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THE HOU VOL. XXIII. L/ HOUMA, TERRFBOJTN*B PARISH, LA., SATURDAY, JULY -Vt, 1900. KOKOMO AND OTHERS. We s'.iould hare stopped off In Chicago, •lily I had to go down to Kokomo—funny name. I wouldn't hare believed there was such a place.--Extract from an Interview with Earl Russell. © when you're through with Kokomo, Mpst noble earl, perchance You'd like to fare to Klckapoo, Or go and have a glance At Ogemaw or Hackensack. And pass through Chickopee, And then from there you might come back By way of Kankakee To Oshkosh and Menominee And Keokuk and Oskaioosa, Muscatine and Tallapoosa. Chickasaw, And Haverstraw And thence to Walla Walla, And pass along to Shakopee. And stop for lunch at Albert Lea, And dine at Pumpkin Hollow. Moreover, there is Waukesha And fair Oconomowoc, Winnebago, Wichita, Red Dog and Manitowoc, Sheboygan, Sauk and Baraboo, Pensaukee, Peshtigo, Oconto, Ox Bow, Kalamazoo, Bad Axe and Romeo, Where man and beast May rest and feast, So promise. Earl, old chap. That when you go back home, you know, You'll not tfell people Kokomo Is the only town that shows up so Blamed funny on the map. —S. E. Kiser. In Chicago Times-Herald. r:: Bill Blake and the Bear f Also Two Girls W ho Seemed to Need J No Protection. fa* ifip â QUARTER of a century ago, when the valleys and bottom-lands of nsylvania were decked in the abun dant growth of tinfter which was na ture's heritage, any self-respecting log jobber, iï his attention had been di rected to the desolate Kettle Creek région, would have turned uj> his nose disdainfully and passed on to ^greener fields, says a Williamsport (l?a.) cor respondent of the N. Y. Sun. But the 'days when a contractor could choose pis place of residence are practically past, and so it was that "Hank" Bell mac was redv.ced to the extremity last fall of erecting his shanty and •tarting operations in the heart of the Jungle-like forest overlooking Kettle Creek. The camp is fitted into a lit tle patch of clearing .ground far over •the mountain top. A narrow turnpike - -#inds up to*4t fronjffhe highway hun '' l ' " " et belofi*, nfui beyond it, »ess, grefl ter. Directly surrounding „ „j the treei have not all been rçtnoved., end on the frosty vinter ni gits, jwaen the snf.w hangs in great layeri upon the- heavy branches and the "air is so crisp and keen that * souncf travels through it with as Auch precision.as though shot from a megaphone, the panthers and catamouilts climb up into the tall «timber and wake the, •lumbering echoes of the forest, . as ■well as the boys in the camp, witn their ivjld and dismal hovrlings. One of those, nights came about a month ago. The panthers aiyi wlld- j cats yelled more furiously, it seemed,-' th?n they had done beforè during the printer, and added to their woeful Wall ings was the voice of th^ north wind as it tossed the snow against the weather-beaten Bides ofthe shanty. For that night -the shanty was good enough for tjiè boys. When supper •was over and the storm showed no aigns of abating they all gathered to gether in the big "lobby," which is home, club, society hnd Sunday schobl to them, and prepared to make the best of "a flight indoors. Now these •woodsmen are not the sort of men who can spend'an evening over a book or enjoy themselves at any tame diver sion, and «in this night even» jack ikejr had no charm for them. The act is tha* they were -jjist in the mood to listen to one ff Bill Slake'» stories. Jt was Blake Who. on a »«là winter's night ten years agOy entered a "dive" in the "Big s Ear" district of Potter county ajjd, with a revolver in each hand, lorced the landlord and guests out into the" street, after which he filled up on the best whisky in the house. Then, when the proprietor re turned with a posse of armed help, Blake barricaded himself in the cel lar and would neither unerge nor al low anyone to enter until entire im munity was promised by the Blow ■ville constable. , » * "Say, Bill," said one* of tjie woods men. "what tarn»l cussed tiesjj ever possessed yon to leave the good job you had in the Slate Bun caipp last lall and come up ta'this pesky "hole?" Bill Blake putted contemplatively at £ his pipe for a mqpjejit, after which h^ •aid: . , . "Well,» mebby I had" p »purty good o telf*: quietl^. Nobody J had finally gone own mind, he reason, Then K havejfone to the e SrSt. placef but at the city, ttit as coach t knocked out grin, on «vas the dude was 'at cut me out. 1 only mention the incident for the sake of explainin' why it was 'it I ever went back to the lumber business at all. "You see, everything went sort o' contrary with me in town after that. I got sick of the whole business, an' all the time while I was dfivin' them spankin' hosses thrdugh the streets my mind would keep a-runnin' back to the old camp life, where I knowed they wa'n't like to be no dudes nor no gals to play hide-an'-seek with a feller's heart. So back' I goes to the old Slate Run job, where I was well known an' only had to whistle to get work. "Wall, the very first night I spent in the camp I made up my mind it wa'n't no use for me to try to get away from the gals. Right i^, that camp they was two as purty gals as you'd care to see—nieces of the bos»' wife. I guess, a-visitin' thar, they told me, for their health. I found out afore I was in the camp very long 'at they was a little too healthy for that place as it was, an' you'll see purty soon what made me think so. "The damsels started right in by flirt in' with me, an' they was so win some 'at I forgot all about the city gal right away. I met 'em half way**in the flirtin' game an' it seemed to me 'at was in clover. The other fellows was all gettin' jealous of the way the gals was shinin' 'round me; but it wa'n't exactly my fault if they wa'n't in it, so I didn't bother about that. Wall, things went on lovely for about a week, an' one night the gals says to me, they says: 'Let's g® along down an' get some apples.' j "Now the o'chard Was quite a ways below the camp an' it was closed in by a big board fence about six feet high. Of course, I went. We had a jolly time goin' toward the o'chard an' the gals se0^ed more lovin' to me than ever. When we got thar an' I seed the high fence I wanted to help fhe gals over, but they says:. 'No, you go fust, an" then we'll toiler.' So of course I went. I put a board up to the fence an' dumb over an' then waited to ketch the gals. Wall, it must have been a minute 1 waited thar an' I didn't hear a sound from the other side. " 'Yes,' says I to myself, 'I see what they're at; they«M>h't want me to help 'em over .j,ftef all.' Then I say% out IçwJ.—ïort -o' pleasant like: 'Oh, I thought you'd change your . minds, purty dearies! ' But they wa'n't no an way "Wall, 1 ' turned esnake«; cinnamon b'ar r tree^n' a-look I'U bet' those m riind boys, what a was, s^g, itglj-looi stand» aiidrr an jrç) in' right at me. W: beautiful locks of mine stood on end like f pbrc'pine .quills. „The.v wa'n't no use feelin' Jor à glfn, "oaSse I knowed I dSdij't have any, not even a jackknife or weapon of no kind.« It was a leetle hot ter proposition than I wanted to,J,ackle jest then, so I bade Mr. Bruin a hasty farewell an' made'för the feÄce. "But now, poys, come the trouble in earnest. It was an easy enough matter to'get over that'fenee, but-when it come to gettin' Viick* -why that was a dif ferent thing. I seen I couldn't der it nohow, an' so I jest stood an' turned my back to the feitce an' waitejl. Bruin was within thiW feet of roe then, an' he riz up onto his hind feet an' stood thar mdvin'Jils head about in a tffreatenih' manner an* motionin' at jne with his big, ugly paws. The moorfwas shinin' out bright» an' clear above us, an' as he sto#d thar between me an' it he was one of the most skeery-lookin* sights I ever seen. He didn't appear to be narvous or discontented in the least, an* I made up toy mind I wouldn't be narvous either. So, lookin' straight into his face an' reckonin' thp distancé, I picked out a spot on the big teller's under jaw an give him such a kick with my big cow hide boot 'at he yelled with pain. "You can l>et I didn't wait to see the result, but I jest, took it across that o'chard as if the dfvil was at my heels. Lôrdy, how my feet did welt tlje ground! A$ last I seen a hole in the fence whar a board was gone, jjnd at it. 1 went; I reached it all right, an' wag jest about half" way through when 1 heard a shuffli«' an' pantin' behind me 'at made my blood freeze up in knotty leetle lumps. Boys,: did you-ever know g b'ar could bunt ? Well, I.have had the "fact drilled into me in a pufty forcible way; for what knocked me through tBe fence at such* a lively gait that night was nothin' more hor less than that b'ar's head} I wa* knocked into a heap on. the outside of the fence, an"thar I laid, huggin' the ground an' shiverin' an' expectiiv* every âeco'nd to find Berlin on top o I me. ' * "I don't know-how long it was 'fore 1 feared raise my head an' look 'round but when I did they wa'n't no b'ar in Sight. I made jip my mind afterwards 'at Bruin was jest gs anxious to get out o* that ieiwe as I was. He must have gone in . through that very hole in the. fence a/t'was probably puttin in his best licks to get out again 'fore I could give him another kiok. VVhee I got to the hole ahead of hint, of vay eyes! Thür ' cinnamon b'ar course be eoi|ldn't very, well do arty Aau knock me out o* the was purty sore wheh I got Back to the camp, but I didn't sly noth in' 'boutAhat an' the gals put up 1 nice leetle »tors, telün' me how when they I *aw the b'ar they was so akeert eculdn't say nothin' an' jest ran ba the house. I took in everything t; said, an' the next night when they me if I wanted to go 'long down 'em an' explore the old mine,! was tickled to death to get the chance. took an old minin* lamp with an" when we got thar I started tn ahead, carryin* the light. The old drift hadn't been worked for years, an' dirty water was drippin' from the roof an' coverln' my best coat as X groped my way in, never doubtin*-" 'at the gals would fol ler. I had only got a dozen feet or so^ an' was jest turnin* 'round' to see if thé damsels was gettin' on ul right when I stumbled over somethin' an' went sprawliii'. The light went out the flurry an' the fust thing I knowOTthey was a deep growl 'at echoed through the mine an* somethiil""had hold 1 of tae by the bootleg. "It was pitch dark in the hol», but a flood of moonlight to one side told me whar the openin' was. With an awful effort I, jerked my leg fren an* scram bled to my feet with the intention of makin' a dash towards that flood of moonlight. Wal, I had only jest nicely got onto my feet an' turned around when I felt somethin' shoot between my legs an' tip me back. I clutched wildly in front of me an' got my both hands imbedded in the shaggy hair of Bruin—for I knowed right well by this time what it was. The b'ar shot out of that drift at an almighty rapid gait, an* I didn't dare drop off forbear of buttin' my brains out against the sides, so I jest laid flat an' hugged tight, watchin' for a good chance to make a leap "Wal, I kin sit here now an'laugh with the rest of you, when I look back at it; but you kin bet they wa'n't no fun in it fer me jest then. "Bight outside the mouth of the drift was a little decline, an' at the bottom of it was a pool of water that was te .die by the leetle stream flotvin' out of the mine. I was all ready, an' as sooiS seen 'at I was out in the open air I jest slid off, easy as you please, the b'ar's back an' struck right in t' pool of water. Wow! But I did nice duckin' an' no mistake. "The first thing I done was to ens» myself for bein' such a blamed fool as to drop in that water, an' then ! pulled myself ùp onto my feet ah' proceeded to look myself o-rtr. Never lettin* up, on my cussin* for a deretlbacjj to the t I got around the nêx-tmoi,,.,, , my su'prÎFr, frlïêirs, when I' went hi hind the fence an' seéïi one of them > blamed gàls feedm' an old b'ar outçn tin ' I a tin pan! "I seen how tjte, who|e t&fng was i» a ifecond. TV m g'alp had been makin' game of meefH the time, an' the b'ar 'at Ijptlon to go in ah' get my shooter an* put an end to the 'tarnal thing for spite, but I con cluded it was bést to curb my temper an' let it gfi. The fellers had all gone to work, an' I knowed if I waited until they got back they'd be onto the tttin^ an' have an awful leg on me, so I jest g(St my togs together an' scratched out as quietly as I could. "Yes, this is a lonesome, pesky hole, an' no mistake, but they ain't^o dudes here nor gals to play hide-an'-go-seèk with a feller's heart an' he payin', I'm durn glad of it." .war, when hi created a se: 1 I 1 glad A Thrifty Habit. "Stinginess is one thing and an ob servance of excessive nicety in financial details is another," said a western man who, according to 4he Washington Star, is'worth a good deal of money. "As an example I will cite a rich aid . „„i« t , j u .„. .? uncle I once ljad. He was a millionaire and not stingy, but he watched thç pennies like a hawk, and he Was so ex acting that everybody said h'e ,\vas the meanest man in the country; bSt ht; wasn't, for he gavé away $10,000 a year in various charities that he would not let the recipients mention., But to the case in point'. One day I asked him for a nickel for car fare, 'telling him' 1 would return it when •I got soma change, but I forgot all about- it Three irioa^ä after that it occurred to the old ipiMÉan to be>ery nice' to his five nepp^Swr.iyjieces, and at Christ inas four, of thejs ivceived checks for. $5,000 mc h. while mine was for $4,999. 95. TkhÈn«» just his way. don't 3'ou see? I owed hioJ that^iickej and he wanted —^ "Bnll Uns" Rnxsell. Sir William Howard Busspll has be come ,an octogenarian, the oldest of the British War correspondents, hav ing been born on March SS, 1820. 'H^l^ a century has passed since he first wp reseated the London Times on the of battle, his lit>t work having -been. -tters from the front ion at home. f Two tft a Kind. A ljig ape that died at'jyJantic-City, N. J., the other day was out in evening elo'thjjs and buHe(j\n a silwr mounted casket. The man who footed the bills', says the -Chicago Tîmes-Her aid! must have regarded the simian aa a near relative. * ' ' FtlsrJmajce on Bicycle», Padua's pilgrims to Rome for the jju-, bilee will make the journey on bicycle#. H HI _HL. I done in connection with the Crimftaar . ' . . - a * BUYING OUR HORSES. Bnsltoh Offlrvri Expected to Pur« ekm Thouiandi in This If.' 4 Country. '„«A large dealer in horses in this city recently, that the arrival of a ber of English army officers in country, who are sent over by jir government to buy horses for in South Africa, is expected to a distinct impetus to the trade principal horse markets of the ntry, reports the New York Post, only will the prices of horses be in the west, he said, where mbet, ( of the purchasing will be done, l»ft a noticeable increase in prices will be noted here. "Not all of tha ennveninent in the horse market, IwKvever, will be due to prospective ■British buying, for just now the »lited States is also a brisk buyer of rses, > "We shall feel the effect of the buy ing in.th# west," said this authority, "very (ÉSon after it begins. In my opinion oui - prices will advance 48 hours afjef the selling begins at Chi cago and Louisville. Nenrty all the horses we get come from the west, and are largely of the class the British government is buying. "Not all of. the buying is done in the United States, however. One of the English agents is to.meet here to day the postmaster from Toronto, who is to go through Canada with the agent, and try to buy at least 5,000 in the dominion. All the horses bough't iu the west and Canada are to be sent to Buffalo for final inspec tion before they are shipped to South Africa, x'kat will probably, cause a more vigorous movement in the New ■fork state markets, becatise of the convenience tn getting horses to the point of inspection*" A Louisville dispatch states that Kentucky has been, seeding horses to that point in anticipation of the visit of the Englishmen. ' The dispatch states further concerning the brisk ness of the demand : "Besides the prospective trade with England's rep resentatives, Louisville is now enjoy ing a brisk trade with the ' United Scutes government. Artillery and cavalry hqrses are being; bought by the hundred and ient to the western army posts. Good çay joyeâ shows,**; number to be country has 1 10,000 to 35,.000f imd CMc peclhs to furnish the ntajorl§-, Bible the English gètenimen wish to buy at the rate of weeïc. and Obtain the lécjillred Wim ber within a few weeks. Only and reasonably young horses wi.. accepted, and the prices quoted by Louisville dispatch are expected rule. ta HS"*"«' '""V . t* - m the fireman vvas straining e\4ry hiervi - . . ~ J . > ' Whlatle Slïtj'-rive Mlle» Long. An odd incidçjtK oéouçî-ed lately on the Chic.ago, <fe , Northwestern railway at Highland Papk, 111,, »e^orts the Jffil waukee Sentinel." As the engineer &, the train* which reaches Milw aukee at, 11 o'clock blew the whistle ,valy| broke and he wa£ unable t<J shfit off the steam f roi the noisemaker. From Highland Park".to Milwaukee, a dis tance, of a Went 64 miles, there wM not a moment when the whistle was not sounding full strength. It could Be heard for miles away as the train camé on in a long, continuous, shrill aopnfl, and nt every city and village-peop^e'raa to their doors to learn «'bat was hap pening. While the whistle wag bio*in •Ä. as blotting A-?ry nerve to.Jceep' the steam up to the run point, and sucoeeded in bringing train into the station on time. . , .,—' .' * For Uoweilr» Maidens, The bequest with u medieval flaior about It is that given by the marquis of Bute to the township of Cardiff, Wales? for the benefit of deserving but dc^yerless maidens. • The interest on £1.000 is. annually awarded to some girl ofj the working classes on her mr fiage. ' The candiifate has to be nomi nated by a member of the corporation, and hts also to prore her right to the dower by meats of good conduct. Ap plications have to be sent in by SÎurch 33. Hut up to ten day's ago not a solitary candidate had presented her creden tials. Last year a domestic servant was 'the fortunate recipient of tlic n^oney. The question its now asked: "Caii the • war, and the consequent dearth of eligible males, have anything to do with the lack of even a solitary applicant?" _ •*• #' B —; '-ra # , In His CsBf. > VV-w-wwhat w-w-w-will It c-c«^>Dst mum-muia-me t-t-t-to t-t-t-t-tel r 13 pljjtAc f-fift-fQf-J^'otn here f-to B-B-B ,Bub»-poston?"^|e asked. ,'Vj t The operator looked at him ingly. ; »'-If.,you f-eally mean It," she replied, ."I should say it would ccysi you about $330.75. The rate is $2.50 per five utes!"— N. Y, World. , l.uokiuK Wlwart, Little Sister (angrily)—Now, you what I 'say. ' . Little Brother—I won't. "You won't, eh? Oh, don't l wish i grown up, and you was my baudl"--St. Louis Republic, we A REMARKABLE CASE. Bee Taken from m Chiens» Man 's Ear, Where It Had Been for Twen» ty-Kltht Yearn. Many a man has a bee in his bonnet, but John Geisler, a Chicago hog broker, is probably the only man in the worlë who ever let a real live bee get in ac tual toucl) with the inside of his head. Until a few days ago a bee had been imbedded in his left ear for over 28 years, and when it was removed by Dr. C. Hubart Lovewell last week the high ly colored insect was found to be per fectly preserved aDd Mr. Geisler, when he saw it, vividly recalled the day of his youth out on a Kansas farm when the bee flew in to entomb itself in the recesses of his auricular organ, there to become embalmed, says the Chicago Chronicle. While Mr. Geisler was a young man working on a farm near Baldwin City, Kan., this strange story began. He was laboringin a cornfield one blisteringhot morning ir. August with the sun pour ing down at a temperature of 110 de grees, when he accidentally disturbed a nest of bees. Maddened at the in vasion of their home the busy insects swarmed around the intruder, who ran for his life across the field. He thought he had escaped from the danger when he heard one huge bee buzzing revenge fully near him. He pounded and sawed the arr with his hands, but the bee con tinued to follow in dangerous proxim ity to his ear. Suddenly the buzzing was followed by a tickling sensation, and then when Mr. Geisler's head began to ring like a chime of church bells he realized that the insect had entered his ear. He could feel it wriggling through the channel that leac^s to the drum and in a few minutes he was in agony. Hur rying to a doctor's office he briefly ex plained what had happened, :#nd after a pain' restorative had been' admin istered he was able to explain the na ture of *iiai caste m Ore clearly: The d.oc tor Worked at th% organ fof some time, "washing it out with oil* afcd after sev eral days the pain left - him and reached the conclusion must have wor he was busy, n; night as ago and .-stab in the hog business, and well-known broker ,at ^be yawls. il weeks ago he to JifcTe with his fett eel*" afcain, Rut bee.incident had happened so long that he arter- onçe thought of it. the ear grew worse. There was a ht pain near the drum and Mr. Geis ler began to realize- that his hearing * edoc B begiMjing to be affected. Finally he decided to consult a doc " last week he callftfl on Dr. t Lovewell at hijs offlée in Gar [Sard, near Çalsted street, r made ay examination. He ed the ear and probed it for an hour of more, when suddenly he pulled ont a shining thing ^that had for ill the world the appearance of an iBseet. "What's this?' said the operator iu astonishment. *Hr. Gcisler looked and -shook his .3 là wonder. .physician looked more closely at i. 1 ' .._,y, It's a bee," he said. "Where in the world did yo.u gel that in your ?" en the whole story, as related*al dy, came qut. Geisler can hear perfectly now. that before seemed barely per» ble now sound like the clashing of .' The mummified bee »Wit be d in a glass ease by the broker. continu % h ab he Evtl« olj Good Advice. ," said the inan with the wpr ook, 4'do you remember giving , of advice ofl hojjf to conduct ■ affairs about two ' piontha repljed the man lyith the wise on. m«, if Ï wanted to win the shouia make love to Jier huh." if I c.wUf ' get the oM lady sldej all t had to do was io aroupil with a dug- and say to the gipl."' man noddpd. for' me to compliment the mother on her.youthful appearance," — i! -* ^.hc worriecf*man. "and g'—* about how sad it was u o^ the present day omf>are4* with those a won the girl, ^■»i* The ôld lady has divorce and me Baltimore " ' i iu It Went. just treated his re«taurant)- a -Not ; francs, eh? greying) —First tlujrl—St. Louis = P ON GENT PARAGRAPHS. Jones—"I hear he got all the rote." Johnston—"Yes, running for office he cakewalked."— Kansas Ci\y Independent. When a man is a chronic suffe *er from indigestion he ought, never to eat any part of a doughnut but the hole in the middle of it.—Somervilid Journal. "I understand that he was under at cloud because he stole an umbrella." "Yes; and he stole the umbrella b« çause he was ûnder a cloud."—Harv ard Lampoon. "I can't imagine a woman marry ing a prize-fighter." "Too brutal?" "I should say. Why, he would never give her a chance to talk!"—Philadel phia in orth American. Wunder— "Do you and your wife ever have an argument?" Hen Peck— "Oh, no. When she gets through talk ing I have forgotten what we were discussing."—Baltimore American. "This," said the sergeant of marines who was showing her over the battle ship; "this is the quarter-dflfe," "Oh!" she exclaimed, feeling for her purse, "I thought it was all free."— Philadelphia Press. Mrs. Greene—"Sometimes, don't you know, I begin to thiak that Thomas married me for my money." Mrs. Gray—"Oh, well, you know there is always a reason for every marriage." —Boston Transcript. Unspeakable • terror was written upon every lineament of the murdered woman's face. "Ha! A clew!" ex- . claimed the yellow reporters, as with one voice. Writing experts were su moned at once. These unheait ly declared that the terror written by one John Smith, obscure lawyer, and he wa I ngly electrocuted.—Detroit 3 ex na sev and ^be Rut long it. a doc Dr. Gar He an ill iu his at per» of be I ngly electrocuted.—Detroit 3 MANY state, where he took l . with an only reïhtivè, an u Moolchen. who «; inippö«e<] - to possessed of raçâép thàï, dp average sh,a.w of this woj-ld'sjgoods. The older Moolchec wàs a bachelor and young öornalnje was his Aeir at law. Shortly after, the arrival of ,ft»i'nelj.us at tBe home of' h!s#tocle the litter was found with his skull crushed and life ex tinct, the body being suspended frpm the stirrup of the saddle girthed 5 to • horse which he had ridden away from short time i> (pression was that the his life through a run but the coroner's in wpr wise the Jier lady io say the g'—* ♦The man had away e-st-ra fact that wheQ d his let: up. led to only ?, S5 profit the *A stranger in a stfang Wihdut money 1 , unable t or «ven understand the j guage of the court' an< With strong circUlnStan «ai»-; 1 : gree, and in tht' sjiring o: was duly committed penitentiary jfbr the n&tviral life. As a priso; v»s most exempla: cfssi^e administratl , most qttarter Of a Century of hi: ceratSfen ,-was impressed wit" ** esty and good intention. Finally during the session general assembly his case to the attention of the pardons. Inquiry ■Sad thoroughly convineed that a great injustice had ,beon young-Germî» and a bill .branche*, ofr the assembly the governor to grant Mook-hen execii' tiye clemency. And* now. firntiy, after 22 years of servitude, in the event bis lifts, wi|h Kl#bair silvered, u stran ger to tlte ways of the world anrf prt; 'maturely^old, Moolchen has iaid aside the garb of infai|y and is rehabilitated in civilian raiment. • me i his in civilian raiment. • The Retanda. . . , The rotunda of the capitol at Wash ington is 96. feet in diaoneter and ISO 'feet high.' It is a eimilar hall ceutar of the building, and con eight large historical paintings. grant dome overarches it. The tùnda is also a name applied to a lie inclpsure a fid favorite resort in' lin,' Ireland. A Henfttelt »eflnition. "Say, pa. Ahat is an adult?" "An adult, Jimmy, is a pçsp doesn't kick out > good j 870TJ ttf j T»»eks. "- Detroit Itérée Pre mm If *** who