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Show ffnUNS -- 5 better than stories old soldiers. Vtern , ernor, it Is easy enough. The Indians know U3 and know i short GOOD FOR OME 0 CORK Ell. An Unaccepted Chal Without Firing a Shot Gen. grunt Once Clubbed by a New York policeman. WO Veterans met In Southern land; recalled Again the story Of bygone days when,- sword In hand. Theyd fought on - Said j ' fields so gory. one: "I wore the Southern grey. His voice grew soft and tender, followed Lee until the day surrender. That jsaw complete I," said he who wore the blue. In tones of deep emotion, "I fought and marched with Sherman "And thro Georgia to the ocean. Old Then , I clasping hands, their hearts were raised To God in supplication That evjery wall of hate might fall Throughout our Christian nation. A Unaccepted Challenge. a In Jcountry town hotel one Sunday not long ago a company of traveling men and Sunday loungers was gathered. i warjveteran, now a stonemason and master of hi? trade, was present, and the conversation turned upon tthe war was not slow to take part, Some of the group began chaffing the reared of the' bronze badge of honor, and the discussion soon grew loud and earnest. "You fellows just went out for the stuff, said a youngster, a and even dandified personage; you got your pdy in greenbacks and ought to be satisfied without claiming pensions, glory, and. in fact, the earth. The crowd chimed In and the veteran Lad pne of those bitter half hours known so well to the men who risked thir lives for four years, only to outlive the gratitude of the people they made their sacrifice for. He thought of the old home and his first going from It, of the long, weary marches, of the death in life camp existence, of the unspeakable horrors of the hospitals, of the g months of a prisoner of var, and of the hot excitement and diz-t- y s, flashes of fighting, the death of and the constant familiarity with md expectation of death in a hundred Lorrible forms all in the span of years irom 18S1 to 1865. Finally the veteran rallied. He left he room for a few minutes, and with a rifle which he borrowed. Vhile he was loading it he thus addressed the assembly: T have put in ay belt $500 in good money. I will put t into the hands of anyone you may xlect, to paid out to any here who my challenge. You say we served n the war for money and got our pay. We received $13 a month. Of course, 'every man here is willing to risk his life 'or money. New, I will give $13 to any man or men among you who will go over In that ten-acpasture across the road and stay there for half an hour while I shoot at them with this rifle. You may run around, but you must not leave the lot. I am not a good shot, and may not hit anyone, but I shall try, and whether I hit anyone or not you will all see how easy it is to risk ones life for money. And,-minyou, I will pay $13 a half hour, while Uncle Sam paid but $13 a month. The veteran was in earnest. He xnded out his money belt and urged hat the money he counted. The scoffers were silenced. One by one they slunk away, and, said the veteran, when i well-Iress- CniLDJlI that we know 11k m they know themselves. You Taught IUm Not to Fear. ' com--ade- re-srn- ed ae-:e- pt re d when the telling story walked along the quiet country road, some of .Lem looked very thoughtfully at that Tisture lot. "I had to keep my $500 and eturn the borrowed rifle to its owner. -- Ada C. Sweet, in Chicago Times-Her- -i the day as they a Gen. Grant Was Clubbed Once upon a time Gen. Grant was leaten: He ytvas1 beaten in less than alf a minute, and he made no attempt a fight back; says the New York World. Vhen it happened Jacob Rlis was a at police headquarters for the The Masonic Tem-il- e associated press. was on fire, says Mr. Riis. The emple is on the corner of 23d street nd 6th avenue, and the fire happened lore than ten years ago. The fire lines rere formed, snow was falling and the dice were out of temper. Along from he Fifth Avenue hotel there came a mall man, with his hands in his pock-t- s and a big cigar sticking out of the orner of his mouth. He did not notice he fire lines or anything, but walked traight along with ofhisa head down. He big policeman, an into the arms himself pushing people rho had tired said the blank! ack. Blank, blank, oliceman, do you take me for a wooden Without waiting for an ndian? small nswer, the policeman seizeda the more few with lan by the collar, and,club loud a with lanks, brought his be-3rhack across the' small mans back said not the waist. The small man resumed word, barely looked up and in his Is walk, with his hand3 still whom ockets. I said to the policeman,Do you knew: Great heavens, man! Do know done? you now what youve said rho that was you clubbed? Naw, I said, te policeman, I dont. his Well, al- fell face and ,ts Gen. Grant, re-ort- Without Firing a Shot. During the winter of 1866 the Sioux Are on the warpath. Two hundred "cited States troops were besieged at rert C. F. Smith, Montana,' by 1,000 In-- 1 was help- ans. The war department and Gen. Hancock, then stationed at St. Paul, telegraphed Gen. Green Clay Smith, at that time territorial govss, Montana, to relieve the soldiers if possible. ernor of Neil Howie was United States Col. He was a typical marshal. -- impris-"A- d frontiers--a- , says the Philadelphia Times, and commanded the Montana Volun- - a this man that Gov. Smith It was to Pressed himself. Colonel, we fean't anything for those poor men in Fort r. Smith. We havent enough men, those we have not right? 1 couldnt get there. I V said Col. Howie, quietly, exhibition of excitement and the gentle voice of a woman. n 3 is no trouble about that, gov-I will need some picked men i good leader for them. X think HeCabs ia beet fitted fer this un- ' C , another he wno 1th - : ft ! gentle-voice- d blue eyes. lie eaid to the yes, it i3 easy enough. gov- - But Ill rty cf tho beet men I can select.bc:p tho rcet cf your volunrco here. v. Smith looked at him in amazs- i tncMiresd: Ilow In the name do yeti r- - tibly expect to V od-3- Cf Fort C. F. Smith with a mu, v it i3 ycu know thatblood-. i by jcro timn X.Cl) In J i rad that tho country with i a L i u n 1 th roisc-rcTM izV o'1 trr - cf rurJ'ro i 1 1 1 1 1 " er ! w with-sn- y f SOP1 C CURRENT ETCHINGS FOP. OUR BOYS AND GIRLS. tlTliy Johnnie FIaSU Became a Great Xian A Story for th LUtls rolls lost a foot- - Californias El g Orange CropsSouth-- .. months During the next three In plck-x- " rn California will be engaged estimated its orange crop, which is Fairy Footsteps the A filleted. boxes, 0T The crop will sell . ll ere are in M.COO mere ceres are p r r- - : ' ' ki. T' taken tn church ly th'r Tkl they ha little i x 1 ' r tion cf tii of th F t One ple were in r-- I th others chased around In search of better picking, twas as his father said; while all tse others looked, he For, worked and soon came out ahead. And Johnny recollected this whep he became a man; And first of all he laid him out a nlan; So, while the brilliant trlflers failed, with all their brains and push. Wise, steady-goin- g Johnny won by sticking to his bush. SL Nicholas. well-determin- ed cut. Donny was glad for he thought it would be great fun. He walked into the barbers store, and when his turn came the barber lifted him Into a high chair in front of which was a looking glass. Now Donny had never had a really good look at himself in a glass before, so he was very pleased to see the reflection of his own face, and his first inclination was to make a funny face at himself, but the barber looked so cross that he thought he had better not. When he went home he ran up to his mother and said: "Oh, mamma, I seed myself in the glass! Well, and what did you think of yourself, Donny? Why, 1 think I look Just like a monkey, replied the boy, and then, after a moments pause, he added: Mother, dear, I think I should like to oe a barber when Im a big man. Would you, my child, and why? asked his mother. Cause 'cause they have lots of fun. There was a man lyin down In a chair, and the barber painted his face all over with white paint, and then took a knife and scraped it off, and I should red-bead- ed p ! e : jaaht that r i 1 i i o a; i 1L- - anc cure ; .i iy. bI cf T ' t I 1 I I . to : Isis-at- rr 1 U lit f i 1 eagerly replied the Sun; I had quite forgotten that. Oh, well! Its no use my thinking about going' to bed yet awhile if thats the case; and he opened his glittering eye still wider, and threw the loveliest crimson and gold rays all over the sea and sky. They were so brilliant that they quite roused the little fishes, who were Just preparing to go to sleep, and they all came to the surface of the pale green sea and put their heads out to see what was the matter, and all they saw was Sun-eyshining .s brightly as if it were still noon-dasaid At this time of night, too! one Indignantly, as he dived bplow again. I thought at least it was fireworks, complained another. And as there were no fireworks they all went to bed again. Sufl-ey- e shone his brightest for a little while longer, but he was so tired that gradually the big black bank of cloud, which was his eyelid, closed over his golden eye, and he was asleep for the night. Moon-ey- e woke up then, and began to look about her rather sleepily at first; but very soon she opened her eye quite wide and gazed out over the sea, whitening the gleaming sails of a tiny fishing boat, and turning the wlng3 ol a homeward-flyin- g seagull into silver as bright as her own pretty eye. She did not wake up the little fishes, but all through that lovely summer night she kept her Quiet watch in the sky, and even the restless little waves grew tranquil under her soft beams, and only crooned their old Mother Oceans little soft lullabies In their AhL-Ki- s e, y. sleep, And little children who had looked up and laughed in the Suns glorious eye only glanced half shyly at gentle Moon-ey- and she laid her pale fingers e; busy any her dollies, and, after telling her all about his visit to the barber's, he said: Baby, lets play barber shop." Ail yite, said baby; for she always did everything hen brother told h$r to. So Donny climbed up on a chair and took down from a shelf a little can of white paint, which his big sister used in painting frames. Then he took the dollies, one by one, and covered their faces with the paint. After that he looked for something with which to scrape the paint off and found a small paper knife on the table. He scraped and scraped, but could not get the paint off, so he said: Never mind, baby; well take em to the barbers when we go out, and hell shave them all right. Baby did not say anything, but she did not like the way Donny had disfigured her little dolls. Now, baby, said Donny, make believe you are me coming to have your hair cut. And he lifted her on to a chair and looked all around for nurse3 scissors, which he soon found. He had just taken one' of baby's long golden curls in his hand, ready to cut it off, when nurse came into the room. Donny hid behind a large armchair. What have you been up to now? said his nurse; and when she saw what he had done and how he had spattered paint over everything, she took him right down to his mother. Donny had only dry bread for his supper that night, and he had to go to bed an hour earlier, but he never forgot his first visit to the barbers. Uncultivated Idtu. The testimony of educated deaf mutes regarding some of their ideas before instruction is very interesting. Some fancied the wind was blown frem the mouth of an unseen being. A number supposed that rain and lightning were caused by men In the sky pouring down water and firing gunn. Ono who had seen flour falling in a mill thought that snow was ground from a mill in the sky. Come thought tho stars were can dies er lamps, lighted every evening by inhabitants cf the heavens. Onlv one said she had "tried to think about eu admin I eath was caused by n Ted ty tho doctor. D af mute a baa. in time for breakfast. man. The Watch- God Elens the Naughty Turk. It was the hour of our morning famhead of the household The ily prayer. was pleading in tones which he could not keep from trembling, God bless and protect our noble missionaries, those glorious men and women, many of them so dear to us personally. Stay the cruel slaughter of the Armenians and avenge thy slaughtered saints. Little Goldilocks, one of our penates, not quite 3 years old, listened with bated breath and eyes not much closed behind her chubby fists, then, creeping away from her little chair to her grandpas side, she whispered in- his ear, And please say, God bless the naughty Turks, then bent her little head and closed her eyes to join in the prayer which she knew would follow. - Gone Forever. Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage says: When I was a boy my mother used to say to me sometimes: DeWitt, you will be sorry for that when I am gone. And I remember just how she looked, sitting there with cap and spectacles, and the old Bible In her lap. While we have our friends with us we may say unguarded things that wound the feelings of those to whom we ought to give nothing but kindness. After a while some of our friends are taken away from us, and those of us who are left say: Oh, if we could only get back those unkind words, those unkind deeds; If we could only recall them. But you cannot get them b ack. Fairy To otstj-s- . See the white violets. Glistening here and there; Like a broken string cf pearls They are scattered everywhere. Dont you think the falricr. Trapesing through tho snow, Ilave left their dainty slippers Amid the ferns to grow? Future Tnn' The Univcmllst church believes in hell, in punishment, teth hero end in the world to come. TLcra cro net ministers ncr theologies enough In all tho to dieprovo tho rJf-eworld to lent fact that every violated law will bring its i malty; that v,hat"ovcr a man roweth that shall bo rl o re p. Dev. Albert Ilamrrett. ci-guL- o, vi -- cu ou' i i or life a m- - on their sleepy eyes, and they too slumbered. The little fishes slept the most love to do that! Moon-ey- e went to His mother laughed and told him to soundly of all until Sun-eye in the dawn and got up run up into the nursery and play with bed sent a of 'and shaft brilliant light right his little sister. woke beds and down them their into up with Do found his sister tie j i ere 1 ; - t r j.i y M i w 1 r 1 I ,s S ,jf J Vr. , , J . f - Ifs - - r la v t ir IlTJLW KNOW i . 'r tN r ip, ttin r :' i ti e; With 1 1 iir-- ' il y r m It cl I it f r r ' t' 1 1 ' , J it p f M t r " nothin - ' 1 ; Sun-ey- e ter tearin3 10,c:J f and was quite sleepy. getting And half a dozen avrake ever since wide been He had other boys that lovely Juno were starting a very early hour of now was and It getting quite with their morning, In the evening. late pail3 He had never closed his bright eye3 To gather berries, a single moment all the time, for no Johnnys p a, for cloud had flitted across to give him an in talking with him, said so he felt he That he could tell him how to pick so excuse to do so, and when bedtime would not be sorry hed come out ahead. came. "First find your bush, said Johnnys Oh, dear! he sighed, as he shook pa, "and then stick to It till Youve picked it clean. Bet those go himself a little wearily; "its very hard work to shine like this the whole day chasing all about who will In search j)f better hushes; hut its long, and never close ones eyes. Really, I feel quite worn out, and Im sure my picking tells, my son To look at fifty bushes doesnt count rays have been getting paler and paler with fatigue. It does seem a long day like picking one. And Johnny did as he was told; and, Indeed. The longest," remarked the Moon sure enough, he found By sticking to his bush while all the sleepily with her eye shut. Flails n-th- ta f"'1- - rick b Eun-Ey- the origin cf the world and its inhabi- tntm All had a great terror cf death is tho grave; one had which cia. nd being put in tho fear that cko rom an industry only fifteen yeojs In sen taunted ty a 3 ooo 000 has been inveed .1 to u In the grave ,bout light awake southern CaliOne rht to call far help. 800,000 t2, all yield. f ct church to cr hip th' dlcmKy an clergyman cf t!a' Undeveloped Ides of splendor. Tlmy h' i no id' i cf any wise rod povKrful thru nee being no and man, conccptiau cf the roul cr N E DAY, I N cf any spirit whatever. New York buckle berry Herald. time, when little Johnny Nooa-l'y- . e At Sebastopol during the siege a A Story for tho Little Folks. CapL Samoiloff, desiring some wine, ordered an officer to send a man after it. One day Donnys mother said to him: The man, a young soldier, took the "Your hair i3 too long, my boy. You money and started on the errand. Just must go to the barbers and have it then, however, a French battery had concentrated its fire upon the very spot where the young man must go outside the works, says Pearsons Weekly. He stopped and then turned hack. I wouldnt go out there for the world," he said. The officer, of course, reported the act of disobedience to the captain. The captain in a rage ordered the man into his presence and demanded why he had not obeyed his captains order. I beg you to pardon me, captain, but I was terribly afraid. Afraid? cried the captain. Afraid? Wait a A Russian soldier afraid? minute. L will drive the fear out of you. Come with me. The captain led the way to the rampart, mounted it, and there, with the bullets raining around him, began putting the man through some military exercises. The lookers-o- n in the fort held their breath. If a hat was put on a bayonet and lifted above the walls the "bullets came that way in an instant. ,Not many minutes elapsed before a bullet struck the captain in the arm. He did not wince, hut kept on with the drill, while the blood dripped down his hand to the wall. Next a bullet went through the tail of the soldiers coat and another through his knapsack. Then suddenly the firing ceased The soldier begged for grace and promised to go wherever he was sent. Still the captain continuedhis drill. When he thought the lesson had been learned or perhaps when his arm he came too painful he (dismissed the soldier and went himself to the surgeon and had his wound dressed. The French explained afterward that they ceased firing out of sheer astonishof the two men exposlater ment at the sight so recklessly. safely ing themselves age-lon- Ati rtirm tl thc.r ' - ij 1 folks from the east have an idea that what you call Indian atrocities are simply unmeaning exhibitions of brutality; that scalping, for instance, is simply a form of torture. In that you are mistaken. The Indian believes that no man can go to the happy bunting ground heaven we call it who has been deprived of hi3 hair. Their motive in scalping a victim is to carry out fiendish hatred to its utmost by preventing him from having a happy hereafter. Therefore, to deprive an Indian of bi3 scalp is to rob him of his hope of a happy hereafter. My men never kill an Indian without scalping him, and the Indians know that. The forty men I will select for this expedition are unin erring their aim with the rifle. They can shoot sixteen shots in sixteen seconds and every ball means a dead Indian and every dead Indian means a scalp and every scalp means a warrior deprived eternally of a chance of ever reaching the happy hunting ground. My forty men will walk from here to Fort C. F. Smith without firing a shot. Incredible. said Gov. Smith. True, said Capt. McCabe. What was the result? Forty men walked 250 miles from Bozeman to Fopt C. F. Smith. Indians watched them on every side. By days their progress was signaled by circling columns of smoke and by night Ly fire from mountain tops. But not a shot was fired. When they got within sight of Fort C. F. Smith the 1.000 whooping Sioux who held the garrison in siege fled, and the forty frontiersmen from Bozeman marched in and escorted 200 union soldiers back to the territorial capital without the loss of a life. Not a shot bad been fired. Not a scalp had been lifted. This is unwritten history. ed V.p, to 1 I i ; : : r r r t e 1 - t - t tl 0 VI t ' r r ; g'fi cold an chill. i t icm.a It)- t irHr the guar ink f ,rr that uv hunfr re- an it wee c t antIt a t'd Vrr lieve. cm evpi-until it , I know thet pccpla look with diitruet t Tl racked. r timet mlu: Ez they grudginly throw me a crura. . floor cn tir-It An the little childen run off an hide, mvrnih cc cc.i is to r.fl n eight tl' jo rr c: Jest ez if Iee a wild critter, dan. eighty-fiv- e Mr t. Tie elm aim r n V tO I Crp C1 i. -n 1 '.G - 1 m 4 1 t- -- r.nncunc n! I ' that th rwt ri: Isposo its all jest ez they say, tho trp fleer, NO fe t nloe. N t:p Thet 'twas drink thet brought me so flewr. to ' ' th according dirrrtcry, low. the fourteenth, and tho clevat-But yit. in that time before Mollis once mere, arrilng rm'r tho upward died, roof a few seconds laKr. In thet happy time 'twusnt so. Yfle can rmhe a rcund trip in I know Id ben a little bit wild seconds; chert inrludirg repV Afore we wuz married, but she said the cf th rogre-o- , tut Cum to me an laying her head on my we have mad in about frty withit breast out steps. There are two exrre a leSed, Joe, wont you do better, fer vators and four regulars, that we call me? way trains. They stop at every f.or for everybody who shouts. OfMn An' the promise I made right then, I and I get passengers who want to gt out kep, at the sixth cr tenth floors. They gM Fer many a long year to cum; when are too, told mad, nuct they they An Mollie had nothin to complain uv go up and take another elevator down. me, other express makes no intermeEr the way I worked fer her home. The diate stops at all during the tu.-An gpechully after the childen cum, hours. New York Frees. John an Nellie an little Ned, Wuz we ez happy ez two people kin An OJd Collection. be, is There only one sudden death Thet have to. work hard fer thcr women to eight among rrmn. among bread. There are 12,CC0,CCD silk hats mado In the United Kingdom worth But the time cum when the childen annually FAO AAA took sick. The wars of the last seventy years An one after another died. cost Russia $1,775,CCO.COD and the have Leavin Mollie an me alone agen. II vc3 cf CG1.C0D men. To mourn at ther little fccdclds. It i3 Etated that pearly 1,CCD,C0D I gess Id glv up everythin then. But Moll kep me braced up, you sea; pound3 of fur fer hatters purposes are Then she couldnt stan' it an' fadedl an produced in the United States. To he perfectly proportioned it Is died. claimed that a man should weigh 2d An thar wuz no one lef but me. pounds to every foot of hla height The meet densely Ecttlcd Etate in Then I did give up, thar wuz nothin Ithodo else Inland, and the second Marea-chu- s 3R3. But to drown my grief In drink; The former has 31S.44 into An when a man starts on the downnrd habitants tile square mile, and the 1 1 c fl- cninr y latter path. Its hard to stop im, I think. An so Im jest a pore old tramp, Joggin along tired an alone, i 27S.4S. Tho letters In the various alphabets cf the world vary from twelve to 2Z2 In number. The Candwlch Islanders Cussed at an kicked an hustled along. alphabet has twelve, the Tartarian. 222. The sun. If hollow, would held 2CD.CCD Askin bread an gettin a stone. earth globes, and an eye capabla cf But thar Is times as I lay In the shade. hourly viewing 10.C2D square miles With the soft summer wind Mowin would require LZ, CCD years to tea all lta ' ' Eurfaca. round, I feel the touch of Mollles hand cn my Astronomers calculate that the surface cf the earth contains S1.C23.CAT hair. An the babies sweet vcicc3 hear square miles, of which 22,814,121 are .water and 7.S11.C04 are land, the water sound. An I only hope now that God will glv thus covering about seven-tentof Time and strenth the old place to the earths surface. Prof. Boot easy says: Cats die at an see. So I kin lie down beside my Mollles elevation cf 13,603 feet, even though grave. they are reputed to have nine lives when on a level with the ocean. Begs An the old tramp forgotten bo. and men can climb the greatest known elevations. Death In the Channel. An evidenco cf the striking uniformWe were camped on the cast bank of sire among the Japanese Is found of Bear river, ten miles below the ity in the fact that recent measurements mountains, and the banks on that side taken cf an showed for a mile up and down were twenty no variations Infantry regiment Im two inches exceeding feet above the surface of the stream. heicht or twenty in weight. pounds the water wa3 It being The botanic garden of the Jardin dca a Inches few deep. At 1 oclock Plantes includes about seventy acres. only in the afternoon a band of emigrants The plants are all labeled with rod appeared on the opposite shore. There labels, medicinal, green for alimentary, were five wagons twenty-eigpeople for ornamental purposes, blu thirty-tw- o horsc3. The banks on that yellow for art and black for poisonous plants.. side were only five or six feet high. To The most expensive parliament in reach the east bank they must travel Europe 13 that cf France. The two up or down the bed of the stream to a Chambers cost the nation $1,503,020 annatural cut. They headed up stream. nually. Cpaln epends $100, 0CD on her We gathered on the bank and saluted Italy $123,000, England them and passed questions and wished representation, $320,030, Belgium $100,000, Portugal them luck In the new homc3 they were $150,030, Germany, $33,000. The seeking beyond the mountain. i3 not generally known that th It last wagon had entered the bed cf the cultivation of tea and coffee in Hawaii stream, which was perhaps a hundred i3 rapidly becoming a matter cf Imfeet wide, and the foremost was a portance to our American markets. Fine quarter of a mile above us, the men qualities cf tea and coffee are being cracking their whips and shouting grown successfully, and It may be exthe women singing the children laugh- pected in the near future that these Ising at the novelty, when we heard a lands will become an important source muffled roaring from above. It was like cf supply. the stampede of a thousand horses over the prairie at night, but no man had Gown. Iltty Greenwho New ever been has Green, yet fathomed the sound when our eye3 Iletty criticised for her sloppy weather ap- -' caught sight of a wall of water twelve feet high bearing down pearance. Las blossomed out into it new woman. She ... apthe channeL There had been a cloudburst away up In the mountains. Tens peared in court yesterday clad la the cf thousands of barrels cf water had latest cut cf Cowing skirt and otherbeen emptied cn the rocks and slopes wise decked la attire. Tho at a dash, and the wall was moving reporters state distinctly that Mrs down with the speed cf a herss and Greens new departure in the matter power and no man could calculate. cf dress has taken twenty years from scream from shriek Shout man, her apparent age. This Is, indeed, & snorts woman and child. End neighs and change that should be far more gratecf alarm .from the horses. It wasnt ful to the eoul of the ordinary woman fifteen seconds after we saw the rear- than by any possible addition of greating, tumbling, frothing wave before It er wealth to great wealth. New York engulfed the first wages not over 2D Correspondence in Pittsburg Dispatch. fcefero it had paeecd U3 and picked up NfUon the last. The yellow foam almost cf Lord Nelson cold in relics Come touched our feet as wa stood cn the good prices, tank. The channel wn3 filled from London recently brought cl: a assoart! for tank to tank and cut cn the plain for the highest being paid ' A Hamilton. half a mile. Twenty minutes later, ciated with Lady which Neleonpainted tad there was rearce three feet cf water in fan, fer instance, d clients work In the channel. In half an tour net above given her, a bit cf veryand cf twelve inches. Down tho ctream and ivory, brought CM3, owna portrait Kel-cc- n, to ber gift a mile away were tho wrecked wagons the recreant wife, down for $213. Tho we 3 knocked tho todies cf drcwnel Lereeo twenty-eted frem tho ight corpses left stranded hero and heros felling mahogany $133. there for U3 to dlreovcr and giro burial. VIetery tremht 1 Net a living thing in that p 'rty Xkc pr cr cf tho Fenny Ere: KM death. Cue moment they ringing ever tho s s r fa G7 t M e e r h r.s and laughing, full cf tepo end r' 1 T a feErkwr, pet'! hX Christian 1 rt I nature tho next they were 1 Mg ci ty ; fern bsvlrg i whirl' 1 Into eternity. Ar 1 v.e . 3 re th' w. erg lops. r Ty there end euw it all mi c.NJ All th r mhrrs cf : I , f N' g to F - C. . . : a j Gel i iiy t: mi In Ir x hs mid-summ- er ht mud-color- ed rpick-and-tp- an up-to-da- te r;n . -- -- r-- N: fl uc: f 'lls' ty. . In 1 : a vrl h i - -- |