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Show r 4 - 'VC - TDIPLE AND TABERNACLE. S i. The organization of Granite stake has been completed, ll a fornifil; pert of bait Lake Make, and is com posed of Mill Creek, East Mill Creek. Ui(f Cottonwood. South Cotton wood, North Jordau, Hunter, Sugar llouae, Lrauger. Farmers, Forest Hale and Mountain Hell wards 1 he organization was formvd In Apostles I raoeis M I A man and Au thon II. Luo 1, Frank Y. Tayloi was elected presi dent and h.s counselors are Joseph It Miller of Mill t reek and Edwin lieu niou of l ranger instructive sjh ei hs nete made l(j Apostles Lj niau ami Lund, conccrnm; tile duties of the Latter-daSaints win held the priesthood, prat tu ularlv thosi who were railed to he tdheersn Stake and ward apathy, lut the chit lesson of their 'talk was the sliict tn forcement of the woid of wisdom. Apostle Lyman going so fur as to say that no person would he selected as an otlieer in the (.ramie stake who would not keep the word of wisdom strictly which forbids the use of tea, coffee, tobacco and liquors of all Linds. lie further said that if any persous select-efor any office had not lived up to these requirements they would have to pledge themselves to do so, and if they did not then live up to this requirement, they would be removed. Apostle Lyman then presented the name of Frank V. Taylor for president of the Grauite stake, which was sustained w itliout a dissenting voice. A very unusual method was followed to secure a list of names from which the other officers would be selected. Each person present was given a slip of and asked to write five or six name thereon of those whom they would like to see made officers of the stake, but to name no office for any one, and be sure t write only men they knew to be up-- r glit and honest, and who ket the w ord of wisdom. On the back of this was to write tiie each tdipof paper name of the ward he lived in, but not sign his own name. A committee of five was appointed as tellers Rifhard R. Lyman, Francis M. Lyman, Jr., Thomas Ahlston, Joseph W. Musset and George M. Cannon. At 11: 0 the meetiug adjourned te give the apostles time to select from the lists prepared by the tellers the Parlous officers to be named. At 1 p m, the meeting recontinued and the names selected were presented -- iorihe approval of the meeting, all re-- . celviog unanimous support. . The selections were as follows: Counselors to Stake President James S. Miller of Mill Creek and Ed- win Be anion of George Crismou, High Councilor Sugar; H: C. Carlisle. Mill Creek; Jesse Wheeler, Charles Holme, South Cottonwood; F. F. Hlntze, Big Cottonwood; Horace Cummings, East Mill Creek; George M. Speneer, Taylorsville; Tobey Filkin, Granger; JobnM. Cannon, For " est Dale; James Bertoch, Hunter; William Bradfor, Martin Chriatopherson, r . Farmer's. j Alternate - nigh Counselors H. 8. Saunders, South Cottonwood; Joseph A. Corwall, William J. Butterwortb, Mill Creek; Arthur Cummings, Sugar; Henry Mathews and Henry Barker, Taylorsville. Stake Clerk and Historian and Clerk of the High Council Thomas Ahlston of Sugar. John Cook of Mill Creek president of tb High Priest's quorum with M. V. Jones and Chillian Miller as hi eounaelorrs. Stake President of Sunday schools George M. Cannon, Forest Dale with Richard Horne of Mill Creek, Ashel Woodruff of Farmer's assistants. President of Y. M. M. L A. William C. Winder, Mill Creek; Uriah Millet Musset of MLU Creek, as. jMd Joseph y MINING MENTION. i The company la disbursing $30,000 month In wages, fuel and supplies. Tie new plant of the A. M. W. coir solldat.oii is being eleited, aud wb 1 tomple.ed will have cost $125,0U(X many respect it. ta Is the largest designed in the stale, for ilt p vtoiL Tin shaft Will be sunk to a depth ol l.Wiu fet t, aud the ideal to explore tie Imw-- i oic horizons of tbo HubtaU Tunnel Quid Brick from ibo Alias. One of the most luiouaiit moviw in niiuiiig mattcis at iur,ii at the present tune is la .iig fei HHilatcvl by the Barstow Mining and Milling Couiotuy Hits company i made i ; t,f Sian lard Oil magnates, w tm an untiv 'dt-il- lj '1 lie lull very rich in tins city CarlamatiIn- t w iMi-iilast wuk of 1tuy j. liith-r- , wlu is mi.ie, one of the llli- t i.i sin the sujH'i uni inti iii i, t th, great Enterpiua-- l tics, has close will us the agent down pending .iii.iin ihungea it th prise mine at Km, of the Hurstons in the iiiaiiaenu tit of loiupan.v. 'i he shut is knitted on the a year ago and was the Bobtail mine ks.ited at Gustnli, benrl pkii-eto s J e J t . Newell and J. was lu the Intel, m of ImV Miixwill 'i here Is consideraWe by ibat provements I'rugra-- s iviae - "1 i - r . exn-n-iv- coal-pan- y I Bi-ur- n d Ndt. pa-pe- r &-lt- li ( -- qtiyw -- lf ton-stam- , : or. beqiUl-rMentl- on r:r n Oeiw-vtuntt- 07 150-foo- 1" c pos-ibi- X e. The Adventures of An Eton Boy... BY JAMBS GRANT. plj eouieinplutf'd onfor the pi tit ytar At present water to contend with, and thus far the ori s front that mine must be huu.Pd ly iron in sight A large amount of by wagon to GiMon. a part of tlm money has lieen spout in development i t li the road leing up grade llim makes the resumption f work on th old ItiKon almfi the last of the downtea slug an expmsive factor in the of the mine The Bob'all ruii-n- town properties has lesumetl. The was, previous to the strike, the which is in to distance if 2.1M0 t Individual Iron producer in the feet lias oja-- d up great bodies of largi-sarea, but the mine waa low grade s'lver. lead and gold ores dovn-nvvMuch of this to Iteing stuped out. drowned out aud considerable repair w ork vv ill have to. ho done before opEverywhere along t lie tunnel the ole The Bison goes down, but sinking on the vttn la erations ij tie resumed. 'ms bteii reorganised under Impossible owing to the uige amount company of water. To open the vein at a the name of the Caribou Mining Comgreater depth aud secui e diu'inage for pany, ceorge F. Campion being th the water, a tunuel, starting at a point manager. Denver News. In the canon near the olil Trensi't tunuel Is contemplated. This will give PREPARED FOR SNOW. an additional depth to the Bobtail of 500 feet, opening up Immense bodies LesdvUl Uu Taken Precautions Thai Am of (doping ground, making It one of 4 Not the big mines of the county. It will So far this says the Leadville also bring the mouth of the new tun- Miner, the winter, costly and extensive precaunel within easy reach of the spur ex- tions the railroads and some taken tended from jhe Bdvertim railroad at of the mines by and smelters seem to have Guston to the Treasury tunnel. A been needless and, while there la plenty short extension of the switch will en- of snow iu the mountains, there la able the Bobtail mine to dump its ore hardly in Leadville or th valenough from the tunnel tramway into the rail- ley to make any sleddlug. It has been road cars direct, saving both the ex- an ojien winter w 1th a vengeance. The pense of traming as well as of loading. expensive suovvsheds of the Chrysolite Many of the best mining experts have branch of the Gramle believed that as the great Commodore might as wtll Denver never have burn built, vein is connected with the ore bodies so far as their utility is concerned tliia found lu the Yankee Girl and Guston w Inter. The Colorado M iilland also apaud the greater depth attained by the pears to have been to a neediest put new tunnel, It will prove as great a of $20,(XK), so far at this camp bonanza as the famous Guston mines, exiense Is concerned, for a niamotb rotary. each of which yielded many millions Many of the mines enclos'd their trea-tl- i to the stockholders. from the shafts to the bins or The Bobtail mine, located abote the with roofs and sides, as a proGuston and Yankee Girl mines In Com- dumps tection against snow, though these Immodore gulch, has been an active proare not necessarily needducer during the jmst year, bodies of provements as they serve to protect the tramless ore very rich bismuth having been mer against the biting cold winds that The Bobtail mine em- sometimes opened up. rage fiercely of a winter braces thirteen patented claims and a mUlslte, it was extensively worked night The Yak tunnel last fall built an open several years ago when many thous- air extension of th tunnel, the full ands of tons were shipiied to the Standof the Graham placer, to cover ard smoker at Durango. Owing to the --length the tracks of the dump, - The shed are low character of the ore and the low ef frame, covered with corrugated Iron. of ore silver not values would the price are fire and atorm proof, Th They pay expenses and the company closed main and branch sheds have a total it down. The mine is owned by Standlength of nearly 1,000 feet. Precafc-ttoh- s 4fj Oik people w ho reside at and about bf ono kTnd aniT another against Titusville, Pennsylvania. After re- a blockade or for shelter wers taken maining closed for two years It waa all over the camp and storm doors put leased to the Ouray Mining and Exup for stores and dwellings, but apploration Company, who in turn leased parently all for naught. January t it to George Wallace Williams, who and the weather 1, These miners opened up so in? Cy . as aa ore alxty silver high running an ounce ounces In silver and one-haQUICK HANOLINQ OF ORK. In In gold together copjier and lead valth that ues. Pennsylvanians hearing leaser were taking out richer ore than Ckup -Made M LMdtBl MIms After tl. Railroad. Cam. the Bobtail bad been known to ship, The connecting of the railroads direct sent Mr. Quick to Ouray to look It up. with the mines, says the Miner, la Upon Inquiry he found that the mine looked very promising, waa turning out working change is a variety of waya, ore that yielded over $50 to the ton by not only doing aw ay with ore hauling also obviating the the carload lot All former leases on teams, but they are Ore is delivered the mine were cancelled, the company necessity of bins. the rail having determined to give the old mine from the mine car direct into road gondola. Trestles extend out a run with their money. - (X M. Carroll, manager and one of the from the dump and the mine car is owners of the Atlas mine, is going to run out upon them from the shaft house and the ore dumped right Into help swell the gold output of Ouray Mr. the gondola waiting on the switch last 1900. for Saturday county Carroll sent out a gold brick, smelted underneath. It aaVea blnnage and from a smalt batch of the very rich handling, A trestle for such direct is now in course of construction gold quart of the Atlas mine. While loading the ore In the mine that runs as high at the Bon Air. The Greenback is proaa $20 to the pound Is not aa plentiful vided with several hundred feet of as that which runs $00 to the ton, yet such trestles, with switches on either the latter will be quite as valuable a side. At this time of year, or when there product aa the former when the new mill la completed In the spring. A11 the are spells of hard freezing, bias hav p mill have been another drawback, and that Is the plans for a of the ore In them into solid completed and next summer a big force freezing It requires pick work and of miner will be put at work to dig masses. out the big bodies of low grade free sometimes even blasting to looeen it np It can be loaded Into a wagon. milling ore that bave already been op- before At this time of the year the open ' ened up. car U also something of a drawback, aa against the box car, particularly if LEADVILLES MlkES. the Journey to be made la a long one, of l do Jenvv in e WH tM '.taMtM say big Daijmt of ; now or rain storm the ore In the open sistants. Do Min. Tw car la of course exposed, and one night Farnk Y. Taylor the president ol The carbonate camp Is going to ship or cf such exposure will permit Granite stake, Ts a son of lreaideni $1,000,000 worth of tine ore In 1900 if the day ore to gq$ thoroughly soaked. in th born wa the present rate of shipment keeps up. Some ores will absorb moisture to a John Taylor. He tons of crude wonderful extent and, hence, the Item Fourteenth ward of Salt Lake in No This means about 25,000 ore of an average of forty per cent of moisture In the smeJtec charge beIn th educated was He 1861, vember, lnc. The zinciferous ore la worth $10 comes much to the dismay common schools of that city and th a ton to the miner, and the years bust of the abnormal, skipper of the ore. from him net of therefore Utah, should $250,000. graduating ness University or $750,000, represents the latter in 1880. While at the Uni- The remainder, CRIPPLE CREEK NOTES, and profit from the time It the expense in course a surveying versity he took the reaches until It Leadville leaves The Doctor is reported to hav loti which profession he followed for about work of Antwerp or Swansea and Is of rich ore in sight Goodly qoxaU-tlc- s two years after leaving school. Jn 1885 converted Into the refined product are broken, but none is hoisted. The sources ofi, zinc - supply In th he .was appointed assistant architect Block 8 of are the district school gectloB is mine, Leadville Meyer on, the ManU Temple, which position the A. Y. and Minnie, the Maid and being operatedGrassy number of the a by finished. was he held until -the temple Henri ette, the Louisville and Small Colorado Midland employes, and the Since leaving- school lie baa always Hope. A considerable portion of the prospects seem to be quite promising ' been more or less interested in mining product of these mines ts concentrated, for a valuable find. used for table learned being Bullion a Wilfley From of is twenty It the reliable source aud was superintendent this purpose, - As the Leadville zinc that the output from the I.abe!l at he ha several 1893. For years in ijeck product in the past twenty year has the present time amounts to three car been engaged in the, real estate and been only about $2,000,000, the aud den every other day. The ore Is graded by this metal as down to about sixteen to twenty brokerage business. He has always- Importance assumed will be readily seen. ounces to the ton. a rich partibeen quite an active religionist, The smelting of the old Fryer hill " Mutual Lessees the Midway on Bull bill culiarly in Sunday school and is becoming quite an Important have sunk on dumps the shaft to a depth of sew and local work,association The is material treated industry. Improvement ' enty-flv- e feet, where they have opened when selected for president of thi by the Loder furnace. It is estimated some fine ore that will run two to . very the ut general amember e there-arwee 1.000,000 ton ef dump five ounces. stake he that "The vein is feiif fcrt church. the of toM. L A. board ifiaterial scattered over the camp, wide and with depth. improving gether with old slag dumps, which will the The Alert company, leasing ,o or An AtHMwrblnr Topln. run from $4 to $5 iter ton. It Is underIs taking out 100 tons of Damon, can and Loder reserved treat so stood the furnace that Is Dick Miss King ore as low as this to a profit. If such dally, and making shipments regularly. has ao f.ttle to say that I can't keep be the case the new plant has a big Castleman and Heine, on the tonsa conversation with her from lagging. lode, are taking out about fifty field for operations In Leadville. - The Home Mining Gompany ha not day, xumtainiug two todlTO oiao? jstk- - (her former ' to pearls, and you will hive nothing yet paid a dividend, although there is They are working in splendid and buy. Jewelers said to lie enough money In the treasbut listen do Sinking has been resumed jj -j. " the $10,000 mala "workings of- - tho-ury to pay (1 ahare-oweekly. capitalization. The dividend was prom- Haven hill. A strong vUn wa 0If7 Ilia Ont V t ised as a Christmas present, but the di- in the level, and must rectors found that there was so ratieh bunches of good ore were encu Mother (crossly) "Tonnny.yon tied tip at the smelter that had hot In sinking. It is believed not talk when I am talking Tommy r I to been settled for they concluded not to ore Imdy will be found at Tl (plaintively) "O, mamma, have to shaft make declare a a dirt bed?'' Stray any attempt depth, consequently wait till vou go to dend until conditions Improved. The put down to the 300-foStories. is 250 tons ore. of $15 present output speedily as - RODNEY; i - WORK AT OURAY. spired by some emotion of znallo or mischief, be alone was the culprit; and If not loud, their wrath waa deep against him. These variation of our compass set the busy brain of Marc Hislop to work, and In a day or two he declared that he had discovered a plan for preventing th repetition of trlcka ao dangerous by insulating the needle ao aa to protect the compass from attraction false or dangerous. I am uncertain whether he perfected oon thi experiment, but Antoni -went to work another way; for on be to wa busy supposed day, whew he In the maintop, be shouted, '"Stand from under!" and ere Hislop, who was reJust beneath, could give the usual marllnsptke. a Let heavy go!" sponse, th same which had been found in th binnacle, slipped from the hand of Antonio and fellcraahing through th topgraUng. Th Iron bar crashed Into the dec at th feet of IIWop; whetberthls ew or design rurred by Inadvertence knew not, but th Scotsman thought the latter, That rascally Spanish picaroon will " work ua some aerious mischief before or ae we overhaul onr ground-tacthe Cape. said Weston, who wa ,the-- 7 raged by "thta,"'fiew Incident- and he whom for of narrow escape Hislop, " had a great regard.- look about Aye, he ha a hang-do- g him that 1 never liked, replied th He seems to be always down latter. th head, somehow. W should by have left him In hii aklff, Just a w found him.like a.bear adrift on a grating, or a pig in a washing tub On another occasion he injured Will White, one of the crew, by letting th topmaul fall from th foretop, where it usually lay, for driving home th fid -- " CHAITLK XVI (Continued ) Most of the houses are built of good Stone, but have all their windows without and bairtcaded within, for the population (of which our shipmate Antonio wag a striking specimen) ronsi ts of a'wut thirty green savanna, where the painted cacique and the mailed. Castilian met hand to hand In mortal strife, the smoke of the steam mill, grinding coffee or boiling sugar, darkened the aky, and the songs of the negroes were heard aa they hoed la the plantations, thousand Spaniards and or in gangs of forty trucked mahogany doub' that nuniUr of slaves and frea logs, each drawn by eight sturdy oxen, mUialtiKs all loo-rtektess, fiery and to the seA And ao, in a creek of the hay the apt to use their kuive ou trvial occasion same plate where the Dutch Admiral There wae rot a tliip Ijtng there Ileyn sank the Spanish plate fleet 1 for Englfind or any other craft by was wont to sit dreamily for hours, which Wes'on could have sent me with the murmur of th wav tn my A f; anish steam-paclwas ears, with the buzz of Injects and the bom on the eve of departing for Cadiz, hut voice of the mocking-bird- s among the being wearied by the monotony of my palmettos, while watching- - the sails loaf voyage, I wa scarcely in a mood that glided past the headland of the for th tea again, and wished to spend bay on their way toJhe Bahama Chana little more time on shore instead of nel or the great Gulf of Florida, This waa my favorite resort A wood leaving with her However, I wrote to my family by of cocoanut and other treea shaded the the Spanish mail, acquainting them of place and made It so dark that I have my safety, with the strange incident seen th fire-fliglance about at noon. which had 0 suddenly torn me from Th cocoas are about the height of them, and adding that I would return Dutch poplars, and are covered - with by the first ship bound for any part of oblong leaves, which, when young, are England; if possible, with the Eu of a pale red. Aa spring drew on, the probably b branches became covcred wltu acarlet genie, which would and yellow flowers. freighted for London, Over these the vast corral tree of the mast After the packet sailed with my letter in her eaiaelous bags, 1 experi- spread its protecting foliage, whence Hia dreams again became a source of enced an emotion of greater happiness the Spaniards, in their beanttful lan annoyance to all In the forecastle -and contentment than I had ever done guage, name It La Madre del Cocoa, the bunk; and on being closely and ae- alnc leaving home, for the sorrow gmallest of which has at tlmea a thou verely questioned by Captain Weston which I knew all there must have suf- sand, lovely acarlet blossoms. and tha men aa to whether h fered. and would still be suffering, ver killed, any one, by accident or ' after being long badgered, hung heavily on my heart. otherwise, CHAPTER XVII, , ha drew hia ugly knit from Its sharkAs we were returning to the brig, An Evil Spirit which had now been warped alongside We sailed from the Bay of Matanzai skin sheath and repliedorsullenly: ao, when ll "Only a Chinaman the mole, when passing through the at t o'clock a. m., on the 3d of April, street which contains the great hospi- bound for the Cape of Good Hope, California. "WelL I wish yon would clap tal, w heard the sound of trumpets, which we were fated never to reach. on your mouth when you go lancea with of saw the stopper and glittering The Eugenie had been freighted for in out of earshot in long streamers above the heads of a that colony with a rich cargo of mo- to sleep, or turn off dense crowd of people of all shades of lasses, sugar, coffee, and tobacco, and a topgallant studding sail ss far off the further and the aa and brown choose, and you color black, yellow arrangements had been mad? that from better," said old Roberts, sulkily, alter we had to doff our hats with due reCape Town she would be chartered for the the midst, aa ravings of the Cubano had kept la for they passed, spect London. Thus I had a fair prospect of d awake for several nights, him epau-lettesurrounded by a staff of officers, seeing nearly half of this terrestrial their breasta globe before I repasaed my good old " "You seem to dream a great deal, and alguletted. Antonio, said Weston, with a keen iparkling withjnedals and croswe. and Lathers threshold.! Elamere. beneath - w hich tha Spaniard each of them rlding with a cocked bat 1 earnestly hoped that we might glance, under hi left arm, came the present encounter no more waterspouts or tor- quailed. "8L Benor Capltano, he stammered. Captain Ceneral of Cuba, a marshal of nadoes, aa they were not at all to my "Hew ia thlsr the Spanish army, Don Francisco Ser- taste; hot from other causes than phe"I am very fond of dreama, he reaa attended d by rano Domlnguet, nomena or the war of the element! it with a bitter smile on his lip plied, eacort of mulatto lancera. all mounted was my fortune, or, rather, my misand a scowl ia his dark eye. on Spanish hot ea. fortune, to undergo such peril and sut ones?" man, and al- ferlng as were tar beyond my concep- ' "Have yon pleasant He v a are always that cannot "I say they of though s.t.., bad all the bearing tion or anticipation. so, but I should like to procure them." View to 1 MYvn t 0 so? ti.ii. ewaiM we On returning to th Eugeni waa beering south by shipmntT' Into at, sinking found Antonio the Cuban working the waves If you please, senor, growled th astern, sad out aa w among the crew aa lustily and aa ac- bad a long farewell going Spaniard. to th lovely Go to sleep, it you can, with that tively aa any man on board. Weston shores of Cuba, now offered him remuneration for the Three of our men had died ef yel- which is better than tbs formula at which at times you pty out time that he had been with us, with low fever In hospitaL so we sailed from prayers, Uk th line running off a log reeL a hint that he might find a berth else- Matansas with ten hands, And what is it you mean, mlo where; but our eastaway evinced the exclusive of three tha capship boys, greatest reluctance to leave the brig, tain, first and second mates, "A good conscience, replied Weston, and begged that Jb might be' permitla the waters, after th rainy sea- with a peculiar empbaaia, ted to remain on board, as three of the sky la 10 cloudless In th foreson, scowl came over the Span black our beat handa bad been sent ashore, noon that the heat of the aua becomes larde swarthy visage, aa he touched) -zlck, to th hospitaL ' almost insupportable; thus w were his furious th rim of hat, darted d la man that Cap- soon glad to resort to the use of wind-sa- il , So hia chief accuser, tb white-hairat glane tain Weston, despite the dislike of the rigged down the open skylight to seaman Roberta, and to end crew and the advice of Marc Hislop, an awning over the quarter-dec- k for ordered that the name of Antonio be coolness, and to skids for the preven- tb examination walked forward. (To be coatinued.) . entered on th ship's books aa fore- tion of blisters on the aidee of tha brig; mast man. but in the starry night the land-win- d Bnw It WmI tm B Three weeks after our arrival the which comes off these fertile isles, RichWorld In Wide the waa Magazine, careened to starboard, when laden with the rich aroma of their brig old-Mactor, tella at clear of all th cargo, and h$d her savannas, la beyond de- ard Hicks, an -narrow his from escape being hanged opper scraped and cleaned, an scription grateful and delicious. which th constant rains of the Without any Incident worth record- on th stage of tha Queen's Theater, season greatly retarded. ing, w ran through tha aea of the Dublin. He waa playing th part ol There waa much in Cuba to feed Windward Isles, thence along th coast Achmet, a particularly villainous an imaginative mind, and mine was of South America, and when w ap- character, who, after a long career of full of th voyages, the daring adven- proached the calm latitude, a that crime, is, to the general satisfaction ol tures and th vast discoveries of Co- tract of the ocean near the equator ia th andlcnce, captured by two British lumbus, with the exploits of the buc- named, we became sensible of th over- soldiers and promptly hanged, "On caneers, whose hannta were amid these powering increase of heat, while th night, while struggling with my cap-tor- e, wild and, ln those days,, savage breezes were but fanning hoa-dc- ra tfl toP ellppfd front one,, i . t ary hmi, the sailors term those which, under th and knotted itself round my neck. I thought of the gaily plumed and double influence of th air and motion Just a I was being hauled np," say barbarously armed cacique, whom Co-- f thebull, are just sufficient to make Mf. HIcSANever shill I forget that tumbua bad met in their fleet pirogues, the lighter canvas collapse and swell awful moment Directly I felt the tug hr had encountered In the dense for- again. at neck I gave a convulsive kick my est which clothe the Cuban mounWe were soon aware of other an- and tried to about 'Stop! but too tains forests, old. perhaps, as tha noyances than mere heat, for now it word could not escape from my twitchwas aa rll spirit day of the deluge of the yellow-skinn- ed seemed ss if there I could only make a gurgling women with their long, flow- on board tbe Eugenie, and that nothing ing lips. noise Frantically I kicked and strng-ffie-d. ing black hair and with plates of pol- went right within or about her. Pain there was none, strangely ished gold hanging lu their ears and Tbe crew sulked and quarreled beyond a choking, suffocating enough,' noset; of th fierce warriors streaked among themselves m if the demon of with sable war paint and armed .with mischief lurked in the vessel, and daily sensation, and 1 could bear the applause of tha audlence.who can arrow shod with teeth or poi- something unfortunate occurred. soned fish hones, that fell harmless or braces gave way, hy which th wera hugely entertained, with what froth th Spanish coats of mall; of the yards were thrown &tack;and in one they Imagined was my realistic acting. wild Csrlbs, who devoured their pris- instance the brig nearly lost her main- Then a terrible aensation, like molten oners with Whom a battle was hut a mast Standing and running rigging lead rushing down 'my eplne, perprecursor of a feast; and of the fa- were found to be mysteriously fretted, vaded my body, and thought my legs " mous fighting women the turrihla and ev$ cut, as If by a knife; and war bursting. I gave another mighty t Amazons of Guadaloupc. then the crew whispered- - tosether of struggle and strove ah bow I strove I thought of the story of Columbus Antonio el Cubano that horrid, dark, to scream. 1 seemed to behold a writing the narrative of iris' wonderful tnyrierious fellow, v hose character m'ghty rush of green water, and my discoveries, hia perils and ears ware filled with the roar ef a none of os could fathom, on a roll of parchment, ad'eturs, which he TWce our com; assS went wrong, Cataract 1 have a dim recollection of wrapped in oilcloth covered over wth and remained so for flays! and before seeing a great crimson 'nun shining wax, inclosed In a little eirit, and'th-- t the cause was d'seovered the Eugeni dimly-frobehind tbs waterfall, and 4 " cast into the eea, w!.h a nrayer, aud bad drifted far from her course, I can remember falling . Indefinitely the hope that ff hr anT triT'e-o- v This varying was fnwxpHeaM,- until lb rough space. Twer day afterward I ished this record of the'r achieveHslop, who set binmelf to watch, anl recovered consciousness, and then I ments might he ca't by the nreaa a saw Artouio hovering near suffered Indescribable ffgony. Yae sufthe shore of some Chrtrt'BU laid. - frequently the binnacle at nlgbt, tmblpped the focating sensation still remained, but As I sat by the aotmdirsf rev that poirpare ho aDl toui there wertf Con- It was accompanied by an unquencharolled Into the bay of Mr toms, rhat cealed nrer It an iron ntarlinp!ka on ble thirst, not totoientton tearful pains tm tlieJ would I noL-bav- e and limbs.". in' given to have s es one side end a lump cf tallow sufficient;.! my body the waves cast thar oTl csCE ct.cW mficr, rithcf with weeds apd barntebs, at my to affect the magnetic needle. , Martdii'i H(ionlal Peak. feet! 4tfter their .removal the eompass are 119 mouaiains la Colorado There crew Hut now the plodding worVcd'ac well as before! Th sact tovnot ?Vr are over 12,000 feet above whose peaks vowed tv the rusty merchant trader pou-h- el strTiHy qlitionedraH ocean level. , the and the tranactton, the waters of, the Lay tmicuri of the tel iM'oranee of illded Epanith ccnvrls, or the Dnj Antonio summoned every stint .inThw The average amount of sickneaa in e, war pirogues of the Triton Ejgnlsh calendar to attest his vur'ors; Ilf ia nine' days out of the human however appeared. and where they fouzht tker broodiest tiut'fione. battles on the wooded Bhoe( or lu th The crew now felt convinced that, ln- - jeer. Iron-barre- d olive-skinre- d e, ki - f s t 1 " -- -- T r.n.t. u. . able-bodi- ki ed cap-Itano- ?" short-sighte- ed spice-growi- op-atl- t ' avow nj Sw Hal-yai- -- Inno-cere- f ds f A. ? f |