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Show H .Saturday, March 23; 1920: ' PAGE ELEVEN THE JOURNAL. LOCAN. CACHE COUNTY. UTAH in Bear liver bay an increase will result that will offset any reduction that might me considered in bag limits, a hundred fold. When the v si tor enters tiie bay he sees many sights that make Continued from Page Seven him think' for sometime that he by CAPTAIN GEORGE FRIED and water fowls pass there on has been ' transported to some migration in spring and fall and other clime where Mr. and Mrs Pried says he would far One is because Bird rein supreme. 5,hlP in my position would have are the most important rather stand eu the bridge of done his best. they are the birds sought after brought back to consciousness by the America and face a that the pestiferous mosquitces I could have enjoyed all the re- - as game birds. stinging than to Interesting as the varied bird life come in swarms whenever they be confronted by an admirhraV.e ?een giVe? In is. by far the greater interest lies catch wind of the approach ofj rnv hrnnif never. beniin the wonderful duck and goose human being. One visitor who at- ing throng waiting for him called an tn to make a speech. He de3 ,sp5ech Re'i shooting that the marsh aftoicis tempted to make the trip in golf stxmdino1 clares he does not feci like Ci'kIU e n dl9ul'ses each fail to the thousands of togs cried. 'T say. these : pesky o ir ier t a hero; does not in fart make the best golf "I051, difficult hunters who come from all pans creatures , buslness. At 0f the United States to shoot these players in the world. Thev can know how a hero should feci. ,CUe firs 1 He got a big thrill out of a make a hole-in-oc,uld every' shot , t eniy the ban-- 1 game birds. visit to Worcester. Mass., his l'ic!?e0Ils at ad- or shooting from behind i A number of the most famous Decoys ton nuinH the toastmaster would blinds is practiced exclusively. In 'poets have been moved to lmmor-,'- 1 home town, however, while " the New-Yo- rk and other retal verse by various birds. Keats d ceptions left him dazed. LiTfim? elnd cwting iT doiie on sloughs; the penned one of his most famous to PrePare hunter walking continuously up compositions in an "Ode to ,,, j .response By Capt. George Fried wnnMy thatj8nd down the bank and shooting Nightingale: Wtmant Wordsworth oe appropriate. But when the ducks as they Jump from the and Percy B. Shelley each sang Copyright, 1929. Associated Press water, hence the name, Jump praises to a Skylark; William by a Chapter XXIII shooting, by decoy shooting is Cullen Bryant was moved meant the enticing of the ducks wild duck to write To a Water-fow- l Twice I hare been the central and at another time he to f.y close to the hunter who is figure in rather spectacular sea in Ro concealed in a blind. Several imitated the rescues and twice I have beeninie and honored and feted by thousands not help matlTrfariThenl Lhings if used foF decoys Jfrd-m- v bert or Lincoln; Ce'ia Thaxter combined tire songs of a. number or oiled fellow citizens in various would of and that have been shot paper. sputter something and then set of birds in her "The Birds Orparts of the country, but J can out on sticks make about the most chestra; Henry Van Dyke wrote assure .you that it is far easier a poem to The Maryland Yellow-Throaeffective decoys. on the of bridge standing my Tennyson was thrilled America facing a stinging nor Many thousands of game birds cotne to the bay during October. with the song of the thrush and wester than to be confronted by November and December and penned The Throstle; Nathanan ' admiring throng waiting for me to make a speech. A sailor is many thousands are shot each iel Parker Willis gave to the world year. Civilization has tended to of literature The Belfrv Pigeon: at home on a ship but not in a hall or auditorium or behind the destroy the joys and beauties of but it would require volumes of nature but in order to protect the poems and manv poets to write birds, game laws have been en- - odes to each variety found at the acted; dykes have been built and bay. It seems as though nature more water has been run onto the ta seed over the earth, and penning marsh to increase the feeding area her stores, strewed with unsparing hand the diversified tvpes from for the birds. beautij It is estimated by the slate which have ' sprung all the (game warden, that there are at ful and splendid forms which feast 200 square miles of area m space does not allow one to deEear River bay that could be de- scribe. Nature lore, said John Burveloped and maintained at a reasonable cost, not for the purpose roughs' is not so much a noteof furnishing shooting for Utah book full of notes of birds and sportsmen, but primarily for the trees and flowers as a heart resting, warned and refreshed by sympurpose of furnishing jleeding and breeding grounds for pathetic intercourse and contact migratory wild fowl upon which with these primal forces. When foot to the 'at least eleven western states are the press of ones springs a hundred affecdependent. In addition to this the earth as Whitman says, then-- one 'department is working on a pro- tions, more gets something to precious open up approximately ject exact science. Nature lore is j twenty square miles of territory for than a public shooting ground. There a miture of love and knowledge-anI are it comes more by way of four private clubs on ine marsh but the land under their the heart than of the head. We ' is 'control negligible compared to absorb it with the air we breathe: of the the thousands-- ! acres that belong it awaiis us weat the side to drink; it to the public- - The government has spring when ' sloop withdrawn from entry all the drops upon us from the trees11 lands lying on the shore of the beneath which we fondly linger; Great Salt Lake. This act means is written largo on thewe rocks and prowled that private individual! will not be ledges where as boys I permitted to control this great na- about on Sundays, putting our or on niches the in hands the tural resource. ' The interest in the natural bird rocky shelves older than Thebes ground is not contered alone in or Karnak, touching carefully the The Tremendous ovations made me feci It was all a dream , Box Elder county or in Utah but Phoebe's mossy nest, with its eggs or noting ihe it has found many sportsmen pearl-whit- e banquet table. Sailors may be aided to send a radio to the for spinning yarns but not cral manager of the United Stat-- over the nation clamoring for gov- spore of coon or fox, or coming es Lines suggesting that he pro- - ernment, state and county protec- face to face with oldest inhabibanquets. tant of the region, who saw the After the Antinoe rescue this tect me from an extensive pro tion. hero business was all new . and gram with parades and The Jzaak Walton League of foundations of the hills laid, and Melt it was all a dream. quets. Radio messages were com-- It America is untiertaking as one of the valt;7. scooood out, Geologic was an amazing and bewilder- - ing to me thick and fast mes- - j Its major campaigns the improve-in- g Time, whose tent Is the gray, over experience and never once sages of congratulations and re-- ! ment of conduions for wiia low! hanging .ticks. One need not be a John Burdid I know what to expect next. quests to be present at various! in the refuges of the bay. The two I weathered the first so after the functions in different parts of! objectives of the league are, first roughs to cniov a trio to the bay; second I felt resigned to what-- : the country. New York City the crystalizing a public senti-ev- but one's visit would be greatly enwanted to extend its usual, greet-- j ment to favor some comprehensive hanced if a love for nature's great might come. rs had been carefully cul-- ti As great. If not greater, was' ing and I was asked if I would j conservation work in western my last greeting in New York consider a parade up Broadway, I areas and, secondly, to secure con- - voted before the trip was piann-for edCity and later I visited Washing- - a luncheon and theater party ; gresslonal appropriations ton. Philadelphia, Boston, Provi- - the first day and then another building game refuges. Already dence, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cul- luncheon. These I could not re- - some $350,900 has been appropriat- - Selecting Radish Types ver, Ind., and my home town, fuse. Then a new angle develop- - cd by the U- S, Congress for deWorcester, Mass. In each city I ed in this hero business. Invita- - velopment on Bear River bay and was given tremendous ovations tions came from 18 cities request- - $1,700 000 was appropriated to be The main question in planting ' is whether to plant and extended such unusual ing that I pay them a visitwasas used on the 25 bird refuges in this radishes ones or long ones or both. round courtesies that each experience their guestPhiladelphia county. come ones the earliest will always be indelibly carved in particularly insistent, with my In a recent issue of Outdoor The round ones yield more my memory, but with it all I old friend Sam T. Banham de- America, officia' publication oi and the longradls1 c.omes. Pretty "H16 that I did not manding my presence. Owing to the organization, appeared an If have one regret have with me my chief officer. the brief time available the itin- itle by D. H. Madsen in charge irertoJlersalFr.e V Mr. Manning, and his splendid erary was, of necessity, cut short. the department program in which a!?g garl??ef boat crew. The one thing that impressed heouthned how the state, through jbdy rr frnI3?ihfensr grow Like a general commanding an me most was the sincerity of the money paid by Utah sportsmen,) civilians, is providing about 20 square miles anyPOyarmy or an admiral directing a people, officials and are -- many radishes verv squadion of ships, the captain of who greeted me everywhere, but of public shooting grounds Midi Therealike and the choice dosent a merchant vessel recteves credit the place that gave me the nesting area out of lands that were much, much difference except as for something done by his offi- greatest thrill of all was Wor- formerly a graveyard for bird life, make cers and men- But there are cester. There I visited my old st a cost of $50,000. He pointed to earilness. The newest radishes been so speeded up that you others whose work cannot be school and was almost mobbed out that this work can be contin- have overlooked. First of all there is by the kiddies and went to many ued in the Bear river bay section can have radishes for the table and to any extent that the .ederal twenty days after sowing the the personal heroism of every of my childhood haunt individual in the boat crew who shook hands once again with my government may desire, ne ex- seed. That day pressed the view, however, that Rich, light warm soils are the endangers his life by venturing former playmates. they in an open boat on a high sea brought back many fond memo- no one agency can build grounds best for radishes because Then there are the men who ries of the days that few of us sufficient in scope to accomodate promote fast growth in the earlv is days. Quick growth double up to maintain the steam want to forget. the demands of American sports- spring the most essential factor in promen. presure in the boilers and the ducing solid, sweet and (Tomorrows A Sea Reporter) alert engine crew that responds But if congress will provide radishes. Any slowing from the be Judiciously spent in of growth is likely to make them to instantly to orders Can bridge. The loss of a moment in Scientists Say will be a tre- strong and pithy. west the result the The long-roinert-erexecuting an order by these men in the birds and radishes are slower to run to Dith yet Now Be Grown On mendous might mean disaster and dollars a actual return in trtng than the small globe and they can see nothing from their veiue to the citizenship. types. Bald Heads positions in the hold of the ship. Is done Unless quicksomething Of the long radishes, the white The credit for , effecting a safe to arrest disease in certain radish, icicle, ly has achieved much rescue belongs to every man in A scientifically prepared food , aieas shooting in the we.it will De It is an excellent popularity. the crew, but in the case of not a drug which supplies the but a memory, he declared. some of the early to plan failure, the blame is placed uponjy Wlth those mineral ele- In a National Oame conference globe or plant radishes the he shoulders of captain. ments of iron, lime and sulphur held in New York seveial months and Icicle at- the same time, the I do not particularly feel like which are essential to a healthy ago Mr. Madsen, In an address re latter to pull as the being ready a hero- - The fact is I do not know growth of hair. It corrects itchy the conference, outlined his globe one go out. thero should a ieel, hero yet how dandruff, falling hair and plan for immediate actrm looking An Improvement in some of the Is a certain amount of self sat- scalp, baldness and gives lustre to dry to the reclamation of the Bear latest types of the globe radishes in knowing and isfaction pride river bay marsh area. In his talk is in size. hair. The majority of them that with Divine Guidance I was brittle Crimson Giant is a Thousands of people have been he discussed toe effect of legis- are small. successful in finding both disfor the establishment of standard variety of the larger their successfully treated and have re- lating abled ships and getting refuges for migratory wild. growth. It does not mature as hair so why not you game human cargo aboard my vessels. gained their fowl. He detailed experrtnee r.fl,quickly as- - the little fellows and these of one line be people. was the in it But after all, various organizations to show how has the advantage of not turning A course of three months treatof duty and the master of any This type needs migratory bird supply is quickly. ment of Life to Hair" tablets the fected by controlled shooting more room to develop and care a bottle of includes which Itchy if t? and gome refuges. He SiMmust be taken to thin the Scalp and Dandruff lotion and a grounds his talk with a map,, and dings to two inches apart if it is bottle of Special Formula Sham- told of the Smaller prolific supply of birds, i to develop qjronerly. poo can be had post paid for $5.00. especially during the migration sea types may be left an inch apart Your money back if no results or son. Birds branded on the Not half a crop of the row. bay you are not satisfied. You are the marshes, ,he aid, have been shot jin radishes is usually gathered be- sole Judge. To be obtained only in 11 western states. The desiruc- - cause the seed is sown thickly from the laboratories of the Field tion of the marsh would automati- and not only a part of Institute of Trichology, Specialists cally effect the shooting through- the plantsthinned, being able to make in the Science of Growing Hair out the whole area. good roots because of crowding 1020 baldness, and eliminating More birds. he said, have jin the row. It pays to thin When in Salt Lake Stop at the Market Street, San . Francisco, died in Bear river bay during the radishes both in earliness of the California. nast fifteen vears than have been cron and In uniform and sizable PEERY HOTEL (Advertisement) killed in the eleven Western roots. Place' That Home like Modern a to states that these birds frequent. Clean. Respectable, valve A a new has spark plug When I talk moderation In killEnclosed in a cylindrical cage, the Minute. Rates Reasonable to admit ing, shorter seasons, bag limits, I an automobile designed controlled intake $1.25 to $3.00 by a ' stroke at each suction fresh air am Impressed with the inconsis- Parisian can be made to roll over FREE OARAGE to assist cera of vaporizaside wise, stand on end or loop cylinder tency of it all, because I am West Temple end Broadway tion of the gasoline charge. . tain that with th expenditure of the loop by its driver, Bear River Bay A Refuge For Many Species of Wild Fowl $1,000,900 -- n-- 1 ne )0 ' bob-o-li- i i j t'; j ! I gen-not- ed at q.. J - ' er out-doo- 1 - - ofs. - - r WJIAT HAS ;OXi; TU.FOnK: - J b&U !i, y homp In SiolUnd to -Fu San ek my lortune in Ca!lfon--:Rmnuiico I met rrtHlijtO and we decided to team up. Oonetrurtmn labor did imt appeal to ua; ekipped and two da later 1 quit. I reeeied a letter from Prodiaal" (tekiuff me to meet him In Krleoo in February He turned up with proposition to frnib-slsk- e me In the Klondike. "Salvation Jim" Joined ue and sailed north with & motley aggregation of gold seekers. I looked again. Mosher had just taken off his hat. His head was of monumental baldness, his ayes close-sand crafty, bia nosa negligible. The rest of his face was mostly beard. It grew black as the Pit to near the bulge of his stomach and seemed to have drained his scalp in its rank luxuriance. Across the deck came the rich, oily tones of his voice. A bunch, I said. Yes, there's heaps like them on board. There's a crowd of danrt-hagirls going up, and tha usual following of parasites. Look at that There's a man for the country now, part Scotch, part Indian; the quietest man on the boat; light, but tough as wire naUe. brown I saw a lean, bnght-eye- d man with flat features, smoking a cigarette. "Say! Just get next to those two Jews, Mike and Rebecca Winklestem. They're going to open up a sporty restaurant." d Tha man was a small creature, with eyes that squinted, a complexion like ham fat and waxed moustaches. But it was the woman who seized my attention. Never did I see such a strapping Amazon, six foot if an inch and. massive in proShe was handsome, too. In portion. a swarthy way, though near at hand her face was sensuous and bold. Yet she had a suave, flattering manner and a coarse wit that captured the crowd. Dangerous, unscrupulous and a cruel, I thought; a shrew, a termagant! But I was growing weary of the crowd and longed to go below. I was no longer interested, yet the voice of the Prodigal droned In my ear. "Theres an old man and his granddaughter, relatives of the Winkle-stein- s, I believe. I think the old fellow's got a screw loose. Handsome old boy, though ; looks like a Hebrew prophet out of a Job. Comes from Poland. Speaks Yiddish or some such jargon. Only English ha knows is The girl looks Klondike, Klondike. heartbroken, poor little beggar." I beard the Poor little beggar! words indeed, but my mind was far Jews Polish devil To with the away. and their granddaughters. I wished the Prodigal would leave me to my own thoughts, thought of my Highland home and my dear ones. But no! he persisted: Youre not listening to what Tm aaying. Look, why dont you?" So, to please him, I turned full An old man, round and looked. patriarrhal In aspect, crouched on the Meek. Erect by his Bide, with her hand on his shoulder, stood a slim figure in black, the figure of a girl. Indifferently my eyes traveled from her feet to her faoe. There they rested. I drew a deep breath. I forgot everything else. Then for the first time I saw Benia. I will not try to depict the girl. Pen descriptions are so futile. I will only say that her face was very pale and that she had large pathetic prey eves. For the rest her cheeks were woefully pinched and her lips drooped wistfully. 'Twaa the face, I thought, of a virgin martvr with a look hard to forget. "Poor little beggar Then I cursed myself for a sentimental impressionist and I went ben was low. Stateroom mine. We three had been separated in the shuffle, and I knew not who Feeling vai to be my room-matvery downhearted, I stretched on the upper berth and yielded to a mood of penitential sadness. Then, as I lay, there can voices to my door, guttural note blended with liquid ones; Lastly a timid knock. Quickly I answered it Is this room number a solf voice asked. Even ere she spoke I divined It was the Jewish girl of the grey eyes, and now I saw her hair was like a fair cloud, and her face fragile as a d Half-bree- d. bandy-legge- man-noma- fear-haunt- ! forty-seve- e. mv-se- lf forty-seve- flower. , Yes, I answered her. She led forward the old man. 'This Is my grandfather. The Steward told us this was his room." Oh, all right; hed better take the lower berth. Thank you, indeed; he's an old mild-flavor- 00 Hair ot man and not very strong. You must come in," I said. "Ill laava you with him for a while so that you can make him comfortable. Thank you again, she re ponded gratefully. So I withdrew, and when I returned she was gone; but the old man slept peacefully. olive-shao- olive-shap- ed hy seed-ustrat- ed iV , you little brat! Cr-r- -i be-io- i if arrangtmtnf wtb Pvbliihti nor-wester If you open your face to him ITI kill you, kill you, aee 1 The voice waa Madam Winkle-stain- s, - and the words, hissed in a whisper of Incredible malignity, arme as if I had been struck rested by a Uve wire. I listened. Behind the stateroom door there followed a silence, grimly intense; then a dull pounding; then the same savage undertone 8ee here, Berna, were next to you two were onto your curves We know the old man's got the stuff t, two thousand In In his bills. Now, my dear, my sweet little angel what thinks she's too good to mix with the likes o us, we need the And mon. see! (Knock, knock.) we're goln to have it, see!" (Knock knock.) "Thats where veu corns in. gold-bel- Famous Florida Cow Used In Dairy Study CHAUTER IV I must say the man was expenhoney: you're gotn to get it for us. Ain t you now, darlm ? (Knock, sively dressed in a flashy way. His knock, knock ) face wreathed oily, Faintly, very faintly, I heard the itself in a smirk of patronizing favoice: miliarity, and with the bow of a "No. dancing master he advanced. I saw If it be possible to scream in a her give a quick start, bite her hft, and shrink back. "Good for you, whisper, the woman did it. "You will! you will! Oh! oh!oh! little girl, "I thought But the maa There a the cursed mule spirit of waa in no way put out. your mother in you. She'd never tell "Say, Sis, it s all nght Just want us the name of the man that was to mterdooce you to a gentleman the rum of 'er, blast er. fren o mine. Don't speak of my mother, you The girl gazed at him, and her vile woman! dilated eyes were eloquent of tear The voice of the virago contracted and distrust. It minded me of tha to an intensity of venom I have panic of a fawn run down by tha never heard the equal of, hunter, ao that I found myself trem"Vile woman ! Vile woman !"' You, bling in sympathy. A startled moyou to call me a vile woman, me ment she gazed; then swiftly sha thats been three times jined in hnlv turned her back. wedlock. , . ..Oh, you bastard brat! This was too much for Mark. H You whelp of sin? You misbegotten fluehed angrily, scum! Oh, I'll fix you for that, if "Say! What'S the matter with Ive got to swing for it. you? Come off the perch there. Ain't Her scalding words were capped we good enough to associate with with an oath too foul to repeat, and you? Who the devil are you, anyones more came the horrible pound- how?" His face was growing red and g- ing, like a head striking the woodwork. Unable to bear it any longer, gretslve. Ha dosed in on her. He I rapped sharply on the door. laid a rough hand on her shoulder. Silence, a long, panting alienee; Thinking the' thing had gone far then the sound of a falling body; enough, I stepped forward to interthen the door opened a little and the fere, when the unexpected happened. twitching I See of Madam appeared. Suddenly the old man had risen to "Is there somebody sick I asked. hie feet, and it was a surprise to me "I'm sorry to trouble you, but I was how tall ba was. Into hia faro there thinking I heard groans and I might had come the ghost of ancient power be able to do something and command. His eyes blazed with Piercingly she locked at me. Her wrath, and his clenched fist was raileyas narrowed to slits and stabbed ed high in anathema. Then it cam me with their spite. Her dark face swiftly down on tha head of Marks, grew turgid with Impotent anger. As crushing his stiff hat tightly over his I stood there alie waa like to have eyes. killed me. Then like a flash her exThs climax was ludicrous in pression changed. With a dirty be- There waa a roar of laughter, and jewelled hand the smoothed her tou- hearing It Marks spluttered as he sled hair. Her coarse whits teeth freed himself. With a curs of rag smile. h would have rushed the old man, gleamed in a There was honey in her tone. but a great hand seised bits by tha Why, no! My niece In here's got shoulder. It was the grim, taciturn ft toothache, but I guess we can fix Hewson, and judging by the way hia It between us. We don't need no captive squirmed, his grip must hav The old been peculiarly help, thanks, young feller. Oh, that's all right, I said. "If man waa pale as death, the girl cryyou should, you know, I'U be near- ing, the passengers crowding round. by." Every one was gabbliitg and curious, Then I moved away, conscious that so feeling I could do no good, I went her eyes followed me malevolently. below. For that matter there were all What waa there about this slip of kinds of strange doings on board, a girl that Interested me ao? Ever drinking, gambling, nightly orgies and anon I found myself thinking of and hourly brawls. It seemed as if her. With the old man, despite our we had shipped all the human dregs stateroom propinquity, I had mads Of the San Francisco deadline. no advances. With ths girl X had Oh, it waa good to get on deck of passed no further words. a night, away from this saturnalia. But the Gods of destiny act In And as I sat in silent thought there whimsical ways. Doubtless the voycame to me Salvation Jim. His face age would have finished without ths was grim, his eye brooding. From betterment of our acquaintance; tha brilliantly lit social hall cams a doubtless cur paths would have partblare of music-ha- ll melody. ed, nevermore to cross; doubtless I don't like the way of things a our lives would have been lived out Hit, he said- - I don't like It. Look to their fullness and this story never here now, lad, I've Hved round min- have been told had tt not been for ing camps for twenty years, I've fol- the luckless fatality of the Box of lowed the roughest callings on earth, Grapes. I've tramped the States all over, yet never have I seen the heat of this. Puget Sound was behind us and Yon mark mv words, boy; there's a curse on this northern gold. The ws had entered on-- that ' great sea to take its toll. You that stretched northward to the ArcYukon's mark my words. tic barrens. No, Jim, I protested, they win As we forged through the vague be all right once they get ashore. we were like a guttering "Right nothin' ! Theyre a pack of sea lanes, fools. They think they've got a bulge trinket on the bosom of the night. We were a blare of revelry and a on fortune. Hear them In blaze of light. Excitement mounted now. Theyre all millionaires their minds. Theres no doubt with to fever heat. Dont mind you much of a Sunday them. Its a cinch. Theyre Bpendm' it right now. You mark my words, school picnic, does it? commented voung feller, for Ill never live to aee the Prodigal. "Its fierce the way them fulfilled there's ninety in a the girls are prying some of these hundred of all them fellers thats crazy Jays loose from their wads. goin' to this here Klondike will Theyre all plumb batty. I'm tired., never make good, an of the other trying to wise them up. They're all planning to have a purple time in the ten, nine won't do no good I dont hear any One per cent that will keep their sweet of them apeak of endowing a home stakes thats absurd, Jim. for or pensionAn as for aee. me, Well, youll decrepit I feel as sure as God's above us ing off their aged grandmothers. me sick. There's a cold guidin us through the mazes of the They make night. Ill never live to make the trip juicy awakening coming. He was right. In their visionary back. Ive got a hunch. Old Jims on his last stampede. leaps to affluence they soared to gidHe sighed, then said sharply. ' dy heights. They strutted and bragDid you see that feller that passed ged as if the millions were already theirs. To hear them, you would us" was think they had an exclusive option Mosher, the gambler and It on the treasure-trove- s of the KlonThat mans a skunk, a renegade dike. Yet, before and behind u, aimiiar were dozens of vessels bearIm keepln tabs on that man. Maybe him an me got a ing just as eager a mob of fortune score to settle one of them days. hunters, all drawn irresistibly northward by the Golden Magnet. Mavbe. He went off abruptly, leaving me Nevertheless, it was hard not to to ponder long over his gloomy be affected by the prevailing spirit of words. optimism. For myself the gold We were now three days nut. The had but little attraction, but the adweather waa fine, and nearly every venture waa very dear to my heart. one was on deck In the sunshine. Once more the clarion call of RoEven Bullhammer, Marks aud Mosh- mance rang in my ears, and I leapt er had deserted the for a to its summons. I have said that we were all more time. The twine were playing checkers. The Winklesteins were making or leas In a ferment of excitement, but to this I must make a reservathemselves solid with the music-haclique. In and out among the differ- tion. One' there was who, amid all ent groups darted the Prodigal, aa our unrest, remained cold, distant volatile aa a society reporter at a and alien the Jewish girl,- - Berna. church bazaar. And besides these, Even in the old man the gold fever eye always alone, austerely aloof as if betrayed itself In a visionary framed In a picture by themselves, a and a tremor of the lips ; but the girt picture of digntty and sweetness, was a statue of patient resignation, were the Jewish maid and her aged a living reproof of our febrile and purblind imaginings. grandfather. The more I studied her, the mere It was while I was thus covertly ocout of place sha seemed in my picstudying the pair that something curred. ture, and, almost unconsciously, I Bullhammer and Marks were stand- found myself weaving about her a came fabric of romance. In short, a is ing by me and across the deckdance-hathe way of young men, I was beginthe acridly nasal tones of the girls. I saw the libertine eyes ning to grope blindly for that affecof Bullhammer rove incontinently tion and sympathy which are the to anoth- forerunners of passion and lova. from one unlovely demi-re- p er till at last they rested on the slenThe land wans wmtry and the wind der girl standing by the side of her shrilled ao that the attendant guilt d Appre- flapped their wings hard in the face grandfather. of the aea were of It The ciatively he licked his lips. Say, Monkey, whoa the kid with snarling whitely aa they ran. The old Whiskers there decks were deserted, and eo many Search me, Pete, said Marks; of the brawlers were sick and lay ilke dead folk that it almost seemed "want a knock-dow- n Betchrr! Reams kind a standoff- as if a Sabbath quiet lay on the ship. That day I had missed the old man, ish, though, dont she e be darned! Never and on going below found him lying A withered Oil bit saw the little of vet right as one sore stricken. that could stand off Sam Marks. Im hand 1Y on his brow, and from hil a winner, I am, an don you forget bps, which were almost purple, this moans issued. it. Just watch my splash. pimple-garnish- gold-capp- vice-lik- -- wash-ladi- sky-pil- card-roo- ll ll white-haire- wolf-pac- k Stand-offlsh- for state experiment station Conservation studies of the udder, bones Ad economical mother ha a young digestive- system. son uho persists in- bringing hi a register of ; clnmis to the apple bin In the cellar. ; First to complete merit record in Florida, and twice j She tolil tlie generous lad to have the qualified for the register of merit, boys 'eat the mellow ones, fie was of the American Jersey Cattle heard telling the young hungry tribe, station j Now, lea sure and eat the mellow club, the cow gave the herd alone 24 female and 28 malej ones, because mother wants to keep "One Is a great- descendants. ones.' th - Gainesville, Fla. Mar. 23 (API No longer useful because of old age, Creole s Lassie Suo, a Jersey cow whose- blood has enriched dairy herds aU over Florida, has been put to death humanely that her body may be used by th? great granddaughter. - . good , i |