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Show Rr- -- RED MEN dECOME WILD Pi lit Ps aod Shoshones Very Belligerent. Traable Fm.ipltail by Three M bile hTriM la Kidnap Tm Mqaaw. aadwheD Thermit- - Murk .Repealed. - l, m Carsor, N Fe, p)u,e S!!l) shone Indians on the reservation near Pyramid Lake were reported to be In a belligerent mood thU morning, but a slight display of force by the state authorities cooled heni down, and all is reported quiet tonight. The first inti mation ol trouble came in the form of a message to Go eruor Sadler, which read ( as follows- Governor Yerlngton, Xev , Feb Sadler-Indian- 21. s hare threatened to burn and kill all the whites wlhln reach of the valley. Send us fifty men bv special train and fifty extra stand of arms, By order of Citizens Committee. Yerlngton is a small station on the Carson & Colorado narrow 'guage railroad thirty miles from this city. At n Valley, near that place, three white men met an Indian ssnd two squaws a few days ago and attempted to- - kidnap the women. The buck interfered and was struck over the head with an iron bar and killed The local authorities released the murderers after a perfunctory examination and the Plutes determined to punish the w hites in their own wav. The squaws were sent away from the valley and the settlers fled pell mell to eriiigton and wind for assistance Galurha was disAdjutant patched to erington with instructions to report on tlie situation Immediately and the state ria'iona! guard was placed under arms a "Virginia City. This evening reports of a pacific nature were receH ed from the reservation and the The fighting guard was dismissed. bucks 00 not rumber more than too, and could easth be dispersed by cowboys, who are well armed and ready for - Ma-so- trouble. t'LKVF.I.AXD8 OKI Fit VANCE. Adds Greatly In the Forest Resrrva-lion- s of the Natloa. 22. President Washidgton, Feb. Cleveland observed Washingtons birth- day by issuing thirteen proclamations adding to the forest reservations more than 21,000,000 acres. Among the reserves art the following in Wyoming, Idaho and Utah. Big Horn reserve, situated in northern central Wyoming embraces both slopes of the Big Horn mountains. Its srea is 1,198,080 acres. Teton reserve, adjacent to the Yellow-ston'- e National park timber reserve being south thereof, and contains S29 440 acres Bitter Root fofet reserve, on both sices of the boundary between Montana and Idaho. The total estimated area is 4,147,200 acres of which 691,200 are in Montana and 3456,000 in Idaho. Uintah forest reserve, embracing both slopes of the eastern part of the Uintah mountain range in northern Utah, and the northern slope only of the western part of this raflge, the southern slope being part of the Uintah Indian reservation. Wall Gazette oa H olrott. London, Teb. 22. Tha mission of United States Senator Wolcott to Europe, in the interest of bimetalism, is the subject of a long article in the Pall Mall Gazette, in which the paper says there is not a bit of evidence that McKinley Is in sympathy with Mr. Wolcotts sion, nor is there the slightest Indication that his visit to Europe had even unofficial saictionv In conclusion the Gazette says: Senator Wolcott came as a private advocate of a cause discredited by a mar jority of his such circumstances to expect be would receive official support from the foreign opponents in such a cause, required a degree of childlike simplicity rare anywhere and 'which no one would expect to find in Colorado. On his return, Senator Wolcott will find that the newspapers alone will display any anxiety regarding the result of his personally conducted European tour. He has met many distinguished people in England, France and Germany, but in not one of these countries did he find that bimetalism was eonridered necessary to its welfare. Though the mission was absolutely fruitless, it was quite as sue-- " cessful as It deserved to be. The Pali Un-de- Love Coaqered. Butte, Mont, Feb. at. A special to the Herald says: D. Gay Stivers, a young lawyer and a picturesque member of Buttes famous football team, was married today to Miss Susie McMar.l-mowho ran away from a convent at Santa Cla'n, Cal, a few daya ago,' where she had been placed by her mother to break off her Infatuation for young Stiver. - The girl Is only 17, but gave her age to the marriage license clerk as iS. The family formerly lived In Butte, but her motler la now a resident n, Anarchy la Aula lllaer. AMONG THE HILLS. London, Feb. 23 The Standard will tomorrow publish a dispatch from ConRota Glov ar.ni sat t the door of the stantinople saying that anarchy preash mans hovel and looked at the faraAsia districts of vails in the. disturbed Minor. The Turks and Kurd have way h!l!. Rosa loved the hills as she loved God, seized everything belonging to the and thought of them as she did of heaven. She had learned that God was Those Kidnaped Wrestler. great and strong and sheltering ; so, she Princeton, N , Feb 23 Both of knlw, were the hills. And heaven? the freshmen wrestlers who were kid- That was far, verv far, awav , and it w as J Irtk&.i'N.b, U was 0 beaulik napped Sunday were found .yeafseeay ar.d ope entered the contest. The light- ful. And the more she dreamed of It weight wrestler was taken from his the more she came fo believe that room on the campus, driven to the heaven was souk w here among the hills. Rosa was the ah mans daughter. She junction, and sent with three sophomores to New Brunswick, where ar lived with the ash ikian and his wife and rangements had been made for his re- their many weazened, brown children In ception. The freshman wrestler was the basement of a'grav house on a grav just within the limit of weight when street in the gray city of San Francisco he was taken away, and by good Theooor little room in the basement treatment, plenty of rich food and noth- had nothing bright in it. It too, was ing to do the sophomores got (his dull and grav, like the house and the and when the cold fog rolled Into weight eight pounds over the light- street, crowded the room, as It always did in the limit. returned he When yesweight it about the faces and settled terday wrestling was out of the ques- evening, and made them of children the forms tion The middle weight wrestler got away look pale and wralthlike. Evermore? Rosa had Evermore! form his captors, however, and was in word at Sunday sehool and It heard the condition. good haunted her. She asked the good stster it meant, and she had smiled klndl v what HHODKH. CKl'lL and said It meant always, eternally." He Hsi Mharp Replies for the People Rosa looked at the sister thoughtfully, Who Are Probtns Him with her big, solemn eyes. We have London, Feb. 23. The examination of evermore babies at our house, she said. Cecil Rhode by the parliamentary com And so Tt was, When Rosa, the little mlttee was resumed today. Several elder sister, had taught the last thin, times Rhodes attempted to justify the brown baby a little patois and encourraid by calling attention to the fact that aged it to take a few stepa, another wallEngland wa- - now in full sympathy with ing stranger would demand those offices. the Cretans in their seeking to obtain Rosa loved the brood of little ones, but civil rights, whereas it was Britons who she tired sometimes of their weak cries, sought civil tights in the Transvaal. and her thin arms and narrow shoulders Rhodes declared that President Kruger ached from the burden of carry ing them had promi-e- d to grant popular rights, to soothe their cries, and her head but had failed to keep his promises ached woefully . In replv to a question by lion, EdRosa was a dwarflike girl with a ward Blake, Mr Rhodes said that he head, pale, olive skin and big had been told that he had ltd brown eves that would aot permit you to Transvaal trouble, but forget her. There was a haunting earnafter examining the letters and tele- estness, a wistful questioning in them grams, he arrived at the conclusion that that you recalled sometimes In gay It was rather Johannesburg that led him crowds where the hungry orbs were out In. of place. They followed and troubled Referring to the conversation be- you as does the gaze of a dog that has tween himself and Bobby White, lost Its ow ner. There was an animals We were discussing the pain in them and a human unrest. They Rhodes saidIf Great reminded you o( the eyes of a woman Egyptian question, I said: Britain decided to remain, I should stop whom you can never forge., one who any foreign power from coming be- had looked upon the woes and mockertween Khartoum and Uganda. ies of life until she 'prayed to die. It White replied : We had no instruc- wis with such a prayer In her eyes that tions. I answered, Of course not, but Rosa Giovanni looked at the faraway It is not the governments policy tht hills. The two smallest brown babies you should lie on your backs and eat were asleep. The others were playing three meals a da y. You ought to in another room with children who were id the Nile and make it impossible for old enough to care for them. So the I did not know the French to cros6. small brown hands were Idle for once White would apply my remarks to They lay crossed In the lap of the something else. That shows how care- dreamer. ful you ought to be in what you say. The great, green hills! How fresh Mr . Rhodes In answ cr to further ques- and beautiful they local Had not Nina, tions, said that his determination to pro- the neighbor, told her It was there the ceed to examine into the Dutch Repub- flowers grew, the dewy, delicate flower lican measures wvs reached in conjunc- which she had seen a countryman of tion with the leaders at Johannesburg. hers selling at the place where many Owing to the helplessness of obtaining streets crossed? She had caught the redress for the existing grievances, it breath of some of thosp flowers once, was Intended to change the government. and it was sweet as sweet as heaven Answering a question regardirg the and the hills. Ah, to have some of Matabele war, the witness said: Ills them in her lap at this moment! To fortunate for you that you have not had press her hot forehead against their cool softness and so forget that it ached so to pay for it." The committee then adjourned until terribly. The eyes opened wide. They stared in a wild way at the F rlday. hills. H resolve was being born, a re Entire Country Exrl ed solve that sprung from her ignoranec Athens, Feb. 23. Tl.e entire country and pain. She would go to the hills. is in a state of intense anxiety and unThey were not very far. Some one had rest over the situation and there is the said they were far away, but they had widest speculation as to what the final come closer to her. They seemed to be outcome vlil be. The people are deeply opening their soft green arms to her. Incensed against the powers for their She would go. She would come back intervention in Crete and their attitude again to the brown babies, but she must in causing some apprehension in court seek that coolness and rest and the flow and government circles. King Gdorge ers. today issued a proclamation that is InShe ran up the narrow street and tended to cool the popular passions and among the car and wagon at the thus avert what might prove a national crowded crossing. Nobody noticed the crlsfs. He enjoins the country to be ragged little figure, for the haunting calm and dignified and to confide in the eye did not aeek their face and e their curiosity. government, which he says is doing Those strange everything possible to uphold the nonor eye looked past the hurrying people to of Greece and maintain the rights of the the strip of velvety green beyond the Hellenld people. roofs. She sped along the street, stopping not for questions. She could not Great Glacial Boulder. be lost. Did she not know where she One of the largest glacial bowlders was going and wa ft not to the hills lying above ground In the State of which her eyes never left for a moment ? Pennsylvania is on the farm of Enos She shivernd but not from fear. The Stump, near Quakertown, In Bucks fog had wrapped her about in its stealthy county. This monster relic of the great embrace, but she thought: The hills ice age is fifty feet long, fortv six feit will take care pf me. They arekind and wide and fourteen feet thick,- - Boston warm. Globe. Her brrath camd Shorter. She 'was but not as when she left the cellar tired, Fierce af Habit in a Male. ot the gray house for was she not com Force of habit strong iri life is illustrated In the trappings of adray mule In Ing nearer to that wavy line of green at every fctep? Once she fell butahe drew New Orleans, which used to haul a l car and refuses now to draw the herself up again .and" walked o more thl time. But the feverish light wagon an Incn unless the old car bell slowly in her eye had become a fierce flame York dangles fromitC6nr.'-rNe- w Her -- heeks burned. The hills were Sun. coir 1,4 closf. She could not walk Gov. Bradley has fixed March 2o for much farther. They knew it and they the execution of Jackson and Walling, were coming to her. the murderers ol Pearl Bryan. s , I found her lying aero the curb. Two San Francisco business men have made application lor a patent on a She wa atretchlng her arm on the tldewalk and aaylng something like: device lor crlal navigation. Ah, good kind hills! Ive found you. the Application ha been made by She must have been there an hour or Cincinnati Canal company lor 17, 750 for she was cold as the stone .of acrea or land In Wyoming, to be watered two, the alkewalk from the Shoshone river. It proposes The big ollceman put the stunted mile to construct a canal 'twenty-fiv- e form Into . ue matrons arms, ol acre long, which will Irrigate 18,000 Poor little lamb!" she said. She was 0 land, and will expend upward ol f In the- work,. The company will uaed to aad alghts, but tear filled her send colonists from Ohio Indiana and eye ae she looked at the drawn, dark Illinois to aetUe upon the land a soon feature and warped body. After they had laid her In the snowy ai It la prepared for cultivation. J-- Jchnnes-burgTnforth- as-r- e half-close- -- chal-leng- bob-tai- 100,-00- from Park City yurred at Sny e - bed she opened her wandering e,e, U,. on rows of clean cot, whereon ihe saw the faces of children. She looked at ihe mother! v face beading above her, then through the window at te sunshine falling upon a wiving line of green It wa true," she said, and the worn little face took on it last childs happl ness. Heaven here among the f ill,. The matron drew a meet over the smiling facg and they placed a mu-m- , about the cot. Ada Patterson in te 1 Louis Republic. Ol Interval ta Tourist, In conversation with Mr B F. Kevins the popular general agent of the Denv er & Rio Grande Railroad Co, we were astonished to know that his line in connection with the Rio Grande Western railway yur. a dally tourist or lamllv sleeping car to Denver, in w hich a low er berth can be secured for $1 for the night or $2 through to Denver. In additl to this dally service, the Denver & f operate on Wednetda Friday, three dlstli tourist sleeping car lint to Omaha Kansa City, Chicago, Boston and New York no change for passengers at greatly reduced berth rtes. These tourist cars are managed by the Pullman company, and are provided with all necessary conveniences and appliances. Passengers going east should write jMr. Nevlns, or H. M. Cuahlnr, (traveling passenger agent, at No. 58 West Second South street. Salt Lake City, for rates, in formation and descriptive pamphlets by so doing money will be saved ana a splendid trip Insured. BLOODHOUND TRACED A BABY. A few days ago Bertha, the prettv daughter of John C. Putnam, of the little settlement of Mill Vt , dlsrppeared. All the neighbors joined Itythe search for her. Night and dav tie hunt waa continued, but not a tracof the little one could be found. The'parents were in despair. It way feared that the child had been kidnapped. Finally, the father, in desperation, sug gested that the state bloodhound Pilot could find some trace. Anxious to do anything that would In the least relieve the fathers mind, the officials took the dog to Mill Village. The dog wa then given tluy shoe that had been worn by the child the day before she disappeared. ThU h held in his mouth for a minute. Then he dropped it and sniffed the air. Iieseemed puzzled, and the knowing ones were beginning to remark that they knew the hound would not be of any use. It really seemed as if the animal understood their words, for he suddenly put bis nose to the ground and was oB like a shot, dragging his keepers after him. On he went crossing roads, fields and timber stretches, until he reach Dev IPs Camp, a point about a mile below Rutland, where there is a small mill stream.,. Here the animal suddenly brought up at the edge of the water gave one long bark, and refused to go d Yil-lag- SECRET INK& REMARKABLE Those who wish to carry on a secret with thelf friends correspondence should try invisible or sympathetic lok. A whole page may be filled .with writing and still be entirely white, as If there wasnt a word upoh It. In thU way it may be sent any distance, and nu one can find out what it contains But te person who receive It knows the sevreyoi bringing owtthe writing 0 that it may easily be read. One ol the simplest of thee lnilsible Ink is a very diluted solution of sulphuric acid. Buy 5 cents worth ol the acid at-- drug store and pour in a considerable quantity of water, at least three or four time a much a there If of the acid. Now, write with this solution, using an ordinary pen, and olot the surplus ink" a you go along To make the w citing show black, all your correspondent has to do 1 to hold the letter close to a hot stove, when presto out come the letter and word one by one, o that they may easily be red Another good secret ink, mote dlffi cult to bring out than the one already mentioned, can be made by using a cheap solution of sugar of lead. To bring out the written word it 1 neces-arto sponge the letter with a solution of sulphuret of atpmonla. Another simple secret ink 1 made of a weak solution of ordinary starch, A letter written with this will remain entirely invisible until it is washed with a solution of Iodine, which quickly brings out the writing. In using secret ink it Is best to write an ordinary letter telling about the weather and other Important things, and then between the line write with the srrret ink. This will serve to lead astray any one who sees the letter, because there could be no suspicion ol sny thing written between the line. Chicago Record. y .TRAINED ALLIGATORS. IDIOTS. Dr. Frederick Peterson- - discusses lit the last number very astonishing special aptitudes exhibited by many idiot who have become notable at mutual prodigies," lightning calculators, and the like. He designates them in the title of his paper as "Idiots Savant,1 and shows that their peculiar powers, due chiefly to extraordinary memory, visual or auditory, and facility tp iiuUa- tioa, go with the lowest order of general intellectual ability, marking the congenltively defective and the degenerate. Of course, a notable example of auch special aptitude it Blind Tom, the Georgia musical prodigy." He wa born blind and hia Intelligence waa confined to sound. He learned to repeal readily, but they had no meaning to him, his spontaneous language, according to Dr. Peterson, being little more than Inarticulate sounds. Hit musical faculty wa purely Imitclve. He could Imitate any (sound and "play on the piano from memery any piece of music, no matter how Intricate, note for note, after hearing it but once." All classes of Idiots are peculiarly susceptible to rythmical sound, and hence a musical aptitude in them la not so astonishing a the mathematical. Thl arithmetical faculty, due to a phenome- - ' nai memory and to Imitation, ha been displayed chiefly In an astonishing povf er of reckoning or of calculating only. Tom Fuller, a Virginia lightning calculator" of the last century, was an illiterate native African of prodlglou Aiked how power of calculation. In a a half, he seconds and year many responded in two minutes, 47,300,000; . how many seconds a man had lived who was 70 years, 17 days, 12 hour old, ho answered in a minute and a half, 2,210,-500,80- 0. As a striking example of remarkable artistic faculty in an idiot, Dr. Peterson refer to the case of Gbdfrled Mind, an Imbecile, who died In 1814, and many of the examples of whose painting are In European art galleries. lie achieved distinction In the drawing and painting of cat and became known as the cat Raphael. In ail the case of special aptitudes in Idiot, strongly a these stand out In contrast to thetr generrl there la no originality, no power of Inventloifor spontaneity. It la all mere The tdlota Imitation, mere memory. savants, say Dr. Peterson, "are mere copyist In music, modeling, designing or painting, and at a rule the aptitude are precociously developed and are frequently lost before reaching adult life. Popular Science Monthly, 'Do you know," said Col. Ben Carson iniug back In his cha'r and talking to man a New Orleans that alligators are the most affectionate reatures on earth? It'a a fact. And he sense they have! Theyre wonders. rhy've got more sente than a dog, .low do I know? Havent I educated them? Aint there an alligator 110 year old in De Ailemand bayou that would work hla tail to the bone for me tf I asked him to? Say you make me tired What-ar- e you laughing at? You get 1 gallon of molasses and a bottle and Ill show, you how to tame alligator. It the easiest thing on On earth. Theyre 0 affectionate. 1 AUemond to De went 1885, June 13, MODERN PROVERBS. bayou fishing. A negro named Baptiste Fortier had Just caught an alligaMisers have lived In hovels. tor too year old. IJ could tell by the Rich men have lived In ring around him. You cant train men have lived In mansion. Poor young alligator.' That funny aint It? Men of shoddy have lived In palaces. me. to him I asked Baptiste to sell By the house we live In so may wo him $4 9, and jlm that the allipaid not be judged, but 0 will we almost alfurther. name wa mine. I put a chain be reckoned. Then the men got to work. They gator's around hla neck. Then I got me a long ways Men of geniusmay"wear frayed panprocured hooks and poles, and the bed necked bottle, filled it with molasse and taloon and go with unkempt hair aro of the stream was thoroughly searched walked up to bhn. He opened hi jaw not marks of geniua, for those thing All this time Pilot stood by the water to nab me. That was my chance the tramp have also. side, though attempt were made to shoved the neck of the bottle In hi a cterk on hla little pay is dressMany drag him away. For the first time since mouth, an where just back of hi ears, ed better than hi employer, but he I no he had been in the a ate he refused to alligator has no teeth, "tilted thq.bot let a valuable clerk for that. obey the voice of his keeper. Toward tie beup. Jim tasted the molasses and There are branches from even th night the body of the missing child waa broke He his tall. Bap beaten track ot safety, but found. As It was drawn to the shore gan wagging atralghteat but that was an accident He the law of tlstes leg, ty averaga accepted by the Pilot sprang forward, took the slimy wa a gentle as a setter dog from the I less dahgerou 'to follow than dress in hi mouth and, raising the child minute he tasted the molasses. I taught even the successful rule of exception. as tenderly at though it had been in Its how to catch him a lot of pretty trick man 1 mpre likely The mothers arms, trotted back to the house to how stand on hi tall, flies, how to to be a prosperous man than the man of the long line of searchers following. chew tobacco. Finally I harnessed hl.n overcoat, and the poorly dressed shabby N. Y. Herald. me at around He looked ip to a boat la more likely to be an Unsuccessman v see what I wanted. I reached over ful man than the man with the tailor-mad- e REMAKABLE KENTUCKY CLOCK he tide of the boat and pushed him a clothe. Off he The oldestxlock In Breathitt Coun ty , little. Then he understood. Kentucky, is owned by Mrs. R. C. went. When I pulled on the rope he Thought and study are harder work Hord.and It thus described by the Jack-so- n had around his neck he was nonplussed for some men than manual labor, but It It Is one of those Hustler: or a minute but he soon caught On, and pay to thluk and plan-- If farmer tall seven-fee- t now when I go to De Ailemand 1 never would more they management study and the year 1746, In which It wannade have to hire anybody to paddle my ca- would not need to econom!?e 0 much; Is stamped on one of the wooden wheel noe. Jim attends to carrying me any- If they would be more liberal in improvtogether with another Inscription, Indi- where I want to go. Say, do you know ing their stock and farm they would cating that it was manufactured in Liv- Im a glad to aee me whenever I make dollars where rigid economy ofterpool, and still another showing that a past that way as If he were a relative of en result In positive loss. firm In Leltchfield, Co- - handled It as mine? Whats that? Of course Its the The men in cities who are the center an article ol merchandise op this side of truth. Ask Baptiste. 11c take care of of energy, the driving whepl of trade, the Atlantic. Just before his death, im for me while I a In New Orleans." political or practical arts, and the woeight years ago, Alfred Marcum gve -- Ex. men of beauty and' genius are the chilit to his daughter, Mr Hord. Alfred dren and grandchlidien of farmers,'' and Marcum purchased the timepiece at the are spending the energies which their Irrprrftiitble administrator's sale of Simeon Bohan-uaThere was a certain Exciseman in fathers hardy, sflent life accumulated in who lived in Ttoubli'ume in 184 Shrewsbury who was very tr m and neat frosty farrows, in poverty, necession was in the possession ol Snnci n Bo In ft! attire, but who had a Bottle nose and darkness. But slight Investigation hannen fifteen years and ran rorstantly of more than usual size. As he passed will show this to be the fact. Ralph " all that time. Simeons fa' her, who through the school lane the boy used Waldo Emerson! j his son to call him Nosey and this made him so came from Virginia, Is the time to resolve to have a Now with the clock after lie hail owm d it fif- angry that he complained to Dr. Butler, good garden on the farm for next spring. ty year. It was brought from Virginia who sympathized, and sent for the head A a rule the farm garden is a mere taken to pieces, on the barks of slave. boy, to whom he gave strict Injunctions make-shif- t affair, but what excuse la Thus there is accurate account thst the that the boys should not say Noseyany there for it being so?" For the time and clock is 150 years old, hs been running more. upon the garden apot It will put expense for over too years, and, as far as is known Next day, 'however, the Exciseman aeveral time over that applied to pay It has never had to be repaired. It is reappeared, even more angry than be- any known field Crop. The chief point seems that not a boy had said In still running and keeps good time. All making a aucceaa.of the garden I t but that as soon a he wa seen make a good fine teed bed, secure goo the wheel but one are made of hard the boy ranged themselves In seed, wood. A relative of Mrs. Hord offered give frequent attention to weedin but she two lines, th- ough which he must pat, and colossus for ancient the herfjoo cultivating. his refuted the author, having made up her and all fixed their eye Intently upon There 1 scarcely one year In twenty mind that the never will part with It nose. Again Dr. Butler summoned the when Intelligent farming doe not pay a head boy and spoke more sharply. You Courier-Journ- rl. d during her life." Louisville handsome premium over have no business, said' be, to annoy a as applied to farmer business. methods man who la passing through he school to know how to be right at every on hla lawful occasion; dout look at It pay sltaLaxur I the farm. Attend your farmer on ted The greatest of all luxuries In Central him.' But again the Exciseman returnthl winter and compare notes Institute eat ed to Dr. Butler, furious with indignaAfrica (a salt. To aaythataman It will help both salt with hi ritual is the tame a eas- tion, for thla time, a soon at he wa seen with your neighbor. thus spent Is One them. and day Park ing that he I alch man . Mungo every boy had covered hla face with hi you worth many dollsrs to any be to sure of use and Lifevegetacontinued hand until he had gone by says the long man who does not know It all" to begin ble food create 0 painful a longing for Letters ol Dr. Samuel Butler." with. Wejare all student n the great deaaltthatno word can sufficiently chool ol agriculture. Denver firemens wages will be cut scribe ft" Chicage Tribune. Tlmes-Democr- . long-necke- dng-out- s. ma-orl- well-dresse- time-keeper- 1 B. - sllp-aho- Itrir. - |