WALTER WELLMAN CONSIDERS Fon- THER THE ARCTIC EXPEDITION. ; Phat + the Party Must Conte With sxd Meow the Difiiculties Ave to Be Met, Thely Gepersl Fauipment— Yore About’ the Alomininm Sledges. . 4; Ty righ 3 | In & little mor than tw: o months we ex- pect to begin our journey over the ioe to -gpard tie pole. Hetter than avy theories whieh we niny have as to the methods which we shail adopt will be the result of geinal efforts in the field, snd of these we hope to write for publication in this paper 8 few months hanes. But the reader may be interested in knowing to some extent what cur fans sre and what the details | of our eu; yi, that bo may the better | form bis wn ody of the amonnt of sie- cess w hich we ere likely to meet. At any © pate, twill afd an opportunity to eon- trast cur plans with oor performances Just where we shall encounter the south. LRNCIENT ESKIMO FLENCT. ern edge of thie ice park is unknown. ‘Bometimes, in early STINET, bangs down © Ls the nnd in latitude £0 degrees. som 150 s fron our bead- quarters. in ot her or seasons it es consid .erabl to the veirtls, at 80 : dogrees, 81 de or even Sipher. On the 14th of May, 1806, Scoresiy, the famous Scotch whaler, | safled slony the edge of the pack to the | north of Spain sn till be had reached | latitude 81% degeves, end ni that pojnt the jee war 451] tre ding 1 toe northeast, J s8eoreslyy hind ; Sight Yave mafia on to Iatit or pos _ sibly 5, but be was after hales, and be | then $3 arred back. Should we be so forty sate as to have a season like that of 1864, it will be much | « fu our faver, far in that case our steamer | will toke us from 50 to 100 miles on our . journey—n tremendous help in a country where every mile of advance costs so much effort. But tliese favorable seasons do pok ootur very often, and we expect to be oom- pelled to leave the steamer and take to the #t or very near the land, or about the eightieth praliel. Seven hundred shat. ‘nte miles of nuknown deserts of fee will He between ns and the pole. At the Edge of the Drendfal Pack. The edge of the joe pack may bv as calm as 8 May morsing. It may te farions with the rage of the surf and tarbulent with rolling and tossing masses of joe. H ‘the weather be fine, we shall bave little diffienlty in disembarking with our outfit; CH bs srevy, wou ppust do ope of two things pum our steamer withih the edge of loose jee till wo roech water that is protected | fvomn the swell of the ocean by the outer barvier (r await n more propitious mo © ment. Probshly ibe former alternative wil Be chose, hacinise the Ba Jarl is built for fe +f such work os this, and it 2 Aa 8 (PRE js pearly always essy to run {ar enough : srithin the pack to find a barbot behind. : the reef of Jee which i= % left seaward. In senthem peri of the } 3 At erates pear by fora wo on a ia view of Shun en our part. Of 8 its gopect 1 omnis or vim conntica--drift- : anoibier, but most Ee contd an rove sieaiun and In her per the pack | teen after the pole, be | F ready made wd earried with fs 3 — it fais provwd ineficn- Wheres Is the Evel 124 to Be Found? treme roughness of the joe cannot ay fro is pressure that pro | ees Casi thew enn be poe consid wir pe ssnre witlont both move ment aud mesidager, Motomient 8 pres ent mgzbout the pack. bat residancs, : erented | Ly the shire or th se lita’, i {ound less snd Jens as we get away from the izpd As we go porth the fa wii] be found gradaally, almost bmperreptibiy.’ rough. until Asally it awtmes ity nor sondition—that of level or 01k : tog fields mpd Sows, with their m mrgin oniy pressed up into Pummdcks by the oid lision of one with apothér. The sing st in finite pressure pear the jund breaks the foes and fields themselves into millions of pieces, sonie standing vertically, others a1 ail angles. many smperimposed apon- oth | pre, but fariber from this line of contact between motion and fesmovsvbity the. floes and fields aw a whole, ret= their | fiat form and origins] ares, ol thelr | borders being broken and crusbed. th : oss gently 1 How far from the land the fiat, pormal | ioe Is to be found is an unkwown quanti | ty. Hirt is bundreds of miles, we shall’ | never reach it, and cor expedition will be | i a failure so far as the attainment of a’ | high latitude is comeermed.. Jf it is only | some scores of wafles, we aball struggle on | ontil we reach it nod the easier travel | { which it affords Ary Change Is For the Better. | If we take our ‘chances wpon finding the | | worst, it must also be remembered that | | we have a chanoe for the better. Frequent | iy the ioe to the porth of Spitzbergen in ermperatively wel and eeny fo travel. Jt ‘Bus frequently been observed in this con dition hy whalers and expeditions fills of foe which the whalers have en- |. countered to the west of Spitzbergen for’ been of this two centuries have ssually been | level characier, and this fre was foaled | out ¢f the unknown regions above, away | | from the land, showing conclusively that | motion alone, unaccompanied by the re | sistance which the land affords, does not | | bresk vp the pack, thengh, of course it! does produce hummocks at the margins. { The farther porth Parry went in 1827 the 1 larger and smoother he found the fields of {jos and floes. A month earlier, and he ' ooaid have pearly touched the pole, but be | | wins too late, for just as be reached the re | gion favorable for travel be was compelled | to turn back because a northern wind com- bined with the duggish current and drove | Bim to the south as fast as be could travel | northward. On two occasions Baron Nor. | wely level. The third | , 4 hoped to journey over | a a bop but could not do | so because the reindeer which he had! brought from Lapland for animsd power | bad all escaped during the previous win- ter, it was exceedingly rotigh ns far as the | eye could see. Carrying Their Own Bridges. Assuming that the ire will this year be | found at its roughest, the hardest partof | our journey will be at the outset. Theme we shall have a chance to ascertain wheth- There we shall have an opportunity also | to test 8 simple device which we are tak- ing slong for us in just such troubles perhaps prove of any use fo us remains to be seen, it in service. nomber of them are very strong, consid esch., They will support any one of our boats or sledges and is Tred, | a Nittie tramway over which we obstacle a-id then down the other. OF ‘our beste nad sledices are made fo | i canstrgefion; to ne Ek bd such un operatic: Fach imide wing fitted with | a Ririp of. canvas over the roonds, nym ari dogs cay ‘sealk up apd down. Where | fie Long sid Melville, and Markhao and | Pars of the Boglish expedition, Payer and | Weypreeht, the Anstrizm, aod others who | Bove taken bouts end shedlges over the pack | ford it pecwssary to laiild bridges, wit the use of nates and shinvels -Pessioly this device will avail us noth. | he, but it isa experiment worth trying. Bill not work ideally, of course—few | $alngs do, even in civiliation—bat if it saves us more enotyy than iu required to Lemrry it and leaves a bedanoe in our fa | vor, well and good. Ws a shall need it most | floes §t will be “So, also, with ross ata wire hich we shail take 3 Spon the jos with us, to wee, if the veea- sion ariges, as an serial tramway over dif- of this we shall want. as towlines and for other purposes, but the most of it may be left by the wayside when the peed for it The! denskijold found the foe to the north of | k { i= nothing more nor less than a Dridige or | a ladder. We do rot printa sketch | of it, because ihe resder can imagine a! indder 24 feet long, 8 little more then 2 | feet wide and with rounds hetween the! two parallels, and he hes in his winds | | e3e our device. Whether or net it will | but we bope to send you photographs of | Cur lddders—we have a! ering that they weigh under 150 pounds | They form | sxpect Ho ran cur vehicies—Bret wp ove side of an | ove enlneless be | da But in fhe nature of thirgs this ex ts oir ref dete lave 3 poTENY. It is pettersied softer the Huden Ley : sledge, sed. for massy years iv porthern Amerits, sod 3 prototype of tbe pleasure tohbogpen: Most arctic travelers nee ledges with rupsers, the Mel lintock or the 52, . Michmi They are best for some condi tions of travel. Lientepant Prary took faut bottomed wiedped on Lis fret Jaurney to Cropland, bait pow bie rooner Sledlges Donbidlens the intter stv best for 1h bard ernst of the soow of the joe cnp over which Peary meskes Lis raids pn Abere is jess friction wi ith a rovoer ed than with a Hudwn bey 1 pemge the former breaks de The yanuers 1010 in or give wrens? oll es Phelr foes bresk For Leavy work, for all Kinds of deep snow, slash drifts, pock- ets, the tobogony is doubtless saperior er edges, theretlore, are made with | fmt hesttoms. They are of alumirjom, with rims turned Op 8t ihe sides to give stiffoes Jengthwise and boles below the rims for jashings to pass through Cnr al amininm sledges weigh only 28 pounds ' pach and could carry 1.600 or 1.500 i pounds. Payers sledge weighed 130 pounds. The lightest sledge wd by the English weighed 115 pounds and the beav- jest 150." Lientensnt Peary ’s sledge, with | | capacity of 1,000 pounds, weighs 4% pounds. | We do pot see how ope of our sleds can | break down. We do not know of any ood | will pot sistency of spow or slush that is i pass over, Moreover our shedges are boats a8 well as sleds. They may be facetiously hat oot inapproprizte! y sajted a” | the north pole.” Ordicarily loads are lash | od upon sledges in skins, tents or tsrpau- | Jin coverings. - When water is reached, the losids must go in the hoats, for fear of wetting abd spoiling the pros This takes timeé and labor is well mdyanoed, the pack is fall of ioe openites or are frequently shall pot ! ind it necessary to anpmck our sledges for | this porpose nor to afer thelr Joads to the busts Agal n. in midsamrner the sir | face of the flom is covered with sind sod with | iful iskes of fresh nater, from 4 few inches to a foot or mom in depth. ¢ Sepaight through these lakes Parry mareli- Led with Bix hosts, hot with bis siedges be had to make] wetting inden, Ready For Ive, Slash or Walter, . © Our siedges aiv boats all the time, sod po transformation. scene shifting is neces sary to convert them from i other. Our provisions, foel aud gv veral | supplies we pock in light bot w Sader tally | | strong esses of alominiam, made to fit | sledges and lashed thereto, These cases viedens 3 DECREE TY Wa - i * ‘lm x the fond with which they were § | are water tight and ane mac de large enough : : to give a displacement sufficient to float’ | the sledge and its entire lond in water. IA joaded sludge will weigh about 600 | pounds at the beginning of onr journey. | The contents of the cans measure about i er we ave equal to the cmergesey or uot. | : i hi CER ALUMIRIUN SLEDGES 15 cubit feet. valent to pearly 1,000 pounds of sea water. When I the sledges will be only tween thi ris sub | merged in water and will be nonsinkable | Our presious stores of Sona and. Powel ave | thepefore secure from lows or injure, sod | we believes wa gap modest) 1 say pan hizo {are the best Sted met fectly ndaptable to the uses for ul ey are tended thal were ever am ey Hn: ally ¢ Jeaded, i re thon : ow ash Fon. ; "The Whale They Fish For Of course #8 ix only theune gpering and | the objet of Bw fishery. Thecomn qual, or faves, laggest of open: | this planet, whisks its 8 feet of | taliow réved the whaler with i any mivdls more dangerons thi 5) cuit Thin, with its wood for nothing cone | 5, the hunchback while, sborviuls in the Loaretic segs, and i 2 like the smoke froma 8 bos factory | A stranger sight still is, A] books i over the bulwark 10 the clear wx ater, pee, far down, Tir the green is torning | “tor black, the Bnge fichering figure ofa’ whale gliding ander = hip. And then the | strange grunting, semghing noise which { they make as they come up, with some | i thing of the contested pig in it, sod SNe | tiring of the wind in the chimney! Con tented they well may be for tie faner has oy asd pature, which fn a bmmorcus mood bins in the case of the right whale affixed | the smallest of guilets to the largest of creatures, has dilated the swallow of its ees valtiable brother, so that it can have @ Yime 4 ‘tank line to When the summer | «ds of water, sand ferrisges ong detours in order tonveid | one into the i the very rarest species of whale w videh 4s i baye seen thelr sprays | on a clear Gay shootitg up sang the hort aR Bo eho ies, save an occasional wwondfish, } “Fave atinmberef to a shadowy recollection of a £x- istenee opo9 the arth, * enid 8 thedno- phist, supporting the doctrine of rein- “Yon donitles bare also bad experi: ences with ap ind £osble vague remes branes of sanething, or suabpebndy caine to von, wheel) © seyied yon and made 1 8 say. ‘I'm sure i ve som that - before, Yet x » positively that as far as this present x +2 was impresitie fiir you tohave revived arn ides of {he pipers © 1 fren yet people with won 1 1w- Ane itis re 3% frst sight, it sens, as | have ofien told them: thst | Ladd known these! for years. It wus enly ther evening that’ 1 met 3 lady frum San Froncisro whose face Bed been in wy mind for years. As soon 3s We md thers seem] to be something 1hat drew us together. Wao were as old friends. even Tr Baye PETSIa Lo “The mont remierkable instance Jere beard ie that of the daughter of Jmuic Folten. Twelve years ago be resided in Effingham county, lils. While there he buried a dumgbter named Mana, who was taken 3 aay just as she was bodding into womanbood. About a year luter ibe. removed io Dakotas, where be still ro sides. About three yess after his danghb- ter's death bs ses blessed with apother little “it being thi favorite name of bis wile. When the little to talk, she persisted in calling berwil Maria She beczme gqupite angry when todd Ber pame vas Nelile, She said the Beye % ti ber, a8 hor porate nerd 10 « 2i3 ber Maria. A matter of bosivess tov Mr Folin back to Eff bam coconut Reliie alc at the ital of the place. the old In mover geen wih | been aeanmintad | from the air. RHE - pe. Bnd many § $ seboolne al ETRY vd wed. Lith J +0 the ie. vet #h0 ha of it to ber fa- expr a rong desire to vivit it. Accordingly ber father ok bor out to the schoolhouse. As Hoon as | sha was inside sbe marehed straight - Wel Ise sive Br 42% ANE to the desk ber sister bad ocrupied aad “This is mine.” In telling nlten said that it ph Fp es had come back 6 the her mother would pot hase if that is triw, said, | story Mr. IF if the demd grave, Lot ft sn. She says bat one child, ~Pistsburg Dispatch Safety Stepludders An English invention afms to provid security against liability to accident from the slipping of jadders, The nm: - ody in this case is the introd: notion of a. Be el forza of shoo suitably attached. | Jt consists of a bracket which can be se- corely bolted to esch sug of (00 Cfomeed at its lower edge wita a lag through which a bo! ls is bored, a sbos being loosely joieted to this by mewns of & pin pos ug through it and the log: connection DEVE sO fre that the shoes can easily svi To the under side of the shoe a cornitgabsd pad of rubber is fixed. Tie «Bit of this arrampasent fs that In wl ver prdition the Jarier we Fx bet LEX always a grip byw ing. bo of the phlipg si 4 $5 pled simicst Borisantally without incurring th ve be ast (ig IY of When drgrod, shors can be ap {the ledier, thos ¥ santiny 3 ase a thw wails « i ernn Vani work, —= ew York 5% Pd Yeuls so GHA £7 ol to Pe r tow A Fi (Bent rad rove? of Curves. The : Saye ws 1 Fravutort, Ky Taid cal At: "yd * Ther a Te ane ryvanll euitves #9 [iss riag that t The cars wem on two the [ower Jor worpen Hr children, the spper for men, four sons being seated in each compartment. . The cars were at frst drawn by mies, | | bat after a time a locomotive was inde : by’ a Lesipgton mechanic. The tender wits a big box Lr wood, and a bogshead wis provided for water which was drawn in buckets from conventent wells. | In pPacoof acowesivher there Wem two poles ia front fitted with hickory brocasa for sweeping the track. —St. Louis | | ‘Globe-Demacrat. #8 BILAL his Fab, pers dock WER 85. F 2 i LOTWeR, per. the herrings. — A. Co | ; ” Nex Consolation. A woman Et intataen ment by s bench of magist. tes, the presidieg just justice of wiich was a well known cflicer of militia, whose pride in his regiment was the sub ject of public she thas addressed the bench: Well, Pot F thomk that nobody at mt was ever connected wi’ the 'milishy." Sholeld Bagiand) Telegraph nd Shar. : A Pieamat Arana". Sarcastic Father-—Jalia, that young | ter invite him tv bring bis trosk and make his bom with os? Inpocent Daungbter—Ob, papa, may I? It's jest what he wanted, but be was too bashful to ask yon. He'll he de- | lighted whes I tefl him this evening. — Spare Mcments. His Wark. At the paval omy at Apugiilis | they tell this story of an English profess- | { or: While marking his class at the end | {of a recitation a cadet iff the rear part {of the recom craned kis peck eagerly to his glasses said, is entirely too smiall to ves son at such rie great distance’ San Frauciso: Ar cially coloring that =k e3iutence is toprerned it 3 who was christened Nellie, spe became old enough she Dad und God gave ber twa” Aw bereft of its senses. It is only the my } adidler, i “| Locknow Humor and went over 5 cous mes ! persasiyy ¥. mamiy TE + Beanty of the system is that there © comment, On receiving ber sentence when he left. Hadn't you bet- The at ‘of dreing tise hair 5s at sedis ibe time of Curist IT was | pesarting to nh gids to bests thet Cle opsira tried 10 capture Umssr AT tiromgh bindery Jadied of fashion hard tried To Improve ype store by a po J ax ih Paul ed Vonjes ied i Tiizsn Wns 3a Ine, in thst day hud re irl 1a uf 1 — a” Toe hella of 1 Sth gliuts: of crimson. More recently simost in oor pwn time—a rage arces fir bright Bond mir. ss io which there wis | a tradition that it bad been popular wi ig he (revi. bets pirse, "Blond beads blocked the fares, and young ladies of good did not disdain to smgloy the dyer un his services wire monopolized by 2508 class. In our dav the popular color isis bright shade of auburn—the blond dye of the tenlevards—and «ily girls through mertyrdom to impart that to their locks. For the popularity tdond hair the srgonsnt finds this case, that if is rarer than black or bmi snd finer. Evervbody knows toe legend of the golden fleece was. gested by the ardor with which Ji sud other Gireek connoisseurs the blond Haired maidens of Colchia Almost all hair dyes consist of sul snd scetate of lead, both of which injurious to so delicate a plant as b hair. A stisaly course of either will i pair the vitality of the hair payilia nay destroy the medolis al ‘Women win bleach their hair ase oxide of hyirogen, which after a imparts au vonatoral sod wiglike lnster fio the hair, Am has for ite basis nitrate of silver, Woes tins is used, the bar = £ washed with suighuret of potasaa) The. nitrhle avpied while it mw sill wot. In all these ¢ soos the dre is 4d terated with a pia eodor, and the elo substitube that codor {or the natural Ho of the cortical subsiance or hair bal It need hardly be suid that the effect 's continued ase of such medicaments i to enfeable and nitimstsly torof the ni sheaths. ' Daldness then ences, and fo ‘that sciences has discovered Bo remedy Desroit Frve Press. Wham an » Elephant Is Crosy. When wo present tbe clephant in session of such intellectual gifts as be his, there has fo be considered cuss of thw elephant that, being “my —a diseases akin to frengy—is fora is % ota time | that suffer; roon this affliction of i ity, but every male is lable to it time or other, and unfort tunately may] be . attacked Hy it without warning of “Kind. Some men of long experience of qk phant keeping say that the “mast” op dition is preceded by premository sy: tons, and if taken in time max, by < ' and treatment, be averted: but, withp presuming to contradict those better formed people, I can aver that I By known sotne of them to be taken by § prise by the sudden “musting” of phants: ander fu ir owe immediate po) Pikson., Some elpphnn “4 a demons cruelty when “niast.” as, for scampip, comnissariat elonhant that, during time in Ouch, broke away from ables trast off om apd oh conntry, Hiling men, wp rem wherever it fonnd ane of doing #o.—Bluckwopd’ Vowels In thé Hawailan Tongue The Hawiiiaz 1 langhage is compe f vowels and 8 few consongnt pat in to viry the MOnOLODY. And wists. Every vows! is prosounced. | instance, wihen the American eve wi at toe APPUATARCS of the simple w “nasasc,” the g five syllables with neatness and spa “This means “enlighten.” Double vpw- els are very frequent, but never a diph- thong. Three vowels are mot une mon, and, ns above, four and sometim . more are foond caseparated by OA pants. Tn the mouth of the wm Hted native the Msgnage' is apt to be ex sive, but the higher classes speak it a fluent grace that surpamtes the or the Italian. In sonnd it - | resembles the general flow of the hon - Furopean languages, for | the vowels ail have the French quality. | the accents are not dissimilar —W ington Star The Phantom City of Glacier Buy. Daring the past eight or ten a oc a ee A Jo- ] city | ured ais directly over the bay. sean (Alaska) photographer has pictares of it on four different oc but 20 far 0 ane has been able to id | y » single ome of the ghostly b | sutlined on his plates. —St. Louis § Lord Crowe's Callostinn. oat creriior-wall fast with Maa Hi a Some ns OPN . in the life of Yife.” “Ease is the disease.” “The highest life of an lies in the lfallest discharge of its tions.” Ther: iz a Teast of food fi flectivn in these three sentences. the farilp of tive lagoons doef | tradesmen 3 an anecdote is told. & scarcity of joe a peighbor of 1 sent to a dealer for sowse snd was told r eo! srmagnnc of the vintage of 1811 asd wore dangerous dye still | hat | n. ! te deasitedd. 2 are to se found at Pompeii, "hat brisk Jet ub pative rolls out the thst the limited stock on band was bept | for the vise of the fa: soos anther. Thea the gentleman sent pain and bade his | servant sok for the ice ia the name of ! M. Damme. The plangacoseded. The | joe was given, and thé servoot the mony on the counter. Al” cried oa Now I imow that you are not from M. Domes, He pever pays ready money.” “My father,” suid. M. Duis Sls “*opos tld me that if be could portion out a pew Jife be would be a handsome woman till 838, a victoricos gesersl from 30 to 30 and a cardinal in bis old age.” [Domss, as be relisted this par- X- ental dovive, glanced toward Romdot snd added : “1 should prefer fo close my life i as an illustrious composer. Mon cher Rossini when you enter a room, the very lacquer pronounces yOUr DAME wih pride as be anprunces you.’ Then “orning to the company be oen- | tinged: "" Anncumer, for instancs, ML Je i | Dood’ Aomale and Sigoor Rossini at the | sae moroent and see on which side afl | beads arid afl bearts will inclive Set | 1 All eyes wonld bacm the e great malelnn who created "11 Bark fe re de Sevighia.” And then we all §lled cor glasses with drank this beaith of Rossivi. The old | composer did net ries, Lot bis face brake | ont inte voluminons smitten = ve. sock tho bal of the amthor of “La Dame Anz Cumellisa’ == Pile iyhia Pompeiion Business Notes i A punter of bast {mess annoTDCements Little city wo whos daily ifs the energy ‘of Vesuvios bas lent a kind of immer tality. Here we get a large vumber of | miscellanecns inscriptions dealing with | mutters of daily life, arnoanceinents of | fortbooming gladiatorisl games, dicts 1 of magistrates, wine sellers’ stanpts to | captivate costumers, rewards for Jostor | stolen property, Houses for sale or to be i Jet andl other things of thot set. We leara froza one annoanosiment that a pines of wine cuaid be got for I | as—about 3 fartivings— while for dames coe could drik real Falernian, Another - ! inscription infiorins us that a desarfos | —aboent 73] penci— was paid fer wash ing a tunic. and the duis, the 13th of | April, is carefully recorded by the write er. Whether she was the lnundfess oF | the owner of tae tunte most be left an | decided, bot it spems at least that she | wes in the Lalit of marking ap ber . washing -acconat on the walls - ber: | Boose, There are several sack iscrizitions on the smipe wali of this particular house, | all duted—e 90th of Agri, = tande. | and pulitom:; on the Tth of May, an = { ticle which nit od pot be part; while on the Cay following (wo tunis | are scored. ee -Macwillan s Magazine, Dishes andl Pistiers of Golde | Qoeen Victoria's wonderful oot of | { ble fu rnitabe is kept m teen dodo | ehamlers and is sadd to reorevent a cash C1 walae of £30,000,080. Amng it inthe F golde # tabs wv service made for George VE. teal eusinted for 138 guests und centalin | ing the flivens crystal champagne coal Ler which is large enough for & bathtel | Tiere ave many pleces in it iat formes | iy belonged to Queen Elicstadn, besides | splendid solid gold vessels frein Indim, | Siam aud China. The pride of the col | lectics §8 a tesenp once owned By | Charles Xii aud a gold pestiek made i for Goorge {11 at a cost of SABI B ns - 88, Loos Repubiic. A Difieuit Pest. - Anjember of + Hoaston volantesr fire compuny did sot appear at the scene of the conflagration until after the Sve vas wonder control. Thechief of the Sede phstment repraached im tly Rell seglect of duty. “It's not my faal " sepia the fire. man. “1 live quite a distance from the fire.” “That's no excuse. Yoo must move pearer to the pest fre.” —Temms Sif. RT Sr —— 186 you proposed to Mim Jinglebi®” *- en” “And she refased oa?" “Yea : : “Piarbaps it was & hasty newer?’ “No. She took caze that it shoulin’t be. Shesmt it by a ua—yer Sage Washington Star. It in seldom that wood. which Bes grown mere than 4,000 years before the ‘Christing ers is used in the construction of a present day residence, snd yet this really happened recently in Edinburgh, wher 2 mantelpiece was fashioned frase ‘woud: anid tu be 6.000 years GM. the sandied ESN be SU Fog ati | before it is steeped, they givy it » Saver Safialusly peenilas, bat ane estoumed
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers