Show r 'WpJiaWiiaidSJa f TH £ Salt Pc Vt' and gjous § Sails in Daily The THE tte Territory A fftJUdthethepeople Political riebt Rrti- - of :l)0 $400 jiAlLlfD— CASH IH ADVAHCS: Six Months $0:00 annum $10:00 Three Months $3:60 TI Ylfree Months MERCHANT’S HANAPER wondered why I Graham when I £d not marry Ashley asked me” Rose Man-l- l ho m j you that as vc sat wid to me one evening window looking on the hv tte open quivering over the lake and moonlight old mountains like a hoar silvering the them “and now you over spread frwt ow why I am going to Ame- jrani to at least ftjure I have no friends know of Well I have almine you off when yon have questways put you I will make a ioned me: but as people say and clean breast of it tel! you my whole story member when we lived in You my brother Janies and I? Percy street and you remember how poor we were and what a miserable thing we made of — lu with his painting and I it together We did not hide with my music? things from you as we did from others the mysteries of our £nt let you and contrivan-numerous and how we managed to exist on have starved on what others would how proud and Ami you remember was? and how with Sensitive James income— so hardly earned his wretched too poor fellow! — he was determined ami never let to keep up appearances know how poor he was? the world It was hard work I assure yon- and the stick vend fell to me hern of the The iii'iiM end of this kind of stick alfor as ways docs fall to the woman 1 had to make the the housekeeper best of tilings and to feel the worst — to ends the two gaping pull together as well us could and to put rnysell'in the I could not gap whin Of course you remember Ashley Grafriend? ham my brother’s greatest They lm(i bet n students together at the ami once or twice in old academy been down James to the had days lived and in his lakes when1 Ashley dear humble modest fellow way looked up to his friend as to a atperior being infinitely beyond him in everything Certainly Ashley's family was better than ours and though they were all ruined now his early bringin up had been more luxurious and refine than oun had been su that he in a condescended when he came manner into our home sphere and he made me understand that he condescended You know how men can make women understand this With James of course and Ashley was all that was genial hrothirly though there was that flavor of the superior being in all me very Mt rA’lI’Tpated “You have often 'to rI "'em wtw hvoA- nandwitirtai' when he came in or went away If h had anything to ask anything lie wanted done for him he looked at James and asked him tlioueh I had to do it and if by elm nee lie came when Janies was out and waited for him he used to tak‘ a book ami busy himself in that without paying more attention to me than lie did to the cat and not quite Ho this was how I knew wi much that Ashley Grahaiu held himself superior n ik Ho as too honorable to treat ni" - his when he knew that I used t think vyus his inferior and liked him all the better for his hatiriitiness Adiky knew very little about our mcmnstanecs and we hid the idi' from him poi baps k now that we hel nh two that behind moms IC'm' old Indian s of our 'rei wls ’J‘l1!l's' bed and that ’neitnT iittlc mom at the top of the ‘Oils' mine He was - poor ns hut lie was in society and we wore tint and that gave him an up pear air "I wliieli superior condition jot coins' he wanted to keep up for the !'di'ot his family Still knew that amrs did not sell many piet ires and jas W( Nn u half starved together Hut Vldey thought that wo per off than vie vvoie and 'very knew bovy '1nly poor lie vinsjjj jb was often in our minus and K' v "fsl eping there no fust hi a'ked for a lied it vva a wild 'vet uuiti rs vthen no one mt situ a liey ii coulii have turned out lie pen a dma lj ed ilollnw' or some unearthly myerat t'iiei' like that vvre putwelve the ist ’’’pnibiis had rrone a cab fwoud ii'n' ruined him outright — a eah rom icy st! jjdloway for a r'oi jiiiiti r irio did not sell his So wi- - inqinssilde! eib' asked m that eaval- iii' if we juld take hint iti ’"iiH's Ion! ui me I answered es ei'ifninly" and with a ui'i s " Irnham does not won at tin ton of the real seaim iraliitti did not object to a the top of the house He nit( giacmusly as if lie were favor not icteiiing it 'ism id u ’it up stairs and heir in nn own loom for him it i was leoicu list :ud noihine moie nv poor li’lle lioud ol Mi'uies-i- s laid them and made the th 'om in bid nwa un ow ii tbii’retionld 'a know villose 'ud when no 'other lu seneely 'to stan ' ki t bad dene and In bad imagined 11 my was to be loom and that ipuduitdh loysilfibi the in 'glit ii n to ad ftJt "Cd tln "iifi ''id fe (Etlcgrapl 2 MONDAY A ia THURSDAY tcrus— ix anrascr: Per annual $8 00 Six Months $:00 Three Months $3M) at residence in the City Six Months Y $12:00 ““ ©1 !i ! Firxt Class Family Paper cirfula'inj every settlement in the Territory PUBLISHED IS 4DTAKCB: 'Di'livercd f nt i NO 10 Ashley knew that I had passed the night sitting on a wooden chair by the empty kitchen hearth for the land’ady let us have a little kitehen for my cookIt had been or- ing and washing etc mally the scullery and was amp old hole but it did well enough e were too poor to bo fastidious lu the morning I took up Ashley's hot water ad his boots which I laid cleaned with lie my own hands thought it was the landlady’s servant who nad waited on him and as he passed me on the stairs he gave her sixpence which the girl took quite tranquilly a even less than her due Those boots let me into the secret of Ashley’s poverty They were old and worn and I mended them for him I must say cleverly I often did this for Ashley never dreaming that I had only a hard wooden chair for my bed when he slept with us continually now overstayed his time playing chess or “talking shop” with my brother and at last got to ask for his room as almost a matter of course James was too proud and timid poor fellow! to tell the truth and I was too happy to be of use tc Ashley to murmur at any sacrifice that I could make It was the sweetest time of my life! That bumble for the one unrecognized you honor is almost more delicious than gratitude! All this time Ashley took no more notice of me than before I was very James was only a protection young in name not in reality and girl as I was I could understand something ot the motive of his reserve and see into the ahe' of it used to Ami yet think he might have been just a little He moro cognizant of my existence! need not have made lo e t me or been vry attentive but just a little— as I used to say just as much as to the eat! One day Ashley came in to us in a terrible state Even James saw that something had happened and I study ing bis every rooou and expression as I did knew' at once that some distress And it was was in the ba kgronnd Ashley moved something so now to — so strong and almo-- t hard as he was — that ore felt it more in kirn than if At least I it had been any other man did “James my good fellow!'1 he said in an excited way “lend me five pounds can you? My mother is dangerously ill and they have written for me to go to her I happen not to have as much money about me at this moment and 1 cannot get auy from old Campbell untill have finished my work lie as good as bought my ‘licrodias could 1?” ' His “Herodias Ian- ‘oor 'he most hideous things cing- ”was no more sold to old you evet 1 was! If Ashley could Campbell have got into the hands of any picture dealers cr ho would have considered his fortune made J umes blushEiv t ponuils! Ash ed and hesitated ley might as well have asked him l'or Wc had not five shilfive lumdred had a lings in the house for we had had week and I mis thinking somewhat ruefully of the short commons we should have to go upon and how we were to get feed at ail for the next ten days or so and now Ashley was in trouble too and wanted us to help him One by one we bad parted with a!! our little viiluabh s but Iliad kept back one a very handsome pearl ring of my dear nmthet s which our father had This given heron her wedding day the last of our treawas emphatically sureand had struggled hard and made many auifioc to keep it When James looked at me o wistfully and when I thought of Ashley's trouble— his mother perhaps dying and lie her only son and so thud of her -- I could not help crying but I could not hesitate What had been sacred to me fiir my mother's sake should be There was no sacgiven him for his rilege m this it was a righteous disposition of a sacred treasuie will tho “I get money front the bank James” said And Ashley though he stared was t taken in by the quiet A poor arway in which I spoke and a banker? tist in Percy street Weill! it was a kind of miiaclc if true but then there are m’racles yet afloat So I went out and pawned my ring and came back with the money to Ashley And of the two James was decidedly the more astonished Ashley took the “1 money said carelessly to me: had so much tun sorry vou have Miss tumble Mantell” and thanked When he went James vuy warmly away 1 ran up stuns and flinging myThis self on the bed sobbed bitterly precious ring — my last possession — and Janies thanked for lending out of a I had balance what superfluous pinout ed bv the sacrifice of my best treasure! But f did not let my brother see what I felt and James as you know was one of those dear good creature- - who nevt see anything they ate not absolutely told or shown But wa half afiaid that had opened the door o a good deal of in the futwe for weull be sure hi do about money as he bed bad the dene about room t iking lor granted that he could have whatever he asked flu and that blip him wilh money — - lauki'’s from the balance at o he could in !p him with i room tioui Ids hberal nnangeinent of lodging Not tint tie ''us selfish you um-- :ivt think’ tint but he ws thoughtless and could be K mi art'-- SALT LAKE CITY THURSDAY therefore be anything but thoughtless? Besides he did not know the kind of that both James reverential feeling and I had for hint and how we would have rather sacrificed ourselves than see him want anything that we could get for him Of coumu Ashley believed in the banker’s balance anu from the ease with which the loan of five pounds had been had assumed that more might be had as easily and not long after his return from tha north— for his mother got better against all expectation — ho asked James for another loan this time to enable his mother and sister to come up to Ix tidon and make a home with him And when he spoke of his sister — his dear nnd beautiful ('ora — I saw what 1 had long suspected that one cause of my brother’s intense attachment to Ashley was in Ins love for Cora It was almost pathetic to watch the expression that canto over his face while Ashley was sneaking If only Cora could be brought to London! If only ho might sometimes see her! If Ashley wanted twenty pounds five could only be had by pawning my ring I ask you Geonrie whore could James was in an twenty come from? agony and I was powerless to help him If sorrow and pain could have brought these men their happiness they could have had it without much delay bat what could a weak and norant girl do fu" them? Absolutely nothii g! I saw James bok round the shabby room and I saw where his eyes rested By rare good fortune ho had been commissioned to paint a portrait for one of those patrons of art whose pntionagc consists in getting the best productions of clever young men yet unknown tit merely nominal prices It was for a rich merchant to whom James had been introduced and it was to be thirty pounds when done Could lie mortgage it? There was no use in asking liawes to give him an advance lie thought he had done great tilings in giving the order at a!! and there was every probability that if he paid bun on delivery he would charge him a percentage on the transaction and make Mo a profit out of his “ca-- down’’ Ho there was no use in going to him! had lent my brother a magnificent silver gilt hanaper which he wanted introduced into his picture It had been a presentation piece from some Society or other and the merchant was very It was a hideous proud of his cup thing artistically speaking but it was worth some hundreds of pounds My brother looked at this taukanl I do not kuovv what made me do it but I took it up quietly ami dusted it with 'p ntv apron J ‘I hoy thblias pot iforiCehed or hurt in any way” I said and it was rare 1 spoke before Ashley as you remember “Mr Ifawco is coming for it I had MARCH 11 1869 at) cap cause he would waylay me on the when I went to bed asking me all manner of things about my brother and his work and who were his patrons and what he got for such and retch a picture He wished to etc pass himself off as know ng something about painting and he knew as much Still we had of it as 1 did of algebra! no right to dislike him as we did and so 1 often said to James when we were alone then that it should le Determined Thompson who had gone out so early I tried to calm my nerves — for 1 was One nervous foolish as it sounds cannot sit night after night in a damp dark kitchen without getting nervous! By degrees the day broke fully and I went up stairs to do the housework before my brother got up for I was the only servant we had we could not afford even a share iu the drudge kept for the house When I went up stairs I found the door of our sitting room open— just ajar — as if it had been I went in pulled too and not shut elames was still asleep behind the I could hear his breathing screen — such fellow! a fast and heavy poor deeper as he was! I looked round the room with a kind of dread as if I ex(Jo pected to sec something tenable the table where the hanaper had stood last night lay the oaken — The and cast open precious empty deposit which the rich merchant hud left not without some words of caution and which lie was was gone coming to reclaim and called my brother hurriedly he woke up “Janies!” said L “what has become of the hanapoi!” “The hanaper? vvliat? what do vou mean?’’ he answered It is not here James it lias been taken out of the ease — it has gone" “Gone nonseirec!” he said “Why who could have taken it llosc?” I did not speak— I could not It wan so clear and yet so dreadful said Janie9 “Call to thoughts turning instinctively man he loved and trusted most All this time James had been dressing hastily behind the screen and now lie came out into the room Just as he did so the street door opened bv a latch key and Ashley came up stairs His and straight into the sitting room coat was wet — it was raining heavily the latch key in his and lie carried hand “Here old fellow” he said to James quietly “here is your latch key I took it with me as went out so early” “Ashley!” said James in his seared way “Hej! what’s the matter?” “The hanaper!" was all my brother could say “What about it mao?" Jamie" ‘ft is gone “What u shame that a fellow ’like “By Jupiter you don’t say so!" said that should have such a tiling — and so “It is Ashley turning pale vilely ugly too!" said Ashley "I can wear it was here last P’glit” worth only the weight of metal hut “Rose hersclr that is being something" he added is aid Jamie excitedly if reflect ing put it away in the ease” “Yes I saw it” answered Ashley “Yes it is hideously ugly —criminal‘'but it said no cost gloomily James ly ugly?" Then he turned suddenly to me and Old liawes end of money I dure say I kuow sets great store by it tho old looked at me as thought suspiciously rhinoceros! But as it is it is too good I reddened under his eyes and he saw It seemed to me as if he And to think that wc should me flush for him be at the orders of such a man! — that could read my thoughts — as if he knew And how could lie? we should he obliged to put such a vvhat I knew Y work! into as our that tiling uling people always imagine that they and I thought I was are seen through He spoke in the artist s injured toue seen through now I have often noticed that arti-- are Jamie saw nothin— uspected nothjured when they are employed by men He was sitting with his head who do not understand ait— Philis- ing tine's as they cull them resting on his hand- - and his elbows on when “Better send it to the nicking pot!” his knees feeling - a man do lie is suddenly plunged into laughed Ashley and his 1 say laughed - a bitter —when liis name is tainted but it As for me the whole career doted sneer rather than a laugh It world seemed to have enished into ruin James flushed and I trembled that at my feet but the one I could not unnever occurred to me derstand diswas brother could do so If I might have Ashley anything my honorable as deni with another man’s died before this moment! I could not property — my dear Jamie the very believe him guilty and yet 1 could not s doubt the evidence of my lie soul of chivalrous feeling — and yet had been out in the early morning — so somehow feared Ashley’s suggestion 1 knew how he loved that man and I far indeed he honestly knew that he quite us much as Ashley enough no one else had been out— that wanted to eo Cora and Mrs Giaham I could swear to and certainly no And it in London and doing But burglary had been committed was not to be supposed that we ha: envying and stealing are two different thieves in the house things and though I trembled I did At that moment came not (lefinitelv distrust Thompson That night Ashley slept wilh I down stairs whistling as he passed our door He looked in and nodded aud was going to say as usual— foi indeed it was a very frequent thing now and his great black eyes roved about the I passed the night sitting on a wooden place and seemed to take in every inch chair before the empty kitehen hearth and scrap there was to he seen I had fallen into an uneasy doze just “A wet morning" he said in his at the last hours as the day began to thick oily voiie shaking his large loose break when I was awakened by hear- cloak about him - he gave a kind of Then he strode down house stairwas I hi a on the ing step growling shiver flung open the street door one of tho-- e creaking old place- - where the st and slammed it against him tir without and y a inouv' could liarulv so went on his way whistling flow henm: heard and there was something wished that wc all had ns light a heait in tire build of ir that made ntv little ami that little kitchen like an echoing vault Tito as this unpleasant bagman! - clear a con step came down the stairs and across one among us bad the hall I beard the rattle science I orrv bn pom' Jamc- He and the holt shoot hack and then the and though door opemd and a'ammed to naimand 'coined quite para!ved eliding for the police a hurried footfall passed on the pave- Ashlcv pi'iipo-i'- step1 An and putting the whole place under a How like ment nnai'cnuntafile t'mr cun'' imv mi kirn! if -ii'ivi — od wijih red at Lis M lilt - he doin' out to culy? but audaciti- v't m brother tlnn i t!iumnr it nmdit be am other hut adept ilii - head on hi at as I tell mu with the lodaei who lived next door to nn hand- - and - elbows to go out vety ho and on kii' i's more like a eieatuu: eta 'ed viub — beloie any one else wa- " IJc wa- - a Menuiriiile as he Lbead than ani ilninr agent time v - draw in on and it drerev st rvant called an inevereiit to tin hour v tu n ILiwes had appoin Us’d to speak of him - “our comwho tod and my brother come tor mercial gent:” "Jame- - I said “dear Lunic! vou had nn artist's contempt tin ennimerce is twelve in a!! its branches always enlb'd him must decide on something! llaw s come'- at one I'lOl'i now and the hagntuti He via- - a bold coarse 'hut will vou do J """ with large loving Yf liut can good looking man ve dov - ami ion tinea a man lire whom VOL I IX 4DVAXCK:! Per annum $7:00 Six Month Three Month $2:50 I ought to have told you that by this dazed with their loss to know’ very James and I were alone Ashley had clearly what was best to be done No bad been obliged to leaveand for the first suspicion had ever fallen on him though time in our acquaintance I had not been had been searched as those of the He had been him other inmates of the house and he had sorry to see go kind to me and very cheery with James gone on living in his garret with honor but I shrank from him visibly — though and punctual payments until now And he looked at me as people do look at now ho wished to pay his last debt something seen for ine first time and “when he could die in ireaco and with seemed almost as if ho had found me an easy conscience” out after such a long period of overAt any other time I should FORKSTCXILTURK AS I LTIMATJr looking have been transported with his attenNECESSITY tion it would have been my pride my but now— feel deAt first thought this subject sma-joy my heaven graded by it as if he wanted to buy my rat an idle dream without foundation silence to make me an accomplice iu or substance A retrospective glance his crime through my love Oh Geor- riowever will serve to show the aaser gia what an awful thing it is to feel tion to be based upon substantial facto that the one you love above all else in and as being a question of great interlife is base and false! est both to present and rising genera Well when I spoke to James like tions But a few years ago com para this I seemed to startle him as from a lively speaking the face of the whole dream countrjr between the Atlantic and Mis“Yes Rose I remember” he said sissippi and Maine and the Gulf of getting up and pushing his dank fair Mexico was covered with dense forests “1 will go of valuable wood which to make way hair from his white face have and make it all right with him My for the advance of civilization poor little Rose! you have had a nasty aeon devastated until there is a cry dear are anu quite pale coming daily up from the people of fright you mind it Never the timber nnw and trembling that section of scarcity of will soon be all right” even of In Central New York where good He kissed me tenderly and before I could stop him or even answer back pine lumber wa3 selling fbr $10 to $15 his loving words he too had left the per thousand fifteen or twenty years house and left me indeed alone ago the same lumber now commands 1 cannot tell you much more of what the supply not lieiiig fioin 0 to Second growth happened for I only remembi r things equal to the demand I remember Hawes chestnut butternut and other similar very confusedly woods such as when white pine was coming to the home and I remember his loud angry voice ami furious face abundant would not have been consider to finishing purposes I remember a swarm of policemen in ed adapted are So into use the room — the place seemed filled with brought extensively them and I remember Ashley’s grand great has the denrend for lumber bei bearing and noble look in the midst of come throughout the older settlement He seemed like a beautiful de- of the Atlantic States and so limited them a god but a the home supply mon to tuc — like Lucifer large quantities an And then — oh Georgiedo fallen one being shipped from the pineries of the northwest bordering on the lakes not let me think of it— I remember of tumult voices feet the men’s of is a as Chicago greatest lumber market in the wo'ld The receipts of and a hustling at the door and Some feet were 606642 thing was brought in and laid tenderly lumber for on the bed It was my brother— all shingles 304210000 laths 00340 000 railroad that was of hitn now —found dead in a besides her trade in staves lonely part of Kensington Gardens with ties telegraph poles fence posts and other similar materials which is very an empty bottle of poison in his hand The annual ratio of increase in Broiul and sensitive as lie was the heavy shock and honor had been too much this trade is not less than ten per cent for him and he chose to brave the and so extensive has it now become wrath of God rather than undergo the that every foot of available lake shore’ doubt the accusation of his fellow men river and creek accessible to the lumAfter this the newspaper reports can bermen from Chicago to Green Bay You and from theneo to the northermost tell you the story better than I know that Ashley was arrested on sus- point of the penhumia of Michigan am for the laid under tribute to flip ply hor neoes tried and acquitted picion The subject of keeping up sitics want of sufficient evidence — acquitted is becoming a serious one and but not cleared for all that my deaf the economizing of wood both for buildJamie’s death divided the suspicion is being The oddest part of it was that the ban ing purposes and a per could not be traced in the remotest urged upon the present generation by prudence way It had apparently vanished oft the dictates of common the face of the earth and how jt hac Large tracts of Illinois Iowa MinneKansas Nebraska and all the gone or vvhat had become of it was as sota much a mystery to the police as to us great plains are entirely destitute of hovvevtr small It looked as if Ashley had taken any growth of timber for my own part I never doubted and as the settlements extendthc more it hut what had he done with it who difficut and expensive does it become to had lie sold it to and how was it that supply tho demand and many obstathe police could not trace it? And cles have to be overcome by the emihow was it too that Ashley was sudThe plantgrant iu making his home in denly so flush of money if he had not ing of timber 1ms been attempted tolen it? He said an old aunt had Nebraska on a limited scale but with died and left him a legacy God for- highly satisfactory results in the report of the United States I did not believe a word give mu' of it! Geologist to the Commissioner of the UnAnd vet’I loved him Georgie' General Land Office he gives some dehim to be and tails of tho residtsof these experiment- worthy as I believed e of that poor bo 's death the I He say-- - “I think a sufficient iiutnboi loved him with my whole heart I had of these experiments have already been him lovin made in this western country to show grown into womanhood could clearly that the forests may be restored and even if I had wished it not have cut him out of my life now to these almost trcelcs- - plains iu a comBut would not marry him lie asked paratively short period of time About me more than once and he pleaded four miles east from Omaha City Mr passionately — for he suddenly quite Griffin nn intelligent farmer has planlumxd ttiVvaid mi' us I have said ted about forty acre- - of forest trees and item utter neglect into the which are now in a fine condition of d But 1 was firm t intense love I grow th ” This plantation is on one of Ho could not have mained him then the higiie-- t points in the vicinity of ho went away to America and I came Omaha and 500 feet above the water down here to Amble-id- e as "overlies s line of the Missouri river The trees and here I mostly in cultivation to the lector’- - children are the cottonhave boon ever since — two years — two wood soft maple elm lone painful weary yearAnd now I and several varieties of willows am going to America next week my says: “At Mr Griffin’s farm 1 found cottonwood trees ten years’ passa'rc is taken and in a fortnight’s time I shall be stand’ug on the at growth with a cireumferauce of 2 feet Now York with Asbicy Graham1 shand inches 30 feet high soft maple tor in mine' If vou vad this letter you years’ growth with a circumference of will see what has changed my life and 2 feet 8 inches common locust ten what has taken me as a penitent to the years’ growth with a circumference of feet of the man I love aud hav o ahvavss 2 feet j feet high black walnut ten loved years’ growth circumference 13 inches She gave me an open letter written feet h’gh” He names many other in a taint and trembling band and tanner- - who have commenced the estIt said that ivation of tindxr with like favor signed “A Thomson1 “lie the writer wliieh all goes to show the being now at the results to make coire practicability of the undertaking point of death Mr so and reparation lar as he Griffin is now in a condition tf make eo' Id of the evil he had For all his firewood from the ’oad tree' it was he who had taken tha hanaper and brain lies of his plantation and wiil and he had it under his large cloak soon have sufficient to at a profit while he stood by the open door of the without impairing the value of flic forrom and nodded and spoke to e est as it will become a from Mantell of the wea’her It was a bold year to year to thin out from among stroke he said “and the idea the most thrifty timber that wluch to him when he heard Ashley go ti'oin vraiouH causes is on the decline out so enly his subject has at various limes been Knowing the habits of tile Mautetls and their !inre he iuii b tiw press or the country 'tolen down stair- - to James' room and but we fear flic ol great impurtaree fores d tlie door ajar hlev had left ihe subject has not become sufficient it open when he vu tit in for the latch impressed upon the lor a community Ho had often sum the hanaper key eoutunied aud successful movement in ol’n n coveted it and and thought that dircttion liovv nimh he could make ofi’ ibr (’ahl 'i'iiii alike with the plains of the (neat Basin and the vast savannas among Ins aequam'aines is a "fence” who wa- - perleetiy sale lie saw the borvvet n the Becky Mountains and ttre oaken e the clasp Mi si mi river stands in need of a and m t quartet of annum after he thoiougii stem of arboriculture Tho left tin e the rich merchant's inti nr rn plate vas seething in the !y hvcc iu ini depleted of their &tatd He had timed lire going oaks and m a few years with the smelting pot out to accord t with Adi ley's rcturi present ate of destruction for — that lie might show himself at the ward there wiil be but here going'’there and door of the room ltnconif ined and a vestige left to indicate that over the of the trouble there was within parched earth was embowered shade it and while tirey 'vn: all too much The penalty abac lied tO this by whclesjMf t |