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Show 'l IMMJIKK'UV, niuajtr. . . BY TIIE HKYIIYEL P. O J4S. itx faar ilh ms iintity. remradr, v to you is tiruilit. Thr cat. The path of duty emP-hin. - X. 57, Maull. Yer-ong- e, Iinvs id htrht Your hmrt isjoum.'. your vision keen, I In lenr, Some oi the English aristocracy are as thrifty as any Yankee. Lady Carlisle of the Howard estate lets cows to cottagers and farmers. If the navigation of the Missouri never paid a dollar in dividends it can le made If these gentlemen wish. I can show them n hotel dose by, he said in a civil tone. Du so, and we will give you five francs for your pains, cried impulsively. "We are strangers in Haris, you see, and I have not an idea which way to turn. Ah, monsieur is a stranger in ill monsieur lean on me? Paris? The hotel is not fur off not five steps distant, in faet. It was very near. A little farther, in truth, than our officious friend TWO WALK TOCETHER. TIIE HOME SENTINEL and thousands in reduced rates over all and only rail transit. to pay thousands straight Tnettoal you plainly a, e. ltear with me kindly . eomrade. It is not so nil u.e. Too 'rail to walk I In jt some steps eliind. And t tie naiaow steps id jsniti to you I cannot tilwitv s ttml. Mt eeH too dim to r nch thepoal, ie hut the nearer lomti: Thou hast tbeuiornmu piorv. Put I the niplit-liad- e ploom. had stated, hut still just around the nearest corner. It was an ancient- yoking, white- Yet we may sulk together. It we hut 'he l.ple-dTo have one hope, one null, one aim, One He'per in our need. His Ime t an make st tone souls like v o"j, And faiilteieis stit h ns I Walk prloefrllv t opel her lieie. Alai net topetla r hi and hy. washed building, standing back from the street, with a small garden in front of it. No name was painted The cost of courts to the public is aeross t la front of the house, as is enormous, an 1 the very f iciiity which evem-corne- r Hsu d with Parisian hotels. Only a Buits m ly be commenced or carried up Hotel with the word. red lamp, incites litigation and atTords opportuon it in Mark letters, was set in an yus no where to he discovered. Yet nity for vexations appeal. iron framework projecting above there lay his clothes. Ilow could lie, TIIK UK ATI I THAI undressed mid lame, havequitted the the door. TiintF. years ago seven Wheeling We paid rur conductor, who shamroom? A sudden t bought struck me. removed in same the who set, girls, Poor fellow!" I thought;hemust bled tlown the street, after casting a solved never to marry. Now they are last glance at the glittering studs be walking in his sleep. all provided with husbands except one, itli that idea I adranced to the and vest buttons which Yronge and her engagement is announced. persons who were in Paris on played ns he threw back his overcoat door and endeavored to open it. To New Years Pay, ists.T, hut retain in order to get out the money. my amazement I found that the inM. Hakthoi.di will execute the statue A sleepydooking old woman in ft side holt was shut. It w.as evident of its horrors. vivid recollection a of Giunbetta which is to be erected at calico short gown and petticoat, anti that Yeronge had quitted the room in mild and tranIu--s with a yellow silk handkerchief tied Yet, where was he? He could not Jardines, Yillo d Avray. The The evening closed statesman's home there has been made quil, hut the night wjis full of perils. about her head answered our sum- have gotten out of the About 11 oclock a finedrizzling rain mons fit the door of the little hotel. window, and t lie room had hut asiu-gl- e 6t.ite property and will bo preserved door. Ah, the lied under the "( h, yes, you can have rooms cerset in that froze as it fell, anil rov-ere- d intact as a memorial. the house is very full. bed? 1 had not looked there. Doubttainly, the whole of the vast city with Monsieurthough has hurt his knee, 1ms he? less he Yvtis lying there and chuckling Ir is not alone a man's standing Yvith a sheet of ice as smooth as a mirror, Then monsieur shall have theground-floo- r over my perplexity. his fellowmen which is affected by the which neither man or beast could ot oil course. The other I said to myAll, the rascal! room, bringing against him of a charge of disst.'tud erect nor walk with safety. monsieur I must pray to mount to self. 1 have him now! himself with is It standing honesty. I advanced to the lied, lifted the the third floor. which is most likely to suffer whether The festivities of the season had we not have rooms togeth- valance of green moreen, nnd fount! "Could called a great many persons from er? the charges be proved or not. that the bedstead yyus a sort of solid suggested Yeronge. their homes on that evening, ninl the box that continued to the floor, so Impossible! Quite impossible! Expekimeni's with a new explosive miseries of those yyIio found them- The old Yvoimin YYtis with awake by that there was, technically speaking In no under the bed at all. called eerasito, which is to dynamite its selves forced to traverse distances this time, and very energetic. I tvas now completely bewildered. 100 to 70, have recently b on made in fact, the two rooms I have offered without the aid of a conveyance can nre the hist that are left, for the Of course any species of foul play Austria, and are said to have smveedeu readily be imagined, for the cabmen house has a gootl name, though it is seemed out of the question. The BO well that the invention has been purall struck work and went home. small. bolted door and barred window chased for military purposes exclusivelWhile talking she had lighted a seemed to settle that matter, so faiLadies in evening dress, white slipyof candles and preceded us ns the entrance of any male actor pers and opera flunks were to be seen couple a narrow Tiifke is still plenty of game for along passageway at the was concerned. Yet, if no one could lamp-postand to clinging railings end of w lie!) was a door, which she un- get in how could Yeronge have got American sportsmen on this great conmid weeping in very helplessness of locked and threw open with a flour- out? And if he had not tinent. Prom mooso and griz.ley bear quitted the unable to stir a. step. Horses ish. room, where was he? Could anyone terror, to the snino and rood bird the gamut You see, you could not he better have gotten in by a secret entrants urns. 15ut the lordly buffalo, the most lav moaning with fractured limits on in tiie Grand Hotel. while Yve slept? With that idea I lodged men and slippicturesque and once the most plentiful the glassy roadway, looked comfortable. It started to investigate the yvuIIs. room The of all, will bo seen no more in his wild ped and tottered and fell, some re- Yvas long and narrow. There was Two sides of the wall were of course magnificence. side as accounted for, as outside of one lay ceiving injuries from which they never one window at the lelt-lmwe entered. The bed stood in an the passageway, nml on the othertho recovered. A M AUciors, a splenetic, a rash peralcove draped with hangings of open yard. I carefully examined the I laid been dining with an old son who would vent his spito upon anmoreen. The window tvas wtill opposite the door. All solid and green bacheother can find lawyers who, that their college friend. It had been a protected outside bv it massiYe iron smooth there; no trace of an opening name may figuro in the calendar of lor party, and a merry one; and grating, such as is usually employed nnyYvhere. Then I proceeded to the new business, will bring tiny sort of nowindows in France. alcove. Here I found rather more it was past 12 o'clock when Ye on ground-floo- r tion desired iiguirist reputable persons broke up. Of course there was a I advanced to this window, and, hold- difficulty, as the heavy ing my candle aloft, pmed out into Yvere considerably in my way. Hut I to their groat annoyance, possibly to shout of dismay from the whole party, see that it managed to satisfy myself that the the damage of their reputation. some dozen in all, when we discov- the darkness.a I couldnarrow of into sort opened yard, YViill at each eml of the bed yyus all but. tho the ered condition of street; wall. right. a terminated bland hy high Ho old. looks has t here was no help for us. We could Ixventok Keei.y Next I turned my attention to the woman, troubling herself not nil go hack to quarter ourselves The old changed a groat do tl in appearance Yvall at the opposite side of the bed. of little about the very my scrutiny in five his our host bachelor tho last small, years and his hair on during rvns meanwhile in To investigate that I Yvas forced to has turned white, Tho effort to keep lodgings, and so we set oil on our premises, the engaged tire, Yhicli was laid all lean across the bed; so I knelt upon lighting make different To wavs. matters his great secret has worn upon him worse our host lived on tiie t hand ready for themnteh in the little grate. the edge of the bed. and to steady and his fucj shows deep lines of euro. When our old conductress had got myself I leaned my weight on the cenHo still maintains a confident air, of the Seine, not far from the Luxem- the tire well under wuv she rose and ter ot the bed. As I leaned my weight so of most us that Gardens, bourg however, when talking about his mowere at an interminable distance testified her intention of accompany- on the bed it gave way suddenly beA rush of told, tor. from home. 1 myself was stopping ing me at once to the room destined neath my hands. for ine. It was up three flights of noisome air streamed upward to iny de Hue on tho Hotel the at France, Puesidknt llAUUisojf is not tho only stairs, but was snugnml comfortable nostrils, and had I not clutched at head of a nation who is an expert St. llonore, three miles off. enough, though rather small. The the bedpost Yvith my other hand I ( hie ot her of the party had to go luiY-of Greece, jKsdestrian. King Gem-ginevitably lost my balHe was a handsome old woman lit my tire, ns she had should also. there is an inveterate walker and is a done that of Yeronge, and then went ance nnd have plunged headforemost from fellow the provinces, familiar figuro on the streets of young into some horrible abyss. Y'es, the named Gustav Yeronge, who had, back to bed. Tired as I was. I had no notion of go- bed opened downward in the middle. Athens. Tho Athenians salute him fts 1 heard from another oftlio guests, to sleep without paying a last I had sohcd the riddle of my poor politely fts they meet Or paSS him, lately inherited a good deal of mon- ing to Yeronge, to see it ho needed my friends fate. visit but make no other demonstration, and ey, and has come up to Paris to see in undressing. I staggered backward, heartsick So, merely waitlife. 1 could hardly claim him even help ho simply raises his low felt hat. off my overcoat and d to amazement nnd dismay. It was with ing pull we for met had tts an acquaintance, I wont downstairs some moments before 1 recovered myhoots, As v.Tyvo important factors have tended that evening for the first time. self sufficiently to continue my exagain. lo keep nations insolated, and thus We Went out into the street, he askamination of the hideous trap into I the found fire, Yeronge by sitting I of ed to what quarter Paris wu'i nnd which I had so nearly fallen. with It a his knee give kingly powor its prestige through nursing aching going; and on learning my destinareposo to Ignorance and insular prejudice - that tion, cried: Very distnnl expression of counten- needed some minutes ance. He brightened up at once enable mo to proceed in my Pounds, is, language and money. Well, I'm going a stone's thf-oWhen I did so I tvas and and and dollars pence, shillings from there, so come, and we will walk when he saw me enter, nnd became, investigations. horrible the at his amazed in nnd of simplicity of onts havo done more to keep up spite pain, quite chatty together. When I rose to retire, the whole contrivance. The bed itconfidential. between tho English speaking full in lie was not only evening 1 did in about half an hour, self. instead ot being a solid mattress, dress like the rest ot us but in a which peoples of tho world than nil olse he was merely two cushioned doors, fitwould not wofully tired, even more so than custom houses an 1 Very elaborate one. 11 is Ioyv, open feeling of hear ting close together in the center ai.d departure. tny vest showed a shirt front of passports. he still for Sit ft held up by some strong springs, such sit down, cried; fabulous fineness, whereon glittis only 2 o'clock, and I have ns serY-- to close the doors of public Emily: Zola, who lias become fabutered three diamond studs, each while; such to tell you. a buildings or stores. A certain amount story for of an oven nnd no inconsiderable size, in stone author, lously wealthy 1 while of pressure Yvas necessary to force down So lit and a sat, cigar, these flush days of authorship, was ex- ot the purest water. Four buttons, Yeronge intersome into open these divisions. Each side was plunged also ol diamonds, closed his vest, and minable tremely poor upon starting out and of college scrapes covered smoothly with linen, and so history his left of he on wore little the finger he secured a place in Hachette's r in closely did the Iyvo divisions fit that and adventures. The 1 book concern; while writing His first hand a handsome solitaire. w liich 1 sat was solt ami eomtorta-ble- , a glance Yvould have reY'ealed nothromances he was often reduced to bread thought all this rather bad taste; drowsy heat, ing unusual about the appearance of but he seemed like a thoroughly the the lire gave out a nud iu fifteen the bed. It merely looked like one of and water, and playfully remarks that whs stupid, story his manners were fellow, and I was fast asleep. those mattresses ay liich are made with minutes lie was compelled "to play Arab, ot- good We got certainly interesting. very a division in the center. in bed night and day because n. to stay along pretty well for about halt an lie had no clothes. seemed I to me It that had just I carefully pressed tho door open hour, slippinguml slidingnndstuiub-linabout, and then (ailing. At hist lost consciousness, when 1 tvas sud- nnd peered down into the depth thus One wise precaution on the part of my companion slipped and fell again, denly awakened hy a terrible shriek, revealed. The same cold, damp air Americans selling paying properties to and when he strove to rise, sunk a cry as if for help, with which it ap- that 1 had noticed before rushed up of the chill back, uttering a stilile.l groan. peared to he my own name was into my face, redolent English companies will be to either Have you hurt yourself? I mingled. I started holt upright, tnouldness of the cellar. I listened stock to continue in cone in an instant. All around Not a sound was heard from below. trol, or elsh to sell the properties out- nsked, anxiously, assisting him to was still. Thecandle ivas extinguish- I dared make no farther examinarise. right, for case or its equivalent. The fell He with hack another but the room was lighted by the tion. Who could tell Yhat unseen ed, groan. feverish character of the foreign infear that my knee isinjured, he ruddy glow of the fire in the grate. eves might !;o watching tny every "I vestment markets is portentious of a said. "I can So profound was the silence that the movement, what hidden ears might hardly stand. revulsion and a financial crash sooner With difficulty I got him at last on patter of tho rain against the windo- he alert to catch the slightest sound or (later, and when this comos good his feet. Hut every step betook gave w-panes was distinctly audible. that might suspicion or detection? At first 1 thought of tying a cord to properties will suffer as well as bad him pain. Ot course 1 could not go Yeronge tvas nowhere to be seen. it down ones. him alone. Meantime, off and leave Yeronge! I called in a half whis- my candle and of lowering 1 abandoned the n human being was in sight. w ake him were he into the abyss, but not not to wishing per, The power of the local press is un"Where are we? he asked,, faintly. sleeping, have you gone to bed? project almost ns soon as I conceiv-e- d limited. It attracts wealth from it. I made my way to the nearest There tvas no answer. I stretched abroad and makes known the resources corner, nnd read tho name of the myself, yawned, nml took a look at Poor Yeronge was dead! Of that there could lie no doubt. The fiends and capabilities of the city or town. street. the clock. 1 line The de is ,1, in a advertisement I local Half muttered. I must yy Iio planned that murder trap were llislav, Every replied, paper past have been dreaming. I had best get not likely to leave their work half an advertisement of the town; it is the coming nek. "I have not the least idea where to bed as fast and as quietly as pos- finished. All that was left to me now voice of the busy merchant to his custo avenge his fate; that is, if I I never heard of sible. I laid no idea that Hind we tire, he said. tomer and also to those who dwell at a slept was share it. not did street. so long. distance. It acts in many ways to that I was feeling pretty I took up mv candle and essayed this time tit. By benefit the town and increase its busi- well exhausted. I began to be thor- to light it at the fire. As i did so it down to meditate over my I sat ness prosperity. For these and varistruck me that the room wnsstrange-l- y, course of action, and collect my scatough y d i sco u ft t ged . ous other reasons, it is the part of "Our best plan. 1 said, is to unnaturally quiet; not a sound, tered thoughts. My first impulse was jwtriotism and honesty for men inter- look for some hotel where we can not even that of heavy breathing, to escape from the house at once. Hut ested in the growth and prosperity of a pass the night. It is of no use try- betrayed the presence of the sleeper how yviis such a feat possible? The town or city to patronize those who ing to go any farther. There is not in the alcove. That horrid erv. too, YYindoYY of the room was securely was still rimring in tny ears, so 1 re- closed with Iron bars. MoreoY'er, it patronize them, and to help support a vehicle of any sort to be hud. You nre right. Hut where can solved that 1 would take one and build up home institutions rather glance I did succeed in forcing out the gratat my friend to satisfy myself as to ing, 1 should find myself in a narrow than those abroad. In other words, we find a hotel?' As he spoke, n man in a hlou.se. his Y'urd, enclosed on ail sides by a high advertise in your homo piper, and with a pipe in his mouth. swung h:m-seHe might have the nightmare, I wall. Any attempt to leave the tihow to distant communities that you under the shadow of an t. Jw ami so it will be a charity house by the door would of course thought; to appreciate the efforts made develop near hv. to arouse him." arouse the suspicions of the inmates, your town or city. iron-grate- bed-curtai- o e rain-soake- bar-trie- rs e be-fo- rd arm-chai- g Yvide-awak- 1 well-doin- if who were doubtless on the alert. Hut one course remained to me, and So I advam-ed'tthe alcove, lifted flie curtain nnd looked in. There was no one there. The bed was in disorder, the covering tossed aside and the pillow pushed away, but it was untetmnted. The alcove was small; there was barely room in it for the bed. a small washstand and a little night table, so that I saw the whole extent of it at a glance. For the moment I did not expect that anything was wrong. I thought that Yeronge. like the mere hoy he Yvas, hail hidden away somewhere to give me a fright and had then cried out to awaken me. I called impatiently, eronge, come out here. Where are There was no reply; Itepiessing a grow ing feeling of annoyance, I set to work tit om e to inof the room. vestigate M.v task was a short one. Yeronge d Cured the Drummerof Flirting. that was to return as stealthily as No more flirting for me, bovs, repossible to the room assigned to me, there to await the arrival of the hour marked a drummer to some ofhisa,-quaintanee- ntYYhiehl could quit the premises without exciting suspicion. I came to this resolve after much I extinguished my deliberation. candle, crept softly and stealthy along the passage and up the stairs, which seemed to my excited fancy to shake, quiver and creak tit every step that I took. Hut I gained my room unmolested, boiled myself in securely, and throw ing myself on the bed with-ou- t undressing I aYvaited the of morning. 111. the long, long hours! How interminable they were, and how slowHow often the ly they were passed! squeak of a mouse in t he Yvainscot-ing- , or the snapping of a coal in Ungrate clilled tiie blood in my veins ami paralized me with terror! Often too, I Yvould drop asleep, only to start awake the next moment with ot Yeronge ringing tiie I thought that the in my ears. night would never end. At last the window slowly grew a glimmering square; the pale light ofdawn showed me the shape of things about me, and the friendly morning peered in upon me once more. Yet 1 did not dare to arise and go forth at once. I must linger still until my hour of rising would be sufficiently late to betray neither compromising knowledge nor inquietude. At last, about S o'clock, I got up from tny comfortless couch, the disorder of mv adjusted dress, bustling as I did so e about the room, with a great at making a finished toilet, and whistling a merry tune. Then I rang my hell, ordered tho usual French early breakfast of a roll and a cup of coffee, and asked for my roll to lie sent at the same time. The coffee was brought by the same old woman who had admitted Yeronge and myself the night The friend ot monsieur left about half an hour ago, she said as she set down the tray. He left no message for monsie'.ir. Friend! Ih was no friend of mine. I met him accidentally in the street last night, was reply, given in as guv and careless a tone as I could aj)-proa- ( j death-shrie- ' k pre-tens- 1113- well assume- - Indeed! Well, his knee hurt him and he could not sleep; so he sent Joan for a cab. and wont off soon after daybreak this morning. 1 made no answer, but continued to crumble tny bread and stir my coffee with pretended inditl'erem-eAs soon as the old hag had quitted the room I emptied the contents of the coffee-cuout of - window, put a hit of roll iu my pocket, and prepared to go. No one offered nnv- - opposition to my departure, hut it was not till I found myself fairly in the open street that I ventured to dra w tny breath The ice was melted from the pavements, nnd I had nodittieultj in finding a cab, I hailed the first one I saw passing, jumped in, and cried to the driver: To the Prefecture, of Police at can drive! once, as fust ns Then, as the carriage started, I fell down in the bottom of it in a dead faint. An the accursed den and its inmates were in tiie bands of th police. The latter comprised the o'd woman, a man who seemed to he the proprietor (who was 110 other than the man who had accosted Yeronge nnd m the night before, and ho had guided us to the house), and two females, young and who, us I afterward learned, were the decoy ducks of the establishment. Guided by me, the able nnd intellimade a thorough gent invesigation of the murderous apparatus of the ground floor, bedreom. . p 1113- s. used to go without I when was dvingfi.racignr smohiug 1 could so intotheladie's go just Pin cured. On my la ,t run into Lincoln I met a nice young ladv. She was ngreealje. nnd ot course I made myself as nearh-- so as possible. Had a pleasant, halt hour with .(. before we readied the station, arid ot course when we got off there askof I couM her if there were any par.-el-s carry for liar. She smiled bewitch-ingland said I might help her it 1 would he so kind. Then she poiuti d to a seat right behind where we weie sitting, and there were three babies, assorted sizes asleep. She said they 1 1 car-H- 1 v, were hers. Well. was in for it. so I picked up the biggest ones, one on either arm, while she took the kid. We marched out and found a carriage, and I put her in and was about when she smiled to su3-- good-daagain so bewhitchingh- and asked au- to get I in. couldn't rinse. you know, so I went along. We drove to somewhere near the Capitol and stopped before a nice house. A man came running out, lifted out the babies, kissed Ihetn, lifted out the young woman, kissed her two or three times, and told the driver he could go. Would you believe it, she was so spoony on that lwisbaml of hers she never said good-by- e to minor looked in mv direetionat all; and the worst ot it. Iliad to that ain't tinhire myself and lost carriage pay half a days time in the bargain. That woman cured me of flirting so From The Nebraska long as Hive. City Press. Rag Carpets. latest fad (the fashionable fancy) in lurnishingisfor ragearnets, Yvrites Luc3- Love. Mrs. t leveland is responsible for this as for some of the other fashionable eccentricities in furnishing. The little ladv- has that about her personality- which makes her a natural leader, and when she chose to furnish her new house in the oddest, most wav- the fashionable world is ready to follow her at a greater, or less distance. The restoration of the rag carpet, however, is not a had thing. It cultivates a specie of home industry of the most economical sort, nnd furnishes a pleasantly exciting occupation for grandma in iier rocking-chai- r nnd her granddaughter on beside her. Hut mind the rag carpet must be artistic. You must choose colors '. You may make a Chinee, or flit or miss centre, with a border in solid colors shaded, or the rags d3ed in reds or blues, or yellows for centres and choose harmonious contrasting borders. Your floors in the first, place nre to he painted or stained, for in no ease is the whole floor to be covered even with a rag carpet. Doubtless in your country neighborhood has a and if there is one it ought to bo kept busy this season. I see that this industry is growing in importance constantly. The - - - - iu-- eare-full3- e ma3-hav- some-bod- y haml-loo- horn-late- r -- A Suspended J udgment. The true scientific attitude of the day, ns expressed bv- the president of the British association. Professor Fowler, is a suspended judgment. Professor Fowler indorses Sir John Lubbocks idea that the field of inquiry is limitless and that there may he fifty other senses as different from ours as sound is from sight, and even within the boundaries of our own senses there may be endless sounds which we cannot hear and colors as different as red from green of which we have no conception. How He Got a Start. These and u, thousand other quesFrom the Man About Town in the Star. tions remain for solution. The familA tall, porth- - man, with a homely iar world which surrounds us 11103- he to other but expressive face and a pronounced a totally different place be full of it ma3' To them animals, Scotch accent, was chatting with music w hich we cannot of color hear, some friends in the Fifth Avenue lob-h- which we cannot see, of sensation I recognized him ns lion. John which we cannot conceive." Science II. Leeds of Connecticut, and was re- Gossip. minded of tiie occurrence that gave The Printer Did It. him his first start in life. Thirty a wdb A he well a known Australian poor boy earning ago ho is rich, very bad penman in mentioning a mere pittance. has -- ut a wide swatli in politics, 1ms the name of a certain lady in an armuch to say in Connecticut affairs, ticle, said she was renowned for her For and lives in a fine mansion at New graciousness and charit3--. read Haven. When a lad ho discovered the compositor charity The author, on seeing some tramps endeavoring to wreck a chastity. train on the New York & New Haven a proof, recognized at once that road, in a spirit of revenge for hav- there was an error; but. unable to used in ing been thrown from a train. They remember the word he had marked tlm had heaped up a number of railroad place of chastity, ties on tiie track, just before a fast proof with what is called a query ? to refer the prinler to his MS. express from Boston was due. At the point where the obstruction was When the article appeared, the writer who had intended to pav- a pretty placed the train would be going at lull speed, nnd half a hundred feet compliment to the lady was surahead was the hank of a river. If prised to read that she was rethe express struck the pile of ties it nowned for her graciousness and would certainly have been derailed, chastity (?)." Verdict for plaintiff, nnd, plowing ahead, would have gone Y2,ol)0 sterling, with costs. San Francisco Argonaut. down into the river. Young Leeds knew the train was due in a very few minutes w hen he A Country of Salt. discovered the tramps at work. He could not attack them Everything in the country of the neither had ho time to remove the River Chai, in Central Asia, is debig ties if he succeeded. by any divice scribed covby Gabriel Bouvalot as walls in scaring them a wav-80 he ran to in the seen is ered with salt. It meet the npproaeliing express, banks 01 shirt. The train yyus of the houses nnd on the drinks one water the the and rivers, stopped in time nnd a purse was is very salt. Traveling raised for young Leeds nnd the summer from place to tramps Yvere captured. Leeds Yvas wherever they can find material given employment in the railroad place, work upon. Their mode of operato office life and a company's pass on Holes the road. He rose rapidly bv honest tion is a rough and ready one. boilers and vats as in serve the earth endeavor, has held many public ovens. offices of trust, and served in the and below these are placed hnminm-of finish lurnishes rue for terms. several Assembly y showy-lookin- g chief-of-polic- e - y. To-da- y - single-hande- wav-inghisr- ed |