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Show r THE COMMANDER." Civil soldiers, resssembled by the rim of tout tame! To who sired the rlrjln elty bathed la Wools in i urn's dear name! Which or all your pant commander doth thlo day your memory haunt Scott. M.'lJowell, ISurnside, Hooker, Model-lan- , Ualleck, Grsui; There is one too little mentioned whan your proud reunion come. And tho thoiiklii'.ul love of eo ualry die upon the aouudiu drum Let me call him in your muster! Let me wait him In yuur yrief Captain by the eoiMiilutlon, Abr am Llnoola wa your chief. Ever Merest to hi Tho peraon, yo were hi do fence aud ahleld: ole luiirenie commander died upon the battle-Hol- All your eener.il were hi children, leanlno on him childleh-wUleAnd they all were Ullml mourner 'round the mlyhly tomb he tilled. Tender a the art of David his soft answer now become, When amid the care of kingdoms rose and fell some Absalom: And his humor gilds hi memory like s light within a tent. Or tho sunken un that linger on the lofty monument. Like the Greek who opted the aunrlse first of all by facing west. At it Hashed while un arisen on a steeple's slcu-le- crest. So while victors turned from Lincoln ere the dawn of glory came. On his pen euun.-lpatloglittered like an . altar-dame- Frellne for the doomed deserter, feeling for the Oral ted sire, FOr the empty Northern hearthstone and the Southern home a lire. Murry kept him rim as Moloch, all the future babes to free. And eternal peace to garner for the millions yet to be Not a soldier of the elastics, he could see thpis b learn. I pretense. Master of tao gro.iluat science, military common sense: he watched your mirches, comrades, hither, tuilhcr. wayward years. On his map the roads you followed, you can trace them by his tears. Xa the rear the peopled clamored. In the front the genera's missel In his Inner counss, uarbored critic and antagonist. Buthe ruled them by an instinct like the queen's amung the bees. With a health of soul that honeyed publican A and pharisees Faint with faith we looked behind ns for a chief of higher tone. While tho voice that drowned the trumpet had the plainness of our own: Ever thus, my old companions I Gsnlus has us by the hand. Walking on the tempest with ua every crisis to eommnad Uka the buvle blown at craning by coma homealrk con of art. Lincoln s words unearthly, qulrer in the universal heart: Not an echo left of malice, aearee of triumph, m the (train Aa when lummer thunder murmurs in pathetic showers of rain Years forever eon secrated, he re ha lived where duties be Never railing on the climate or ths toll's monotony: Here hie d irllng boy was burled. and the night in vigil wept. Like his Lord within the garden, when the tired disciples slept. These soldiers had been scouting for Anderson end had come down as near Centralia as Sturgeon After Anderson had dune all the devilment hia hands could find to do in Centralia, Major Johnson came into the pillaged town swearing all sorts of frightful and fearful thing At the head of his column a black flag was carried. Bo also there waa one at the bead of Todda column. In Johnson'a ranks the stars and stripea for this day had been forbidden; in tho ranka of the guerrillas the stars and bars flew fair and free As Johnson rode toward the ridge ten men anticipated him by coming up fair to view in skirmishing order. The guerrillas numbered 263, in commend of George Todd. As the ten men went forward to skirmish with the advancing enemy Todd came out of the timber and formed s line of battle. Johnson moved right on and some shots were fired at long range. From a column of fours Johnson's men galloped into a line of battle. The ten guerrilla opened a brisk fire and fell back to the main column. As this movement was being executed Johnson's men raised a shout and dashed forward altogether formation of ranks all gone. Up tq the hill crest a column of men suddenly rode into view halted, dismounted and seemed to be busy or confused about something. It meant that the men were tightening their saddle girths and patting fresh caps on their revolvers and preparing for a charge that wonld have about it the fury of a whirlwind. Johnson halted his men and rode along their front The gnerrillaa gathered themselves and took the bridle reins between their teeth. In the hands of each man there was a deadlv revolver. They dashed from a walk into a run. The attack was a hurricane. Johnson's oommand fired one volley and not a gun thereafter. Some broke ranks aa soon as they had fired and fled. Others were attempting to load their muskets when the guerrillas, firing right and left, hurled themselves upon them. Johnson fell among the first There was no quarter. The wild rout broke sway toward Sturgeon. Death did its work in twos and threes in squads. Beyond the first volley not a guerrilla was hurt That volley killed three and wounded three. Johnsona loss waa 383, or out of 800 only eighteen escaped. Johnson's overthrow was probably a decree of fate. He did not know how to command, and his men did not know how to fight He had by the sheer force of circumstances been brought face to face with 263 of the moat terrible revolver fighters of the American war." Flnt Soldier1 Home. I think I am not in error when I say that ths first soldiers home was built In Boston, Mass., in 1864. The Rev. Phineaa Stowe of the Mariners' church in Boston, had for a number of yearn been known aa the stranger's friend, and when spoken of by anybody waa called Father Stowe. Mr. Stowe waa a very warm-hearte- d man. He had established a headquarters for strangers in Commercial street in Boston, which was called the How his call for meu wont rlnglu i, round the Mariners exchange In the latter world s might v bell And the races o: creation cams ths proud reof 1863 many soldier and sailors part volt to quell! Standing In the last reaction on the rock of returned from the war. wounded or human right a. disabled in some way, many of whom Worn and mournful grew his features In tho were foreigners, or others far away flash of battle lights. from home. Once, like Moses from tho mountain, looked Mr. Stowe became anxious that they he oa the realm he won. When turning Richmond knelt should be cared for. He went to see and thought him Washington: Then the envious bravo snatched him from the Mr. John M. & Williams, who, like theater of things Mr. Stowe, had a large heart, and To become a ssi nt of nature in ths pantheon of with plenty of money and influence king. these two united in the idea of raising Faded are the chevrons, vanished 1 money enough to provide a home for the pride of war Mild In heaven hit moral glory tin ten like the the friendless soldiers and tailors. morning liar The idea was a good one, and waa And the freeman's sons of cotton his whit crowned with success on every hand. spir.t seem to be. And the Insect in the harvest beat hie army's The first soldiers' home was bnilt in reveille the South End, in the city of Boston, women AU around him ipollrd or greedy vain in 1863-- 61 At that time it was only and honor siient Still his faith In human nature lived without a Boston soldiers home, though open thoel-ivosl- discouragement. to alL For his country, which could raise hint bar Thus we had in Boston, in the year height. foot, to the Could he mock her or hi mother, though her 1864, a home for the soldiers, an exname she could not write change and headquarters for the seaDeep the well of humble childhood, cool the men; and next Mr. Stowe formed what springs beside the hut. Million more ea poor as Lincoln seethe door ie known aa the Little Wanderers' he has not shut Not till wealth his made its canker every home. Mr. Stowe died in 1861 National Tribune. poor whits' cabin through. Shall the great republic wither or the infldel Too Hrave a Maa to Disarm. subdue. One of the earliest acts in the great Stand around your great commander I Lay drama of the rebellion waa the capaside your little fears! Every Lincoln carrier freedom' ear along a ture of the United States arsenal at thousand And when next yfiiw the call for soldiers rolls along Apalachicola, at the month of the ths golden belt Chattahoochee river, by the troops of Look to see a mightier column rise and march, the state of Florida In consequence prevail and melt! George Alfred Townsend. Gath " of the weakness of the command, an How Guerrillas Fought, This le the way Major E. N. Edwards describes the Centralis, Missouri, massacre in September, 1864, when Andenon's guerrillas slew hundreds of Federal troops and dtisene: "A few shots from the guerrilla at close range cleared the platforms and windows. All on the train were formed in line and then the work of winnowing began. It was a ghastly line which at last separated the eiti-zen-s from the soldiers. Twenty-fou- r of the latter and one citizen who wore a soldiers blouse fell upon that aide of the line where death, yet Invincible, waited grimly in ambush for it prey. In twenty minutea more all were killed. The train was next set on fire, and the engine, with a full head of steam, dashed away like the wind Then the depot toward Sturgeon. and a gravel train were destroyed. After, Indeed, killing everything in and about the town that looked, t.aHA or acted like a Federal soldier, Anderson led his men back to Singleton's pasture, end reported to George Todd the nature of the morning's work. It was then decided to put Todd in oommand and await further beyond developments. These, bloody in comall precedent, were not long ing. At Paris, Monroe county, there had been a Federal garrison under command of a Major Johnson, 100 strong. entrance was gained. Mr. Powell, who had been in the service of the United States some twenty years, and had command of the place, acted in a After the troops gallant manner. had entered, he faced the line and thus addressed them: Odloers and Soldiers: Five minutes ago I was tho commander of this arsenal; but, in consequence of the weakness of my command, I am obliged to surrender an act which I have hitherto never had to do during my whole military career. If I had had a force equal to, or even half the if strength of your own, I'll be yon wonld have entered that gate until yon walked over my dead body. Yon see that I have bnt three men. These are laborers and cannot contend against you. I now consider myself a prisoner of war. Take my sword, Captain Jones!" Captain Jones received Commander Powell's sword, and then returned it to him, addressing him as follows: My dear sir! take your sword! Yon are too brave a man to disarm!" The whole command then gave three cheers for the gallant PowelL American Tribune. Twenty yesra ago there were but two or three manufacturers of horse hide leather in this country. The consumption of this leather Is large and rapidly Increasing. BULL DOGS THE IUGE. and, If necea- AND HOUSEHOLD.! dose" to the fireplace, ! under tlie ladieV aw.iy veiy uoees. TlieOgdentiia-lcts.o- f racing cup fame, FASHIONABLE WOMEN HAVE have a bred bulldog ill their VAB,OUS METHODS OF KEEP-cit- y FORSAKEN PUGS. home wlm'iss great favorite with ! IMG SWEET POTATOES. the household. He is frequently seen I (IroWiBI (ifNMFlMirrlMi The is a neglected fruit ,,f gooseberry r4l,,, Iff 11 the famifo Maaa Fan, Knit Dug Nothing Bat ot Ernoaletl the . inn uSwavtt ultrucU no I Is. the tin. Which I. ami an Indiana man in an Will Da Them New Hama TyiU-a- l (irunnuf titfosfiber-ri- with many, tiee. Though i...tknouu at the bench I U4 (Jaunty of ltef ialry Jtatea exchange speaks a few words In its Caataa Aristocrats frois tppar lea- - bhowft, call tliis doff one of i favor: The murket Is very rarely the wht fcpcciuitriiih of the EnlUh tvpe ! aud lloiuolwld Haljia with the fruit, and a now in A merit'll. He is sinull (wefn- reason for this is that it can ba ing but twenty pounds) and rather ilia- 1'otatoM. await Keerlng 11 E DAY OF THE and marketed through e fo411 Wjlh : 1 kl,in the sweet potato it Is gathered little dog as a season, insteud of all having 1o long thod wh,ch lie harvested aud sold at one time. dvU,lu lu Venn is one id thtTfamous woman's pet is Miss dog" most economies! and convenient, the show, she is the property of The green berries soil readily almost drawing to a close. of The fat and wrin- Dr. Duniel L. Haight of Kant Fifteenth wbich depends upon tho size of the as soon as they are large enough to 1 the surroundings, .says bo kled pug finds his street, end though not always in town, crop and then the best picked, bring ia nevertheless accustomed to city life. , Farm and Fireside. The method glory departing.the sleek terrier ia get- i'eup.c who promenade the avenue have matters bat little o the following prices of the season, but this la equalized bv the feet that later on ting out of date. Of seen her time and ugaiu uccoinpunying principles aud conditions are they are much larger, and a bush Haight. There are few dogs in Lrvd: all the tiny, will then yield more quarta A canines sandy clay loam is best iroosoberry bush at three that have possessed years i t0 helthy from planting should yield three the hearts of dog- Shape of her hud' being superbTlike ' ,uito?. of tLo a lime-iA all of the bulldogs of rank, she Kro', potato. heavy of and after that dva gish" women the nearly stone soil, or one strongly lmpreg- - quarts afruit, a dark brindle. An season. Japanese spaniel alone retains his full average quarts John II. Matthews, the president of j natod with alkaline substances, la- retail meed of affection. The little dog's duy is ten abort price the in ud-, determined of hi and cluli, skin the makes Bulldog the has tuber fashion kennels, jura being done, cents a quart. The crop is his chuteunlike not joining is the residence to Avoid rot. soils almost a certain one, for if tha long unlit riisocptiblc upon a new favorite. It and graceful greyhound that ia coming Riverside Drive and Ninet enth street. that are heavily fertilized with worms are kept off, which may easily bnt to into vogue, as he threatened do, .,Jih,'-xmoniacal manures. HidenHiUnJ be done by the use of hellebore, tha the finely bred and thoroughly pointed sweet pot to before the only other enemy they have to bull dog, really tne ugliest of canines, An I..! lie tr0At kilU th fear is mildew. Our native varieties and yet to people that know him the them more especially Tdrr often acwunjmnies Miss Matthews in tUo teni kil t,,e whole tuber, be- are not much subject to that. The most interesting of them all. There are still very few bull dogs in lter walks uoout the west sale, Bathos loot dry time if possible, to dig in. plant should bo set on cool, moist the best white Handle each potato curefully, do not soil, and a partial shade does not America, bnt the breed is growing in is with hardly a doubt favor and p qmlarity. And nowhere ia English bulldog IXin America, his only bruise nor scratch them. Do not get Injure them. Close pruning will inMorgan's Cardinal thorn sun blistered while digging, his bow legged snd hesvy jowled rival being E. crease their productiveness and tend ilia weight is forty-fiv- e n wolsey. & Hetnove from twleh directly to majesty received with mure gratifies-tiotoward making them longer lived. than in feminine circles. It seems list of never handle of and "(mi V11"?' storage, The fruit is the very earliest of any mm(,Mi shown in place 6ilu wninAn'k PFiwntSfm flf Him. winnings market or to we have from our home a long one. his first prizes being two hem tilI tke out gardens, and firsts at Hloueester, England, in IS'.H). bed. Rot, if it sets in, may neeeesi- - for this reason only should be much con-th- e ouch n but 'Sortinont. Ute America he In gained unotlier first ut more widoly grown than it is. In Westminster Kennel club show in i dition should nut exist. If a second planting we advise procuring one 181HX : handling becomes necessary, use the year plants in preference to those His muzzle is enormously wide, ex- - greatest care. older, (iive good cultivation, a reg4. The cellar or place of storage tending beyond the eye line, and the ular manuring in the fall, and cool face is short and well wrinkled, liis should be Is Moisture perfectly dry. mulch in the summer to protect the body is hung low and his legs are ad- conducive to rot. roots, and wa think you shall have mirably crooked. Further tlian this A. Let the temperature range behe has that great distinction of good no cause to complain at tho profit and Fahrentween fifty sixty degrees which a small patch of the fruit will bulldog breeding a perfectly broken heit, and never lower tliau forty. tall. a Ventilation is of vital import- give you Journal of Agriculture. Dollle Tester is a pure lirlndle with the sourest of fnc.-- s and the most dis- ance. Top ventilation should always Th go III nf I' sat contented expression. She has not be given, especially after November; makes a good deal of difference It WHS VEX. quite the fine face of Huthos, but is this is secured by proper construc- wliat is fed to fattening steers or when bull dog traditions and history typical und of great value. Never other cattle as affecting the kind of tion ol the potato-hous- e are considered. For throughout ficTwo dugs of fume at ths Kennel cover the potatoes with straw or meat they will furnish. A sweet tion and story the Irall.dog Ik spoken of shows are Leonidas :::T Stinky, the cloth of any kind, for this prevents food that is easily digested makes a as the most vicious and ill tempered of property of Robert I. hi. I V.'luthrop's the escae of moisture and injurious better quality of boef than dues corn, brutes the very last kind of a dog to family. Though more chilly dogs lie quartered in a household or to march of the Hempstead colony, they are fa- gases, and often causes too high a which is starchy and not easy to down the avenue" us a woman's com- miliar figures on the pavements during temperature. The best cover, when digest Pumpkins ought to be part certain months of the year. cover is uoed, is dry dirt or sawdust of the ration if much grain is fed. panion. Tlie bulldog, however, has been Society marks two ''bulls" in especial No cover at all directly ou the potato Ilubbanl squash is richer and sweeter s. grossly slandered. The sins of mon- that have endeared themselves as is decidedly preferable. than the pumpkin, und will fatten and yet have kept away from grels wlio have perhaps a touch of An underground cellar is the easi- excellent beef without other feed. been veins have in blood tlieir bulldog public sight on the bench. ilne of vhdted upon him and caused his bad these is Mrs. Albert Stevens dog, a est and most economical means of It Is sometimes used for feeding by of The simon bull wliite eunine of great intelligence and keeping a large quantity of potatoes. thorn who grow Hubbard squash for pedipure repute. American Cultivator. gree' and ranking is one of the sweet- beautiful ugliness; the other un English Those should be built where perfect its seed est tempered dogs in existence. His specimen of the genus bull belonging freedom from moisture can be Dairy Not. composure is unruffled, and he does to Miss E. M. Fulton of East Twenty-fir- secured. An elevated point with street. Miss Fulton has been un- slope from all sides, and a deep clay not periodically growl and fret. Separate the buttermilk from These dog are seen more and more fortunate in the matter of dog mortal- soil, is a good location. It Is almost butter as quickly as possible. on the avenue each day, says the ity, having lost several excellent types A hard milking cow is a nuisance. to get a dry cellar when New York Herald. Fashion has be- the post two or three years. Her pres- impossible cow should milk easily to be a Hie or strata has rock is it dug through gun to net her mark on them, and the ent pet she cherishes, therefore, with a rock bottom. A rock wall is not so first-clas- s cow. only difficulty ia that they are hard to much fondness. He is a very fine folWhen a cow stops chewing her end good; clay brick or wood Is better. secure and a long purse is needed. No low, with a curiously marked face. Partition the cellar Into bins of while being milked, something haa other dog is so hard to breed and so The dogs of Hruudway and the new hard to raise. Once a well marked, Rialto up ut Herald square are seldom from forty to one hundred barrels gone wrong to disturb her.. full blooded pup ia for sale there is a bulls." This fashion has not yet The grain that Is marketed in capacity each, with air space beclamor of buyers, and the chances are set in among theatrical folk. Its fully first tween each bin. Let an aisle of a butter and cheese is marketed in less that he goes at last to one of the fam- impetus was given to it by the Baron- - few feet extend the length of the bulk, and hence at less freight rate ous kennels in Baltimore, the east or cellar, and build the bins on either More patience and more good comabout New York. side of It Some varieties that are mon sense in and handling Yet. for all that, some admirable to keep require smaller bins, the heifer withmilking hard seen of breed be the her first calf, would may specimens can be bulked while other varieties the spoiling of many a cow. daily trotting along the avenue, in larger quantities. If the season prevent held in leash by daintily gloved hands. There is used for soap grease and is wet end the potatoes sappy, avoid In all probability the best specimen other purposes than buttering bread of the bull" in the city that takes a bulks. large S00, 000,000 pounds of bad butter daily constitutional, under feminine When the potatoes are placed in Even at is every year in this country. to of and fsaiiliar strollers the leash, or the leave doors the cellar, open ten cents a pound there ie a lose of swell district, is the dog owned bv floor over take up the Immediately Mrs. Frederick Neilson, Fred Gepiso. 000,00a the bins and leave up till cold hardt's sister. He is a brindled French Cows have likes and dislikes. their necessitates weether new breed of is closing. bull that toy, that often conceive a dislike for a They not be do need to closed When they just coming into popularity here, milker, and that man or woman can smaller than his English brother anil opened again. Ventilation for the never get as much from thorn as one not so decided in wrinkle, yet with the rat of the season should be given like can. Usually the only way same general characteristics. In color they or two one, hatchways through to discover their likes and dislike he is dark, in disposition quiet and sethree, as the case may require to change milkers, and sea whloh Is date. Mrs. Neilson brought him from above aisle. the which should open Iaris a year ago, fresh from honors at does the best with the cow. serve should as the These hatchways the French shows, lie is aa typical a In drawing off buttermilk, the entrance to and the exit from the BATIIQR. dog of the French breed as it would be You can National Stockman m;s: be as should left and open possible to find. Ilia earn a distin- css" Blanc, wlio always hod with her a cellar, catch ail the granules that run out guishing mark in this class of canines charming French bulldog of white. much as the weather will admit stick up stately and resolutely, a Entrance from the outside should with the buttermillf with a strainer besprinkled with brindle sign that the breed is pure. spots. Onatava's Spanish bull'' of bo provided by a door or doors enter- made this way: Flake a bottomless whatever mar lie the other plans black and white has been a Broadway the space above the cellar. These box, four by six Inches, with side of the NeilMin household, the daily stroller for several years, bnt it is a ing be opened or closed aa the tem- pieces projecting far enough to rest may exercise of thin dog goea on with masculine band that holds him buck Avoid always a oa the top of a bucket; tack some requires. unabated regularity, .dm. Neilson' s when he tries to investigate the modus perature fine wire cloth on the bottom of the of current air. maid takes him walking whenever operand! of the cable. effAfter the doors above the bins box and you have a good and her mistress is unable to do so. He is seen besides in the Neilson carriage, in THE SULTAN KEEPS HIS WORD have been closed or the floors re- icient strainer. the park anil the perfection of groom- Aad Tbrr. Hundred Annhsi are El- placed for tho winter, they may be Hoasahold llalp. to sawdust with or covered dirt If proare cored before they are ing looks out on the world with intelapples evated bjr Drowning. ligent eyes. It is said that foreign amlNuusailors tect the potatoes against extreme pared there is less danger of their less admirable of in the way llunlly complained to the cold weather. No artificial heat is breaking. points" is Miss Kip's French brindle. to Turkey recently that the prisons of Con- necessary by this method. If ink is spattered on woodwork it the first of these dogs imported here. sublime jiortewere overcrowded with An underground cellar so built as may be taken out by scouring with He is the constant companion of his stantinople Armenia. from Tlie not to admit of the above treatment sand and water and a little mistress, and it is said among her political prisoners ammonia, government decided to remove the may be so regulated as to observe as then rinsing with soda and water. cause of the complaint and shipped 300 far as possible the above principle It is bettor to have the sauoe of the prisoners on board a A topground cellar may be built poured around an article than over for transportation to Africa. The vessel was only gone a very short time, upon the same plan as tha under- Its and to have the border of the dish however, and it was a mystery what ground cellar just described. Double garnished with bits of parsley, celery had become of the prisoners until a walls are necessary, and means tops, or carrot leaves Russian merchant vessel in the harbor should be provided for artificial Tha dishes on which meats, fish, of Constantincmle, while raising her heating. Pack tha walls with dirt anchor a few days since, brought np or sawdust; also use a heavy layer jellies and creams are placed should be large enough to have a margin of with it fifteen haircloth sacks, such as and below. The bins in this are used by Turkish merchants for above ol house can be made in the an inch or so between the food and the lower edge of the border of the packing goods for shipment At first, style the Russian thought that he had found center with a passageway around dish. traces of smugglers, but when he cinnr them. Pipes can be placed in this Gold or silver embroidery may be tc- examine the sacks he found lliut passageway for hot water heating, cleaned by warming spirlte of wine most economical filled with were human and is which the bodies, they and applying it to the embroidery or a sack. in The of means eighteen twenty heating. satisfactory with a bit of soft sponge and then bodies were ascertained to be those of A small quantity of potatoes may Armenians. It is said that tho grand he drying it by rubbing it with soft, some in a and in dug dry pit kept new canton flannel vizier said not long ago that he would sheltered some ea barn a or place, settle the Armenian question by anniA tablospoonful of melted butter same treatment Observe hilating the Armenians, and he is outhouse. in cellar. Place plank is measured after melting, but that a as in keeping in be to a fulfill fair to way thought his threat. The matter lias been re- over the pit. and cover these planks spoonful of butter melted is measured as Russia, is to BTAXLXT. it thought that with dirt when the weather gets cold. befora The distinction should be ported The sweet potato is sometimes carefully observed, as It makes the friends that she never allows him out some of tlie murdered Armenians were difference between success and of her sight When she viiiitn Europe, Russian subjects. kept in banks like Irish potatoes and- j failure. thelshould he bank This as she has done once or twice since nis They Fat a j Ulosa la liar Coffl turnip. The potatoes i The work of garnishing should Men delight in giving horrifying ex- tered aud ventilated. arrival in this country, the small brindle takes the sea voyage, too, and amples of the length to which feminine should not be covered with dirt un- not be overdone. Even a simple bears it exceedingly well. vanity may run. but the supreme til soaHtined fur a few weeks, and not garnish adds much to the appearance readied in Her continual watch over him Is dne climax seems to have la-ewoullier 1 cold enough to of the dish, but too much defloration to what pnmd a thrilling incident In an old Swedish enstmn A looking until the only injures 1L Garnishes should ba hia dogship's life. A year or so ago glass was placed in the coffin of an un- require it. Barrels filled in the patch, re- so arranged as not to interfere with Mins Kip was standing at the foot of married woman, so that when the last the steps of her houiie on the avenue trump sounded the could arrange her moved to any place of storage and the serving. Tee should always be mads with talking to a knot of friends, liis dog-shi- tresses before making her entry into left uncovered will keep well if dug unleashed, was placidly running heaven. Maidens were expected to when dry. just before frost, carefully freshly boiled water. The gases back and forth. When they turned to have their locks less tidy than these of handled, and at tha right that are in water and give an agreedry kept he was him. look for however, gone, their married sisters, whose hair was Enough potatoes may able flavor are driven off by boiling, and search proved unavailing. In de- bound about their heads in orderly temperature. In ibis he way in a family room and when water has been boiled for kept a offered Miaa of reward Kip gltio. braids, while the unwon maid wore spair the to family through the any length of time it loses most of supply rewaa here loosely in coquvtthh arrangement and several daya later the dog When the weather gets its gsa and will not maka tea of a turned. It was afterward found that that was eusily disturbed snd put out winter. a butier ut a neighboring residence on of order. very cold the barrel should be rolled fine flavor. m over-supplie- SKEhSMS , ob-Mr- lncon-sequenti- al . j v I . j prom-enader- st y man-nf-w- n ar |