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The Herington Times from Herington, Kansas • Page 6

The Herington Times from Herington, Kansas • Page 6

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Herington, Kansas
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Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

and I told pa to come on, 'cause Vessu- THE HEBINGTON TIMES f. vious was going to erupt. KANSAS STATE NEWS. THE LIFE- A. 1L CZLL1 i EO Publishers.

Pa came on the just as he was, and then the worst happened. I think the hippo went under water when he KFRINGTON KANSAS. found the sneeze was coming, for just as pa got to the tank th3 water flew into SAVER By ALEXANDER BLACK (Author of "Kiss America." "Tha Girl and the Guirdsman," Etc.) PECK'S BAD BOY WITH THE CIRCUS 4 Ce, but you never saw such a change in a lion. The crowd of visitors were right near his cage, when he sniffed, and when he got the snuff into him. he began to heave his sides like a man who is preparing to sneeze, caught his breath a few times, and let out a sneeze that sounded like the explosion of an automobile tire.

It threw cut feed all over the audience, and everybody ran away, yelling that the lion had busted. He kept on sneezing, and looking so astounded, as though he couldn't make out what had got into him. Pa heard the commotion and came running up to the air like a torpedo had exploded un der a battleship, and the hippo had London ir.otor bus drivers who sneezed all right and pa and the audi avoid accidents for a week receive a (Copyright, imo, by JoMph it. Bowies.) ence which had followed him were bonu3. Tliey are fined for accidents.

Sometimes he sat on a pine chair, drenched and deafened by the explosion. The hippo had blown the water all out By HON. GEORGE W. PECK Author of "Peck's Bad Boy Abroad." Etc. Senator La Follette, of 'Wisconsin, is one of the closest of Shake-peare in the senate and the only sometimes in the sand, sometimes on the edge of the life-boat.

He was tall, sqnare-shouldered, very brown from of his tank, and he lay at the bottom, on his side, sneezing little sneezes not the summer sun. Dressed in a fash vegetarian in that body. louder than the report of a six-pound cannon, and panting for breath. Then. ion resembling the running rig of an athlete, his bronzed skin seemed Consul Kanna, in Monterey, Me fco, reports a good demand for Amer he raised his head, got up on his feet, and opened his mouth like a gash cut In a steer by a cow catcher of an engine.

statue-like in the beach throng. His ican musical instruments of the teeth shone extremely white in a the cage to find out what ailed the lion. After I had gone around to the other cages and put snuil in all of them, I came up to the lion's cage. The lion had stopped sneezing and was roaring and jumping up and down, with his mouth open, trying to catch his breath, like a man who has taken too big a dose of fresh horse-radish. Pa said: "What you been doing to Shadrack?" cheaper variety, except pianos.

Higli Crade pianos are easy to sell there. The Bad Boy Feeds the Menagerie Scotch Snuff Pa Gets Mauled by the Sneezing" Animals Pa Takes a Midnight Bide on a Mule to Escape Punishment. and he yawned, and I guess he got the lockjaw, 'cause he kept his mouth open When they reached them with the boat he was almost in shallow water and was disposed to scorn their help. But they helped him with his burden, and presently the girl from Georgia was in her room with an embarrassing number of nurses. Krainer lay prone on the hot sand, breathing heavily and telling them to let him alone.

In the evening she sent word that she wanted to see him. Miss Convell went up with him, and he found her looking as he would have thought a princess ought to look, if princesses wore crimson kimonos. "You saved my life, and I am very, very grateful," she said, putting oat her hand. Krainer had never had any romance. He took the hand and kissed it.

"It was my fault," he said. "Not one bit," she rebuked him. "It was all' mine. What could you have done that you didn't do?" "I could have refused to let you go so far." "But I should have gone anyway. Besides you did refuse.

And I want you to forgive me." Krainer stood there awkwardly. "I'll do anything you say except let you go so far again." They all laughed finally and Krainer went back to the hotel office and tried to read one of the papers. He found it quite impossible. The girl from Georgia had begun to fill the whole of Krainer's imagination. He found himself tnmking of her when he a-soke in the morning.

He guessed that this was love. He looked at the sea and dreamed new dreams. He and the sea had a new smooth face browned to the roots of his yellow hair. The bathers, men and women, circled about him in the free attire of an American seaside re Fair Keliroary Business. The independent oil refineries of Kansas are doing business right along The Uncle Sam company sold 1,740 barrels of oil and 13tJ barrels of gasoline in Kansas last month.

The Paola refinery sold 054 barrels of oil and 50 barrels of gasoline. The Superior refinery sold 611 barrels of oil and G9 of gasoline. The. Webster sold 208 barrels of oil. This made a total of 3.213 barrels of oil and 275 barrels of gasoline.

The sales to other states are not included here. The figures were given out by the state oil inspector, who only has jurisdiction over oil and gasoline sold for consumption within the state. A ronnd hoc I a Woodchook. Dr. F.

H. Snow official' has decided that there are ground hogs iu Kansas. He also decided that a ground hog and a woodchuch are one and the same. A farmer took an animal to Lawrence to have it classified. Afttr about half the town had declared it a woodchuck and the other half a ground hog.

Dr. Snow was appea'ed to. He took one clay to look the nutter up and then declared that both were right because the two names wore: used to designate the same animal. In the United Slates are 230,000 acres of peanut land and 170,000 pea-mitters. Three hundred million all the afternoon, to get the air, like a soprano singer in a choir, who has been fed a cayenne pepper lozenger by the tenor, just before she gets up to sing: sort.

He was the life-saver. He had torn several exhausted bath Well. I spose I have done It, now, and it would not surprise me to be killed and pounds of peanuts, worth $11,000,000, I told pa I had woke Shadrack up, and are produced here every year. fed to wild animals. The manager of ers from the clutch of the undertow, usually without much effort.

It seemed that he knew the Atlantic very that in about a minute he would find that the whole animal kingdom had got a the show was talking to pa and me, be "Hie island on which Eddystone fore we left New York, about the condi bellyful, and would join in the chorus well. One day Miss Convell, of Troy, tion of the show. Its finances were all balled up on account of settling with Pa tried to soothe the lion by going up to the cage and stroking his mane, but the lion looked cross-eyed and stopped stopped to speak to him, as she had several times before. This time she lighthouse stands is the smallest inhabited island in the world. At low "water it is only SO feet in diameter mud at high water the base of the lighthouse, which has a diameter of only a little over 23 feet, completely covered by water.

people who pretended to be injured when the tent blew down atPoughkeep-sie, and the hands and performers are prancing and gave a sneeze right at pa, LaJ her a tall blonde girl with which blew pa clear across the tent to extraordinary eyes, as blue as his kicking because we are a month behind where the sacred cow had just got hers, own, though they were wider and without hesitation. on salaries, and they get drunk when When the stuff began to work on that cow it was simply scandalous, 'cause ever any jay will buy for them. Every Miss Convell introduced her compan body gives passes to everybody that she bellowed and cried and sneezed all at once, and pawed pa. He got up and "A Charge to Keep, I Have." We went around and inspected the sneezing animals, with the manager, and he complimented me by saying I had saved the show from becoming an aggregation of stuffed animals, only fit for a taxidermist studio, and made every animal show that he had ginger in him. He wanted me to try my snuff cure on the performers and freaks, 'cause they were getting to be dead ones.

Well, before the day was over at Wilmington, pa was scared worse than he ever was in all his life before. The state of Delaware is the only state that punishes criminals by tying them up and whipping them on the bare back with a cat-'o-nine-talls, and all our men had been warned to be good while they were in Delaware, 'cause if they committed any crime there was no power on earth that could save them from being publicly horsewhipped. Pa himself impressed it on the men to look out that they didn't get into any trouble. Gee, but the fear of a public whipping makes men good. I ion as Miss Rayce, of Georgia.

Krain-er gave his short nod, a nod a trifle shorter than usual, for Miss Rayce had wants to get In the show, so the box office man has a sinecure, and people told me I was overdoing this waking up It is admitted in the military world that Turkey's army is gradually assuming strength and efficiency to such an extent that, as an ally to one of the larger powers, or independently, he will soon prove a formidable foe. Turkey's military progress is mainly due to German influence. chase us from town to town for money act on the anlmais. for board, and hay, and everything. All through New Jersey we showed to By that time the cage of hyenas began to sneeze a quartette, and fight each other, and the atmosphere about their startled him.

She was very beautiful, he thought, not one of those merely pretty girls such a3 you see pictures of in the summer resort columns. He did not know that Miss Rayce had asked her friend about him. Was he claim agents and creditors, and didn't bond. They each had held Paola Rayce. One night she let him walk with her a college fellow earning his next term's over to the rustic pavilion that overlooked the beach.

There was a moon Its Forty-First Anniversary. Gov. Hoch was among the gue.ts of honor at a banquet heid at the Kansas State Normal school on the anniversary of the opening of the i't-situation which took place 11 yearv ago. Among the other guests of the alumni association which gave the banquet were Mrs. George who attended the school on its opening day, and Miss Helen Plumb, a sister of the late Senator P.

B. Plumb, who graduated in the first class that the school turned out. wherewithal? Evidently yes, though Mis3 Convell had not asked. "He's and he took her hand and kissed it again. But he did not tell her that he loved her.

He put that off, and It is estimated that 10,000 Russians of all ages and ranks have taken refuge in Switzerland during the past year as a resuit of the unsettled state of affairs in their own country. Among these are members of the Rus ian aristocracy, who have lost their fortunes during the strikes, and arc cow obliged to work for their living. several times a hero," she said to her friend from Georgia. The next day Miss Rayce spoke to hH 1 ll ft Twenty years ago some hold-up men him. Kraiper talked much better than the next day a young man came, a slender young man with eye-g'asses, who was not quite her height, and she walked with him at the hour she usually bathed.

from New York robbed a bank in Dela ware, and were caught, and given 50 lashes apiece on the bare back, by a big usual. He rather surprised himself. He had never met anyone who had seemed so delightful to talk with. Miss Rayce did not appear to be in a hurry to go into the water. negro, and there has never been a bur It was an hour of fury for Krainer glary in Delaware since.

We though who wondered how long the intruder would stay. we would play a joke on pa, so the man "It is so cold," was her comment, ager told pa that constables were look The next afternoon she introduced ing for him to arrest him for cruelty to Out of 4,217 arrivals of ail classses vessels from foreign ports at New TYork last year the American flag flew ver 760 ships. According to figures fTiven out at the barge office recently, 47S of the 7ti0 vessels were steam powered, six brigs and 246 schooners among the sailing vessels. Ia this time there were 2,844 steamships under foreign flags entered at the custom icuse, of which 1,355 were British nd 521 German. animals, for kicking a camel in the stomach, and hitting the camel with an Arnold Wants a Deit.

Frank Wilson, trustee of Ohio township, Ness county, has filed a petition with the state board of railroad commissioners, asking that the Missouri Pacific Railway company be instructed to erect a depot and keep an agent in. Arnold. Attached to the petition is a. statement showing that during the year 1905 the railroad company transacted business amounting to $10,300 from Arnold. Start for nrses.

At the last meeting of the board iron bar, and that if pa didn't want to be publicly horsewhipped on the bare the young man to Krainer, and Krain-er listened sullenly while the young man paid tribute to his skill and courage. After dinner he learned how it was. This was the man. They were to be married in the fall sometime. He was very rich.

This sort cf thing has happened a great many times; but Krainer did back he better skip out for Washington D. C. where we would show in a couDle She thought she liked the sun and sand better. Meanwhile she made a remarkably pretty picture. Krainer had hard work keeping his eyes on the dead line just within the floats.

On the third day she asked him about himself, and he told her how he worked on the beach patrol during the winter, and watched the dead line in the summer. She seemed immensely interested when he told her about the wrecks, and the rockets, and the lifeboats. She gave a little shiver at the thought of how cold it must be in win of days, and wait for us. Pa was so frightened he couldn't get supper, and everybody talked about cats cf nine tails, and how prisoners were cut to pieces, and every time pa saw a jay with a slouch hat he thought it The Lion Sneezed and Blew Pa Clear Across the Tent. not know much of the world.

He knew the beach and the ocean and his "game." These he could understand. This new tragedy Lit him between the eyes. was a constable after him. After dark he put on an old suit of clothes and said ter with the deserted shore fringed Frederick de Martens, who was one the Russian commissioners at Portsmouth, has just resigned the professorship of international law in the University of St Petersburg, which he lias held for many years. Prof, da JJartens is a member of The Hague court, is one of the most eminent authorities on international law, and has served as an arbitrator in the settlement of a large number of important controversies.

he was going to Washington. They told of regents of the university, it was decided to establish a training school fo nurses at the new hospital in Kansas City. A principal was and the general rules for the acceptance of nu.H:es were promulgated. In general, no candidate will be received under 21 years of age, or, who has not a three years' high school education. She had the young man with her when she said good-by to him.

She him if he went to take a train he would sureiy ce arresiea at tne depot, so pa with ice, and did not make her plunge until Miss Convell was coming out. It appeared that she could swim. Krainer told her she va3 built for a swimmer. But he warned her about the undertow. "What is the undertow?" she asked put a saddle on one of the mules, and rode out of town rode all night, and all the next day he bought oats of farmers to be delivered at Wilmington for himi "It's the devil part of the water," the circus.

Finally he got out of Delaware, and the next day the farmers came cage was full of hair and language that would be much like cussing if it could be translated into English. Pa tried to quiet the crowd and silence the hyenas by taking an iron bar and mauling them, but the hyenas just backed up against the rear of the cage and howled and sneezed at pa. and dared him to ccme on. One of them caught him by the shirt sleeve and tore pa's shirt off and eat it Pa was a sight, with no shirt on, and he ought to have gone to the dressing room and slicked, but just then the camels and the giraffes, who had inhaled their snuff, began to sneeze and beg to be killed, and pa had to go over there and quiet them. A camel is the solemcest looking beast on earth when he tries to be good natured.

but when he is sick and he said. asked him to accept a token of her gratitude and so on. It was a little silver locket. After she had gone he dropped it in the sand, and drove it under with his heel, then spent a lonj time searching for it, finding it at last When the gray days came Krainei began his winter patrol. Thera came a day early in November when he took out one of the smail fishing boats from the cove.

He did not look at the sky until he began to lift the little sail. It was a savage in with the oats, but the show was gone Ke suspected that she had been dis and they won't do a thing to pa if he take in money enough to buy meat for the animals. He said the animals had all taken cold, and lay around dormant, md didn't take any interest in the business, and the manager 'told pa he must think of something to wake the animals up. Pa said he would leave it to me to rake 'em up, and get some ginger into them. I told pa if I had five dollars to 6pend I could make every animal jump like a box car.

Pa gave me the money, and I went and bought five pounds of Scotch snuff, and divided it up into ounce packages, and started during the after-Eoon performance at Wilmington, DeL, to wake up the animai3. There is something peculiar about animals, if you try to give them anything that they think you want them to take, you can't drive it down them with a pile driver, but if you try to hide something where they can reach it, they watch yon out of one eye, and when you go away they look at you as much as to ever shows up in Delaware again. Strengthen Farjners' Institute. A largely attended- farmers' institute was held at Lawrence. Besides several local addresses, Prof.

J. H. Miller, a conductor of farmers' institutes in Kansas, and Prof. Ten Eyke, of Manhattan, made addresses. It was determined after the meeting to strengthen the farmers' institute which has been in existence for the appointed when he told her that he was not a college man, though she continued to talk to him every day.

No South American country has made such strides in every respect in recent years as the Argentine republic. For the first nine months of 1905 Imports were $155,651,400 and exports $247,110, 133, showing an increase of Imports of 16,889,197, and of exports of J43.917.214, over the same period for the previous year. This enormous export trade was substantially all agricultural and pastoral, while the imports were miscellaneous. Pa met us at ths depot in Washington but he was ever so changed from his long ride and anxiety over the possi and when he came to the hop at the hotel, as he sometimes did under the bility of being arrested and pilloried, and lambasted by a negro in Delaware. easy privileged life of the place, she came up and spoke to him, making it He said to me, with a trembling voice: day, quite the wrong day for fishing.

The sea had an ugly slate-green kssness. The wind swung like a scythe. 'Hennery, this 'ere show business is too mad, and full of snuff, he is a fiend. One quite comfortable for him to ask her to dance. such camel is enough for a man to handle, but when 14 camels are all She told Miss Convell that he was a peach" of a dancer, and awfully hand much for your pa.

I would rather be a Mormon, in Utah, with 40 wives, and several hundred children, and long whiskers. I am a changed man, Hennery, and afraid of my shadow." sneezing at once, and trying to locate tha some in hi3 "Tux." person that is responsible for their Presently it began to be true that past ten years. A U'nr IJeail. Brig. Gen.

James Ketner died at at Junction City of la grippe and old age. He was C8 years old. He fought through the civil war with distinction. When the war broke out Ketner was practicing law in Leaveu-worth. He was prominent in Kansus democratic for years and onre Wiis offered the nomination for gov- srnor.

He threw himself at the sea as she had thrown herselftS the morning cf that amazing swim, and he went back to that day while the wind drove him over the slate-green, foam-flecked waste. The sea squirmed and frothed, and spat into the boat. He did not care. At last the Kook lay far behind him and the 'angry Atlantic slipped aui shouldered the wet beat until Krainer Krainer's day did not begin until he saw her coming down the beach. This was generally about four o'clock.

WASH IN RUNNING WATER. Among the wedding presents sent to Hiss Alice Roosevelt was one from Abilene, Kan. Charles Parker made a tiny merry-go-round of the latest design, and decorated in white and gold, with a little gold-plated engine to propel the machinery. The horses are only two inches long, but are perfect Jn every particular, and flaxen-haired dolls are the passengers. The toy will run as smoothly as any crry-us-all or carnival features, and was sent to Sliss Alice with Mr.

Tarker's Public Drinking Places in Buenos Ayres Kust Cleanse Glasses That Way. Once she appeared in the morning just after he went on duty. No one else was bathing and she challenged him to go out with her. knew that he must make a choice He was astonished when she dove then and there. If he went on, th-2 through the breakers and started to swim straight seaward.

"I've always wanted to do it," she ooat nrst scon nil. v.ater was cnura-ing about his boots. There was no certainty that he could go Go back? To what? said. "Only a little way," he warned her "They do some things better in Buenoa Ayres than we do in this country," said a former Milwaukee man, who has spent many years in Argentina. "It may be considered a small matter by some, and yet one ironclad regulation down there always struck me as eminently sound a regulation providing that all glasses and putlic drinking places shall be washed in running water.

The idea is tint bv tnPm jn warr tijt over his shoulder. There was a faint sound above the noise of wind and water. He ee-til .1 But she kopt on la a straight line beycid the floats, laughing, tossing Lead. the sp'-av frr The vitality and the influence of the Jews are one cf the marvels of the modern age. Persecuted almost everywhere, except in England and the XJnited States, they still keep up their Identity all over the and in numbers.

Without a gom-rceat any sort, and without a single person to speak for them, collectively and officially, they wield a powerful influence in nearly every government. Even Russia, through the czar and Premier Witte. is obliged to defer to the views of the Jewish bankers and merchants. used o.ei-aud o.t: there Is a good chanca for the transmission cf disease. Inspec see tr.e D.ac:i ncr.e cr cn ocean Iit.pt bo'Ti'l.

He in the path. VCeii, that would be ciii But they- would net run him dcrn. The bow cicared him by a few yards, though he his craft defiaat'y athwart the course. He looked up at the mil 1 saw figures here and there, r.ear the stern a scarlet hat that somehow associated itself with a curious crv. He her shining Lair.

"Far casub'" ae said then, in his aUtCntative tone, swimming bsyond her and crossing hsr path. "It is a hard pull getting back." She cut obliquely past bim with an excited laugh until he caught up again and put out his hand. Is the Pri.e f'hnreh Town. The town of Willis claims distinction because its inhabitants believe it has the greatest er cent of church membership, according to population of any town in existence. There are oaly seven persons in tewn who are not on the roil 0r some church.

Willis-claims a population of -JO-). Limiiei! Over Governor Mead, ox Washington vi'r iteJ with Superintendf-nt E. E. Marshall, of the reformatory t.t Hutchinson and locking over the institution with the view of getting facts which may be used in the construction of a reformatory in Washington A Hiu Usk Flovr. One of the largest gas in tli3 worid has been struck southwest of Tyro.

The flow test shows 3 million cubic feet for 2-5 hours. The oluma of gas from an Vi-lnch pipe run be seen for IZ feef in the air. The can be heard far miles. "Ycu must go back," he commanded. She half turned but continued swim-! av a waving bndkerchief and that Pa F.ode Out cf Town and Sode All right tors are always cn their rounds Kiin that tha law is ctserved, and woe to the man who is found derelict in its observance.

Eue-03 Ayres, by the way, is kept a3 clean as any city in the United States, and is one of the most progressive towns in the world. "When a man dies down there it does rot matter whether he made a will disposing cf his of net. The law cf the country comes Into play, and divides ail his possessions equally amcrg his heirs. Net one of them can be disinherited. One good effect of this is to do away with big landed estates.

Many of these, though, arc still of enormous size, and farms of 6.CC0 acres are the rule, rather than tha exception. Speaker Cannon once paid a tribute to the "young man on my right" Mr. Cannon made reference to Asher C. Hinds, whose modest title is that of lerk at the speaker's desk. He knows more pari aaientary law than any member cf the house, and is familiar with all the rules and precedents.

No speaker could have the knowledge he possesses, and in a whirl of parliamentary motions, when quick-decisions are necessary, Mr. Hinds stands near the speaker and prompts him at every turn. The speaker relies upon him absolutely. say: you think you are smart, don't ycu?" Then they will go and dig it up. and piay with it, and eat it if they wast to.

I took my first package of snuff to the lion's cage, and he was the sickest end most disgusted looking lion you ever saw, acting like a man who has taken a severe ccid. snd wants to kill anyto-ly that locks at him. The lion lay cn the it wai she, the young man of the eye-glasses standing beside her. He underctcol. They were married and this was their wedding journey.

He knew that she saw him, that she knew him. He stood up a.nl lifted hand convulsively as the grrat bulk dwindled. He drew cut thv locket from his wet pocket and threw it with ail his might. It fell intD the wake. As he dropped to his knees, h's fare in his hand 5.

there was a fresh inru of water. He looked up ae.ii. ct tkf shore with the line of hi'ls bel.i i and ming at a right angle the shore, bsr head still high, then suddenly turned and began a shorter, quicker stroke shoreward. He watched her eyes narrowly without speaking. Hs saw them acrvure a new glitter.

Her lips opened and her chin sank lower in the water. "Put your h3nd on my shoulder," he said, gently, as he drew up beside her. "I'm all right," she returned, but with half her voice. They did not get any dearer the shore. "You must," he insisted, and she put up her left hand.

It merely trouble, it is the safest to keep away, and when pa went in amongst with no shirt on, and the Arab keepers had run away in fright, it was a dangerous thizg to do. Eut pa is brave even to rashness. He went up to Mahomet, the double-bumped leader of the btrJ. who was the leader of the sceeer. and kicked him ia the slats and fc'i i to hush up his noi.9.

Ke clubbed him on the humps with a tent stake. Then there was a Opposition. attorney of Ea-his intention of congress against Miller, of the Miller to Have L. E. Clogstcn, an reka, has announced entering the raca for Congressmen J.

M. Fourth district. Tp-to-rata Konks. Thi nenks cf the St. Bernard i Etraw, stretched out full length, payirg no attention to the crowd that passed Lis case, and acting as though he wanted i a hot whisky and his feet soaked in mustard water.

When he was not look- rebel ion Egypt, an set bit ra. and wouldn't let co. Ed the ei ine siowiy vaaiiiiin sm 7 1 r.e hospice in Switzerland are bouni fa be up to date. They have purchased an automchile to carry provisions uti touched him and fell off. She had he p'Jt hi? hand to the tiller s-v-'cg the boat about until the bow hell tz: the carrcis sneezed tl'i over pa.

tnd had Lira down, walkirg on him with their padded feet. The circus Lands had to pull pa gone under. He knew what to do aid did it quickly. They could see on the shore, the group that had gathered to watch. the mountain.

In order not to frighten teams tbey had a horse hitched to the motor wagon. The gov- Farmer Killed nt James Giver.8, a farmer at was killed by a Rock IsnO, train. He started to drive across the tracks just ahead cf the train. His wagen was struck and he was throwa la front of the train and ground to. pieces.

"f1" funs.iou 10 00- jliE3 coavell was there wringing her tained, because of the bridges, some harb The Simple Life. For a cultured person to his wonted mode ff lift, to dwell in a three-rcomed cottage, to be c'ad In corduroy or fustian, and to fare sump Now comes Prof. Dr. Ernil Fischer, the celebrated chemist of the Eerlia announcing that he has succeeded in concocting an albumen as pure and wholesome as that contained ia the egg. Iu a learned lecture before a large audience of savants lie demonstrated a protest, and he promises to give to the world the result of his experiment in a carefully prepared treatise.

Coming from such a source the announcement may be taken as a solution of the problem, for which the civilized woU has waited lor.g. or wcien were aot intended for such Ing I hid the package of snuff ucder the straw, snd rattled the straw a little, and he opened his eyes and looked at me as much as 'to say: "You cp.n't fool old Shadrack. for I am on to you." I walked away behind the hyena cage, and Mr. Lien got up and stretched himsell. and walked to the place where I put the paper of snuff, pv.t his foot on it and broke the paper.

a3j then he put his coss down snd sniffed a sniff that drew the who'e of the srufT up into hts cose and Jurs. and Irsides generally. heavy loads. out. and it wasn't so tarl.

because the crowd remained and they thought it as a part cf the show, and that the animals were rraiEed to sneeze fhat way. The worst case was the hippopotamus. He wss io big. and had such big nostrils, that I laid about haif a pound of snuff on tne side of his tank, and when he sn-ufTeu it up his nose he got it all. 1 hesri a howl from the tank and I knew the was cstting ready to sneeze.

tuous every day or. beans, cabbag? "Won't somebody launch the boat?" she cried. "He never can carry her so fir!" They started to get rrct the boat, bu'u. they too, that he was gaining slowly. The back of his blond head was eomiug nearer the floats, her tangled gold just Vroe lis chin.

at His First Ive. "I understand he married his first love." "Say. how can a fellow marry lim-self?" Jcdga. Reformatory I'aroled 4:5. The board of managers for the stat reformatory at its session at Hutch ia-ech parole! -13 inmates and gave final discharges to three young mea whx.

tad served their maximum sentences. soup and black brad woul.l net bj a return to the simple but to the sordii life. Or.e can live a simple life just well In a as in a Race Builder..

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About The Herington Times Archive

Pages Available:
14,560
Years Available:
1889-1922