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Tim-TE BESTB S LOCAL NESVSPAPER. DvlN DIM VOL. 4. RIED LODGE, PARK COUNTY, MONTANA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1893. 0. SECRET SOCIETIES. I O. O. . (iA.VFI.LDI ODGE, No. I 3.6, I. O. O. IF., nmets every Satur day at. 7:30 o'clock p. ft. S)journingBrcth ereu are cord ally invited. 11ENr 31:cINToSII, N. G. ,J .ME'; TUI':;I IL, Secretary. I( OF L. MEETS EVERY TIUitS a day at 7:30 o'clock p. m.,at Black burn's Hall. T'l s. Plt., M. \V. DAN. SUTIrHE:t.AN) Secretary. F. & A. M1. STAR IN THE! S West L(dge, l. I,. &: A. M1. i - ular communientions first and third We - nesdayin each mlont h at 7:30 o'clock p. t., in Blackburn's Hall. Visiting brothers are invited. J. L l.u:Ns, W. I1. J. S. I)D Nivis, Sec. OF P MEETS EVERY T. E day a7 t 0 i :1 L p. n. ; ];sa : T P,.Y, ,u., C. C. G o. M. Jo:NEs. K. or' H.. .t. P. CHURCHES E. CH.-iC"ItC SEVIC,' ( 1IELI) i. :.Ietholi' t ' Church. rea- -hin<: every alteruate Stluntldy at 11:00 a o cool 8:)0 p. .. Prayer .eetiln every Thurs day 7:;0 p. mI . 'u ''a-y S clo r.ol n y afternool at a o'hlo,'k. ('Ins', la.s e !In' aft.er iO nerlitn:i. are htcrtiiy Vweltcome to thl.ese En:!-' :'t . , 1lNG,'x ;ATl ION L C li t' 1C II. IL rchine l t 10:3 0 m :t 7:;> r ) t rn.1 Sunday-Sc.l.:ho l .,I- 12 m : Y. P. ' (' E 7 p .. m. uew. ('. E 0-o.iety 4p. mi. Wedm lo- y h-,ir pra'ctice 7 p. -. Prayer Aletin.: S p l W . II. Va- I i'. t ' 'or. ( AI A\' IY i . . A N -1 , I. l ,) . .' Ev'ry altern 5t sundary i e. .,ri. Ih w tnd 1iM . Oalins and L drto,, r.t DR. .; . P. o .soN EL-LJ JLI. }0OkCKL ' LX X .i' -iseas s of F'iSelr r a ,e . . PAYSi(:i .\N A N i ')[ , ,' e Et tN . ANDREW P..,'c cAN ELLY, R~o& L~odg, 2.2o:ta":4.;. W. F. Mey-r. T'I"'TOI-; ' 1'-; 'iT I ,_'_ . Rid Lodge, Mont. Thomas C. Ross. Attorney at Law, N8OTARY PU3LiC. Agent for a:ll the hle:oulig Insur-i ell(ce coll pantiets. 1Mem1nhr of all t:he lad:uliing ir ('OLLE('TI)NS A SPECIAI.\ ITY. A lsntrirf and' T h.i.l s Ex uird. REI) LOI)GE, M(TNIA.1. a O. F. GODDARD. ATTORNEY AT L.1AW Olflr.. v ,r First National BaI:ll: BILLINGS, - - - MoTANA. The Livingston ASSALY OF'WICC Gold and m ilver - 1 ' r hon - - - - - . Gold, Silver & le,:i 2.)0 [ Tin - - - - - :.; (Copper - - - - 1.: I) al - - - - - rIO Nickel - - - - - 5.0I Fire ' llny 1 i.0ll t)o "3.u Address Ii.1 o:y L. GLENN, Livingston Mon t. (efee Natio:l P':rk ;0 nik lvi lust onml. Referenc 1W. 1), \hol ler, a vr in m c h r . ri IE Hanly & Fleming DEALERS IN WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS. AN ORI)ERLY HOI1USE ANI) (UENTLEMAAN TO SERVE YOU. (ive us a Call. Red Lodge Montana. W, ý EWH, COUNT, MEASURE ·7e--y article pur ~L~ tv- , ch a ze: L, is Cle advrice cfts·ri. )ielc c't to the de~1er, bat we7 thin LT, it a3pplies to the ccnz a36~ wev'Cll s~jeep~ W'E JIE, BY SPE)IAL Al-i ?~TIFRVEYOR tmUIf"I fl' 'L 7 eý: ýIn- ? ng need .vi I l' tisiy tse il-< e _ 7-I t~3 rF' j ? ;) I' 'A"' IiiR T I\ I½R ,ýI) I'; EVEiUV WOELL E',BB I.' ,'E1) FA 111LY. i-4 g-ay Rakes, etc. SiliN ,. WE AIh )0 RES .'P'O iRS EF I' IIlRSONS. ONE PRICE AN1) TIIAT THE ( )N ISTENT \'IT'H THIE QUA LITY OF (0OO1)S W\E HANIDLE. AA t'AIl AT t)OURII S'i')TORE WILL ('ONVIN(E'. T'ilE MOST Si'KE'TI\UAL THAT We Are the People TO IDRAW\ TO. I F YOU ARE LIVING OUT OF TOWN SEND US YOUR ORI)ERS ANI) WE WILL ATI'EN\I) TO THEM Carefully and Promptly. J.Ho GONR AD IS THE PLACE. WHITTIER, DYING. Breathless the mist of amnethyst That faints upon the sea. The sun moves like a musing god What sacred sight sees lie? The goldenrod doth grevely nod Unto the beckoning bay: The aster watches for a sign What ails the happy day? On its pale lip a finger tip The stern white itmmortelle Lays softly, like one murmuring: "Hushl Ask not. It is well." Smile ye or weep; ye cannot keep The secret that ye bold; Deep hearted autmumin that he lovedl The solemn word is told. Wind of the northl It has gone forth; Breath of the pines-he dies. Ye had eternal kinship's right To kiss his closing eyes. To us, who love as men may love, Tender and loyal he: But Nature was his confidant. Sole intimate was she. We kneel afar, where thousands are; Gray light is on the grass: The tide is calling from the ebb: Lord, let the great soul passl Thou spirit, who in spirit and in truth Didst worship utterly the unn;eon G(od, Thine age the blossom of a stainless youth. Thy soul the star that swings a:,rove the sod. No pratyer to heaven ever lighter rose Than thy i:ure life, escaped, ariseth now Thou hushest like a chord into its close; Thou ceasest as the amen to a vow. Sacred tie passion flower of thy fame. To thee, obedient. "Write," the angel eai th. Proudly life's holiest holpes preserve thy nalUC, Thou poet of the peoplle's ('hristian fail h. Master of song! Our idler verse shall burn .With shamt before thee, IBea'uty dedicatel Prophet of God:i \We write upon t lhiu urn. Who, being tGenius, held it cinst lrate; To starvintg spirits needing heavenly bread. The v.,ud or free, with wrong or right at strif'e: To qliet tears of mourners comforted Iy nmusic set lnlto ete'rnal :iie. These are thine ushlirs at the Sil:'nt t;ate; To th.e aipealing, tihe w e gi've in trust. Giad heart l 'orgive i:1:n us, de,:olate. The nob withh hich \.e leave' thy sacred elust l -Elizabeth S. Phelps in Atlanitic Monthly Slbstituto for Candles. There were two substitutes fort' candles. The on1e was th-i, ani!ent oil lamp, thie c;r,,o:de (Fr. creuiset). a triangsular mnetal saucer with an upnright lhool! at the base to. be hung up bly. There -, wa.s an inner s.auier. Mnoveab'le, to, graduate the nse of the oil. At thie apex of the anigle was flam5e, coming f'('m 'I wick made of pitb'h of ru.shes. vwhich must be t(ut at full moIon, , tAe htn'e was thttiught to wax and w :e with the 'mo:on if cut at any otiher time. The othtuer substitute for the candle was the Ihog can'le. It ,5lis unlide by splitti-ug up the resinous logs of the primeval fits that are found imbedided in the bogsii They were left to dry at the fire side over the crmci or chain that held up the pot over the fire. The candlestick, called the peermnan, was a stone with a hole in its (euater, into which was fi:ied a pillar of wood ait =ut four feet high an tilpped with a cleft piece of iron, into which the caudle fitted. The nose of the candle was always turned to the dohor. Black woods Magazine. A Lgancy to SeronO!lanl R:Boksllers. By a chas.:e in his will M. Xavier Marmier, a member of the French academy, leaves forty pounds to t.,e distributed among the tellers of see ondhand books who ply their tradle on the quays of Paris. The money is to be spent by the legatees in a feast or dinner, during which they are to think of the testator. rwho( is grateful for the happy moments which he spent wandering from one bookstall to another on the banks of the Seine between the Pont Royal and the Pont St. Michel. --London Tit-Bits. To See the Heart Beat. M. Marcey, the well known inves tigator of animal movements by means of instantaneous photography and the zoetrope, has now succeeded in rendering the beating of a living heart visible to the eye. All the phases of the movement can be fol lowed and properly examined by this new method. The heart employed in his experiments was that of a tur tleo.-Pittsburg Dispatch. Machine Made Love. Clarice-And so your engagement with Maitland is really off? Isabel- Yes. I got tirh'ed of pla chine made love. Clarice--Machine made love ! What do you mean? Isabel-He wrote all his letters on a typewriter. -Exchange. Competitive games, especially in tercollegiate, in which many ele ments combine to carry the excite ment to the highest degree, are dan gerous, not only in the final decisive struggle, but in the long preliminary training. A pie served to Charles I1 was made of sparrows, potatoes, eryn goes, lettuce, chestnuts, oysters, cit ron, artichokes, eggs, lemons, bar berries, pepper, nuameg, cloves. mace, currants, sugar and wine. Leaves attract dew; boards, sticks and stones do not, because leaves have a chemical use for dew and de tain it, while boards, sticks and stones have none and do not. Lawrence. Kan., is stated to con tain several girls who imagine they are so pretty that they are afraid to appear on the streets in a crowd for fear of being kidnaped. In Genesee county, N. Y.. there are 155 families who have never seen I a Bible. So says an agent of the American Bible society. The woman's sufferage convention was held this week in Washihgton. 1). ('. Fooling Jay Gould. A resident of Kansas City collected a group of men around him one night last week by telling in a loud voice some new stories about Jay Gould. His stories were chiefly interesting because of their improbability. The story teller evidently did not know Jay Gould. He narrated, with ap parent sincerity, an incident whc ein Mr. Gould was outwitted in a rail road deal by two Kansas men. The'y had invited Mr. Gould to take a t: i over the Central Branch railroad in Kansas with a view to purchma.ng it. They wanted to sell badly. Mr. Gould was induced to visit Atchison, and from that city started with the two Kansas men west over the line. At every station the Gould train was obliged to wait for freight trains to pass going east. The farther west they went the more numerous be came the trains, and of course the greater grew the value of the road in the eyes of Gould. The return trip was made in the night, and Gould is represented as having closed the bargain eagerly. Subsequently, according to the story, Mr. Gould ascertained that there was very little freight traffic on the road. He found that he had been deceived by the trick of moving every empty freight car belonging to the company past his special train. --New York Times. Do Animanl Dream? Much research and investigation warrants the assertion that man is not the only animal subject to dreams. Horses neigh and rear upon their hind feet while fast asleep; dogs bark and growl and in many other ways exhibit all their characteristic passions. It is highly probable that at such times the remembrance of the chase or of a combat is passing through the dogs' minds. Besides the above signs of fleeting pain, anger and exciteminnt, these noble creatures of ten nmanifest signs of kindness, playfulness and of almost every other paSsion. Rum ,inant ani inals, such as the ishlepl and tie cow, are believed to Lbe less affected with dreams than those of higher passions which Slpend their waking hours in scenes of greater excitement. Philosophers and investigators tell us that if we trace the dream faculty still lower in the scale of animal life we shall prolably find that the same phenomena exist, and judging from analogy it is only reasonable to reck on dreaming as one of the universal laws-almost as universal as sleep it self.-St. Louis Repullic. flares Often Take to the W'ater. A correspondent declares that hares taking to the water are "by no means a rare p1henomenon." 'Hay ing," he continues. "been residing near London for over fifty years, 1 have had but few opportunities of observation in this respect, but I well, remember in my younger (lays a hare quite deliberately crossing the:i Avon in view of the tollgate keeper at Hampton, near Evesham, and after shaking itself skip off to the gardens, no dloubt to regale itself on the dainty lherhage there. "On another occasion a friend of mine shot at a hare not far from the same place, but not securing his prize it ran to the river and swami across. Another case camne to my knowledge when a hare, pressed hal d by a dog in pursuit, swam over a brook and made good its escape. The latter two cases were for dear life. not so the former. I feel sure many residing in the country could give instances to confirm the fact that hares have no objection to a bath." London News. Too Iig for Ilis Sphere. The newspaper office b'oy is fond of work-that is to say, he loves to sit and see it accumulate. He loves to contemplate work in the abstract. Its details are less in I teresting to him. The sound of the call bell is music to his ears. It never annoys him in the least. There are several authenticated instances on record where he has been known to answer the bell. His forte is the running of errands--those not con nected with the business of the office -for himself and friends. He likes to assist the elevator man and make himself generally useful outside of his usual duties. The dull routine of office work is too limited a sphere of action for his versatility. In fact the newspaper office boy is some thing per se.--New York Herald. How It Sounded to a Child. Little folks don't always under-: stand things aright. At one of the pubhc schools recently the teacher was instilling "Barbara Fretchie" into the minds of her charges for concerted recitation. The lines "Up from the meadows rich with corn, clear, on a cool September morn, the clustered spires of Frederick stand," had been drilled and drilled until all had them perfect-to all appearances. But one little girl, on reaching home, recited the lines in this style, "Up from the meadows rich with corn, clear, on a cool September morn, the custard pies of Frederick stand." Hartford Post. Smart as at Lawyer. First Burglar- You was mighty' lucky to get cleared, but that there lawyer charged ye about all ye stole. didn't he? Second Burglar-That don't mat ter. I'll watch my chance w'en he goes home tonight and git it back. New York Weekly. The cold wave in the east was the ,.most severe for yea:rs. A PAIR OF "JINERS." An Incident Showing IIow There Are Setbucks in All Business Schemnes. "They hain't no convention nor nothin in town, is they?" asked a long haired man who. with an elder ly lady carrying an enormous reti cule. sE>.: i ti.i:aingly up to the cotth~er i:! ", I ni,.t: hotel Friday evening 1' .d hi.ccd the proprietor fair in his v.":'u" eye. "Not lt 1 know of," said the proprictcr. '"Wha;t kind of conven tion, miste', were you looking for?" " 'Waal!. E:tis'. Baptis' is my first pick. l'm Bal;tis'. Hesty here," nodding at his wife, "she's got a Meth'dis' leanin, but 'twouldn't mat ter much either way, would it?" he replied, smiling at his modest part ner. "Did you come to town expecting a convention?" asked the proprietor. "No! Oh, no! Not's I know on We're both Y. M. C. A., ye see, and she's temperance, and I'm consider able in the Grange. and she's a Re bekah, and I'm one of the G. A. R. post up in my town. We (come vis itin, but the folks is away. We:d orter let 'em 'a' knowed. but we didn't. We've allus had good luck counven tionin; allus staid a good while ani. had plenty to eat and a mighity good time, and it hain't never cost r-, nothin. We generally intend to di most o' our visitin in strange p.l-,es as dellygates, ;ut here we be, and the folks we w":as a-goin to v.isit has gone away, and, thoughts 1, if there's a convention in town it'a mighty slim show, but I'd be one of the bretherin and she'd be a sister in less'n two minutes after we seen headquarters. 1 thought I'd ask the question. No harm. ye know. El there was a convention o any kind -Republican or Democrat, Unitari an, Congregationalist. old school B-:p tis'. Good Templar, Sons o" Temp ' ance, Temple er Honor, Patrons' o Husbandry, P. U. O. W. F., G. A. R., Sons o' Vet'ran; or anything of the kind--you'd know it, woualdn't. you ?" "There is no convention of any kind." "Come on then, Hesty," sdi. he wearily, "we'll have to stay here and settle." "Sam." said the landlord, "give this couple the bridal chamiber." Lewiston Journal. A (irewImue 1isi:g. It was a rather unusual ornament for a room. if it could be called at ornament: Lut bachelors often havE strange things in their rooms. This was a human skull, polished and made into a receptacle for stray bifs of paper or anything else that one wanted to put into it. The top could be removed at pleasure. It was a grewsome thing to have on a writing desk. and it attracted v a great deal of attention. Calleow shuddered as they looked at it, anc one day one of them asked the bach elor why he had it around. "Oh, it's a sort of a keepsake," he said carelessly. "it was my broth er's." "Your brother's" He looked surprised as he saw ev ery one in the room edging away from him. "Why, yes," he said. "Do you mean to say that that vae your brother's skull ?" demanded one. "Certainly: what's the matter with it?" he asked with a! parent astonish ment. "He gave it to me when h11 was married. He got it when he was a medical student, but his wife wouldn't have it around the house." -Life. London Fog. Over the mighty city. amid certain atmospheric conditions, the particles of carbon form a canopy that ob structs the passage of heat and of chemical rays from the center of lifo -the sun. There is a lowering of the temperature, and animal vitality is diminished. Pure fog mist, such as we see in the country, does not seriously interfere with solar chem ical energy.' Mist is simply condensed vapor. When it is frozen the particles form storage for the deposition of particles of carbon or of sulphur. If the vapor is merely in condensed watery parti cles it absorbs the hydrocarbons and the sulphurous acid produced by im perfect combustion of bituminous coals. The innocent mist is thus con verted into the yellow black fog known to the dwellers in London. National Review. The Shah and His Subjects. The immense amount of money spent by the shah in the purchase of furniture and curiosities in Europe excited a feeling of discontent, and his second tour was unquestionably unpopular among his subjects. That he was able to venture upon a third is a proof of the absolute security of his position, but it is also due to the sentiment which he has taken care to diffuse among his subjects that the princes of Christendom vie with each other in anxiety to entertain so great a potentate and squabble for the honor of his alliance.-- "Persia and the Persian Question." A Great I' c<s.,r. M. de Semlblacay, bishop of Bau gas, for many years eat six meal' a day and attribiuted his talent in thio, direction to the fact that "i ca:y grace not only bef(oe and after e :: repast, but at each removal of a service. "--Exchaune. At Homestead 300 people are on the verrzt of eterv,:tion. The Use of thie 1 o:.ocle. There is a queer fashion, more prevalent in England than with us perhaps entirely cic;if_.i ed to England and a few anglomalenu:c.; in Getrmany and this country--cf v. 'ing a glass before one eye only. Ti:; c'sc' probably eriginatecl ,w ith short sighted pe;!:ip who. i. . w~Ii, to be able to see at a distalue wi' l one eye and near at hand with the other. armed the short sighted eye with a glass andl left the other in a condition in which it worked easilxy witho t one. An English gentleman lately told me that this fashion arose from the needs of the hunting ficld, when it became necessary--on jutnpiug a ditch, for example----to chae'ge the view from one covering thei ,whole field to one that would correctly e -'i mate the short distance to b c ,ovc"cd by the horse. The one glass could then be real il dropped from the eye, whereas to tie tach a pair of eyegtlasses wonld not be so easy. But whatever ;vts thet origin, most of those who no .v wear a glass in this way do so for pu:'o 10.-c. unknown to the writer, for a i: with no refractive power -v-ttvr is often worn, and peul le use lh 'm who have no defect of vi:ion. Pri.: :l the monocle is 'an c -e"c· ,f c 'iili tion upon the eye. but ju.t ex- ., how English civiiization, whlich ju: ly ranks among the hil'hS.t, h a-:' come to its use, while (o-ther ;natin': scarcely empnp!,'y it. it wouid b, diili cult to say. -Dr. D. B St. Jo:., Roosa in Cosmoplitan. A Mouse In He1r Hat. One day this week a lady wenout to a Fourth street store to im:n' s"v purchases. She enga:g'.l: a y.;:: clerk in conversation co:t.'c;ie:·.· ':: rious artic 10s. While talkien' t, I), 11 the salesman chanced to loo: :: her hat. It tmoved slightly. T :en 1he looked again, and aga'in the f, .i.:i'-e' headgear was pertcied toll I; 1::, tion. The young a ,t tun 1.i and his tongue did cleave to lth'' r, i" of his miouth. Like tne t uAe'ri:h . with niglhtmn:e, hie w.anted to r, e i:r . but could not. Al! the time tIe l ,-' 1 hat kept moving in a peculiar w:. The young m-an k"i;t hi;s .az o(: .. hat--for sc:le rea-sorn g .a'i;,.-t t; himself he could not do ctywe'si:e. Presently he sw oo -:0i1 ' t-i !r hat raise up; then .. -:ir of 'h'i:a. lbright eyes peered out. The ,.:: instant out from unl.r the t:i: juimped a mouse. It landed on th pale young clerk'e; slhoulder, '-i I '.(' ran out into the strLct yelliing likt a Conmanche. "'U"h'. what was ta:t screamed the lady. "It wias a :::; and he jump1ed out of y-eor h:it." :i.a swered the ;pale yovung clerk from he tween his chatteri ng" teet h. Anil o it was. The lady had taken en hir hat, put it on and wore it to tiih store. On the. way. gse ''id. sh:i lt something moving; in Ir lh.t, Li a thought it was the ;ree'ze movi",' in her hair. iNhe was greatly Ir il'. td at the develehtm:e::ts , but n ;t -, frightened as the pale you:ig cl'rk. Santa Rosa Rl'publicanit. An Instructo, r in :tcon. Mr. Carter went amnong' the lb-:i at Eton by thilneliet of ")i1i Shoes," and died at the very vad vanc'ed age of t;il.ty- fo'u. ie was a steady going, average old gentle man, with a great pot\ver of pi,'ciny his relati ves in c; lie (;il'cos and livings and a plienitul law; of in agination. He greatly tnu'l ed (1. as boys by taking, as his te:t the words, "My sins 'a'e m,'e in u ber than the hairs of my head. l.i: own pate being as trie' from hair I;., an egg or a billiard ball. In his tenureof otice as vic.. pr vost there v,-as tal;; of a n,',' l:'U';it for the college chai, .. :end some ain guine man vain'tily '.led to p( rsuad111 the authoritics inl it (tt'::;t to be' designed and erecte(d by \i1 William Morris, then junt bec'o-nu ; knowni as an artist, whlo hdi an ot'ice in Queen's square. I (L C.arter walked therefore into A11. Sior .is" studio, with the w;'ids. Dl you keep pll pits?" as th ',;uglh hiit ad I .f e .l : . ::. taip o for tape or bI. te;ht i'. I', l .t ' e mained uichangiil, a -; e'e of :'mt ture as con n! lnllt ilac'e 11 811' :;O'i'i:,i'ils ordinarily delivered in it. Nioet teenth Century. Fifes Cootnnlui ic'ate Clho!cr:i. Flies are a very active mnedium of communicatnmg cholera, according to the report of the Hamburg Mcdi cal society. Nine flies were c'laturtcd which had bt(:n in ',outan't with infected ci:olera I ateriail, and were placed in flisks c-;i-taiiii:.ng nutrient gelatini. li x Iof the nine ves sels unmlt"u.n l lt'o'es of co('(mmnmma bacill were s:i: c. -sIl iily cultiva;ted of course t'.; 1 tiw I I...'('tloln con vey .d by ti,- i.i- ' i Le ;,ssibility, the:'-eforel. I :i'.,- i a victim to cholera iit ;`:a v .- i ayo no nleans small. Chag iti A Reli" of .,heru sin' s - A nty. Dr. Shelly ;liver. i! Burke conity, Ga., has a tIuh: that is believed to have been lett thetre at the time of Sherman's raid through (ieo (rgia, as the lower portiron of Burke o.,unuty was directly on his line of "march to the sea."- XWash'nugt' Poi:.t. Not a lagn'riie . He-You knew there are thirty three motives in this opelra. How many can you recogUizce She--Ohl. I don't go into it like that. I like it very much. but Idon't know any motives for liking it. I farper's Bazar. A_4 heavy storm, doing great damace, Sprevailed in Engli;-l Su'tnlay "A KISS HE TOOK." A kies he took and a bI:ck w:ad look. And her heart ', re, dioy liglhter: A trifle. y .ou , to cio nl it diy; Yet the duli .ray mt : .i ser..' h' ri.hter, For hearts are .:!'i . h I :: l.eler 'l tI ' May banihi a lo,. r ,i:,: A small. slight thing i 'an .i: 1- . But a frow'n will check o u gliltss. The cheeriest rvi a,' : our way Is the little act of ki!::; Andl te keenest ting s-,ole cars, thing That iwas io ne in . nlii: :.'llint'es. We can bravely itau lifo ina hnt- , herestrdtd No foothold ca ti Cr, A :di be lovers stie . i" we m,ly . tl: Though youth's i:rirht i:iy is over Ah, sharp as swords "ut the inkIla words Thai are fn r betyo d '.'lril: . V'hen a fact' lie. .: i it i; a ti:in tiL And blitter t'ar, 1::7_ '.t:i We fain woill iv hal the ivces sne live To undo ourl iile s=;an'li: g.: Then let ius nit 11: i: ,-i il:e nl kis, \ i1en we p:'il : tl cii ,i.:t n: ti loru:in·. -Lillian lanketi, in San Fro i-,tco Ctall. Clepatira's Asp. Th_.re is inin t reptile ho!use at thi Zoo a speitil itl of Cletiliti. t's asp, not, it should he observed, the jew eled variety fhiu ltll Si lt few monlths ago in St. ,Joh,,' i wo(:dll, hat an asp ,"f cs . and Wod, or perhc ps, hbav jl intg t'rd tot its tn.liatollt y V tlhit'irally, we sh:uld say of s-in anl bode. This little snake is pr Uvi ' cd with sand, into tiwhl f it l:'In .uri':c:t. a p''tie to which it is iddi't 'd it: its nativtt uhutlts. ThIis pi-itrita is it . t'1 x't'tlli'i ly good on tforl liting t ilt heel of thid trtavels-., w iho ti('tlin)t lwalp s tl'to't by bruising tile htv'e cft the snake, for the aitmlti!l in questil i: `il'e of those mltut ('i't'u-'t's which [a`e a genereal odilOe id (')ol'ratih:n tiI1Il'(sl minatingi. to the slrlTilnldlil.gs atmlil!,tl2" which they liv'e. The asp is. like many frequnters of the di's(,rt, desert cithlorte. The Lus.iIly aeceipted tlieory aboutl ts is that the atniitl-s so coloi'det (a;t-tile detc-titn t;1 take a illt'nan l llV.ttttte.:' of their ie'epItive heeso to steal ia marilch llutpo :suil(' blrrlle:'s~ blut nlll erately c:_jiciios h-,tbeast. 'Thissti ith has a pair of little horns upin itS head. Vs hen it is hal' burtld li tlhe 'nil those would projett and it'r har:.,- ,xcite theeurit.ity of s lit ' [.,r hit in'.uisiti , f u5s witlh hit I I, Loudliin vs. The lt: Mt SF!rt (.' ar. The fti'lreet car i:; : a(tw 'all .an b!sl)n sable part of every 1,iy lifi . tuit its inlevintor," - Jlohln S c .;ltFbenl- ill X1(110 lives at a cii nit l (re ")i'n t , tie'i r 'i tl and honored fbi'y ill non ltihnu it1 this city in thlie ciarlv pait I ofth i 'i! tury, of sittdy i 'h iIl i :.i ai't age, Step 'llT.heiso n :i.l s. tr:' d 1titi, "-p pr'enticet'sih ait .iet u(p i n huiii : a:i, for himtseif ;' a cr''n' tuldu, w hen the fi" t l;, .(t ; r:ih tn 1l c· ai panly was o0"ganiz:d in . it known asi the N,:w Ytork and :It! Maa;on , of ti:e (' i;,m ,,:J, `., :i, ban k , antd ei ta ;thT < . \.\ Cqutizlly \ht I m i . Stelhit.o sa -at i , ..3 iiino - l li t;i cona)liai y to i : ' t. (i tril li ; vehicleo f '. ". .hi l-" on,'.f., tYi,, Ca]ul(ai te 'l l, (l-' ' o 1Sl't't (01 w oi-'k. eiar. 1-. i.( F: . t'r tL: first site- t " ca et ' 1u:il1,';n iit c'n le I;leIt'l \ a. 'i ' b ti t ,'F lllii i y an1d t ' l u . t \ivu' i ' li ot :- s , ;,, : id N 1V. nn, i :2. I 'I is ,!1ar ,I I. ,ýt(, it\idrcwt¢ .knaou. ýet, Yui k lies all. A n ' -.t r aordli,. try (;(,:,,("i, .:(,t(. An xtr lt: litl:'t C(' hii'.hl . cll'red 1 i i t w et' . A t ilt t I-, m"set11 ' " ' (1(1 oft' it: 1 t''ti!, ( s-ti .. i,'i il" :i " t \ i:,;[ ,t- i raut, 'i.''i' e h il l-a lh-;,: f .. win with qsome 'is.1i1 tlht took a cab to the lt liui of LI';lai,. tIlhotat to dell(-it som.e li(0 y ()t ('(lllt ing the '- l liii lit fhiolltl that le tiail lost a fifty poundi ll<Kt. 1t11(1 ian ,t on'e sped l00 k to ti1t' l:1h1(. of einte: t:,.1u mnittt to.h lo.k ti ' the Il ,.-11ti i "pu i'r-I' being it.o'..-i l t ) I 1h (f t teil altii('I'iSf the In,;te(` 11 i of lhnt t::111 (ti1 \vhl,'h counveyed him to Te' uinr ll:11,h'sir(t t. TIh se- ' .t'd h \t . t i tiu idlh .i, ht it, promptly ct ha.'' ' rt d 1 1,0i.:th t i al t o' conv 'y him l tt 8i 'ath. ul' "1',tu'. 'to Ivlis ti0V ttt ..i . u- it - It. t t i': t oim s;an li_( v,,h id -, i , t ,. I. v',,: t ,:1 like t'tl tAit' . I', i1 a ilt't" of fact, A , :In t; "t T i s stir ift I............1...ii i( at l Ati y i iun v ',..:.m .i was Sli (risi d It t t.-It l ;'i- wd at t t ' can trast ietween Jay iiot \x welti. and hlsil:u ," :. < ,t li.1;1 A., she ('():t("1.I 1:, l , i , ,nn tim lt o the Ii d :\-- . V, 1 ; . . '.tly tit llcorn r h " , 1 e-t'e in a t.,::" .1 . 1' t [ :1. nlate d It do knt<vh.. J .-'we pem L y-,-n • i - tell me w l t "Please. I. - i b i .g ta1,-1 -' . : ." .( - it( il,.g ta-1( a _.d u .i 1 1n.',a'd ,oIn the! peg."-Giroude. l 'n . T H u ..' i.' ', . l ( c t a r n t o H -e - n' semt I .k' a hi m1.t a the (s, an, u -ri }-iid