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Show Rs Sor 5; THE INTER-MOUNTAIN O N REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, OCTOBER DRY Wyoming Congressman States Some Pcr- sonal Experiences and Observations of Farm ing at the Pine Bluffs Festiva), My Dry first experi ence as a dry farmer]I have been o obtained as a boy n the irrigation oer. | produce the best results and that it m ore years ago|tee and for a number of years was must than I care to be plowed deep Is 30 fundamental tel] ona ft ‘arm In north-|C?ariman, so I have taken a lively in- | western Iowa. proposition that the verlest novice ee in all that pertains to irrigation We did not havea pat-| understands {t. Above all, In season, t at the same time I have reali ed | and out of season, and between season that, as not to exceed ten per cent of | tho drying and baking surface must the area of the arid states coul ® Ir-| be broken, was rigated, any considerable along agricultural lines ; historic was few years visitation of later we had &rasshoppers the in uncertain advisability of absence of the and farmer dry Unued suggested &rowing C them, and irrigation became a years ago. twenty My quantities farming at Wyoming that With scant rainfall has been carried on throughout region and the the arid and semi-arid limited knowledge that d of what was In all others In Califorhas been necessary to discourrather that encourage dry farmsome ns because irrigation was possible and therefore ought to be practiced In Eastern Oregon and Washington the system of cropping the ground only once in two years has extensive great success, while in every the West farming is carried on more or less here and there without irrigathon and with a secant rainfall, would not presume to give practical people such as you are, many ful = KR dry time The success of dry farming under proper conditions is the 10pe of the semi-arid West. for it makes possible the settlement of vast areas that otherwise would produce only the secant forage which unadied nature provides I n its development it will double, possibly treble, the cultivated area of the So-called arid states. It is the handmaiden and supplement of Irrigation, for as time passes and population increases In density, the high priced irrigated lands must be used exclusively for the growth of crops of large value per acre, thus rendecrijng the entire western country dependent for its cereals and certain classes of forage upon the unirrigated lands. Dry farming wil also prove an help- must depend quite largely upon the possibility of the growing of crops with h scant rainfall. Therefore I have studied the Possibilities of such development as reislously. as have studied {rrigation | n all parts if the western states I have visitec The result of my inv estigation of the subject has been a surprise at the extent to which the growing of crops I learned some things t were quick maturseeding and forcing of considerable value to my later experience in Wyoming. Twenty-one years ago next month [ took up my permanent residence Wyoming, in Weston county, about five miles from where the town of Newcastle now Stands. The need of grain and \egetables which could not be secured nearer than fifty miles and then the the development con- ally to try, and profitably afd the the last irrigated lye ------ that can than DEDUCTIVE (Continued to for a number of years, during | of you versed in the science very little. It is quite wonderful; and prac- | how very little they can discover when time I gradually increased the tice of dry farming until I farmed muchadvice betteron than over a thouthey really exert themselves. The po- | I, a lecture or extended the , - i surged _ sed hi and dead, | raised over twenty| subject, but there are some general| bushels of grain and over Ce Surgeon pronounced him dead,| ropositions which have come under|and they took an inventory REO! of his twenty-five hundred bushels of pota-|my observation that may possibly be} clothes and belongings. toes oes, -§sixteen years yeg ago this sseason. Very meagrs se _| useful toov you. _ The > first} of these 2s IS! =e were ms course the latter, we poor id not chap. call Some keys, | | it dry that the successful growing of cera few cuttings of vacant positions ‘as | pean ner had we Renee ara ce tain classes of crops on lands which amp system butler from today's-or, the biennial] do not contain too rather, yes. | great a percentage a eeliry System of the Columbia pence | river uplands, | of clay is with a limited and terday peoeners four-and-sevon still pence! very well on a thin soil! without artifical irri & ationrainfall and with did about has long }!n silver . and copper in @ leather purse, | fourteen inches of since ceased to be an experiment. . Sec-|@nd the watch and chain. Curlously | rainfall by simply doing very good]|ond. that so-called dry farming farming under]€0ugh, there was no mark on eifther | and at the right time reasonably favorable conditions and]|linen, hat or clothes, would do even execept Which acreage Sam6 now circumstances, under for the we by the havela use little of less proper certain methods and is but|itials satisfactory|€nough. in which farming is carried on and in| ich reasonably good crops have|/that the most results will] been grown by the majority of the|he obtained in satisfactory most regions having the past ten those who have twelve farmed] |less than of annual the best have been rewarded with phe-| nomenal crops most g00d crops all more from of time. the hilly Breater sections heavier your the and country time and] broken here. and It there eighteen or z precipitation cropping and S..' which I took up the {nvague were the jacket is| is a] summer tillag be-| | to see running of the years | manded. get more dollars per "Of course annual per- annum frrc om with than by less labor Bae by , this a his farm cropping . ever and expense. experience ccs "The police had not seen it?" Ide-|_ lieve that in the he farmer will a know except The only variety of soll. Also in the exception I should make to this rule most extensively farmed alis in cases where a cultivated crop snowfall. Recently, like corn or particularly potatoes . or = however,5 |neath the of Did Under- the seam the lining he . aie. 3 tweed Itself: the _ a? the were & you as : anything thumb? left shoulder sewn ches Horton oe to; discover rule been resewn, - ; as well as the stit : ir not, them by New York, Oct. 17.-The in Standard "Unless the letters from one Poge had , being orltginal brown ie brown a maddened "We {te money for race after check the purchasing alone men age. to money, "That corruption shall respect power, not and so case be able honor that to buy snd hom- ous. o moral needed, that revi shall One.) nition of mental oe less in other ‘ maint = had no axcitensbe eaened. La8for 4 man of brilliant intellect Parteng | legs, and my restlessness in turn af- | {s too Intolerant of average intelligence fected Sir George hen that modest | In DOL Oke ae Bak sounded through the Hash Gene nouse Te corn w murdered | ‘Oxcae police De have' Bacrars acquiesce both Hard "The not larger "There is a street No. ee : soon In the generally somber street. What Sir | >> George spoke. . "There are two at the door," he eried. ‘One {3 certainly Partens, @ other looks like a coachman out of livery." Wie near ars pmol ara co demanded. called "My Gecgurs| Partens, was friend, open George's: Sir imperatively translate morality 4 Se , : ee fs one municipality y ning under-wage, Par-|ing tenement. An sald | man wita alert, = good, | sade wlll melancholy a "You sent for me, sir?" he sa "No, Altwood, no: a istake. ‘ . "I took the : liberty of sending : dren as All of eee aa our dry farmers ee oo are not ONO. . dry Bp ee Weihun good|in farming : ateee needs to _Dating il iy" eves in ongress [around sould be plowedInthe full otal of tush. bad workman: | sine, Ble, toa ft uy tarot | cag hit Wien ei a belongitig to Lady Wilton. Deny | restless hours wonderias, wast, Derrens| | Altsioo and During all my those service who farm satisfactory, in congress neither |g does ae ae Pp ie = "i wun 1 ae | fede stiaeia the stitching. to suspect Inside He is concerned might be present if eae the OntEtoane lie 7 awake mo = nee for ' ae ee two| warning a Deeks Te warhalt : ae gad. expsct must PRAISE OF I QUIE quired.il oan inte ™ BY J. QUIGLEY, ee ee ee Rien neGees Sey re ae key' is the ja | we eae tee Feary = ote teak adrift from NOM cut ourselves ene| SE Niger Ghia wermiey ie enieie SOG: eres ene oe at a lies in quiescence as well Maat as in . a Shite,7* ann ee |and, to that leisure is essential to sustained success. We muat oe vec ave "he sat workers oO € give out. The os s truth | Bere tatonn Sat atte" anerey g | and have economizer 5 73) with due thought, instead a a il eas 2c get receptive. the ; full and mixed a tumbler of whis- | iy THe"jowers next soda. at ofmornin gucesing. at seen r on a late oie re Per- © 83a © a peas, e. eerie. ou know,reat r ice Georg gl Ahm ine,‘i the caretaker,an sotting ones OR n eeeres ss anions re right noniaer {fs a little high. aera Ora colorless apathy was the noise | His tailor, who is an artist in his way, | -omewhat changed. She r Snead ever expect-|does his ‘best to rectify this mistake | with a nervous admiration J had never orge. Jumped weasel and Altwood $ sudden dramatio anoe very this value of 2 tS Spat uments "He Seas distance : from whence may be|of the jacket has the initials ‘W. f pride é hief {is not a heard to perfection the nicely-adjusted |on his handkerchief. sounds principal perhaps ha | Pree byandthe the violin eg UiRhinthe: or by amotif, beautiful 1a ns the conclusion that the dead n ne ts vetea ett = in life, we listen for the William Smith, late butler to ‘Sir aS si es nda ' ; tin vay mo-| main theme, that Bets Fo) worst EER er oes ‘ qe ; that htjotten seems drowned by Ne€ naerOe €o "By jove,e, no.". I erled,ey quite Seexcitedita. ments or hours spent {n quiet though ear conflicting duties. Sometimes we}"The man's name slipped my memeee ek rent , ie in cagac favor ot quiete catch o a word-a : = : stanza-but y not in- Ory.‘ Y You wherefore,' @ arelave in a magazins | enough that, Horton. to make the whole meaning 3a may well find a ] Ah, # pee Dati Cr telligible, on ‘an AnppHtanit and we are perhaps too tired, | should not E forget such 2 that aims to enrich and s trengthen reminder|or too impatient, to listen carefully. | point." . lif More especially is this remin ° houghts as well our work, "Of course," I continued, "the man} oie ae heceesary ie to asthma. and which I sus pect 4 ae oo wipes eine "You're in 16 =pipert ide. sir." she sald, with ill-concealed pride "In, that you sas een cave s ‘ow an' stur fa Steik 8 dis discov ed the ecessne oo oe pean lies. Some fo 8 . ive tbl trapestn an tol age Beare born dyes, and never ain More Ml a fit or a run hover. I shall never 4. | Gaba ee ane Oe Ee rade hall é sees the deceas = aeqaled up, give you , a drop , ; vy insir. yourShall tea, 1 sir? ve brand No, thank ' you, Mrs, Perkins,"', I) ig afolding my morning paper kn) enable MRS. Oct. , % ‘not bungled. ar Colonel, very Or you must namely employ do an the at- thinking and manipulatrbances an xletles as. along with the regular - ‘ ig ase are the only two -ways of Steering t "f clear of legal worrlment and faa sinter ee nute you beginagit to e the little infringe Bate ai fractiog o our ri nn se: 1 ane eee ott and Sean ini cee nth them Cour, that is) as ue Unpre hither blinded, dazed A. nee ES Re |S HELD IN gS EASTERN HOSPITAL Philadelphia, Oot. 17--Suffering In k, ts last 4 are old, ty |months tho { etone his disease came | Rarbadocs 9 ,-) years ago a on OF o out- e Cam- bout people in four the in da niden. Befors the Istana at from West Indies, abou /a ted bh Dt abdSond betes § offers the opportunities ated in Washington for boys mg = men of moderate means to win LOGAN. Wash- t with ten The 7s harlea in & small hospital at Blackwood. woo mingling three from stages, building in the rear yard en county hospita The boy has beon_ for moral m hool school, arr and thine Beanie 12.-Since are you! churned, nothing Rane about law, aie then keep 70a, out ofee it; * swallow your chagrin as a personal in= justice and thereb y 7 ereby save your pocket- eprosy ; and and unti} eventually take leave of your own ree mening sensea, So, if that is your plan a present, you are duly warned and there is time yet to call off the chilates Tr maelstrom and thither tljon whio PRIak ae hee eerie a sow, é here else could they receive tho P |samo salary for their services as they departments of Wealinaton me. make appropriations for great untver- | working elght hours a day and allowpar-!the lescontention by denominations and colleges, without overtaxing but at eer Gsar Pal i 1 oh themselves, nis Heb id he control of appropriations "There was only one criminal," P ee have arrested ee mg purpose eee e lice stopped suddenly, | ; has gee, Tac police sto Parnaga ng retNo. they have. No 7 aah eas Se ataine raen ee You leaving the ng, the cru-|LEPER andfo ens JOHN sults. to deliber- preserve your mental hal- SHINGTON, THE C THENS Ge law h* are m SRE Sena Washington, oc in mind your youThshare pay whirled jt $| ran Soe an-| ington < Thanks," was oe ' aS lic, CBee eat ere pears aoe Parterts Mfefeashy suppor sranigenced in its educational facilities eer: d man propositions have een ae omT TR Meee eertainig: "cup iaiiatriRap whd wishes|of nature. The left shoulder tn all his | before bad Posi the. mpty tray, and | wood murder Smith, That beats orchestral mu-| | coats has the powerful undue diy The an black of padpearlamount is found edbitual paused in a hoarse Th tones,she which spoke she In her| at-]| two jr {s infamous ertminals in my ‘ Bee " Geatere to sit Sa AneA left shoulder The dead owner minuted No BY a winner up as well. opposite, Seed . eR ? . carnled to, pietnd dx itensaie', waen Dare "Ma ered out, to be make account and mage anti-sweatshop: adi to Lady Wilton." .0iat droppe eens meee : tle doubt;} bulged, andeave his 0 jaw FWhov'was the dead man?" 1 in. | fd how he" had" discovered whe ete mur, | PAS luiiing fourmmhgelor pulled up ae Geren'. of .¢ WAM iam EOE Partens EN smiled ‘guinea, stables lazily, and, belonging IN - I ately swallow every grievance and Injustice and thereby save your bank . :meet ‘ ® danger of m can be averted by a ng to our for|assets. Thia is the work of the h for YT LAW BY CARA REBSE. Keep out of law altogether, or elses keep tn law up to the handle, if you also. © Tesew- | master," " said my astounding friend, Parthe churc We must make ae eiaaes ing had been done in black ee! rataer |inology, "SentimentHorton," {s out ofPartons say,At) and place inyawned. clumsily? ecrim- | ¢5oesee quits be advised | hurriedly-or, ei : aa : : = shall "M ae son)wanted fa is: | "Today eopen 1s Friday. from day to day of the him. cooly. Arrange dry farmers by any means. with Sir wood wheeled round ; oni to confront| In fact|/that Power of public in every at all bable opinion, for this; dry making the farming region There it was was : not noeven reason some of them are very poor dry farm, at Alt all that | | adapted Georme to for the bl growth a meeting f of the sacred interests of sowinter on grain Saturday the sear at} 4,2" Wilson, who, advancing towards| had given, ae of ume) o'clock ut his house, rill you? e ers,u yet they , have in the 2 main been|such blame o Ne him,:lnid-a e broad. crops are the most certain stumpy S hand on hia | ren, ciety , and é h 4 Sir George? : i ‘ith . amore ore houlder. at had been altered at any quite -cisely. successful Sener. Cea AVOID ' A genuine morality such nas Peioe sha Seas have of the newer A { | oe being Oo. a tall, slim, | Condition s eifor men, mete women toe . Must understanding and the death-deal- | book. anti-spitting crusade but an {as better. insist open a oon- pared to met the cold, calm working | { legal process that been on the the © ticonfor many years, just that minute, bankruptcy. || grind y enter the of signs of moral serious a = this establish of social outlawry. , ence of the multiplication against the social order, we must not divide, but unify our moral forces. threatening problern of employment? The state does ee for the eink employed in keeping an army of poli-| tical idlers of both parties unemployed Mr. Wilson bowed awk-|is valet eBPec entered, east be-| face. his hunesty. Today her husurdered, and by his death of theft from a generous Wilson," | wardly. Then, suddenly, he grew Epeael adiae se ceanncttet case yesterd | quiet-looking ay well-she Mr. tens casually. William of the nothingit is o pain-| in now any case, Thi |her husband lieved in band ts convicted I 14 lives Mrs, enne stl a she And, w murderer. fully Ing feet and rushed to Rit atin ie arent yen n ee ton. : Child) labor trovertible to lawless rightenousness a clearer oe the cap of some Incapable| @Mtly, Partens an ke nnenloy. BtoiGs Sick -set | mont, lookin an In sober habilments, which h By the way, Horton, duty t suggested the subdue and I must be up carly |;| certainly rsiRekilling ne. state Cort ae no amily coachman, were duty the overtime and to prevent _damgo to Muswell ed naa Bere a ] T,shall ‘MuswellC Hill-why?" Row Baye sprang to our eee Se some fenders. in terms of life. "We need to deal directly with what hath well been called long range sine. A man may be executed by the stato for slaying another, what shall be the fate of one who goes up and down the land, deliberately inciting the nation to war-if deliberation can be associated with his speech or action- an o may yet succeed in bringing about one of the most disa*trous and cr'minal wars in history, a war between these United States the Empire of Japan? Such a war would mean the slaying of tens and hundreds of thousands and the madman who provoked it would probably be rewarded with the name and style of sdmiral "The captain of the Slocum is imprisoned; tho men who owned the {ll- "The use of moral pressure against the men who take unlawful use of opportunity and privilege and power will be likely to limit the purchasing power of wealth, to give pause to men is difficult "We are not so much in need of what has been called an annual supplement of the decalogua we are in need of the daily application of it. If we would have a truer justice and a "The moral bankruptcy which obtains today is caused by a discrepancy between our moral ausseta our moral lability, If it be true that socla) efficiency be the measure of both religion and morality, then we morally bankrupt; for our clvilization ‘e socially inefficient, wasteful, ruin- of the tt against I sclenceless industrial organizations, proves not the innocence of the cused, but the cunning and the croft, not to say the guilt of their legal de- must limit the value of money, lessen EVIDENCE Froin the and insofar of our : Oll company was denounced for treason by Rabbi Stephen B, Wiso in his sermon in the Free synagogue in West Eighty-first street. Dr. Wise had as his theme the recent exposures made by William R. Hearst and backed by documentary evidence, and he pointed out the menace to the nation in such corruption Dr. Wise also pointed out the need of a moral revival In the republic. He dd: Smith must have been ship and the men who filled the an adroit; there's Want to know why] fated tip reservers with lead instead of | ate " replied ‘Partens." »"You ~ havel toe! ich eal rid ore Sn gt cork ine unmolested. ull > quickness of ¢ the , protessional the big black pearl and told me ‘stories detective , "Every lynching of a negro, wheth- | detective, Horton, at arriving at a con-| s of the luck {t had . brought her-most-|er ar in Alabama or in Tlinois, is at one Giusien er, in connection witi won-|and the same time an indictment of I was pleased at his praise, dis-| derful feminine fripperies ; : that ut- |'¢the Southern politictana P bdo re See ane whose rant - | A eo ee oe a e ~ coe emale Which ee tak ae Ings cause the life of the negro to twisted nia n Ss. with a man a whose came pe habituel at the bell. attitude© fs,! , i z Sirrecisely Georgeat al ring mere ericeine not to put in his| held cheaply too fine po On and it, @X-! an little den algnment, | which has a window like moreover, of those mean, at the ceeding! ba patroning. One may forgive|an alert ove keeping watch on Berkley|and # certain acidity on in the force the bench, who are responsible recog ‘ to me a source of amaze-| feather in ment that my friend should easily | inspector, |read mysteries baffling to theso police, | our !s twenty inches|who are daily educated by " = by biennial]/in the detection of clews, < method The country . up there differs consid- ~lac | acre erably ‘W. Says Annual Supplement to Decalogue Is Needed For National Protection heads of the S members o representatives, which recently ha been given out, are forgeries, the Standard Oil company stands convicted anew of treason to the largest interests of the nation "Treason in times of peace is not less abhorrent than treason in times of war. The purchase and prostitution of servants of the state Is trea- yet formulated a thejis results than ordinary farming] Whether there was any tallor's in the average country name.}ory. Ne doubt of heavy rain-| in time they will There do was not. But a brief examin-|so t he eee poe etree fall, and much more satisfactory than|ation gave me the clew to the dead | setae soucas giceandarad Pnainleek in many regions of heavy rainfall with | man's identity." pearl," 2 | poor soil. personal opinion is I sat up in astonishment. It has! ‘Of course based on quite extensive observation | always been The discovery will be learned many things from those who ave been the pioneers and path-| finders {n the science of dry farming We have now up there in Crook and Weston counties an extensive territory farmers for years, while 160 acres of land. If he crops only | 18, 1908. -<<---$<_____ and acres thousand better ceived to be a more nearly adequate drv farming homestead than the present homestead of 160 acres. An energeltic dry farmer who has a sufficient amount of can care for more one-half of his land each yenr he needs 60 acres. In any event he ought to haye a little pasture and under the average conditions he must have a greater acrevuce than 160 acres to be assured of success, While the legislation we sought passed both the house and senate, {t failed of enactment into law by reason of the insistence of Senator Smoot upon his non-resident provision and the refusal of the house to agree to the same. The legislation, however, still remains upthe speaker's table and may be callindus- on ed up at any time during the coming can be | sesion of congress when the oporbe suc- | tunity offers. stock acre and | cessfully dry farmed in our western country, has been brought under culUvation, the major portion of our intermountain territory wil! still remain as a permanent grazing region interspersed with the Irrigated valleys and the dry form uplands affording within easy access the feed and forage which relleves the stock industry of the dangerous element of chance and makes posible the improvement of our live stock and its finish at home, so that we shall become the producers of a finished article rather than of a raw material, thereby securing the profits which new goes to others. © representative of the people of Wyoming I made every earnest effort last winter to secure what I con- I arslowly, solutio for no great See hiunént by ever been establis a an ee cen saa th all m a e li amar pep ap th the sue their chosen anata a Vashington ee profession or vocation posible susp ae thé sg ity, the great movements university for higher educahe Hbrar- | Catholic 3 ure and science Gethe ete in pg (ete Joundat ian es, : . Be eee ae ren William various departments a ne ee force e considered the finest o Smita" -- * sompleted Partens; Dinan che world. A few years 880 8! ane aps wal 1 tl Pea ilitiont was adopted by congress "yo 7 noi xu found the : = . se f these "But pearl."' ini his The cuit black inr my Sir|allowing as pOaraeninent Ey | collections the by gratuitous all students use an A ate excessiveee Gaorgo's voice Meee . cathe exact mea@an-|Vie tions of learning. Dee oe ee ee ie vhen had s early as 1799 the Catholios Of) Am . ee same eee at wn Catholic university, and w completed, will ord another fleld for ambitious students as all enjoy ae , sO @ of the eeenational wonderful oe eec heetton heraise~ efore mentioned, the George Washash for people2 the cramped in members sone 0 psa seem "toslank: to concekication c . was a suspected ington university. which has for years E a i and oman discharged. h attar They all ee1 spointed Ow roundings. veryvoice. remember well, sir," So often said prese in " ory y ng = I hearshoe ner Penathe a co i faten But we must that not the murbe jumped disheartene | the Old to World were appreciated right hief. He had known} thé afte pe pea é graduated students oF in the pyr! a family , in sation " at the capital poor dederneath ¢ ircumstances ~ my a ly {s nave of the window A great jered man was the artments that at &Sir George and been|on and thief, which is steadily ance of education ins the | because our thoughts wander. the doorstepea unfew friends ; : 1 slowly | Sere ntertaining b ewer Aeh great | thinking Pp no chance of BE bysy slowly] ee oe i. | great republic aca Ther then. and | philosopher blic "As and hastened lihas said 1d | e to me estab-| that} ‘ ft aime creasing the its departments, hasty : na a. ae and bene- e Ke See fi 2 ar: cas Wink OEE rac,ae tol house small, anc half-penny paper. In "ef cre AP lat eh An » but|ed > coal versityee andSich et though is the most the Seuicatince: lish the ean students wi and Canta work always atrons bu | in the always waiting y« toto bébe done, cial Taras We e mus st tryeu to train rect mind's cognize eye I couldb world. ?evidence, seemy windows. nd aoe » not always t i -usatory recognize uletly for at ; a mo-| Convent f i a c t soccupied o Partens accusatory minds into . on quieth jnraMce cial Institute, a no vsratums "a emember. ton- were >» called the parents do n ; Shall that I run over the ° a evidently the ablest educa ad Navy ; smoked ly ple . school ' Emi! pleased . to inPartens at ynth's our aste ! restless, preoce N ¢ ren Jo-| } are entitled ment, a Walon lt | eur I ° remYour nv memory old-If|/the Often cs Army that their children we church. anap and. Mueidaas feel out To ; of them i hia ar elongs caMiehelleosThe newaspar newspapers were me very e@ulo National does Law quiet not sch see:n|day. J The 3 ; © loss5 {s f sixthe mé¢ existence"y dividual , rights, and i that it Is good rent| th for | touch1 habits lahinen tu ou st ang 7 7 w {th }Nature, , and unless loneers In that school, art has) ~ case of cistle of the police, credit of having been ploneers . clear. You had pat4+ all 31) cle and it wasparagraphs se forgotten + theiy >|| {even appa yr to be at rest é «istic ith was and d any number of private in; » ired ah from some their meaning ca utious : for yuld ) Ore us, we » the|then black 's he wehave name direcion, : ‘ and, pear 1 in his jacket Six in in close months ago being touch 16 Lady would stitutions Ps "|| stitution with infon was equtlly indorsed s of Europe, up-to-date , by he for short years| time e coulpments dally. been |e content sre, He open Ww to al. who-.dewith alone, if universities o at. the Wil for a : missed her big black pearl. , equip | are ¢ pictures to glance. briefly; : It They are only thorities. a apr They to th ink that quietowt sstudy regarded th ton vanished ofte * | best : yes quietly to the And I thus‘ we go lace on, "thy ad. bee they offered the fines pearl as finished taken out had of the been safe 9 s an IN] ee s tery z ft of » the sir blac ‘k pea ewel. i Directl) often h,| Sir disposed never George pe give rising above at the club at lunch,] given to this country. or musing is awwaste > 0of time. How the commonplace vantageous ¢ could ; then be Si the o pearl I knew his conditions. George's kind: dressing thatt the mur-| room Sinai by , Sir force I w Sir G yne's | ~'T. » to time in the early zs his5 Ge : : of = this "Mabel one wane hears compla aints ; found But It is probably not too much to clalm it hf ls the ts pe useless i gave rare to him_Fartens's of its one hiding 3 Aeorce i From : force time to «7 | dere least | George on the had table been : anc ] left whilst]/and "John is always awa > dreaeaming,yooke"" lous ¢ or Mave'! : ie, thoughts. 2 h "Certainly, agreed! We shall "Cer: overnment, learn t at. sitting taleas various! <amination showeda : slg ht ? { I shanged tnat Washington slnce, vera An examina into his : evening dress. is freer from tempta tory he over change books : him t he Horton Ie e black pearl. feminine something vate & and My denominationalal wife from is]! ewe a picture | , he tions shoulder and by demoralizing Influences than s o f h the wastes all her thme over ; butler. schools, su-|cut William priva on the Smith, § 5h. be came Te 4 him to he would -rjoyed. 2 sstful mind, | fhe She has some an c established, Mabel femlr bu tainly, . John but it was no t any ' not , nto a be) Gutetly3 before cs ro and " chad } Rormust other ot O F it, cates disturbec with eity er a {n our res country. he P luck ° of the have Wil-| t been asked we hts Sir George have! *lthe the door ; ° to se¢F "ith door and the pearl. "4 . heir perstition sould share about : " the which all other thoug fter est luckwant the & civil 2 war that bave {lable it it. gone could! In I off die tn? Te a's s OG the ,.¢ypations with to know : which of wine are avallable just then] jonas sir | until after .dible,"" in going wit exclaimed = : Sir ; Repel S 5 {med awe in agers be itt a that ‘: Washington j incredible, eaaie ct the bust- bien banished for was i District of Columbia{ are o f such char; -~| be claimer Omen q Xe | Household leat Pe F ctee 2 4s re Ney caocrnatetrs being risa dutte es tat. what eing luck we've pre: how pp paid pictures js aston ishin sg ee tojrecelved, rece Bacruets a = 4 add "Il anything {¢|and ness for which they are would nee inutes.|Snippy was with Smith wail Hotgrave, eZ some5 any -& m 100 minutes sense an Athens e dishey gavel OR wood oyment, aa by with ‘xcellent five Pre ~|ous years, and how and acter andra crimin Sas | easily-tt they ¢ oral ties eh aie |iike everything v ‘ else, blic character." eS ) madeschools . 5 Individual culture that makes , one =| BEryars } r.. Enjoy: ' loving eyes, they tired him under|with an excelle were |He oth then returned xtent. Hence, vay is mere. if one 1s disp . with Smith nt of crime," |} yancement. se If-indul- | jooked to com yle 1d a him OORES his steps 1 at with The and e retir public ' e wine = honest " mer"Opportunity Is that way great ‘e| exte pare is 1's the an parent invoice ace . war of mind,|some ¢ from office, } the Horton . win message which the age clause the artist strove a eae 1 1 reconstruct on a be reckless rhich gives no peace th®|among 1 vith the or women.|said Opps profil delivery the first to bebe recognized ¢ he © finds Partens note ' gence, fe 08 Shal be-|} which a g 5 un as. g by We to a lot were all of y » success. meant blind | old chants won But|to aie w ey t put on canvas. : ecelve thelr JUSt) a © in the were pocket] long ewe tittle ‘S ° 2 eno to true encouragement » ai awsy |) proper eh? ¢ Come. Heved ant here basis and ake because the pot/ tnvoice to receive scene' of and Yo The be cannot inwornthe rmit re x lead of Altwood goodto sew , Saturday,> , i 3 ft eh is ne to had appropriations enjoy beauty. V1 the for The th®}rhe ® fact that love eh?| risk 0 of being rainst with in those Smith Berkley of mis sunder-|to that are 5 engage d to permit stre¢set. eyen at the risk he witl ha ; ket. Share st o of Columbia. n of usg&us all e was with that}|ness and: una ble| uw , a tweed Theasult room x beauty > is latent iin , until] The shaped | luck most lear? nmorning in more out of hereis elevating y the waray<villain-|‘to.go e loyment employr : is oddly e must protest agains a theeR Y pearl In {the thejac room because o ft the]© District allelograms have of Ot tens may ; ria keep i cooking: hintn wait be developed ; i C ienced men of, the whole| out' of ithe inasmuch h 1 as it is two parallelograms| (0), no time to associate with that aT ve been|ed and exper class. the co pcre é cunt view she book: of life which ita tak inter advo- | It The fact a adict-what ine oy wou Nature the ssed.|} future we must country try,|/at were right brought angles, to the capitz A curtain could oir ange ceaseles No one can predic Bs ous. welens I'm activity going to write cates the to PaIriOws : when of a the pictures, pearl to know | as an 1 the ; cole to <3 pre put|drawn at the aynoan: se get See a ee raise the ‘ standard n rte 2 of the] > mittee." or education who . ought Into ome," will be two I answered. in Washington, iia 1e ne -{ rou ne thoughts, hac Even re o and people eo look w one at a "Yes a safe "The 1} irty public schools. new !aside come worrying There were many Pat-| nall writing F ta"rey 5 iSasr ay )l its wonderful ree oles re cono camp z bedstad then Bet St view and Excuse shor 1@ "i in and a sma ne meé,|e he the » pi padding s on the ag y | P > nial oe schools G a Seven-thirty. h a quiet mind #8V0} : ith the dif‘hese hiding were place..¥ , connected relics of can liv multiply the Jezreel itiplying. Iden | ochial tinually The city3 Is growhatter se share scan SH just sits there and | her GR w COP UTIM Glee A lies, Reauligs 7 are head does a and bacnoniaie t was & residence nothing; sudde thoughts ynce sald an ex-|°Ur minds p Bee. Catholic olan, wien churches if nil 0 recollect, of tt Sir ing emselves-for -- more bea beauty | George was chief of staff. Fi the «sult. to Batt Sir George] ha with y re ee uently there was for a timé} pither gpres temporary C a cole arterwa Tas, Woy OES care or tne w riter anent, But the is gift, ara od's 2 ift neat 1 pesienced cles nieplanning anit op osition for free schools. Th®| steadily te ach us more used the writing table frequently big schemes 7 iooesDivine GOVERNOR r te . Nature to ‘than becoming more agreeable. It HUGHES «we could went =r there tn nto look foror tite » Tavlos fBi hte Sai ienaenteat new the head public 7 w yg HD schools,| AND THE PEOPLE would { the sound soclety like an |‘ Aladdin Gad. Partens, how do eg Sa atory wrwise':° . by we shall} adv leaving ere Paver C died Sm sment 0 i for ; out and pride ae the arvat! advance know otherwisef thelB y eaning, to give the enue eee oe ere ate -schemes ' his?' oom cried : and Sir xcreened inated her-* George, even his if| om e) reo ‘observation : rasp ~e, some resulted of he black pearl tne in the highest més , p0s-| i have come In that had just normine that oute to Cae ashington room as th uit. The clerk his bushy lifted nearly hair , into ever his Its become place, : _ resulte real a lovers ee of Na-| st lard * aie George that have since Dein ane experience belng f maintained s looked probable or course the § invoice last ton years and established blshed :schools sible we He Some of us can never get away Sere stanc . ere the papers of his writing special) Partens coolly, We hava pable and 7 iv. old private schools that were) a ‘Tammany state senator, | eve ItTA wasErne .d te ; for young ladies especially. in spite of long pq the » fact tte under er- | as N18) ore have been supplanted that‘ ac quiet!» ¢,.rom the } influence; of p towns, by cones personal Grady, 3 had ' not a) Per-/as graspec : ne -ae ain yt alen | Sir. the 2 Inner acket not Reer | _poc cetroom« wahis Georg: that~ nIn, the ; h ce we were eae pasential bred in the busy in @ ll work zzled as sported me = as watsaying« in a campaign city | tweed chane The : thing ‘ery sense oO breath.} ere and thought is essen his valetJa busted establishe |! that rep are up to date p in every 2 that 1 puzz on tn inserting the Vv reason Her one idea) ang feel mores studs an shes ( "puts were a Altwood's hat Governor dela at home e js not Hughe a Th 4 a there 2 than|h was the that {Involves word have until if grown organization. bus »vening today the in jacket there property clothes, rue from i s Sir involved George| 2 dollars ; in solitary speech, ane that places. G sents ‘Yhose ‘A0ywho Z% really above| why he ipment atte Ane { work to the was du ne th.tolddid not value something of. two; b him,-of ; a aalen forton, his! pimself on a moral of |} it]eity in the Union that a Nature are(indeed'vto pedestal far above "besxenvied: Smith anj arn a When equip J te and, thon invologsrand ete you, oy a found | thing like the advantagespresents then ss nual : labor-some le." that Wash- | hundred _thousand OutWArC ‘ enor mie Saab be hier restfdlness and waa to dollars, discover ae these ek Altwood felt 111] consat sald, ington does for a universal liberal edu{In one of those absurd| the people. began break with for half ot Aty, such as writing letters, COP) Mr. Grady, a dozen | with pupils tle anc Se de Bent after Smith's Ade to her thelr sorrows. zt Sie Those not "‘Deep call-) ats of generosity: informed as to the] BOY eal ara who now ‘You'd better have have from one hundred and aise a beo eT rarded as com-| aaigh , ue With SO ites Smith told me that her SS ing documents, >ert et leSY know) at tweed sult, Smith. in thes€)eth unto Shan't deep advanced condition of educa-| fifty to two hundred, who represent wear for them 1d willt hardly a f »hrase that be in. regarded { Smith f e spect: a left, carryin the | dismissal y tng. the | 4! s most \}twood peop by "the t were again i people form Sn un- | Pres he | husband and IESE of} full ' of special r mean : iedalways plimentary the suit| » "is would tional affairs in Wa‘ashington } here be the finest _ families ‘ is Te & minutes 5 at laces ifterwards ¢. public from every 7 = ir} Alitwood part o ‘ 1 ‘ woaahioninn ante demance 1 telson rnor to be] Hughes at sult, plac en friendly. : at the . 4 number ai o Y t It was act °lthe | astoundejed that country. Gove raped @ : ae e od which s ee j ies 1 tenia. wales tKOuGht rds that in| eorge , on the grou : nervous aerivale = : ‘ bres yssible eae vate : during pie earl t ‘hie " schools, z seminaries, sufferer. nate on a moral col-|nopolitan, to t he eh Ca os a : petty prejudices and pores | derives Se hae > lps a of fairin | Deenad him, 2 to and acquire 8 anu ms the E power LYIDE Fee iivacntieg ch cpavalinow Py room. nh he distine er stinct- ple, half 40 of the ot ogo e forgotten and r plain, honest, the » ordinary, or ¥ P ee refused an and| j|/when toae ps offered activity when : may §Smith be J @ a i n c e aa | anon "it Therefore, saver | oni condition. to for a oother few : moments The], st than prosperous conc of health, ople seem to drift immediatean a atime, taking it out of the) ayiding people. . young people we can withdraw from some | sate romamnened who abho1 eeacaras a= It of dise ao)ase Be : of 5 idleness" was . gon Bauer he ly panee Peer arins s an ob- rbeateacnace from Europe and : ya! becomes> ano rh form of activity ss, and baa nlice that we imagine event rllec ‘nin Bu must] edu-|jy into broader views and higher ame nara alarmed, the ‘ mips Perdaad Of course, ne ‘calle wir 1 0 js eh 6® t res: AltSv arial centers from the Untted States] wit™ + ice-track the "gospe Re ne TOry eeyr Se ei ad . ge [dlers are pitions, = as : thr P ayesa did t not ' care to ec which AG ad by naturally ourselves, t v purchase tends and wie think, to Ree or have of "co! r ¢ been brought BO ' in era ¢ every ethan to Washington Gtocee a youn and lot pudined divesvand sential |creater to appreciation aint commun A yy The Jeorge ur ownry third ‘ study, ol party our . minds for fear hie secret will 3 grow vy _deepe r, sh are now engaged hearing ten times in teaching a larger} to my knowledge, | ilies peg, country and its {nnumerable ~oyernor Hughes and is on a in6 known iA ito remarkable, Par-| number of resident and non-resident comparable resources. every human to"be being \y> | SeaureeS ‘ 5 | ee Saree 5 haty.mMy +: 0p ; ed the mys-|not have he Continent and t advantages that} sire to avail themselves of these ad- founc who cumber the It is sometimes a good thing to "look | torton. The greatest evils of life No doubt Gove above the kind of] ground and will only, "This story i% dee ill this deductive pupils than tn another place in the ur ators.of | om, at ke, fo, think of oven avepvaas {their alleuigtans: and Sit George have]. | moral a tar avons the Kind of | ®9AM but Ce5 lo ae subjects ae they really ae Serie stress 0 i tireamstances, "sold "edt! mut F losopicing. 8.) VADER BIA: 3 raat entirely bana} | people pedestal inority gs they effect their own self, Mntea havestatee"been opened aicos Ne defeat the Governor; Young inladles, somitt"| AO RANERSS of Sores converss se the average British jury,| aries cee 1" JURY FAILS bosses depend t find. on election TO CLEAR ctraordinary lack of appre-!),.-< within MYSTERY the last ten yearshie s aia g the world this e@ jn are kind hold good, bear his the min ane he truth ee man viz: burden, That every ut is utmost own own salvation, and do Pan the talents entrusted ve eromn absolutely no ee peer onsibility. Our re influenced ers . enyironment, "follow and the & yards, upwar ai bY vill | 34 must hls] with There individual1] and a vn own shall ¥ ere aie! learn at home raceed fF0IM | to our our own see on good self ae aside,|or seal motives) - have Lge ee apoutthe the mainnolsemelody of themayorchbe jife Oo put ea"ach wards . | Rut we mustg » that leads onwé But v : leam"™ tha -s wnen | place apart: his gleam comes W! Poo This gies lay and may and ana SN absolutely he ont We even learn to see that, | hie |{, working mayfeverishly. the eee oe both charac-|+yjose heredity and] ny us mut} work Work peauty gt boring Sir George, Stalag his and 1 iste n truth h for and and it. in all that of | See Yes Lhecard. a decorous Sr ae mer sare slacially eecour qulet| these] T said, upon ||picion pie hia! felloffects 7 )seonult onnect led | "I know ' in-| he the but bosses the aay 5 will ae rest. Sus-| To ae ot restrict BEN ocracy Bees Smith. usearched;\the. He was search-|{ndust were ry Pol and ins hancmolic was e thoP police LENSE Chat: m with th valet was also pracee¢ a za) Beau ' iwith no: results of least expecsoted, contai -e or from the lips lr ridor csi fruit avout our|in o1 the ‘ , Ws op our own; not like cansescience ripen av . flash out having corridor from left the Drop Pe ne a a é . ‘ r e nissec Another'. od Back or-from the ee hy aie to them from through & g00% years of . Ce ey \ ee eweut and paln, : hich, t fluences pf INNatur at} es - jum cable inte ‘Jone struggle these |without long struggle send nonone ‘ aid: e'er oes i Danae L e r i jvidual, oe elp the ind .a for oul . = é rttain ; work to he from Quict's|tweea are intended fc jac oa whnward $ look as ™X hich are in . ; se might| The dow i -Lowell, | influences, - W » not st due A due to chance, ~ blissful seat. clover {nds help and ate jatent if our m 1 non-ex be ag well ae with find, : : ©: we of the shop "was nearly in-] day, that the great palo er abate! we had more imputedand basemoreones. We tolerable to Partens. Sir George's pri-|neaple take exactly Hughe: tolervate opinions SE aT nest aih of Partens {s not print-| Gang as Governor become TyTwo could room. taxed to cbt' ther a1 searched vainterm at work{ pain swear to his no t Smith ‘ wae 7 dis- ee Hee invention. ee ‘ans means - in- lace x 1 He 3 said. | dustries: o extra which appearsit to dead be be attribute eRe man was their ould most refuse lip ofa Knife mine the Boi It had been Ee eed ion ar pe oe oe searched Altwood's| leant othe uncut} u era ec" for which orThat work "overtim tha js extra pay, s $s eanized labor demant : Be a can times to e blac ae pe ale ar preferable a ee aD Mane asin Me shape) ie ha time, ha Dees ater Daa the to light sewn ownin|‘ pene o results of to theAmerican Sir George's Democratic alee pay Beste 5 the (Eofe tho ce armed with a warrant. Ser p ; - the fact | |hidden gee emcee trunk, The atip = eta. cleansed inclasp-knife. ia e FAS a zed labor 1s aw: Organiz senublican victory : that Repub av-rolls on full time Pay-ro as the Dem-| aia hampeT with afatinguished : . TaeOurs da it exactly 5 That, 5!sing. ? 1] be fitte sufficent evidence, even| think, will be suf for a Britis ry. ey "But if it had not beene for ‘our 8US-| you knife]Sea ‘lew of picion of Altwood, cle rf Ithesaid. r beenthe useless." tip would eb es i Par- | saree * icion," said Pa t See Te ea area tnite sure.' i rel George Wilton, I am glad to add, Sir Georg Mrs. William granten annaity a to Mrs Sm . or 7 the z offered reason in the tha t city the s advantages of Washington {the thorough equipmentin women for eny sphere of life for young| su- are . . Kenosha,surrounds Wis, Oct.the 17-The deepest {dentity of the mystery perior to those of any other place in| .,4 the portions of mutilated «ne world. The climate, non-commer- | ody were found in a whose thicket soutb of cial and healthful conditions, magniftKenosha and the Inquest held by Core, {cent musical parks, libraries, Andree failed to bring out any ena resourcesscientific, make it literary possi- | omer Revaloweuta It. was at drat : er} new o. women under ble prop for - yoyoung in a}thought poseible that the jance to achieve more here In guidance there | those of a Zi Zton City) man time brief ra ajge, than they could anyw nothing of the soccelal .ad' to say antages which are optional 1 an a which & rccndieg people of » contacty w ‘th peor ee ‘culture. ean be said of the educa- | ca £ tlon heof same boys and young men, No other but this was : rema ins were long missing proved untrue. © jury 4 ' find n that the brought in a been verdict found in the thicke re a ee nd 1 olding tha time, place an but holding manner o ai t identity 26 «6©man, (to the members of the See ed Jury. - ow |