unless you hold a steady rein on him. He will double, leap high above the water, dive to the rocky bottom, turn, twist, add jerk with infinite ingenuity, to tear the cruel Limerick irom his jaw. And if at last you lift him upon the"bank in safety you need feel no shame that in the contest of wits it has taken your very keenest to beat that cold-blooded little fellow. It took me full five minutes to laud my game, though ho weighed but' three-quarters of a pound, and when he flopped beside me on the bank I threw up my hat and whooped and danced as wildly as 20 years before. During the afternoon I caught 20 more, and in that whole noble string one could not j 15 MmMw "jfati-ii.- At -j,.f ..-V.--J.". 'Sk, .!-, JkJ&iH8jLxe-v .?3t,1&iljhi. ' -iftAijAji.j j. .j'.. ,..-.. irft ..-.NStejfciv ,..:. ' . si' -" . .,j. -, ' . Z&d '. z. . . . SUNDAY, JOTB 21, tell "t'other from which," so exactly were they of a size. Away up on the headwaters, back of Pike's Peak, in a rough and track less wilderness, a few days later, I found much larger trout. The Eocky Mountain trout are not nearly so beautiful as the princes of the Maine and New- Hampshire brooks, of which they looked like a blurred' and faded reprint, butnone the less they; are famous sport. A Big Ditch for-Irrigatlon. Near the northern endof this canon is tb beginning of a most remarkable canal the "high-une"irngating,ditch. Thiscanal had then a total length of 83 miles, a width of 20 feet, and carries 1,184 cubic feet of Trottf IWOng. water per second past a given point. For miles its -bed is hewn from the living rock, and in one point in the canon it runs through the heart of a great mountain of red granite by a tunnel 700 feet long, 20 wide and 10 high. In Colorado, as in New Mexico, Ar izona, and much more of the vast South -west, the rainfall is too slight to nourish tne crops, and tne necessity lor irrigation has led to the construction of countless thousands of miles of ditches to bring water to the thirsty fields. After a long and glorious mingling with. the trout of the South Platte, I finally got back to the little rancho on Plum creek, where my pack awaited me and where the evening of my return nassed nleasantlv in listening to the terse, quaint talk of my r snaggy-Drowed host as he told or the suller ings of plucky "Coloraydo" and drew in vidious contrasts with Kansas. In the seven years ending with 1878, Colorado was devoured by grasshoppers. Her corn fields disappeared as by firej the grass which was the lite of her millions of horses, cattleand trees shivered in leafless nakedness. Ona. July morning in 1875 my old Yankee drove I off to Denver. "When he got home next THB-DISTASrCM, evening his 20 acres of corn was absolutely wiped from off the face of the earth, his cat. "'p us oare grouna, ana not a straw was left of his tall stacks. He showed me where the ravenous insectshadeven gnawed half through the sheathing at the bottom, of the outer walls of the housel Cutting Off Surplus Baggage. My writine kent me bnsv till witM,... 'hours of sunset next day. and then the. was a rough 17 miles between me and the necessary-postoffiee. Oyer hills and valleys, gullies, 'irrigating ditches and cactus I stumbled on through the dark, steering by the stars; and at last reached Sedalia, just in time for the mail, but wet, lame and ravenous. A pair of scales showed me that my load the heavy rifle and nr-Ann.. cartridge belt, knapsack, blanket, change of" .uitnAMigs, etc., weignea si pounds; and that at onoe struck me as "ridincr a fr horse to death." Thenceforth all that could possibly be spared went ahead from station to station on the broader shoulders of the to station express companyj and many anight Inearly froze for want of the blanket, whlehnroa ;'ure te be ahead of or behind me. Lightened by 12 grateful pounds I re sumed the march next day, zigzaging for a week from rood to mountains and back pgain, as the whim seized mn findinw I enough game to be interesting, and enjoy- mg every moment as Keenly as only trained muscles and careless mind can enjoy. One cottontail that I shot near Castle Bock rolled down his burrow dead and would have escaped me but for a boyhood lesson from old Hugh, back in the White Mount ains, with the end of my staff I could iust feel the limp fur at the bottom of the hole. Wetting the end of the stick with my mouth I put it down until it touched bunny and twisted it around gently a few times. Then, when I drew it carefully out, there was the rabbit at the end hnnnn" linn I delicate cable of his own silky hair. A Cry That Cardies the Blood. The full moon was high overhead as I wound through the lonely canon of Plum Creek, and midway of that bare defile my ears pricked up at an old, familiar sound, for years unheard and almost forgotten the long, weird howl of the gray wolf. It is a cry to make the blood curdle; but there was no answering yell, and after the first startied grab at-the butt of my forty-four I. plodded on. At Larkspur that night there awaited me. a cold weloome. It was bitter weather. Under-the water tank the ice was three, inches thick; and the savage wind roared down the canon in icy gusts. There was no place to sleep save in the "bunkhouse." Xhat had one occupant, and he had one, blanket TYTvnwn tmq it, f!nlr!H, Cnnnrvs land not even a gunny sack was to be found. w uuuKave me mgni. . xne oia tracK waiuer . shivered under his one tattered cover and, wouhi have no fire in the battered stove i he said it "would make the boogs too wa-Ketui."- x irozeon the bare planks till midnight and then in desperation took the law and stove into my own hands and built a roaring fire, which made the night endur able, though I had to sallv forth several times before morning to "rustle" fuel. Boring Wind With an Auger. From Larkspur to the top of the divide, 8,000 feet above sea level, was a steady up hill pull, growing cooler at every step, and in the teeth of the very worst wind I ever encountered. By afternoon it was a perfeot gale, against which I could make scant two miles an hour bv the most violent exertion. At the door of one lonely house I knocked, and politely asked if they could lend me an auger. "What d'ye want of a anger?" snapped the hard-faced woman why an swered my rap. "Why, I thought, madam, that it might help mo bore through this wind" but she slammed the door in thd face of this ill-timed witticism, and I went without my dinner for being "funny." The temperature kept falling and the gale rising as the day wore on. It was already generously below zero. Near the aptly named side track of Greenland, J was crossing a trestle which spans Carpenter's creek when a sudden gust, resistless as a wall, swept me off bodily and flung me upon the ice and frozen sand a score ol leet below. The ice thanks to the wind had but lately formed, and through I went into a shallow pool. It was better than falling on the slag rip-rap at the ends of the bridge; but the eight miles to shelter, walking withjplothing frozen stiff as a plank and nearly every bone in my body aching, was anything bnt hilarious. Some Wonders of Nature. Prom the top of the divide there were no temptations from a straight road to Colo rado Serines, the lovelv Httla elty In the edge of the plain under the 7017 ahadov U J jFsSMwiWiK' 1891 Pike's Peak. Just back of towil Is a hillock 160 feet higher than 'the main street, sar casticaUy known as Mount "Washington, be cause it has just the same altitude above sea level as the noblest of our Eastern mountains. Not far back into the foot-hills from Colorado' Springs begins the Garden of the Gods a wonderland fitly named Here, walled in by rock-bound peaks, is a wild glen of 2,000 acres, and in it amid the murmuring pines a hundred colossal towers and eaitles. pin- Jlf .tUe.menU le ? the deep-red sandstone. In the center of.s- great amphitheater four titanio crags, blood-hued and radiant, burst from the level ground and soar 800 feet aloft. Their tops are fretted into Wfprl nnints. and their sides worn smooth and sheer. One of the strange "monuments" in this "land of the standing rocks" is a littls lnrcer around I than a barrel, but CO feet high. xui x ao not wisn to describe that won derlandeven if I could. Tt 1 Knmpthinir 'Which every young American should see;. ;and seeing it ie will realize how little can words give an idea to its radiant dory. Near by, too. are superb waterfalls. beauti- iui caves, ana many other delights; ana 'what I fear was almost as interestinz to-1 , s .. -- - ,; I ., me trout. o. S". Iiiraiins. GAS FINDS IN NEBRASKA. .Possibility That the Natural Fuel Exist There In Commercial Quantities The Story of Two Babbling Springs A Bon-' fire Sixty Feet High. CConnsEFoxDzarca or Tnz DisrATCDtJ Omaha, June 19. TVe hear from time to 'time through newspapers of natural gas being discovered in various parts of Col orado. The accounts are doubtless true, but somehow after a time we hear no more about them, owing either to the flow of gas having ceased or the lack of persistent pros pecting for it, During the past month I had occasion to, fvisit the White river district, about 30 miles west of Meeker, in Northwestern, Colorado. This is a singular region of numberless plateaus, or ' table lands, intersected by ravines and dry water courses. The White river flows sluggishly through the heart of this country. Along a nearly dry water course we found two powerful igas springs, about 000 teet apart. S"ftJu8Z"'n Spring. 3oth of them were bubbling up through a pond of dark alkaline water, emitting a strong smell of sulphurated hydrogen. In one pond a great number of little springs were bubbling up fiercely at different points. In the other pond, which, was about 13 feet in diameter, the water was in a violent state of commotion, caused by a constant rising of great bubbles of gas from the central orifice, which raised the surface of the pond nearly two feet above its level and kept the surrounding water churning around like a chaldron,, -The spring sent off at-the same time a strong 'smell of netroleum.thoueh none of that sub stance could be seen floating on the water-! -issuing irom it Tne Spring aHuiof name. " "From a safe distance we applied a light to -the surface of the water and in an instant the whole pond was covered by a sheet of flame rising six feet above it, and giving out an intense heat. These springs were discovered bya cowboy over two years be fore my visit. While riding along his horse ehied at something at the bottom and at the same time he heard a low, hissing noise. Thinking it was a rattlesnake, he returned, to the spot to investigate, and saw that the noise came from a spring. Guessing what it was he lit a match and ap plied it to the bubble, which immediately Sashed firs and continued burning for a few seconds. Staking the ground out as a claim he got, a company to undertake the borincr. and. -two wells were put down, one at each point. to a aeptn 01 about ouu leet. a. large cattle "round up" happening to be in the neigh borhood the operator told them that he would give them an illumination, so he set fire to the gas which was issuing from the wells. The result was more than he had antici pated. A column of fire 12 feet in diameter and 60'feet in height rushed up with a roar into the midnight sky. More Than He Counted On. The operator was-seriously burned nd all Hha machinery was lost, while for months this improvised volcano illuminated the, whole region. How long it took it to sub side I did not learn, but doubtless it was eventually overcome by water. The com-. panv and operator appear to have had f enough"from their experience and the wells were leit idle, hut have continued to pour out the same volume of gas that I found on my visit. At the head of Piceance creek, three miles from this, I found similar springs issuing from an intensely alkaline pool. These springs, like the -"others, would burn a few seconds when lighted. The gas is allowed to waste amonethe sagebrush desert The .nearest town is Meeker, SO miles distant, andGlenwoodTO. To pipe it to these towns and establishglass andsmelting furnaces would not be thought an impossible under taking in the Hasten States, but here it is different. I have since learned that simi lar eassprinss are found alone Buzzard creek, 20 miles from Aspen. It is evident wai, uaiuKu eua in cuuiuitjruuu quantities exists throughout this region. It may bo years before it is developed, but I think it Is -safe to say that it will. Pbank Mohtgomee-; Substitutes for Whalebone. The high price of whalebone has spurred. -up the invention and pushing of substitutes. The best of these is feather bone, obtained from common barnyard fowls. Then there ore bones of prepared horn, celluloid, bam boo and steefof different kinds, bare and covered with cloth, said to be waterproof. But there is nothing as good as the best whalebone. The Poor Car Horse. Baltimore Herald.I From my very heart I pity Seeing driven through the city The poor car horse. From early morn Jtill late at night, Hurrying along with all his might, The poor car horse. No one over thinks him weary, Or tho -nay so long and dreary For the poor car horse. In cars packed to repletion Thci e's more room lor an addition. On the poor car horse. If in starting he should slip, Goad him on with voice and whip, The poor car horco. If his limbs are racked with pain, And the sweat runs down like rain, The poor car horse; The trip at any cost Is made, The corporation must bo paid By the poor car horse. . If I were a man and voter, I'd have the cable motor, And save the poor car horse. Many a irroan from brute creation Ascend to Heaven for reparation i y tTiXT OSir1l1rIWSi SEASONS GET MIXED. "Winter lingering in the lap of Spring Is Nothing in Santiago. HARVEST COMES IN SEED-TIME' Sights to. Be Seen on a Rambling Through Chile's Capital. Trip A GREAT EXHIBITION OP MUMMIES rcOBBXSF03I)ZKCZ 07 TEX DISrATCS. Santiago de CinxE, June 1. Fe w cities -can boast of a more delightful climate finer situation, or grander scenery than this. Though barely 1,800 feet above.the sea, it is far enough from the equator to escape ex- cessive heat, yet not so distant as to be sub ject to extreme cold. Set in the midst of a great, green valley, the mighty Andes that stretch away to the horizon on every side Inclose it within walls from 8,000 to 20,000 feet high their snowy bulwarks in dazzling - contrast to the cloudless blue above, the "living green" below, and-the gqlden sun shine that envelopes all ae with a garment. The country immediately surrounding-the' capital is made up of small estates, with handsome villas upon, them belonging ioA wealthy families, who have the good taste to forsake the city's glare In summer-time for a few months of rural living. Jlanyof these suburban casas are fitted up in a style of elegance rarely surpassed in similar resi dences of Eurone or the United States. The true namo of this jinnient ymital. hv rthe way, is Santiago dd Nuevo Eitremo, "Saint Tames of the New Beginning" a strange title, bestowed upon it by the con- querer, voldlvia, something more than three hundred and fifty years ago. in con formity with the jurisdiction that had al-tj ready been set up at Cuzco, under Father' Yalverdo,the first bishop of South America. Sllraclos Accompanying Its Founding. The history of its founding reads like a romance how Pizarro's whilom friend, Diego de Almagro, tried hard to conguer the tribes in this valley, but failed disas trously; of heroic endurance, and deeds of valor on both sides; of the direct interposi tion of the "Virein Mary, who appeared standing in the clouds, to the confusion of tne savages, ana oi iius Diessea spooj,oau James, the Spanish Patron, who seems to have had a habit of ridin? downward from the skies on a milk-white steed at critical junctures; and of the later vicissitudes of Pedro de Valdivia, who came soon after Almagro's defeat, with only a few of his countrymen but-a great following of friendly Peruvians and established the town on the right bank of the Hapoche, in front of Araucanian village. The tourist, coming down from the trop ics, feels exhilarated by the climate of San tiago, as by a draught of old wine. Benja. min Taylor, in his "Between the Gates." describes it exactly, for nowhere are tie-' reasons more neighborly. Says he: "The impropriety of winter lingering In the lap of spring has made a public- scandal; but when September 13 on whispering terms with May, and old January masquerades in June's clothes, and July gives all her rain bows to November, it is time to talk I The winter is in summer and the Bpring is in winter, and harvest is in seed-time, and autumn is left out of the calendar alto gether. The siroccos blow from the North and the cold winds from the South; and you. must never sail by the almanac, or you will lose your reckoning and get lost in, theu weather.' W1H2J otTolcrate -Sires. But there is another side to this charming picture. There is a summer-time of fleas and dust (during the season of our midwin ter), and an uncomfortable spell of chilly -dampness throughout the rainy months, .when Northern people are sufierincr most p with heat. The people have a deep-seated -notion that fires indoors breed diseases of every sort, and except in houses built by English or American residents there is hardly a stove, grate or fireplace to be found in all Chile. The enormously thick walls retain no end of dampness, the floors laid flat upon the ground, without cellars be neath are cold and clammy as tombstones, and as every casa is built around a central patio into which all the rooms open, there ore seldom communicating doors between the various apartments; so that, whatever the weather, one must step out into the un covered courtyard to go from parlor to din ing room, bedroom or kitchen. Although the prevailing diseases arey pneumonia, throat and lung troubles, and J tne mortality irom uiese causes u ingnuui during wet seasons, nothing can convince a Chilean that artificial heat will not abso lutely poison the atmosphere. When he visits the home of a foreigner and finds the rooms are comfortably warm and dry, he Invariably grumbles and requests that the door be left open so that he may not suffo cate but spreads his hands and coat-tails before tho cheerful blaze as if he thoroughly enjoyed it. It iooks odd, at a party, to see ladies in bare arms and decolette bodices, with blue noses and chattering teeth, wrapped in shawls and fur-lined cloaks. crowding around a charcoal brazier, which J emits iust enough heat to make one more sensible of the deadly chills that come gal loping up one's spinal column; and odder still to see them, at table, still wraoned in cloaks and shawls, the aching feet of each. guest thrust into A foot warmer, though sur rounded by every luxury (except fire) that wealth can buy. Foot-Warmers of the People. These foot-warmers are unique institu tions, and as ftnamental as indispensable. They are regular pockets, each just large enough to slip a pair of feet into, and are made of fur or flannel, lined with llama wool. They are often richly embroidered, and are of Lome manufacture, or made by the nuns or ornhans In the asylums, who are all experts in needlework. And oddest of all. it seems to see gentlemen and ladies. perambulating the plazas in mid-winter J the former with mufflers, overcoats and furl caps, the latter bare-headed, with no other. wrap than a silken shawl. The manta Is universally worn in church by all classes of Chilean women, but for riding, shopping and the promenade, all but the ultra-lash- ienable still go about with heodsuncovered. Santiago is especially blessed with paseos, or public walks. Besides the incompara ble Alemada already described, the central plaza, with its environing arcades and portales, and beautiful Santa Lucia theiV is the Tajamar, lying along the banks of the Mapochc, which used to be the favorite resort before the Alemada was completed. It isan embankment of solid masonry, some three miles long, which was erected many years ago by a Spanish Governor to protect the city from the annual rise of the river, which sometimes swept away streets full of nouses. A dengntiui winter promenaae is the Tajamar doubly attractive because out of fashion and therefore comparatively de sertedits ancient wall overgrown with vines and lichens, partially shaded by straggling willows and eucalyptus trees. Then, there is tho still popular Canadella a broad tree-lined avenue where spooning lovers loiter. Some of Santiago's Wonders, Though many cities have extensive and beautiful botanical and zoological gardens, there are few which can show any thing like this of Santiago and I doubt if its equal, in area and tne value and variety of its buildings, can be found anywhere in the world. It contains not only a vast botan ical garden, laid out on a grand scale, with little lakes crossed by rustic bridges, a wilderness of blossoming plants, vines and shrubs, towering oaks and pines, statuary, shaded nooks, well-kept walks and plenty of rustic benches, and the' greenest of sward without a single placard (so fre quently met with at kome) saying "Keep off the grass" and an extensive zoological park, containing all the animals of South America,, and many others, conveniently arranged for observation in long avenues but a magnificent museum; an underground, crotto-llke strnotura cont slain Innttmer- jU-frm t-iVfiaflriih riM-nh-f 1 1T"V water supplied by hidden fountains; aa agricultural college, with 'a handsome mus enm of its own and a long line of buildings devoted to its various offices; an enormous new Normal School, capable of holding 2,000 pupils, besides the teachers and their families, who, supported by the Govern ment, are all to be housed and fed under the same roof; and a variety of other edifices -'too numerous to mention. - One of the most unique structures in tho Quinta is one, contributed by SenoraCous lno half castle, half pagoda built en tirely of glo.s bottles, bits of iron ore and square chunks of coal, cupola, balconies and all representing the family enterprises the coal mines, iron foundries and bottle factories at Zola, the wine manufactured on their various estates and the celebrated "Cousino beer." Besides music stands and dancing pavilions, there is a luncheon, pavilion with open sides and awning shaded porticoes, where parties may be served at little tables with ices, winefc Kxruits and other light refreshment. In a Swell Restaurant. There Is also a big restaurant, which It justly famous for its breakfasts and dinners the former served between 10 a. m and a o'clock, and the latter from uY.yu as lato as a possible customer remains. Breakfast is naturally the most popular meal, since a whole day is hardly time enough to see all -the sights of the Quinta Normal; and there lore It is customary to come out early, stray about the gardens during the cool of the morning, take a mid-day breakfast in the big restaurant, (previously ordered in ona of the numerous private parlors, and served in many elaborate 'courses if the party is very swell,; and then devote what remains of the afternoon to the museum. Though the cooks are French, Chilean styles pre vail in the food and its serving. Among other delicacies they give you camarone3, or fresh-water crabs, shrimps with long, black;' hairs on, the plumpest of white-breasted partridges, tiny brown birds on toast, "sea urchins steamed in their own round. .-prickly shells, strange fruits and salads- ana ij you aon t taxe at least ciaret ana champagne with such a conglomeration of unaccustomed viands, even the servants will turn up their noses at you as "a greenhorn, from away back." Chile's National Museum is housed in the imposing building in which the In ternational Exhibition of 1875 was held a miniature copy, in stone and glass, of the Crystal Palace in London, with a magnifi cent entrance, long central hall, and a wida stairway In the rear, branching out both ways to rooms above. Space will not per rait any detailed description of the wonders collected here, where the naturalist, the)' scientist and the archaeologist may revel for days without time to examine them alL Tha best of it, however, was stolen frqm Penv during the recent war, for Chile is not rich' in aboriginal relics like the land of tha Incas. The collection of birds is the finest Jy an inch long to the giant albatross-and iuge Andean condors. The Exhibltlon-of Mammies. Perhaps the object which attracts most at tention is one of those horrible "pressed heads," the work of the Jivero Indians ofj Ecuador the flesh, of a human head, from! which the skull has been removed, shrunk en to the size of a fist, yet the features pre-' served with life-like expression, eyebrows' Intact, lips sewn together, gaudy feathers pendant from the ears, and Ion? black hair concealing the pike upon which this ghastly trophy oi savage wariare is impaiea. Ana then the mummies t There are enough of these dried and pickled folk to populate a village those that hailed from" Egypt stretched out at ease in their gaily painted coffins, leering at the ancient Pe ruvians, who are all bound up in the mostf uncomfortable posture, with knees and ears close together. If only they could speak j r what tales might they tell, of semi-barbario-" r nations that swarmed these coasts 1,000' .years before Europeans ever dreamed of an I America! xney wouia speas ot laois' worshiped in great temples, of people who toiled and hoped and loved and died, as men do now; of victory and defeat, advent ure and conquest; of the slow upbuilding of a mighty empire its gradual decline and 'sudden fall. There is a boy mummy, still grasping a sling in his shrivelled hand; a baby mummy, which was probably loved by Its mummy mother a few centuries ago; and a grandmother mummy, clinging to her spindles and primitive weaving apparatus. Most of the horrible company have con torted necks and twisted limbs, and every brown face wears an expression of fearful agony; as If striving to convince beholders that the statement ot history is true to the effect that mummifying process was begun, by their relatives before life had left the. body, it having been necessary to bind; them fast in what was considered the proper' position before death had stiffened their muscles. Eas-xxes B. Wjm, MOLECULES ABB SPACES. A Simple Experiment That Seems to Es tablish, the Atomlo Theory. According to the atomic theory, all matt ter is composed of small particles of matter called molecules. Between these molecules are spaces called pores, much larger than the molecules themselves. Both molecules and pores are so small that the most power ful microscope cannot detect them. Never theless the following simple experiment is .eonvincini": Pill a wide-mouthed bottle completely full of alcohol or kerosene. Then drop small tufts of cotton batting upon the sur face of the liquid. The batting will imme diately absorb a portion of the liquid, and will then sink below this surface. Bepeat this operation several times, and it will then be noticed that the. bottle does not seem to be quite full of the liquid, although If the experiment has been carefully per formed, none has overflowed. Now, by means of a line wire, push the cotton to tha bottom of the bottle and add more. In this way a large amount of cotton may be added before the liquid will overflow. The only satisfactory explanation seems to be thaMh6 molecules of each substance enter the spaces between the molecules of' the hotter. DEATH IN THE SPUING. LA-Gsu Babbles Irom Its Bottom That Kills Every living-Thing. -flan Francisco Chronicle. "Talk about DeathTallcy," said Gavin McNab last night '1 know a spot in this State where no living thing can exist five seconds. At a point about three miles from Eopland and about 30 feet from the road, there babbles a spring of the clearest spark ling water you ever saw. The only thing peculiarly noticeable about the spring from a distance is the loud hissing sound it makes sis it gushes up out of the gravelly soil. "Approach it and you will be startled to see lying around the spring the skeletons of hundreds of birds, scores, of small ani mals such as coons, foxes, and the like, and nearly always there will be a body or two of birds or animals ina more or less ad vanced stage of decomposition near the edge of tho spring. The tact of it is that there rises constantly from the spring a gas so noxious and so deadly that one whiff of it is sufficient to extinguish life." Weeds of Sumatra Widows. Hew York Snn. .When a Sumatra woman's husband dies she plants a post in front of her particular door in the family house and Jiangs a flag upon it. While that flag waves she may not marry again. But when the winds, blowing softly off the sea, have torn it into shreds and scattered the bits on the ground her term of mourning is over, and she may ac cept a second lover's proffer. For Fain In the Stomach. We made use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera andDiarrhoeaBemedy on two occas ions for pain in the stomach. . Besnlt satis factory In a- very short time after taking the medicine. I hesitate not in giving my opinion in favor of the medicine. At least it has done all elaiad for it as far as w have tried It VXX.J3oox. s -1 1