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The Clinton News-Record, 1899-05-18, Page 5- • • -06464E.09/4?) JACK Then Ott of the maise et =ottani** figures there emerged at different points themyoung lodians, tell and magnifieentlY formed. Iieneath the iLear, derk Mein, Welt had been oiled .and rubbed Until it glietelied like bur- nished copper gni stretched like rub- ber, One 091.1id eee the play of the poverty.' neuectee, • 'enebrolte leaned over to Eviction, "Gadi" he said excitedly. "Leek at the tallest chap, nook at those nolacles over the *outdone and in the' back.. If be had been a Trinity College . man lailt year, I rather think we'd. .have won." "ales MY favorite," put in Carl- ington; "'Ill batik hire, to toe the dance through. Fre Been him before; his name is Waite Eagle, and bee a fine Indian." "Thee all lookgame," remarked Stirling; "they' Must be the .pick of the tribe. ,The ooe with the red brow - 'band Woke wicked, though. 1 ratherhePe the texture will be a little too much for 'blot," • The three Indians were moving noiselessly around the ring', keeping perfect time with one another as they mised and, lowered the foot with a double blow on the ground, showing thole intense excitement only by their flashing eyes and the quick, nervous Movement of their limbs. Slat meth- • eine-men arose slowly, two approaching each of the three Indians. They .stood e• for a moment motterina some bepan- tation, and then raotioned the young • Indians to lie down on the ground. They thetestationed themselves on the right and the left of each, and began , gently to rid) the heaving °bests.' It ' was like the even, .practisea work of , a good masseur, only, therewas no varying of the stroke or position. The spot on each breast that they kneaclea and rubbed could not be larger than • a silver dollar. Asthey worked, the , Indian with the tom-tom beganto beat again, ,but very 'softly, and there ran a subdued, sympathetic murmur through the crovrtl. from, out on the prairie one -could hear now and then the short, fierce whinny of a bronco, end the sun bean 'down on the` pine boughs- more hotly than over. and they gave forth a faint, refreshing odor. , Captain Eveton turned uneasily .to the women. • • ' • • "You'll be awfully sorry you came in about a minute," he remarked. "Perhaps you had beteee not look-" He might. as well have spoken to .stone walls. /The eyes of the girls were fastened cni thienrostrate Indians ens though held there by a magneto and their breath earns in quick,. un- time with the bat of the drumn while tae raususiens maw "The Oong at the Brave:" I tang, I sing under the oenter of the skY. Under the center of the iskee; Under the center of the taw I tango theder the center of the ' Ten birds of the brave take. flight around the eke, A flight ai erelt,:hdt.the BUY; The birds of the brave take a flight, ok The birds of the brave take a fliglet. The spirite on high repeat me neinC, Itepent my name; The 81,140 On high, the epirits on high, elepeat ray name; Pewit one set of musicians would sing, and then another set would take up 'the words, take the antiphonal chores ot a cathedral choir, while- the 'two 'dancers swung staggeringly around the °ken Simact now torwa.rd as it Walking .now sinking and. slipping back- ward, as the earth. reeled under their tremblieg limb& The Meat was nin- ning down their rigid bodies line rain, and their sinews were Pulling fee out from thee ptstoting °netts and, snapping back again in a horrible way, as the agony made thein give to the lariats. - Miss Kenwood covered her face with her handleerobief and begot to cry ettftlY- ahe men moved restlessly and met a.nxious glances at one another arid the evemen. Stirling put an erne around his wife. suppose irsOmpossible to get out of this," he ventured. . . Captain Bvisten shook but bead. "Quito impossinte,"; :be .. returned grimly. He had hardly spoken when, with 4 cry of mingledfear. and rage, the evil -looking Indian with tee red brow- band bounded forward from the other sido of the' opening and held up the broken ends of his lariat: The rope hlmd parted --the worst medicine that. could ha pen to an Indian The niedieine-men, terror-stricken sank to their knees but the, young brave stood up defiantly, although he ieeled from faintness. Sta,ggering acrostothe open space with his broken lariat dragging aecer lune no paused on -the edge of the circle, just below the little party of whites, and -turning his bacO to. them, he began to harangue the In- dium. Ile looked like some devil as he stooci. there, his wicked face bedanb- ed, with paint and . showing ghastly, even under the red, with agony and. Wild rage, his bloodshot eyes:rolling from side to side, his breast crimson LIU FATHER URI SON 4R4.10 90$ 0,1140 AI* Welton** Ireettetese er Wenente retreats. It la reinerhable wbiat a neMber of prominent seeil bete $one twbo are clotiely following in their footitepit. Meaty atriking instance" ere to be aouncl an10114 Stiitearnen. ThS %Cargill* Salieburra fifth Oen, lord Ileigb Itieleard Heathoote 06014 * Veritable "chip of the old block," and he will be a prominent personage in the poli- ties Of th, filtUre. Ereil noir. 'ha la One Of the heal listened -to- meMbere ot the House, WI being a no Mean crater. be will undoubtedly go far. 140reover, •tie started bia pelitical dareer iu an excellent wheel, that of private iteto rotary" •eat ate present Printe Minnie ter. Mr. Harbert Gladetolie hini formerly yearn assiduously .followed• the high ex- ample set by Ins lete father, He held office when his tumuli permit was Premier for the hest time, an in tiO ni;xt Liberal, Adminiatratioa he will Probable' be found in the Cablnet. alte Celonial Secretary leas eiseson to be Wend of hie Son, adxuoten Chem- beriaite %kit Only are fatheruna son prominent novel:lam, but both are almost ideotioal 111fonee, and figure. Of the sante heiget, thof dram *ape: ly alike, and mon weae.e. an eyeglass, and exhibits A WEAKNESS FOA OBVIITOS. A few years batik' there was a pleas- ant episode itt 'the Hatton on the oe- melon of Mr. Austen Chamberlain de- livering his manten speech. After it was (nor Me. Gladstone crossed over to Dir. deeeph) Chamber- lain, and oongratulatea him on his 'sons succeste !tea in his • subsautzebt. speech. the deceased Statesmen re- marked_ that moo en. event as time nest Parliamentary. address'. ei a see 'must be very dean to a fetlier's heint. Mi Chenencriaitos Mee„ glowed. with pleasure at them; words. , teeeeltee eee, nte member for Bast 'Grinstead, hie been able to wfite "M.P.,' atter his name 'since lawd; and those who ignove. him intimately bear witne.ss to-thepossession of =ph of the ability that dietingutsheta ins tier- ent •Mr. Closcitert, jr., utis not yet done Any great things but he is slowisa Yet surely carving. out a position. for binie self. and will be one of the leadieg lights of Conservative party inthe coming century. • •- Tnere Mtn be no doubt'whatever that _One of the meet tragic; events in Con- temporary polities was the death of Lord Randolph Churchill, Jest at the zenith of .his power. It Is, therefore, ••••••1400. BRITISH ELLIONERNI astrret4rIxtidd held etperars =Pert!: SOU ElegraRIC NOVE, 1311. 1•••••••• HOW SORE or Tax RICH, NEN OD, TAINED THEIR WEALTH. The Ore* elopsoins Hon et Me Wiliteeme- New thee& Keenan Oben** Ufa ingot la ArrIcse.noiritee nitreeten Inetty rind serke Was or Col, North, ORO Nitrate Klee. It is a ratitake to 'Weise thett the • moony mines of Great Brindle are pre- empted, or that, like tit lee and big landed *tato., they pees 'from father to non by an entail mpossible to break. A Money miner, who hair 044 WI Pick, his shovel and his !exit, Can ac- ounU1ate millions under tire British 'flag. Perhaps Um Mast dramatic fortunes recently mole were those of Coladorth the "Nitrate Xing ;" Barney Annan!, the "Saftir King;" Erneat Torah, Hoe - ley, the champion promoter and bunco man, and Sir Thoma Lipton, whose wealth in more legitimate' and less speoulative. At one tette the three • rielfeet men in the kingdom, at wee said, were the Duke of Westminster with, $50,0000ee0, .the foundation • of *Inch he inherited; the Duite of Bet - 'folk with. W10000,000, and Col. North, Whose possessions a. was 'uncleretotel amounted te thn tigure named. $it Douala Ciurins use ,Clitirtirlr,of a large titeamship astern, Wes a canny Scot Who began, his business career • with a suit of olotees very threedbaxe :AIM all sorts of energy. Tleoto.as Wilson of the Tranise Croft baccarat scandal, ''or :ether, the pro- -genitor of the 'Wilsons, Who took part. •• in that scandal, wee once a laborer, New his family do nearly all the ship- ping business in Hun. THE ,WILSON HOUSE PLA mime to, crowd out every other flag. around Sweden and. Norway, and about the east coast of England. The firni probetily. (eves 109 vessels, and yet old Thomas Winton, who founded it was theroughly unpresentable. .It is said that after the family became sooially ambitious they tised to look hien in a bali room and put one of hut own, bbatawabaa on gutted lest lie seould wee', tiend tee zoutartabrote attempts at auleide. A fourth was aumeestal. Otte Juleind off the Union line steamed:Ow Seel: of iter voyage between South Afrioa end Southempton and was drownee. tael. Jebel Taomes Berth, the Nitrate 11 31$' 1470h„,a,,hlY a WOrthier man t Oar ate. '.,the Colonel is a Yorke shireman. Ile began life as a Bailor, WA* twenty-three years old be was on a dock in Chili Without anything in his nooltote. except Ins handle Technt- eat talent tit,t ad North, learned a little engineering, went in- to boiler mending,rveting and ma - °Waist's work He made good wage's. When .,he became better *pointed with the lay of the land be begen to turn an ambitious eye toward the enormous bade of Chilian nitrate. After making money In Chili, BORTH WENT TO LONDON, and put his interests' into stock com- panies. Nooley an Bonnate were men ot vulgar manners, brutally frank in their dealings. So was North. An Eng- lishman, of the lower elasses rarely Pre - motes himself to tlie,ways of a rank higher tkau his own,' One ot his fads was to test from Erie daY to Monday at his' country seat, There he ravelled in clogs and heroes and a ridiculous picture •galtery whiolt contained 4bsiirddeubs,isold to him at large prices by alleged friends. Ile ran his horses at the race' meetinge and made a spennilty of coursing. Some of hie dogs were worth tabelous awns.. Ono of the Colonel's'. schenees for "getting inn, with the nobility was to establish a "spotting. ,resoit" at, Ostend, Titis Was to be a sort of Monte Carlo where the lerizece of Wales, the King of the Belgians,. Lord Rotsebery and other haughty personages would ell at the same roulette table with the Colanq anteaffably exchenge epigrams and. brtgbe remarks, while less fortune' t tuftIl:;rmt(mrs lookccl oxi in envy. A remarkable centrist teethe mil- lionaires mentioned and a Man •who stands splendidly in the eyes of Eng - 18 Sip Thenaaa Lipton, This gen▪ tleman, did net' Make wealth. by selling Worthienssenining steak'. MEDICAL FORTUNES... A 'Few Physicians Are itieh, But Almost AiI or Them Die Piker: iSodishaw Esilltralligt Sus sad Tioly alsistiiiir Pleats Among the novel electrical produce tie* waleh have been put on the emir- • ket reeently are 'the electric rainbow fountaln for interior extertor de - °oration, an electric titet.outfit built to run by power tunnelled by Primary battery cells enel an electric lighter which pl declared to be °keeper and very netioh neater than Matches for household or storco use. The rainbow fountain be a mtniature, of the wells known eletltrio fountaine which have proved great attractions in parks and publi° reeorte in many parte of the country and it is Wade in a ate() and manner that make it aa portable as a potted plant In feet, round about the central portion, where the fountain playa, are placee tor plants- to decor- ate and inclose the watere. The waters are made to rise In the form of a thin oylincler by being forced aigowarn,between tee edges of a glebe of glass in the centre aid a perforated gless-plate outside this. Underneath in another plate Of glitiod4ineh is divid- eti into sections of different color; and tisis is kept. revolting under thei foun- tain by means of a weter whee). fed by the falling waters. Under the colored • disk is ;Rex brdinary incandescent 32- eandleepower efecteie lamp, which ligets the dancing spray with the oolore ol the revolving disk. Some of 'these fountains are supPlied with an eleottie pump whieh enables. them to • operate. without an outeide supply of • water: _Stteh a fountain, can he made o epee, +wt. power from a few cells et lattetery, and thee can be used where there no oo aynamici current at hand. • . . et is for seeh places that the new fan outfit has been made. Three cells operate it, and it is saidi that it will Wane< FO IO 150 HOURS , at a epeed or lee .revolutions a minute withwit change of '1h now electric lighter is made to The large fertune Ieft by Sir be operated either in connection -with ban) Jenner has led to much writing an eleoteic ligittiug circuit endepen- itt the la r but win t im er- dentle by battery power, and either feee information as .to the source of itt eh the Pu°}3 eemPanY. of fpoSnir u*nislolutalund in -the British politic -al and financial Sir William jienrir w4'9 the ,eteck. of a metal torch s the body of :11:00:sn:vealtIr waY it takeScao 1.ttle current, that or many yeare at tha top body of ohinaware into whieh extends says alining, conststs of an ornaraetnal not permanently fallenaehow , what f sky. eleti rise and fall -though he has. "1'6 l'amet• d •tbe ion]. Professime having risen there by which holds a supply -of "gasoline held leis Men, Mr. Winston Churchill,. seents pine He was the son of a. poor vicar the elect:rim cesC of operation is omit muds) excellent neorllizing Cecil Rhodes was a. brilliant meteor has been y has a peeking of sabertos. The metal ed there by scientific acclamation ev- all the more pleasant to reflect, that, rn Po man ma " col not:teh. . The .43aetith'. of • the ,torch his genius, and having been .rnaintaine .e'ry• 'whit asennen ras by Reveler favor. paring . these years: .ace'.."undoubtedir vice. wean pert of • the ..torciet rimer' is made bell shape and ;:his 'violets the. liglitingde- this ' is put dawn into made e yerY, large income, but not an 'place, it merely epiettots apart the Beene income that tenon hive entialed him oe two bele cranks which extendeito , 7 , the inert:me in the chain base but to Bali° Such a Own a° g375PODI all& as i'vlicOn the' "Lerch . is drawn 'ni, !these a matter, et fact, a certain portion on Arans are 'raised With, it and . spread hie:fortune was 'derived from tiacle.and. apart at the stune-thne until; just as bequeathedtil to him by a brother. .laut e torch leaves themethey make con- ' Oleos witn two binding pests within eindtiu„ btedly Sir Willi:am' 'tanner. earn- twitter and . an eleotric spark' flies ed a genet. nuns of money by .tlie nerite- across the end of the torch, igniting tioe of lee profession and the fact may gasoline Aity number of theimghiers .1xt ulusealkbbP itinaidngleeleetrie"er-egitnitteiyato ardworkedwiOtheeamebat- yoiagaectiaatiemtoabservokeenlyitpr3or other ' ,power, When the and Work hard. . ' iligliters are intact:tact to an•electric That o few medical men have made ;light circuit they have Most 01 the largo icirtunea is weIL known. ref in- a:olinroreetted. wcuitt.beinfettylri,ab.utclionkea7 beat, stance Sir Aodeeter, O'er); left 4O03.e teryieonnection this is. not needed. In 970, S' Oscar ,, ta tO .left £146,746,theatter oase, two ordinary Ory 'tet - Dr. Rhodes Armitage left £217,420, Dr, teries supply power enoughand this' t. T.. Cumberbatch lett 414:17'°°°'Sir. Ipise..,3tait 'ztt°'.gtilaeve tehirecuePitareght.baYspiterkineteeilr: Richard (etude. lett £110,820, Mr. Hen- ; Althouahthere are a number of rLoyng: litsteraafttailleitlexttlx£,0100t7D8Or: EDern.ry•Cei34n_ fit Li a xemarkable fact! the-the market,' D.• 'portable enteric li lit i o none 01; Sten left al19,200 and Dr. .a. H. Paul the el e a al papars isingles several .of which were certainly inher- ,,parattie for houses to be fed by bat- ten... X1C0,052. ' But all ' these . fortunes.' a deeesisemees .0a electric rightingape ited and: not made be proferesional pine- I xeries, . Of course it is tvell under - tam, are thrown into the saede, by the 'stood that the exposits' would prohibit estate of Sir William Gull, 'Meese Vet- lregula,r house lightbsie by battery pour- weuali,vlaikiteSdir watiltattgelefeen. Jenner, .00;6. indietis;a ..ralde 9.c such rata_ htiosche I where-. the-acos re ewould be -though- -fortunate investments, Ita..teitling. :They woad be of use in odd Bewnilaultaym there are many. uses :which outfita in the Made an enormous professional muco me e eke a where et temp woull b3 either a total of his fortune that fatailY nee , souice or danger or semonvenience haps, played the Oar.t in swelling I. quests played'. in the case ot Sir Wii - seeleti as in olosets or Milers ar to flesh liam Jenner. The above names have izi front of a cloak taco to reveal . the been taken from es lists oompiled by ile , time at night, and a very pretty use I. for them would to in place* of candles over the last ten Years. . •,:lanpa; which wooltiereceetire only :small Daily Telegraph and the Westminater Gatette and over, 'a.. period. extending . for tnaable, , where little incandescent On tlieestreugth of thesis:the- raedi- currents, weulda give all the light aal priinseeion cantiot be mid to ahound .needen, .even gasps, flhon-did not even hetie With the bleed: that now flowed freely donated to take opine father mantle. ht:aertfordeinre; And went. to -Natal* • him. So he turned again to look, and from the lacerated flesh, and. the Not Tong age be. made Ilia first speech Cape Colony to be cured of lung trou- aof he did so the saw thn. medicine men quivering nostrils and upper lip telling on- a political platform, whech he de- , • rle. He took bode' with. Hee- •daw from their '13age sharp little evetobett.er then woxds the wrath livered: in a way meaty " old" Patna- b. " h''s ' e knives like scalpels, and, make two that alone was keeping his trembling xi:tenter), hianda 0, cond not. surpass. In .beri Rhodes, his brother, Who had a parallel incisions in each, bethunbed limbs from sinking under him. • His othewalk whieb his father followed plantation breast. ?pt . a. drop of blood issued voice, in spite of his faintness, anr . • . I e from; the wounds, and, the sinews thus strong etteugh to make itself heard e slightly -that of authorship -the haa followed. Mr. Winston Churchill des conceived the idea of Brit - son, li' ito laid ehare were draWa' olit carefully 'above the din by thine eearest him. being only in the twenties, hot urinate °teeing the larger part of South Ate and skilfully, and short . pieces of. "I Yellow Wolf, am brave and fear- time to make Ins mark. rice- was th‘ k woOd passed beneatli theta, to each teas," he 'shouted; "I do not fear death TtIetNING• PROM "POLITICS, 'of joining Egypt and„ pope Colony ber .enedicine-men then took each_ Indiatt±.Prevail against evil powers that come one finds many distinguishints exam; conquering the - lettere:ening e tern-, end of. whichoe was tied. ,The Or any kind of torture; but, who can . by the shoulders and helped him; to no one knows whenoet Our medicine,:i Pies of famines mon withesons distin- tdiy. This ea now a section of British ins feet. As the youthe Indians, lOen are powerful, and they have pro- ed to beoome equally stood ...upright facing the excited, pitiated the Manito of the f imperial policy. When England wants radial; r Litre,rature, for instance,- the case o !natin DileCitreliy. may be cited. land she generally brat solids an in- xestless throng, they gave one tritunenthey had not thought . to ro 1- . pbent, scornful look about, and then itate the Meant° of the white He is a ro.ost PUP' discreet but zealous missionary to mid- eip a position beneath; a cross -beam, here t Why is our lodge invaded. .a.a.r 'Teeth', Huntly McCarthy, was ter- ' . , and historian, His sort, Africa to be captured' and cram; then eitoved forward until each. had taken. raga. W14 the white man '1‘)velist" and about eitially distant fro% One our dance mede public.? Whe a,re th6 merly an M.P., and hei is_ followmg fellows a, the. army to punts e ou a tat t andther. So far they did not seem to 'claildren of the White Mother per- in all the other paths eis father lias age. Tate army never le ves. . trod. Moreover, in one instaace he bas Rhodes was never strong on reit- Paesed his parent Inteang added that alma and instead of missionaries he of the dramatist to his other avoca- sent real estate agehts, more danger - Among actors, many. neve sons who ous and practised annexers. His agents are in " the"' profe,smon, -Sir rleetrY were known* as the " chartered cora- Scours Baneroft, too, has a son PanY," and in it such famous persons hlave a great histrionic future. Sir to blovr while . they danced, to thou ed Captam Eviston once more. t w be at all affected by the torture, ex- raitted. tteeome thus among us?/lave •cept that the pupils, of their ohs had we lost all freedom, all. courage? Did eontracted to pin -paints, and there was thor not er.ercess an evil influence over peeoliar rigidity about their limbs. the Batmen who lies fallen and belie- ffeey were the picture of proud un-. less, he who was so 'strong-" ..enhe -concern while- the lariats. were being words died away in an unintelligible throwii over the cross-beaans . and murmur as hes fell, half fainting, to fastened there, and they put the the ground- •ehrill little whistles, which they were "What does he say, Doyle I" demand - Irving hes two sons whosarebelieved to ' • as the Duke of Aberoorn and the Duke inning leis' spurs on the stage,. and of kite, the Prince of Waleeei sou -in - mouths' 'with. as much indifference as Doyle, lookeng more unhappy than has blossorne ou . lhottglothey had been cigarettes.. When ever; t freely, shifting him- ability. Mr, George Grooms:Rh, auts .x b t as a daamatist . a law were interested. •. ' ale was ready,' end •tite medicine -Men eelf Uneasily from onestoot to' the oth eon and a 'brother, moll of whom has • EE °OA. tEaB 'C°411rAlsrr NC G ' - the yowls; Indians baleen. to dove -iii, scone as the bother Hindi*, an' Air' neeager ie .% eil.se musical comedy to raake trottble. ahoy got into eles ee.... . heel a lot of policemen,. who erent along • lead stepped bieck, suddenly the tone• en:taken their cue from him. r, eorg toms beret ou.t with a terrific rattle; ' all' says, par, that we save ioodooed. er., writes hia own musical Income end tapir and teeth at the ends of, theta that we hought ent. .stee_be 'pre-"- t -. nnirod difficulties with, the Metelieles though they would endokly. "tear the before him a moment, regretting moat take to the pulpi . ,A, tTpieal.itiStalice i vh ch th atives we e murdered sinews from their breasts; thew/list/es keenly the feeling of deheacy' which is a or e by „slytTrgrteogn. Ins twitn Wnnoslesale b; lidn axan oilticrhinerye. the masses of Thclians broke had prompted him to come 'Liman:led to celebrated C• II. cine -men, lifting up thei? %tends, prayed a amine 'would appeal to this Indians. pastor of the church his father made tral .A.tricaeand all South Africa with hhe lna been published , sweeping -lung*, as Captain Bviston looked theughttully .-gven -among reaabbilii abliia and. them followed. a war ,Of demigod; leriats .Witti long eh rts one being the • Pointing to tne map of Africa, and -into a booting, and the medi- the dance. He lead thought that such sons aro bot Pren circling Slgypt a large part of Cen- afoud.to the Great lefanito. Nen sort of Unfortunately, they had apparently tamtam"' e_ -- frenzy seepned to coramunicate its- not noticed or appreciated thet piece his isand, Rhodes once aid to a friend; s seif to every Indian in the lodge. noir of refined sentiment. He aroused him- FINGER -PRINT TESTS. ,, " One day all thetevill England's- self mete* Disoiesed lot Nettle en' Wenn tha is ray dream." observed his friend oynically. faces turned ashy, and their muscles -self from his. little reverie to find Um quivered as if they were undergoing eyes. of all the Indians in the tepee vite "I give you ten years to wake up," restleils heels beat the ground in on him and leis guests. There was a - The r, ITnerowned King dr Sonth Af- He some intense phesiettle strain, ".The fixed scowlingly or threateningly up- lying Crhoolnolla• double throbs that shook the whole suppressed excitement and antagoniera._., In din eistive-nevels linaer-priri ts left ries, ' is a profeasimral bachelor. tePee. The swarthy faces, which an about titene which Would have been by criminate, preferably in blimd. OILY inthinkeiele° etetr'im.°n,Yr dee:Lr(Is marriedanlpll'smarn hour before had been only vacantly sufficiently unpleasant if he bad been an imports/eta part, but truth seenis d on itJ3itl ViOn ... ve. near full Of palseiOn and wildness, An isaele. As it was, the absolute 1mPa- Stranget Chart ti°ti°11 ill e ao er s, a ng th f et that 1 k .431 imi that the feet that the Aroun m, either as servants or good-natured or sullen or stocial, were there with fifty good privates at his ' f ytig man married shows such a. wofu Jac Indian beeide Miss Page sprang into Toneless of his `situation made him per.. the linger -prints system of Mend of 'ad ment that be ff tannot bee use - the tar as though some devil within teeny cool. Four ram and an order-. Orirainale in India has been made so int r, . girl shrank back faintly toward Pon- coUld not hepe to cOntend successfully of !perfect that it weal& enable any intei- broke, who ;Was slightly. behind. her. against five hundred maddened In- ligent pereo, D. in a few minutee to. dis- Rhodes's early life are told bee hun- The usual stories Of jam -stealing in him had broken loose. The young ly with' seven women to take cafe center, and was trying to proteetehem While Vellovir Wolf etill lay moan- from ail other Persens noW living in ximessary, ' tire& of eta ladies who claim to have ;1a.mW.Ittnenteiblernenite_ The men had.' pot the women in the diens. tingtzish the individual, if on al/ sidete but it was quite impose old chief mated • near Itl.corrirlad..731iwilli!hor from the crowd of Indians pressing in :ng and struggling on the ground, an the world, or, if data were available, o si a remonstrated with! by sible tameke them keep baek dr appeal had beard what: he had geld, arose, and bine, toad who. front all other persons who bane lived hie mother, he obseeved, " Well, when ' th "This is awful; it must he worse. began (to speak seothingly, as if tO a item is simplicity iteelt and there is I want some more I will go somewhere to them in any wayepleading out h . • ' ie bands toward him , loinnn the ereation of man, The ses- -fight," the young girl said, cbild. aina get ita' with, at the Ogitain. Eviston recognized Writ as r Mollies& South A.friean Money wiz - than a prizenone of the elaboration of proems of ard whit tlid much juggling in London an unsteady little smile Diaglisinnan. Pretty Feathers, ooe of the friendlie 1 e cooly and delicate machinery re- was, . ' ATO cally and looked over at his sisters gann• ' Ale that is needed is a piece of tin, a of Winteoluipet His name Was were taking taking things calmly, though " ariaef be aolieforted. Cease MO come The irtic impressions of the ten digite let second-iand clothes neer Petticmt Penebreke Binned back sympatliette eat and most sagacious of the Pet- (tuned for the tin.hropontstrie system. "13A.ItNEY ' EARN , •' Being 'Engin& girle, they ".My son, said tee old nuns softly, aheet paper and some printerat nerd Isaac his father being a dealer there was a hot topot of red in each Olaints-the complaints of a child wise, are taken and filed. in the proper nem- lane. In. lila yeah lin wait iiPeciditi„r, cheeks and their blue eyes looked al- knows not how to take punishment, partnient ofenatealeroper pigeon -hole, but he aceumulated nothing in the most black from the Intensity of their WhY shouldst thou think the Manito and that on the elassifieation et re- woe of forttute. He went to South Af- excitenient, of the white man has interfered with cords and then' distribution into the rim, and joined a circus, attending to Suddenly the Indian s' cendidate o thy destiny e rfas the lyrchite of the pigeonholes that the suet:mot of the alto horses, at first, and' by dint of aearest them dropped hat whistle, and Indian never vielted thee before with eyetent depends. . mental energy getting himself pooh:tot- with a low groan fell- forward oit his his displeasure?, Ifs turned to merest • $very finger mark shows lines of eti" to the position of elown-one for nom in a dead taint, His attendant mer, of the Indiana, who wets listening, and. the "loon," or the "whore. type aed be which he was eminently suited -and aline -men sprang fotiveted, released raining his voice, tried, ',yellow Welt a ;Ample table of the cOmbintAiOns of Whieh he played a gond mini* Years the lariats, and Pulling the thonge has %Johan words of foolishness in his Wet types in the ten &gas 1,024 subsequently in the financial oirous o a from the sinews, spit upon his theet, anger. Let us f011eet them, as he will Main olasses are made- There are Chanel Court. At Kimberley he was robbing the wounds, and murmuring forget them, and--" ssignificataly-oog again subtlivideti aesording to minor peddling watches, Matches and court ineantatione over him, After a long the white man will feret thsra.n detells, and the ettlidividote can 'be' pleatec, and teIliteg lies &holt( Alia ware* time he slowly opened hie tees, When There was a nuari4tr of disenproba.. turther divided, ad In/datum if timer to detected miners. One de),he.wnlke.d full COnedictlinlesS returned to hrn and time as he' seated bible:Aft hut Many of sary; but with the table before him over an abandoned Stine winch had Ii*' realized that he had tatted in the or- the Indians lookecl lens aggressive, ana any person of ordinary Intel:a-got:me caul been gut in a rainetorm. He found a deal, he tettranitao his fedt. in: se, frenzy many once more turned their at 11.t00 his finger on the corresponding 80-earat diamond lying on the eters ex - Cf disenimilltillent and rage. An Ide to tits eirele iseeire the leer -Indian, card to a record in his land within posed by the rain waSiting away the eyessfelt upon the little group of white •White Eagle, still danced. Ile Was al live minutes, no Metter how many mud. Abandoned mines were timely at people °Musette him, a wilder gleam of moat eitents aini tl quavering, faint thousands cards, there may be. It is Kimberly, and .1ternato--Icis eire,us anger lighted UP Ids face, and point- notes of bee whistle told how little ealcUlated that the chances are about name -got POseeSSIOn of this one end ing a shaking finger at them, he breathand life were still in him. His 04,000.0000 to 1 against any two per- of theme around it, Soon he watt worth `Shrieked ,04 a0Me 'Deprecation. As he fitee wee gray -white, and aught froth mons having single fingers identical a million. pounds. erect 1190kWard, fiat mediebete mired lee tins. Ipts body was ony.rd end the chow*against all ten fin., garnet° Was * sliert, S1 out,. pudgy grappled with -him and bore him with' hlood and great drops of per- gets being identittal go beyond, Math- Mall, badly. built, vulgar in books.Mart- Cantain Evision turned to Mlle. had at firet been unnitturaliy nem and mind, At that time refine - ting and shoutieg from the ring, Nitration, mad hie lower which ematioe altogether. Whet did that Indian fey, Doyle I" now bent and twisted sad doubled under • 111(Mt WOO Txot churacteristio of itim- . bad ODD rtammints he *eked, ettletly. ' him as he feared busk and forth. It wee • balm yet Barnato was thrown ont of the leading club there for man - The Orderly Was tugging at his evident that wale*, the Sinews soon Perhaps' the oddest suit of furniture nem and Profane langung6' Iltle limn° gtovise and looking very uncomforte bUrist he would faint from pain and It owned by Joseph Berger, a betel thing lialtlietted to hitie at the Hand , able. loee of blood, ititO all his agony would keeper in Budapest For many years Club. earl we 'axe given 'int 'bed. meal- Mild for nothinghe his made It his business to eollect TEN XING OP THE l.'44.1'Iriliki eine,' sir, die that ie his gate to get a Stniderd), a. Young and Pretty &VAN matehboxes from factorise of various was bright. YU once got into a row Blood Indian conjurer 'ti ktiOWS to sprang up from the mass of Indian °gantries. llis colleetion iinitregetoo eitli his landlord, that gentlenum Th - make us all .eripples.". women °mucking near the edge of the 4,000 bditail. He ordered a skilled Meting upon his leering the house In ceb- ees, be de era tranelete ell they eirtsle and forcing bier way frantically inet maker to equip a room with furni, m stor,,,' commanded the officer, calraly. thenugh them, riethed forward witb * tune MAde of thme boxem. The out- the same oottdition as to plunabing as Throttgitout this epitiode the tem,. terrible cry, and throwing herself ,fit conchae of I withal, .4, m itu that in which he had found it. Bernet,. teMst and thoutings had not emote! for with' ell the strentilli of thz rug emokieg aptarattts, a rsAss--rIleswar----it popurt: Uri. ws 4a4dtveder,tibeesay esurt nint:bsamtlinewiTtliv; ere Stopped sit Inetteat in their frantic bete Intl' no. linotwi of le clown neap- articles. Theattie the boson tee oondition in which he found it, 100,000 Attempts Di break their MIAMI and So lied like Whipesordon and with ti green met,. ther are eidinated se higenlonal7 meek heetlea,r1 Followlait MO WAN he prolalmed "brass." Thee lersd he totipted OVS, rd. that the are fully as stroog no Darnato's taws sizal the, address of the moments nor had the other two damn wistos gat, him ablest, a e air and other smaller Agreed tet leave his dwelling lit the iisa swung from aide to aide, kee ng efo be tit ties ordinary traitors. PLUMING HER WINGS. "silo ts, gettni be ft ening lady to now." "1 It And l'in to% t glen," NM the. father of the young retie of four- teen) It was the mother who made kb* first remark, and she tide ed":We cannot expect to bore hex Mi- ner our eye every minute now, as when (Me Wata on the nursery floor; and for one, Pm not gent,/ to try. She Munt plume her wings, Iesuppme. We have to carefully inetruct her tie to the dan- gers of the putaide world, and then trust her. OW, keep heri" think there he nothing more trying „ to the parents of a high and refined intuits of propriety' than the epoch In • ohlidee life, be it son or daughter,. when the little wings begin to appear. Tab/ question as to the hours after school; while the &el is in school yen know where she is; after she Dome. oute-where I She mutt have exercise, must have the fresh mot have rin asreation, 010, frolic, Yet, with whom! And .Wheee sWe older people know that the streets of a great town, or a little village, for that matter, are full • perilin we tomes the frights, the poisible insulte, the Urea and snare'. Yet we do not melte; wish to fully exa plant these things to e child; the explanation itself a tarnishing' pro- cess. We do not like our,child to look upon life with a horrible suspicion, nor ,hang the awed outer air with: ghostly shadows. Still, there is the fide-Wis.& bad world. If the little gni is out anal dusk, we know there are lurking daagers; and if she does, not appear at the tea table, we know not where to seek her. One mien as well leek for a needle in a 'haymow; as. to search for 4 person in a great town, when Onee that person has walk- ed. oef your block. It is indeed necessary to cultivite child,. in selferelianee. The good wife spoil.TheThe c•Viliclutt mmauYstereadriale ttiolltyare care. of herself,. in a meatture, and it • were better that she learn it wIlile you parents aro alive to help her than after you are gone. Then, too, there iii no doubt that very serisltive natures imagine forty horrors which never'did come. and never will. There are par- ents who seem to become careless of the whexeaboote of their growing caileteen; and possibly their chuldren get eking just about as well as those over whom parents Worry every min- tite.that_e.aey_s.re ouneif_parentaLeyea night. This.. last sentence Might be disputed, but, for neirna,rt, I am sure that my catildren were never .pne-half • the care to me While aniall.that they htiVe been since. ". I frankly coinfess that the most difficult thing has been ' for me to know Oast heot far to trust ' :them to themselves, and how far to keen a vigilant eye upon them. As each in turn has grown to the plum- ing period, I bave suffered tortures, till I saw and fully knew the right' tendency ot cliaiaotee end force - of. will to ineright. The true place for care is at home. It is in that (shamed (Anne that the work of protection must be done. A spirit of self-relia.ne,e is to be cultivat- ed, founded on knowledge of good and evil.. It is fax bettor to insk., young thing as to the wrongidad • dangers of the outer world, than to • ' leave her to discover ' these things. Discovery is.attended With the danger of exploration. Inscovery has an ele- meet of the netreal•and partial in it; oite wants to know more; thee is tuned oa by a false seeming of attraction, Discovery is a possession to be conceal- ed, to be even feoliehly proud of; the boy or girl, who "finds out for him- self oir herself" is apt to he a trine vain of the information, and too self- confident in using it. Discovery is generally coupled with a companion. Far better, 'with' your own clean inform the growing. youth of the hid- eous sine that he In wait to catch young livas. You can picture the thing in its native hatefulness, and win half the battle to begin with. Do not enter into noisome details; excite no ou,riositty; tell enough to make the ` evil scent dangerous, fatal eta mete „trattive, but no more. • "If my child ever can go alone!" r But though a parent sigh that, yet a • parent ought to know that none, of us ever conte to the time when we cite, "go alone."..life is never safe. There are dangers to young wings; there are yet hawks for the oldest wings. There is truth in Solomon's lament; "The day of one's death better thatt the day of his birth." That is, if he pro- fpiThetshingott virtuous tiboeu4 aosutriozig, veviagroorouasti children. We are all at eehool, and must meet the bears in the woods tia we go out come. The protection of a keert wit, a pure heart and a watch- ful Providence-thesto are as .much needed by the young girl's mother and, father as •by the ohild herself. The larger the game, the larger the 'matt of prey; that's all the difference. . Still, for all that, it must ever, re- make trite that the period of young plumes is the period of peril, above a•l1 others. The new-found powers of appetite and passionals also of thought and aspiration, knotsk with genet stick, aftgatittuttitt;thretytoung breaet. With- out these powers the child would be a te manage them aright is the wisdom, of age, and even age, fails. The two two infanoies are tb,e eafest fanoy of youth and infancy of old age --for then appetite and. possums are qatieseentee Yet these are not the noblest periods of life, by any Means. Philomphy denominates them "native powers,'" these desires and appetites. ' Any dne can sleep innocently! but to be awake and in action, and yet re- main innocent, oh, there* the rub My dear young readers, my friend.. ship yearns over you as you begin to plume your wings. I pray you, try to be wise for yotifselves. Control your. selves,. Be your own Masters in the ones that you keep yourselves with tight reise in your own right guldance. May you learn what your wirtge are for -namely, the most intense ttotivny anti force of existonce without hurt to self; the loftiest flight, lot keeping . dear of the bunting candite-alarkley Rarker. • it pecuniary -prizem Only eleven per- lowzsr worth IN FLANDERS% .... eons, whether shining in the front rank in one of its' notoriously lucrative ,i, 1 ,, et 'the metlical profession, or engaged. i up miaow, Imo by Widen sicrsetess c.f. ., branehes, or blessee by eceident with , peoutdare advantages, )(axe died dure Soni. rinse Is iiliMseil. . ing ten years in possession of that'. , i a . teclass•brewe beet. ended toi the Englis 'impinge expected to since tIr43 introduction ()nett° horse- _ More 0 new words have. nmessarily ' ar's fortt'ute would less carriage, and the vokbularies of the brewer would be a. 'partitive failure. We are net setting eitailarly euriched in :ill. countries tee of the eleven medial tortimes or up it wail th3.t medical Men do not ounted aggregate to-, a cam- where such carriaget have become Poen amount to mere than t other tongues have also aaturally neon make more money, but the feel:tate of ea.,. _ Sir Williarn Yenner or Sir Willalm "`"4 Gull ought not to lead the public to With Imre exceptions, all these worolii ' mistake the bets as to the average are technical and their true 81gs:title earnings of the medical profession. The canoe is only understood by the elec- prefession itt Great Britain neunbers . . trieitut and the Machinist-. The mem- emit. 9.8,000 persons, and although now ben of the Flemish academy of Anvers and again one man die.s ricli the vast recently determined 1.0 frame . a ward majority die otherwase. which would be readily intelligible, to all wile understand the language of . GRAINS' OF GOLD. Flanders and wha had ever seen a , . homeless carriage; and the result was Where ignorance is bliss 'tie. folly that after much deep thought they to be wise. --Gray. , . ,. framed the following word; Let hanor•be to us no strong an obit- " Siielpaardelooazondetspoortvegpete Pliny. gatlon as necessity is to othere.- rolrlituig." This enplionius word signifies "a ear; , ., tinge which is worked by illeanS of tie - Give me a sober nation and I Will troteuto, which travele feet, whieh bas takeecare of the revenue. -W. E. Glade no h arson and which 15 inot tun on rails." That is, from, one point of view stone. ott tine example of tatiltuilt, in parvo, hut Beauty is the titan present nature i may be questioned whether one et- givees to women andethe first it l'xifes tritordirtary long Word ie preferable to away. -More. . , half a dozen eltort words. The'lelernish , Brevity is the. heat recommendation People, however, think differently, and of etteeeh, whether in a senator' or an the acatletniWarts of Ativere bave been oratore-Cieero. Wetly comp minded by them on their There is nothing so olear-sighted and 'linguistio skill as seen in this unique Sensible as a.noble mind in a low es- word. tate.-jane Vorter. If idleness does not produee vice or VOlAR.11 OAVH DWELLERS. malevolence, it commonly Pollutes': Cate dwellers, or; to be exaot, earth naelattelloly.,Sidney Smith. . -1 .Or rook dwellers, are not yet extinct. Tite A nd nu traveller who visited the preltistorie not from enjoyment to enjoyment, but tiave dwellings neter Halberstadt, in the feore hope to hope.-Yohnson. . liars Mouthed*, found in tits nearby Home IS the sphere of harmony and pm& Tho itbot vim. anteil find 4 'Malta Of rentgenatein ten Oates hewn tasting 0406, loon 110102 blowup in the rock and occupied by linty per - they descend to earth -0.-1. Wale, emu. tittle little settlement is built on the slope of a rooky hill near the 1Vhetever be the motive of an ilk- Village. The fronte or the dtvellings 'tun it ig always best to overlook it ; _ 'nue mulff by cutttng a vertical face lot folly scarcely eau deserve resent. In the rook. Each "house" hem a door merit, and meth* Is pttnislied by se- and one window. Threfhtst house was gleet.-Johatolott. conetructed only forty yenta ago by a ity what we would, appear to be; and ma 6001 in mown. witb honor in the world ist to be in reel.. Mr root° nailees The shortest end intriillt Way to lir. Yon,* married tempi* who awl:reel:7o heir rent inths ?Mame. are war in winter if we ()Wren, we *Sill flild that all heelthful, *wording to th testimony human virtues ilailretiale and strength- of their Wm tit, whose stout limbs s4a'truth fox the truth of ,m the/n*1v* by the praetioe and and rea their stater& • W. them +ant ten, Arlen* . a *use. 1 TAAL tx FRANCE. I Many of the French papers keep in their employ harmless pereone whom* iegistered an managers of the reemeee. *Live pttblieations. When it paper has iszblished any article of a libelous Cheri. rioter, in regard to which the vitiate makes legal moiripIainta the registered manager .stande trial as in offender rota ts subjented to fine or imprison:1e went, ferrite** both.