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Show e ' THK SALT LAKE TIMES. WEDyESDAJULY 80, 1BW. Ladies Bazaar, ARTISTIC NEEDLEWORK. Semoved to 323 8- - Main Street Choice line of Piano Covers, Tabl Covers, Toilet Sets, Opera Bags, Sofa Pillows. Hand Bags Bureau ana Sideboard Scarfs, Silk Drapes, Cen-ter Piecesand Doylies' Summer Cor-sets, Swiss Embroidered Aorons, Ruching, Ribbon and Zephyr, Wash Silks, Linens ana all kinas of mater-ials. Stamping Done : Lessons HITen A, S. Webster. A. M. Webster. THE FAIR, This week will give special sales in iiffljriiwiutemsilliii Will Sell: Lawn Chairs at $1.25. worth 1 75. ' ' A No. 1 Corded Hammock, 90c. i One lb Choice Japan Tea, 30c. One box 25 Habanna Cigars, $1.50. - " ' $1.75. ' 50 Virginia Call Ye Smokers and Give Our Habannas a Trial. 13 WEST THE FAIR, FIRST SOUTH ST KELLY & COMPANY Printers, , Blank-Boo- k Makers and Stationers. No. 40 "W. Second South St. Salt Lake, - Utali Our facilities for doing First-Clan- s Job Print-ing are of the newest aud best. Books Ruled, Printed and Bound to Order. Baronies of Kallroad, Mining, Hank and Mer-cantile Work always on hand. Complete line of Office Bupplle. embracing tn most approved Labor-Savin- and Economical Inventions. Prices Low. Call on Ui. Price & Clark, Dealers in Poultry and all Kinds of Game Fruits, Vegetables, etc., in season. No. 68 Wert First Month etreet, oppoiite Kimball. Block. r D. VAN BUSKIRK. OFFICE OF ,T. C. STE33I.MS The Van Buskirk Investment Co. GENERAL REAL ESTA'lE BDSINESS TRANSACTED, SPECIAL ATTENTION TO THE FORMING OF SYNDICATES. AGENTS FOR EASTERN CAPITAL We do not handle SNAPS, but GOOD BARGAINS EXPERIENCED OPEIATOE3 and Members of the IjtEAt. Estate Exchanob 179 MAIN STREET, corner Second South. Pabst Brewing Col (Formerly PHILIP BEST) IL'W.TJISZEE, wis. Export, Bohemian, Hoffbrau and Select Blue Ribbon! Keg and Bottled Beers shipped immediately , upon order. ' --THE FAMILY TRADE SOLICITED FREE DELIVERY! , TELEPHONE 3651 B. K. BLOCH anD Co., ST ; Agents. GEORGE A. LOWE, Sealer in All Kinds of First-Clas- s -- Agricultural Implement- s,- SCHUTTLER FAFM AND FREIGHS WAG0N3, Coils Mm, Mis and M Carls .,r'.., of every descriptioa Steam Engines, Leffel Wheels. WAREHOUSES STATE ROAD BETWEEN FIRST AND SECOND SOUTH. , t 7 . --EXCLUSIVE DEALERS I-N- 4 Sole Agents for t James Means' $3.00 hi Spencer & Kimball, 160 Main Street. J. M. STULL & COMPANY, FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS First-Clas- s Board Companies Represented. No. 22 East First South St., Salt Lake City, , Utah. E. SELLS, J.TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. Sells & Corripany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Lumber. First South street, opposite 14th Ward Assembly Rooms. F. 0. Vox 1078. Old Pioneer lard of Armstrong & Bagley. " - -::- -W. J. KING-::-- Dealer In ' TINWARE & HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. 279 South Main Salt Lake City, Utab. TO PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH AT THE CITY TICKET OFFICE. lliiion Pacific SYSTEM. MOUNTAIN DIVISION ' The Only Lino carrying the Unite! Stiii' Overland Mall. Direct Connections all Points North and NEW TIME CARD ' Jmy 223, 1S90- - UTAH CENTRAL DISTRICT. THE EAGLE FOUMY AM) MACHINE COMPANY Telephone 314; : : 424 ESTHT SolrH, : : 'i, 0. Box 485. Patronize a Home Industry. Salt Lake Lithographing and Publishing Co. Lithographers, Printers, Blank Books Makers, and General Stationers. Engraved Calling Cards and Wedding Invitations IVJ ARE NOW IN OPERATION and ready for your , orders. .' Elegant Work at Reasonable Prices. No. 11 West First South street ' H. H. VAN CLIEF, Manager. .::.; f monger mms Arme and Leare at Salt Lake City as follows: raOM THE NORTH lb fmt,c and Poituad Dutw ' FROM THE SOrtH. MilforflEsnress ...-- GOINQ SOUTH. Juab. Provo. Lehi, E'u- - J"aV- - V- - LeW. Ironton and En- - reka Express 'fka Express..... Hrffl l - P.ui.MlIfora Express. JJJPJi crtali aad NevisTDiitadct: GOISG WEST. 4 For Garfield Beach, daily from the west. ,., , ;; ...""..'.""wiSSm Fro,?.GarfliaB:a. daily.-- . . is ms pim " l v. ;.:? . u " !"45p.ni " u u .. ' .. .. :p.m ' . .. y.m ... 3:46p.m .. . :r-- u 4:p.m , .... . t:? i.45p.m .. .. s::tJ?" :4.sp.m . t it "Kxpt Monday aU(1TneV,iav - -- t::,r'P m " " IZ::'".'.-- - - Escept Sundsv. " 1 Cenl denser A2t. General Manap SUSIE. V ABttlrirlhdied."tbeym- - Only Blitcon! Weep ttje may bend low Mjreprajrl f "What dM it meant" tat we cannot weep, though the child be '. dead, And hearO beat aore; Ufa droopa unwed, by yon tirleu bed, By the ahadowed door. Lfcfaml God fashioned a house He laldi "Build It with care i" Then aoftly laid the oul of a maid To dwell in there. And always he watched It ao, Both day and night; the wee aoul grw aa your Uliea do, Splendid and white. grew, I aay, aa your Uliea jrow, Tender and tali; WI Ood smiled "Now, the house Is too tow For the child and small." And gently he shut the shutters one night, And dosed the door; Vara room and more light to waft upright On a father's floor." Bore room and mora light for the maid yoa sixteen; And an God's high row, where angels go, Hhe smiles between. ' A. H. Bea-M- In Oood Words. One evenin' him an' me was trespasaln' oner a compound wall after one of them mnngooses 'at he'd started, an' we was busy grubbin' round a prickle bush, an' when we looks up there was Mrs. De Sussa wi' a parasel ower her shoulder, us. "Oh, my!" she sings out; "there's that loveloo dog! Would he let me stroke him, Mister Soldier?" "Aye, he would, mum," sez I. "for he's fond o laady's coompany. Come here, Rip, an' speeak to this kind laady." An' Rip, seein' 'at t' mongoose had gotten clean awaay, cooms up like t' gentleman he was, nivver ahauporth shy nor okkord. "Oh, you beautiful you pretee dog!" she says, clippin' an' chantin' her speech in a way them sooart has o' thoir awn; "I would like a dog like yon. You are so verree lovelee so awfullee prettee," an' all thot sort o' talk 'at a dog o' sense mebbo thinks nowt on, tho' he bides it by reason o' his breedin'. An' then I moks him joomp ower my swagger cane, an shek hunds, an' leg, an' lie dead, an' a lot o' them tricks as laadies teeaches dogs, though I doan't haud wi' it inysen, for it's makin' a fool o' a good dog to do such like. An' at lung lenthit cooms out at she'd been thrawin' sheep's eyes, as t' sayin' is, at Rip for many a day. Yo' see, her childer was grown up, an' she'd nowt mich to do an' were ullns fond of a dog. Soa she axes rne if I'd tek somethin' to dhrink. An' we goes into t' drawn room, wlieer her hushand was Thoy meks a gurt fuss ower t' dog, an' I has a bottle o' aule, an' he gave me a handful o' cigars. Soa I coonied away, but t' awd lass sings out, "Oh, Mister Soldier, please cooin again an' bring that prettee dog." I didn't let on t' colonel's laady about Mrs. DeSusua, an' Rip he says nowt nuwtlinr: an' I cross airain. an' ivirv time belongs to the canteen sargint, bad" cess to him he that's lost half his time an' snarlin' the rest? He shall be lost for good now; an do ye mind that he's the very spit in shape an' sizo ar the colonel's, barrin' that his tail is an inch too long, an' he has none av the color that divarsifies the rale Rjp, an' his tim-p-er is that av his master an' worse. But fwhat is an inch on a dog's tail? An' fwhat to a professional like Orth'ris is a few ringstraked shpots av black, brown an' white? Nothin' at all, at all." Then we meets Orth'ris, an' that little man bein' sharp as a needle, seed his way through t' business in a minute. An' he went to work a practisin' 'air dyes the very next day, beginnin' on some white rabbits he had, an' then be drored all Rip's markin's on t' back of a white com-missariat bullock, so us to get his 'and in . an' be sure of his colors; shadin' off brown into black as nateral as life. - If Rip bed a fault it was too much markin', but it was straingely reg'lar. an' Orth'ris settled himself to make a fost rate job on it when he got haud o t' canteen sargint's dog. Theer niver was sich a dog as thot for bad temper, an' it did nut got no tetter when his tail hed to be fettled an inch an' a half shorter. But they may talk o theer royal academies as they like. I niver seed a bit o' animal paintin' to beat t' copy as Orth'ris made of Rip's marks, wal t' picter itself was snarlin' all t' time an' tryin' to get at Rip standin' theer to be copied as good as goold. Orth'ris alius hed as mich conceit on himtion as would lift a balloon, an' he woor so pleeased wi' his sham Rip he wor for tekking him to Mrs. De Sussa before she went away. But Mulvaney an' me stopped thot, knowin' Orth'ris' work, though niver so cliver, was nob-bu- t skin deep. An' at last Mrs. De Sussa fixed t' day ( THE PEIVATES STOKY. ',' Par from the haunts of company off-icers who insist upon kit inspections, for from keen nosed sergeants who sniff the jij stuffed into the bedding roll, two miles from the tumnltof the barracks, lies the Trap. It is an old dry well, oAdowed by a twisted pipal tree and fenced with high grass. Here, in the Years gone by, did Private Ortheris estab-lish his depot and menagerie for such voageseions living and dead as could not ofely be introduced to the barrack room. Ear were gathered Houdin "pullets and fox terriers of undoubted pedigree and more than doubtful ownership, for is was an inveterate poacher and pre-eminent among a regiment of neat hand-A- d dog stealers. Never again will the long, lazy even-ings return wherein Ortheris, whistling oftly, moved surgeonwise among the captives of his craft at the bottom of the ell; when Learoyd sat in the niche giv-ing sage counsel on the management of "tykes," and Mulvaney, from the crook t the overhanging pipal, waved his normous boots in benediction above our beads, delighting lis with tales of love nd war and strange experiences of cities Kid men. Ortheris landed at last in the "little tuff .bird shop" for which your soul longed; Learoyd back again in the amoky, stone ribbed north, amid the clang of the Bradford looms; Mulvaney grizzled, tender and very wise; Ulysses i sweltering on the earthwork of a een-jfcr- al India line j udge if I have forgotten pld days in the Trap! ! .. Orth'ris, as alius thinks heknaws more than other foaks, said she wasn't a real laady, but nobbut a Howrasian. I don't as her culler was a bit doosky gainsay she was a laady. Why, she lode iv a carriage, an' good 'osses too, 'an her 'air was that oiled as yo' could see your faice in it, an' she wore dimond lings an a goold chain an' silk and satin dresses as tnun a' cost a deal, for it isn't a cheap shop as keeps enough o' one pat-tern to fit a figure like hers. Her name was Mrs. De Sussa, an' t' waay I come to be acquainted wi' her was along of our colonel's laady's dog Rip. I've seen a vast o' dogs, but Rip was t' rmHat 'rMor rt ft nllvftr frvr tjirrlftr 'nfc there was a good dhrink an' a handful o' good smooaks. An' I tolled t' awd law a heeap more about Rip than I'd ever heeard; how he tuk t' fost prize at Lunnon dog show, and coat thotty-thre- e pounds fower shillin' from t' man as bred him; 'at his own brother was the proup-utt-y o' t' Prince of Wales, an' 'as he has a pedigree as long as a dook's. An' she lapped it all oop, an' were, nivir tired o" admirin' him. But when t' awd lass took to givin' me money, an' I seed 'at she was gottin' fair fond about t' dog, I be-gan to suspicion sumniat. Onny body may give a soldier t' price of a pint in a friendly way an' theor's no harm done, but when it coonis to five rupees slipt into your hand, slylike, why, it's what t' 'lectioneerin' follows calls bribery an" corruption. Specially when Mrs. De Sussa threwed hints how t' cold weather would soon be ower, and she was goin' to Munsorree Pahar, an' we was goin' to Rawalpindi, an' she would nivir see Rip any more onless somebody she knowed on would be kind tiv her. Soa I tells Mulvaney an' Orth'ris all t' taalo thro', beginnin' to end. " Tis larceny that wicked ould ludy manes," says t' Irishman; " 'tia felony she is sojuicin' ye into, my frind Learoyd, but I'll purtect your innocince. I'll save ye from the wicked wiles av that wealthy ould woman, an' I'll go wid ye this evon-i- n' an' spake to her the wurrds av truoh an' honesty. But Jock," says he, waggin' his hoead, not like ye to kape all thut good dhrink an' thim fine cigars to yerself, while Orth'ris here an' me have been prowlin' round wid throats as dry as limekilns, an' nothing to smoke but canteen plug. 'Twas a dhirty thrick to play on a comrade, for why should you, Learoyd, be balancin' yoursolf on the butt av a satin chiiir, as if Terence Mnl-vane- v was not the aquil av anybody who for startin' to Munsooree Pahar. We was to tek Rip to t' stayshun i' a basket an' hand him ower just when they was ready to start, an' then she'd give us t' brass as was agreed npon. An' my wod! It were high time she were off, for them 'air dyes upon t' cur's back took a vast of paintin' to keep t' reot culler, tho' Orth'ris spent a matter o' seven rupees six annas i' t' best droog-shop- s i' Calcutta. An' t' canteen sargint was lookin' for 'is dog everywheer; an' wi' bein' tied up t' beast's timper got waur nor ever. It wor i' t' evenin' when t' train started thro' Howrah, an' we 'clped Mrs De Sussa wi' about sixty boxes, an' then he gave her t' basket. Orth'ris, for prido av his work, axed us to let him coom along wi' us, an' he couldnft help liftin' t' lid an' showin' t' cur as he lay coiled oop. "Oh!" says t' awd, lass; "the bautee! How sweet he looks!" An' just then t' beauty snarled and showed his teeth so Mulvaney shuts down t' lid and says: " Ye'll be careful, marm, when ye tek him out. He's disaccustomed to travelling by t' railway, an' he'll bo sure to want hii rale misstress an' his friend Learoyd, S3 ye'll make allowance for his feelings at fost." She would do all that an' more for the dear, good Rip, an' she would nut oppen t' basket till they were miles away, for fear anybody should recognize him, an' we were real good and kind soldier-me-we were, an' she honds me a bundle o' notes, an' then cooms up a few of her relations anfrionds to say good-b- y not more than seventy-fiv- e there wasn't an' we cuts away. What coom to t' three hundred an' fifty rupees? Thot's what I can scarce-lin-s tell you, but wo molted it. It was share an' share alike, for Mulvaney said: "If Learoyd got hold of Mrs. De Sussa first, sure 'twas I that renumbered the sargint's dog just in the nick av time, an' Orth'ris was the artist av janius that made a work av art out av that ugly piece av ill nature. Yet, by way av a thauk offorin' that I was not led into felony by that wicked ould woman, I'll send a tlirifle to Father Victor for the poor people he's always beggin' for." But me an' Orth'ris, he bein' cockney an' I bein' pretty far north, did nut see it i' t' saame way. We gotten t brass an' we meaned to keep it. An' soa wo did for a short time. Noa noa, wo niver heeard a wo'd more o' t' awd lass. Our rig'mint went to Pindi, an' t' canteen sargint he got himself another tyke insteead o' t' one 'at got lost so reg'lar an' was lost for good at last. Rudyard Kipling. ... lver I set eyes on. lie could do owt yo' like but speeuk, an' t' colonel's laady sot more store by him than if he had been a Christian. She hed bairns of her awn, but they was i' England, and Rip seemed ' to get all t' coodlin' and pettin' as be-longed to a bairn by good right. But Rip were a bit on a rover, an' hed a habit o' brealdn' out o' barricks Uke, and trottin' round t' place as if he wore t' cantonment magistrate coom round inspectin'. The colonel leathers him once or twice, but Rip didn't care an' kept on gooin' his rounds, wi' his tnail a waggin' as if he were flag signalUn' to t world at large 'at he was "gettin' on nicely, thank. yo'l and how's yo'senf" ' An' then t' colonel, aa was noa sort of a hand wi' a dog, tees him oop. A real clipper of a dog, an' it's noa wonder yon Saady, Mrs. De Snasa, should tek a fancy tiv him. Thee rs one o' V ten command-Iment- e says yo' matrn't enwet your nee-bor- 's ox nor bis jackass, but it doesn't say owt about his terrier dogs, an' happen jthot's t' reason why Mrs. De Sussa cuv-ivete- d Rip, tho' she went to church reg'lar laloDg wi' her husband, who was so mich Idarker 'at if he hedn't such a good coaat ttiv his back yo' might ha' called him a black man and nut tell a lee nawther. They said be addled his brass i' jute, an' Ihe'd a rare lot on it. t Well; yo' seen, when they teed Rip tip t' poor awl lad didn't enjoy very good 'elth. So t' colonel's laady sends tfor me as 'ad a naame for bein' knowl-fedgab-about a dag an' axes what's uilrn' wi' him. j , "Why," says I, "he's gotten t' mopes, &' what he wants is Ida libbuly an' Icoinpany like t rest on us; wal happen la rat or two 'ud liven him oop. It's low, unum," says I, "is rata, but its t' nature luf a dog; an soa'a cuttiu' round an' (meetin' another dog or two an' passin' It' time o day, an' hewin' a bit of a turn (up wi' him like a Christian." t So she says her dog maunt niver fight mn' noa Christians iver fought. "Then what's a soldier for?" says I; an I explains to her t' contrairy quali-ties of a dog, 'at, when yo' coom to think Wt, is one o' t' corusest things as is. JTorthey lain to behave theirsens like gentlemen born, fit for t' fost o' coom-Ipan- y they tell me t' Widdy herself is fond of a good dog an' knaws one when isheseee it as well as onnybody; then, on t'other hand, round after icats an' gettin' mixed oop i' all manners w' blackguardly street rows, an' kilhn' hrats, an' fightin' like divils. T' colonel's laady says: ''Well, Lea-iroy- I doant agree wi' you, but you're ,right in a way o' speeakin', an' I should like yo' to tek Rip out wi' yo' sometimes: but yo' matrn't let h flht. nor chase cats, nor do nowt 'orrid;" an' them was her very wo'ds. Soa Rip an' me gooes out o' evenins, he bein' a dog as did credit tiv' a man, an' I catches a lot o' rats, an' we bed a bit of a mutch on in an awd dry awimmin' bath at back o' t' cantonments, an' it was none so long afore he was as bright as a button again. He hed a way o' flyin' at them big yaller pariah dogs as if he was a harrow offan a bow, au' though his weight were nowt he tuk 'em so suddent like they rolled over like skit-tles in a halley, an' when they coot he stretched after 'em as if he were rabbit runnin'. Saame with cats when he cud cet t' cat agaate o' runnju'. I thrades in jute!" "Let me alone," sticks in Orth'ris, "but that's like life. Thorn wot's really fitted to decorate society get no show, while a blunderin' Yorkshireman like you" . "Nay," says I, "it's none o' t' blun-derin' Yorkshireman she wants it's Rip. He's t' gentleman this journey." Soa t' next day Mulvaney an' Rip an' me goes to Mrs. De Sussa's, an' t' Irish-man boin' a strainger she wor a bit shy at fost. But yo've heeard Mulvaney talk, an' yo' may believe as he fairly bewitched t' awd lass wal she let out 'at she wanted to tok Rip away wi' her to Munsboree Pahar. Then Mulvaney changes his tune an' axes her solemn like if she'd thought o' t' consequences o' get-tin' two poor but honest soldiers sent t' Andamning Islands. Mrs. De Sussa be-gan to cry, so Mulvaney turns round, oppen t'other tack an' smooths her down, allowin' 'at Rip 'ud be a vast better off in t' hills than down i' Bengal, an' 'twas a pity he shouldn't go wheer he was so well beliked. An' soa he went on backin' an' fillin' an' workin' up t' awd lass wal she felt as if her life warn't worth nawt if sho didn't heve t' dog. Then all of a suddint he says: "But ye shall have him, marm, for I've a feel-i- n' heart, not like this could blooded Yorkshireman; but 'twill cost yo not a penny less than three hundher rupees," "Don't yo' bolieve him, mum," says I; "V colonel's laady wouldn't tek five huu-tlre- d for him." "Who said she would?" says Mul-vaney; "it's not huyin' him, I mane, but for the sake o' this kind, good laady, I'll do what I never dreamt to do in my life, I'll stale him!" . "Don't ay steal," says Mrs. De Sussa; "he shall have the happiest home. Dogs often get lost, you know, an' then they stray, an' ho likes me au' I like him as I niver liked a dog yet, an' I must hev hira. If I got him at t' last minute I could carry him off to Munsooree Pahar, an' nobody would niver knaw," Now an' again Mulvanoy looked acrost at me, ao' though I could niak nowt o what ho was after, I concluded to tak his loead, "Well, mum,'' I says, "I never thowt to coom down to dug steealin', but if my comrade sees how it could be done to oblige a laady like yo'son, I'm nut t" man to hod back, tho' it's a had business, I'm thinkin', an' three hundred rupees is a poor set off again t' chance o' them Damning islands as MuWaney talks on." j "I'll m(k it three fifty," says Mrs. De Sussa; "only let me hev t' dogt" So we let her persuade us, an' she teks Rip's measure there an' then, an' sent to Hamilton's to order a silver collar again t' time when he was to be her awn, which was to be t' day she set off for Munsooree Pahar. , "Sitha, Mulvaney," says I, when we was outside, "you're niver goin' to let her hev Rip!" "An' would ye disappoint a poor old woman?" says he. "She shall have a Rip." "An' wheer's he to come through?" says I. "Leuroyd, my man," he sings out, "you're a pretty man av your inches an' a good comrade, hut our head is made av duff. Isn't our friend Orth'ris a taxidermist, an' a rale artist wid his nimble white finger? An' wba't a taxid-- ! ermist but a man who can thrate j I shkins? Do re mind the white dog.tuat j ....-.'- A Man with a Long Beard. If Mr. l'liilip Hanson, of Corinth, Miss., lived among the Turks or Arabs he would doubtless receive honor and reverence. They regard a man with a big heard as worthy of homage, and Mr. Hanson meets the requirement to the fullest degree, as he is supposed to have the longest whiskers in the world. He is ot unusual stature, but ulthouRh nearly six and a halt feet tall, when he is standing erect his beard reaches the ground. This reinarkablo growth is hut fourteen years old. A German reai-- I tlent of Chicago a few years ago boasted of his sixty inches of heard, but Hanson goes him several better, having many threads in his hirsute appendage that measure over seventy inches. Hunting for Treftmire. Treasure hunting has as great a fascina-tion today as when Jason went searching for the golden fleece or men flocked to Cal-ifornia in the "brave old times of '9." An expedition will shortly leave Valparaiso, Chill, for Cocos Island, in the Pacific, on which it is believed an enormous amount of treasure is hurled. Two or three times expeditions have gone from Valparaiso on a similar errand, but nil proved fruitless. That fait h is still maintained in the exist-ence of the coin is shown by the fact that about $10,000 has been obtained for this nw experiment. The crew receive a cer-tainty in the way of small wages, and are to get a share of the treasure if any shall be found. Not Hi Boot. A. Did yon hear that the thief and desperado Buckshot Jack had heen killed? B. No. Died with his boots on,-- I suppose? A. No indeed. He died with another man's boot on robbed a shoe store.- - Texas Sittings. ftiey Don't Observe. A Boston artist sketched an average sunset just such a one as is seen 100 times a year and had five wiinesges to verify the accuracy of his work. His sketch had no sooner been hunj out than 80 per cont. of the critics declared that no man in America had ver seen such clouds in the sky. Detroit Free Press. ulte Uie Reverte. Mr. Grand Canon Don't you find our western scenery impressive? Mr. East Port Ic rtrnck me as lving rather sleepy. Mr. Grand Canon Sleepy! Mr. East Port Yes. J 'noticed tho gulfs and ravines were yawning on alj sides. Smith, Gray fr Co.'s Monthlv, . |