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Show H ; Tnii MORNING EXAMINER: OGDEN, UTAH, MONDAY MORNING, APRIL, , i I 10. 1003. - I iosoh hi v shed a scornful l.irtpU and remarkly either to draw- hi knife, ed that if 1 obxerir-,- piv per ram ion no remaining wvapon, ci.t right aud harm would come to me and my Indian left and rite lighting, or to surrender. police. APACHE CHIEF DISARMED. submissive ".My "i.,ere was nothing police were not slow in discernin this and 1 began to winder what The ing hi thoughts, aud a quickly a renegades would do when ,iu'y thought oiu- of t liciit sprang forward ihe knife from the reneuty reserves file out of the commissary and Kuau-heOn bo,U side went desper- gade's belt. At the earnc instant half building. I I FAMOUS RED MAD BEFORE THE PUBLIC EYE bi-on- $30.00 TO LOS ANGELES it-r- sw d li The participation in ihe inaugural parade o( one whool and lvnegtac. Sunday of ar, readier and now prison,'1lia-at Fort Sill, Okluiwnia, Indore man tvii tiiripltt this famous -and ha the public ejv once again, l or liis auiries in many milled . and allcwwl eapiorr. (.erom-railor veracity r.aord wIuihc decUros waa anytiiiiiK to la- prowl b never was ruptured. -Mr come hi. give up. two, ilir liniMi" admit ihe wrinkled old rniri 'le gel I'"" I;1 in lit Ihe Apaches. id the rd no lime." Bui Hie records Interior Depart mum -and a sutemenr r The tar pu secured ly a report ! Gcroninui' claim to the laid. The and show h.- - was captured once, , the mllita-i-vonly mre. and then not hut ly an Indian agent. supported liidiun police, by five iron- or more nienilmra of the same tribe of which l.enmimo a a at the head. wlio came With tlic influx of vdsitors In Waahimron to see ibe inauguration came one (lf president Roosevelt there uenilcinrii from the borough ofwasSew York. While this gmilemau r In the entire show, the panic-ula- and had a long talk with the to in which they pit cunst-nii-remove in Kan Carlos. Tln-- asked foist linle linm in which to bring tlu-iwomen and children. Tiii wa grant- iuridt-ul- cliii-l-- wa--rs- or a d r tG. s J ! , s " j Ira! very nighi. (i'iiniiuo had ail the dogs in the ramp killed, abandoned hi surplu camp equIpuR--- - and pro visions, and net out tor hi old home in Mexico. Front that date lieroninio . a renegade, was branded a Kaiux, then commanding thu Depart-ineu- i oi Arizona, wr.a at Fort Howie. moie-ment-s informed him of and reqtiesiwl that the column of eavairy stationed in the Kan Simon valley lie ordered To lake up ilia rail of ihe fleeing Indian and administer rliRMisemeut to them. Thro iroH-troops of cavalry mid on company of Indian coii:s. muter MuJ. Morrow, of Gerald-mo- . started next day in purs-iiFrom but fulled tu oteriake him. that time June, JKTK until April. I follower 77, this Indian ttntl hi were eonstantly raiding through Arizona, southwestern and in Sonora, in Old Mexico. alK-Bci- nter (it-n- 1 I r roe-on- t south-easter- n o u RENEGADES LIVE HIGH. "The troops and scouts failed to stolen on check his career. Ktis-these raids was traded off at the small towna on the Rio (irande, and l lie renegades wore wealthy and happy. wearied with the military the coiiiiiilssiouer of Jndlan affair at Washington wired tue to take my Indian police and efferi a capitire of Orunlmo and his outlaws. I wa ordered to seize all the stolen properly and restore it to the rightful owner and lock the thieving renegade in ihe guardhouse at Kan Carlos on charge of murder and robliery. 1 wa also Instructed to rail it pou the military for aid should 1 need it. Here began ona of the most exciting and Important movemnnu in the Apache campaign. lnar-tivit- i, r st f ' t t ; intL-rra- t con-sisie- 7i 1 e aaa to shake object of hi hands wlih Grnmlmo and b dlaeuaa with him an incident of thltty jears ranger waa lie rpplcir npj. when the at ntid tieronlnto the captured. The from Now York was Mr. Jolin K Clttin. now a fiosl office ftiKiint'Oir, lmt hack in the 7m he served a tndi an Huent for the Apaches in Arizona Ipon hia arrival and New Mexico. hern he hunted tip the old chieftain In and found hint waled comfortably Third on hotel smAll or a ihe lobby street northwest, firrotilnio lesiked up; hi eve forgot, t heir euHtouutry squint anil opemd In wonderment. He rose, and unbent Ills form until it reached the height of former yeara. His pipo In Urn latter tari of March, JS77, 1 and he held out dropped to the i Kan Carina with 120 Indian police, hated. hla unsteady armed with needle guns and a good GERONIMO REMEMBERED. he re- supply of ammunition. OJo Caliente, 1 know you: J know you. I no where the Indiana were supposed to lie peated. "Howdy. Major I'liim. see you for thirty yeara, at OJo Cali- ramping, was "50 miles from Kan (tar-- I oh, and my little army had to mako ent e. I remember. Amt Major Cl uni remembered, too. the Journey on foot. In New Mexico. It was an interest ing meeting, and the General Hatch, detriment commandrod akin whose record ia the tiloodiest er, hnd ordered eight companies into with me In the tliere talkluR with the the field to in history nnlv man who ever captured him. Yes- protection of settlement should serious trouble (Mg nr. All alotig the route terday Mr. Chun waa cornered In one of the corridor of the Host Office De- we were informed that the main body of the renegade waa in the mountain partment end made to tell the story, whluh rivals the mind fantastic fic- near OJo Caiiente. foil Strong, well tion. and is enough to make conserva- armed and desperate, and waiting to tive hair stand on end. greet tta lu the moat enthusiastic man- first nier liertmimo, he said to a ner. Till knowledge managed to keep i at up the during the march. reporter for Tho War, "June 4. 1876. moun-tainClilnuwhua In At Fort the imsa. Hayard I arranged to meet Apache He and hi lutud of inursudera Major Wade, now commanding the Dehad been killing net tier hiu! pillaging partment of the Hast, and the same iioiurs along the San I'edro river, and who crtnimntidnd the military grand dithe entire southwest country was per- vision in the Inaugural parade two turbed. The hand took refuge in tlm weeks or so ago. Major Wade then fiiountaliM. and in May, iSTfi, I waa or- commanded the troopa In the Held and dered to proceed to their stronghold hp agreed to meet lue at OJo Caliente. and bring ihe Indian to the Kan Car-in- s Willi my polio 1 inarched cautiously resen m Ion, of which I had charge. within ten tulles of the agenev. and I then selecting a bodyguard of twenty-fiv- e Arrompanixil by a small without the ramp of I rode Into the agency itself JiimI vlaSi lu-- t ore sundown on the day agreed upon by Major Wade and nnselt. To uty chagrin i received a dispatch from hint slating that lie was delated and would not be able to reach tho agency until three day Inter. SETTING THE TRAP. J determined not to wait for llio military and soon learned that fieron-ltu- o wa camped about, three mile to d the west ward, and that hi force men aud a number of about of buys and old squaws, who, by the way, are much more liable to piecipi-tat- e a fight than ihe men. 1 decided that I iiiuki act ri once it hum If ihe purpose of my To was to lie accomplished. effect the a n eat or the renegade I adopt- -, a hi i of strategy which worked so perfectly that I have been proud of it ever since. Tho renegade had watched my arrival, haviug learn, d that some Indian scouts had come from Arixona for some purpose, but, tiiey had not discovered ihe main body i police, which 1 had left ten miles That they buck iu the mountain. t bought my entire force consisted of I felt conthe bod) guard of twenty-fivvinced. "Accordingly, soon after dark, ihe a. lssly-giian- renegade having retired to their cantp, I dispatched a messenger to Boauford, my chief of police, who was in charge of the reserve, with order to march to the agency before daylight the next day. About 4 o'clock on the morning of April 21 Beauford arrived rt the agency with the reserve police, alioiii Km strong, and the entire force was quartered in a vacant commissary building Just south of the agency and on a line with it. Soon after daylight I sent word to tierouinio that 1 would like to have a talk with him. He cante with his brave, and a desperate, defiant group they were, adorned with feathers, their features hideous with war paint and carrying an equipment of needle guns, shotguns, hows and arrows, butcher knives, lances and divers other weapons. A score of troublesome squaws were tagging on behind this grotesqnc procession. I collected the renegades on the parade ground, which was directly in front of Ihe building in which my reserve police were hidden. My bodyguard of was with me and had been twenty-fivdeployed in skirmish line ho as to partly surround the renegades. INDIAN REPARTEE. "The hostile were gathered, in a solid group directly in front of me. and, as was their custom on such occasions, the worst In the crowd were nearest me. so that I could have touched them without moving. They knew that the Immediate presence of such notoriously desperate characters, fully armed and hideous with war palm, waM anything but reassuring to a When all wa ready 1 told (Jeronimo that 1 had come a long way to have a talk with him and his people; that 1 hud matters of Importance to speak of. hut that if my words were observed with caution no serious harm would come to him and his braves. Geruninto e pale-face.' ate men. and the -- lightest cause might change the history ut the day. TRAP WAS SPRUNG. "The signal was given, the door of thrown the commissary building open, and my police emerged on the dead run in Indian file with their guns ready for lnstan action, and completed the skirmish line surrounding the renegades. (Jeronimo aud his fellow outlaws watched the appearance of with an the first dozen of my expression that showed they didnt care for a dozen, more or less. But by the time two dozen had passed the commissary portal and other were still coming the renegades grew nervous and began to move about so as to occupy more space and give room for action. Some moved toward a nearby gulch. They were ordered back, but the order was disregarded, whereupon my chief of police threw up bis gun and drew a bead on the foremost of the retreating Indians. "Instead of the report of a rifle we heard a terrific yell and heavy squaw sprang upon Chief Beauford. hung on to his shoulders and brought the nuts-xl- e of his gun down near the ground. Beauford. a Ulg. brawny scout, gave one look of smaxemenr. and disgust, anil with a sweep of hi great right arm sent the squaw sprawling ten feet away. Again his gun went up. This time a dozen of my police followed hi example, and the retreating Indians returned. The entire lnd was surrounded and we had the drop ou them at last. s es AT BAY. GERONIMO "During the moments thus occupied I had not forgotten to observe each expression of Geronimo's face. In a large pocket of my overcoat I had a pointed at the old fellow, and had he made any move to resist a shot from the pocket was among the surprises I had In store for him. When instated that the renegades lay down their arms during our conversation Geronlnto objected, hut I stepped forward and took hi gun out of his hands, a gun which I still have in my trophy of possession, a much-prizethe occasion. Then I told him that I had grown very fond of him. so fond, in fart, that I intended taking hint hock with me to Kan Carlos, lie wa sitting directly in front of me. 1 informed him that he would have to go to the guard house, nnd that he would have to go Immediately. Geronlnto sprang to his feet at once, and the picture Is one that I shall never forget, he stood six feet In his moccasins, erect as a mountain pine, every outline of his graceful and perfect form indicative of the strength and entrance for which he had become famous. Ills straight black locks fell to his hips, his high cheek hones, his angular nose, his keen, flashing black eyes, his proud and graceful carriage made bint a model of his rare, the most perfect type of Apache Indian I have ever seen. There he stood Geronlnto the renegade, a form that commanded attention and a name dreaded by thousands. liis eye burned luridly under the excitement pf the moment and his form quivered with immipp reused anger. He was halting between two pur 1 d a dozen guns were leveled at him, and the first and only capture of (Jeronimo was completed, lie wa conveyed to the guard house and. heavily ironed aud the entire band was man-beback to Ran Carlos, where they wete still 1 confined when resigned my commission in the Indian service. The records how that Major Clutn met General Wade while the former was en route to Kan Carlo with the renegades a prisoners. General rupe who commanded the Department of the Missouri ai the time, made a report. however, to the effect that had been captured "by the troops under hiscommand. I'pou what facts ibis report wa bared ba never been ascertained. In 1878 when was in charge of the military, he grew tired of the bond that held him and took to the hills for an outing. A few more lives were sacrificed and then Geronlnto sent word to Captain Haskell that he waa willing to surrender. The renegade and his band were returned to San Carlos and released on good behavior. In 1SS1 he took another trip to ihe mountains for his health and more lives and cattle were sacri fired. Two years later General Crook, with a large body of troops, caught up with the band aud returned to the agency with several squaws and papooses, claiming alo to have captured Cerouinto, but explaining ihat Geronlnto would not be along for several days. A month went by and was heard from on the Mexican border, where with a band of about fifty bad men he waa stealing cattle and killing settlers. IJcut.Brittou Davis, lr. 8. A., encountered the band aud they all agreed to go with him into the reservation, taking the stolen cattle with them. At. Whipple barracks the cattle were ol,l by Capt. C. P. Egan, who gained fame iu the war through the canned-bee- f episode. In 1KK5 Geronlino thought he needed another outing and he left the reservation without so much as a word of regret to the commanding officer. A year later, wearied of the war path, he General came in and surrendered. Crook received him and had them pose for a photographer. The next day General Crook had ihe picture and that was all. The Indian had changed their minds about surrendering. GenGeneral relieved eral Miles then o Crook and In the course of tlnio became weury again aud surrendered. General Miles had a special train waiting for ihe outlaw with habit and he and ihe "surrendering his braves were deported to Florida, where they basked in the sunshine or dosed In the ahade of the sheltering palms. When the "reform had been completed, Geronlmo was taken back to the country whence he came and ever since he has lived at the expense of tho government which he opposed so long. and RETI 1PM VIA FIRST EXCURSION TO CALIFORNIA VIA Ger-onltn- o SALT LAKE ROUTE Cer-nulm- o Special Train Leaves Sait Lake City 15th, 8:00 P. M. For further information, or sleeping ear reservations call at j CITY TICKET OFFICE . - 17 West 2nd Telephone 1986. EW.GILLETT. ' OCO :OiVO 00 vo.v ii O Ger-onim- o Spanlsh-Atuer-lea- Ward 400 guineas for the specimen of liiq great auk or 'Alca imponnle, to give it the name by which it is known in scientific circles. The great auk immeasurcably increased the importance lwih of itself and its eggs when it. joined the Dodo in ihe realms of the extinrt, and its market value is ever ou the upward grade. The stuffed n specimen shows that the great auk, or garefowl, as It is sometime called, was a fairly big bird, perhaps the size of a Michaelmas goose, and It had an expanse of white bosom of a spot low which would exetis the envy of a German waller. It had a white splaxh over each eye, but its head, its webbed feet, and ita elegantly shaped back, were almost black. Koine interesting particular of his life and habitat are to be found in Lydekker'a "Royal Natural History," from which wc j take the following passage: 'Confined to the North Atlantic, and ranging as far north as Iceland on the one aide and Greenland on the other, the great auk wa a migratory which in winter wandered aa far south aa the Bay of Biscay and the shores of Virginia. Both in Greenland and Norway It appears to have been always rare; and ita chief or only breeding places were three rocky iclan-near Iceland, known a. the or Gierfuglasker, Garefoyl Skerries and Funk Island off the Newfoundland const. By the subsidence In the THE VALUE OF BEING EXTINCT spring of 1830 of one of these Islets, which, as being the most InaccessiA Great Au Going to America. ble, wa. the fsrorite breeding-place-, tho birds were driven to one nearer the shore, where they were more can(London Daily Telegraph.) an American ity approached; and in thethecourse of Tho authorities of the next fourteen years museum have just paid Mr. Rowland became extinct in Europe, thespecies last Ger-onim- I apt-cie- , o ov 0 J CO 0. 00 By Jlktrta Platt 0000.'00V0 900000' OUOOO u. Op o Op tfo Op Po Op PO Op PO Op interesting order of the Insert klndiun are the beetles. All Insert are Invertebrates. An nvertebrulc Is a creature however, or merely for Its health. The the beetle's egg. It big ball deposits them therein, thru roll the ball tn the plure w here the beetle make Some boys and It burrow. You would never imagine having no ii coinmuii tutnbiehug could h.ive so girt and even grow t, uple do nut to have uuy to their iiiiivh sense a till creature display. After shoving the bull to where it ts wanted the In ette dig s tolerably deep hole In the thru roll the ball into It. Af'.- -r that it cover the whole with earth and !evcx tho eggs to hatch in due time. Deciles paw through three stage of exhteiu-- .. riret a worm, culled a . It griili, i In thi fur a elute eoiiFdeniblo t'.iiie, then linm'l'I.K.t KKilTI.K. turns Into what is csliyd the pupa. In character, lniwt-vei- large may be the t hi Ktuge it look n.neh like the full Snr In li, li- - lmll,-- . grown l retie, hut cannot tty or even ro spinel Though beetle li.eto ulwint. Xi'Tl. uf-- r w constdeniblp n hern ire, ilnir liu they ure well provt-.le4cvd, the p.iip.-- turn Into t Sfcvir.g two i,f trigs and tel le:! liie perfect beetle, tiiinr heellea re:iii'h of l.gi. The Ibr.h t iu quire four or five yeara to pas from hit. lug blue e inset-1.yc.u efS ts sbniil pui-,isml finwers 1,1 In tropical countries are beetles or So I the pretty tninirnxc size. They fee-- upon the de- itn.m-- ere litrit! n J creature to w!i.-lwh 'never In thv country rl:ilj,i-:te It they alto ays mu : ir. Irdrlwn fly nr:-- tune: r srs iu. i A with this lltllo blossom's arrival. Once upon to time this flower was a enow maiden and lived In a bekutiful snow palace. In to durk dungeon waa Imprisoned to noble knight named Galan-thwho wa only gn earth child. He wore to shining armor which was greenish In tint and very beautiful. One day the snow maiden found him in hi awful dungeon, and after that she went each day to ee him. On ons of these occasion th walla of the palace suddenly felL Thin happened because the south wind was melting them away. The snow maiden wept bitterly, and over to wheru Fhe (lalanthua ruil-ewas, took her In Ills arms, and together they sank down Into Mother Earth. The snow maiden was so norry to leave her companions that Mother Earth promised that every now and then alio should come hack to the snow country DUCHESS. 0 Op Monster Beetles Of tbe Tropics fo A CUT OUT OF THE ::O;OlYov0:0ft0a0f.Oft0A:000&O'.:;0r0" d ap-pr- ur and se them. Bo, according to this promise, the little snowdrop peeps out above the earth every spring. The reason site has to wait for this reason is Ihat she need the aid of GaUmthus to help her up to earth, and this knight requires the entire winter to make Ids way earthward. The sorrowful part of the story I that the snow child arrives too lute each year to nee her snow n friends, but a she Is very fond of thus she 1 happy to go back with hint to his home In the earth. heii-hed- vnl-ni- u, . t . J i i " :,l I Is one uf Hu- moil i d rcu til the try rollii-- g ...I. ft . ; a:,u June f'.' than itself, throuli t un, ih. It due nut . tills h ill f.u puie liectt-- l.u- - - mi,) buil-- l ami .tmusviiu-nl- . animnLKQVIX, LONGEST BEETLE. This huge beetle contain so much it Is mal substance that travelers say ccjh.g wood of tree, and since there ii'd for food by African native. They are so ninny tree and o many rotting trur.l. and branches In but, roolit lou-itilthe beetle get plenty uf foist on. to A l.ilge beetle found in the West ii is .lie Hercules, w'cli from the tip to the end of :t body is live of it lm.hr lung. You ce thi iMld creature In the picture. You would naturally suppose the long, projecih.fi horn In be the burlles tipper Jaw aud u tnnulh to bo directly beneath. Thi: is not the case, however. The big horn I quite above the head ard spurt from it. The projection springe from wlint would tattle tcetlc'a shoulders. If tt had any. Thr set ond liorn, the small one turning upward in the picture, projects from t p of Mr. Hercules' rrnl head, nnd ! are at each side ef It. near ht-- t eyfro:l - gi. t m'.y the male hercules has tbe ii.jni ting hiM-rlit tr.ii-lc.Africa H fennj it:-- - Got-.of nil tl,ii tribe, for tih. the hirg-.in g'-o- In-d- lu-t- . e : thl- tuy trini-lllni- l:un-t;- All of you children have read Alice In Wonderland will remember the duclicu. 11 you wont to know how the ducheas really looked you may cut her out and uile her up. and there she will be. All you have to do I to observe the Triton tug Cut out the duchess and paste every section X on the reverse of the neighboring sect ion of the same shape, fold back the sections Y nnd p.iKte them where they naturally fall on the reverse of the back view, down the front and baik of the crown and paste the sides of the crown Z to th in hi Taste the bars and front of the duchrs together as far aa the Urn: D. f old lire lap out .iml her skirt down, folding the fft out at right angles to th- skirt. Taste the section C to the tab 1 and the tubs E to the baek view. Cold down tin- lappet of the crown, fold the babys head upward and Its skirt downs aid and fold Hie Hutu F out at right angles to the back. - the lull le. e Ga-In- f ll hi: ,Ti X . l i!: i1 t : e VOZJATH WINGS FntuAi,. ; a vcrl!-ib!- . Inches tors. In Goliath will: IU mnnsipi, wii-- - . It t lure spr-ra- ) d eu - cm oup and stew and it a great delicacy. Queer .Hit-' some have. (in,- - great tropical beetle I a curious lure, very l aulifully colored. of - wired lints :t i named the harlequin, ll ts sniped and flecked with red, yellow and black. It six legs are black w ilii red rings avound the upper pari. The body of the harlequin beetle is not mi Inlgq a that of ri-- Ii Into k to It-- of ths rest of the tribe, but it front it own aise. pair of leg, consldi-rlnare tremendous in length. When they .'i-.stretched out forwurJ full length the harlequin, leg aud all. Is nearly a . g foot In the picture the harlequin' leg protrude ahead or ii. The threadlike loi-g- that turn backward around body and come close together In a tort of mat shai are its antennae, or feeler. With th- - aideuuje it touche object t -- ZHiuiiie what they are like. Wli-'t- i crawl nlona harlequin be.-ilthe ground it I sn awkward creature, the gnat - les being in tie way. . I tl-- a tj ;), ft-n- South J.L. MOORE. Dist Passenger Agent Gen. Passenger Agent. HHed in the 1844. The existence of the nT fowl on Funk island was about 1534, when ihe birds waf? numerous as to be reckoned said, by thousands; but incesunt itt J! PJlrJ'vluR secutkin for more than iso mur eventually brought about us atkm, which probably took pirg l most contemporaneously with ji, appearance from Europe. On Fu u, land it wa customary for th ere, of several vessels to spend the mer for the sole purpose of kiltiiE garefowl for ae sake of their tofe ere. Although we hare but tradition, oi these expeditions, it i indiiwtiyi that store pens were erected lit. which the bird were driven ku sheep, that they were slain bj up lions, and their bodies were left y, rot where they lay, while for tm purpose or otner frequent isd la continued fires wore lighted m ft. Uland. The records of this tludiu are still extant in the sum! 4 garefowl bones to he met witk ft ft. 11 of Punk Island: such redo, together with a few skins, and a mbv of egg shells, being all that wi to us of the finest of the auki uik, -- Grouch To Judge by your wrffim, then, you must have s mighty potia o' general health. Baltimore Antrim, LaMontt Now In Holland I kin seen washing going on in thi nft That is something you doa't w America, LaMoyne Oh, yes, you da LaMontt What street did vesq see washing lu? Wall stmt Orient LaMoyne Daily Ncwa ' Entertainment and Instruction For the Young OfC'-OiO-- April The Napkla Ring Triek. Insert tLe two forefingers Into to kin ring from different sides and nap- turn Folks APRIL RACING HOBBYHORSES. No doubt you once had a hobbyhorse, and rode It, too, rocking backward and forward, trotting, galloping and even jumping fence and dashing madly across country all in Imagination. Suppose you really could race on to hobbyhorse against some ons else mounted in the same way. Well, you can, and your hobbyhorse will prance, kick up, buck, stumble and do a lot of very horsy things. This hobbyhorse has real, klckable legs, four of them, no tall at all, but to father's the sun and air nothf fls cloud, sftN My courtiers, the daffodil croord: My voice I the lark's voice, My fu k the wind's; X waken the fir eons that In thdr mat My rind Sleep dreaming of summer and KIM fd of bird. And lilies leap upward to kwhs an word. Dark a1drs beheld ms and Ifthttx Bill green. Ths bluebells surge upward th ksekn between; I am lif.1 am youth. I am all thitblwtu And fragile and swift In the sweet s' I year; I gm hence. I am gone ere earth ml II here." "She Blow, daffodil trumpets, Mow bg ri I lou- dI am April, th child of the zus ud cloud. -- KonCtema 1 llelr to the Isislas Three The baby whose picture you make up for It two lively heads. It can go at several gaits and Is kind and gentle. It will never run away, and It will always go just as fast or as slow as you desire. It Is useless to describe the construction of the hobbyhorse, for the picture shows exactly how It la made. The riders get astride of It. os ths picture shows, with knees above the crossbar and elbows beneath it, grasping ths body of the hone with their hands. They may gallop or pace or trot Make a hobbyhorse; get two ef your friends to make ono nnd have race. It is no end of fun, and two boy may become so expert In the sport that they may defeat with ease any novices who may race against them. I Alexis Nk'holsievltch, who, If th throne of his father, th ezsr, saved, will ono day take hi ph MW ruler of the Russian people. This last of Iff 12th on the was bom and hla christening was a wondcrN ceremony. He owns cap, clash the Angers around each other slowly, lotting the direction be sway from the body. Clove the finger and thumb of each hand around the ring anl bring the tips of llic four together. Oren them and drop the ring. This sound stint, le. but If you succeed in a half dozen attempts it Is astonishing. When the tips of the Ungers and thumb are But It liven mostly upon trees and then brought t tlifr the tip of the Angers show what these long leg are for. It of the right hand must rest on the Firefly Calehfag la Japaa. grasp twig with them. let Ita body thumb of the left, and vice versa. In Tn Japan there are firms- - of firefly go and wi!i( to and fro like a monopening keep the fingers and thumbs Is found in ths Joined together, perfectly still, and the dealers, each employing sixty or sevkey.' The enty t ateliers and exporting their tropical icgin,, of Koulh America, par- ring will at once be free. "catch," chiefly to the large cities, ticularly in Drasll, For food It sucks where fireflies are used at all grades of the juice of in,- - bags Kiddle. tree. Why I n little dog's tail Hke the heart social festivity, from the private gnrden Ilniv thr Sanndrap t'nei to Earth. of a tree? Because It f farthest from parties of nobles to an evening at a All children know that the first flowthe bark. cheap tea garden. Bomellmes they ere er to peep out of the earth when the Why i a man tulce married like a kept caged, sometimes released in snow leave the ground I the snowswarma In the presence of guest. The ship' c.jpinln? Because he has a secdrop. The: ; a pretty story connected ond tnnte. firefly hunter start forth at sunset with a long liamboo pole and a bag of mosquito netting. On reaching a suitTHE UNEXPECTED VISITOR. able growth of willow he makes ready his net and strike the branches with of gold and TWciu. wtt his pole. This jars the Inserts to the robes caps l ornamented his of ground, where they are easily gathered two large gem up. In tbe Imperial nursery Play, attended by a nube A Yew Kind of Tin re. will be surrounded by he Little Harry's fallv r, who wa a phoso trndittoa M descendant, the one as lightning night tographer. took a picture of a midgets whom a great In V wa very turners flasn. When Harry saw the picture ths employed a spit next morning he looked up and asked rial kitchen. Lovesick Mushroom: "Nothing, darInterloping Mushroom: "How about wond-rl'igl- y: At the polo there Is hut kit: ! of a picture would ling, shall become between us. I swear me I" "I'ap, . it!" VI JB night throughout the r. Ihud-. W f f ti, gr.pi- - I I |