Show GREAT SALT LAKE CITY UTAH MONDAY t Ttti SEiltWEEKIiT TELEOBAPII: nnuilli® ETEttV MONPAT I I and TirblUDAT 'Editor T'flH-STENIlOB- EE - CONTENTMENT - ! lCTeiturM hide the book of fote— prescrib’d their present statuA bot th'PB men whet spirit know FroJirflt whet men from whoxiltl wITer being Werobdowf ' frflW n - -- r J ous matron and as happy os A woman with a numerous progehy an partner can in tlus (according to romance vale of grief and tears expect to be The service I was fortunately enabled to render her forms one of the most pleasing recollections of wylife -- easy-temper- ed " Ityiot doomsI‘lto bleed Tb Uffib he to-d- ay end play?! hrklp tbya40 to food I ! the flowory to hocrops Krtu'd blood ryto reimd abed bia hand the jnat lifts -- j fatnns! to the given kindly ohTilindlps jhitcAph'Sry til the circle mark’d by Heaven j i xriifZi with ei'ptal eye as God of all T ' I hrojsrl£h or a sparrow fell Into ruin hurl'd or Jtema J ' JbI mm abnbbie burst and now a world then with soar trembling pinions Hope htiably " ado£c jt the jjrtat teacher Death and God irbat Titurc bliss'- he gives not thee to know' But gives flat hope to be thy blessing now hniiutn breast llAp iprinf etcrnnl fir the detail never LS- but always To bo bless’ d ' S’’ j the niuIl‘uacasyaqdconfiiidfrom home on a life to comet' JiesU lniUAnyrfVose untutored niril frefill poor Ciod la tSotulsor bears him In tlo wind Hu foul proud science never taught to stray IHr as tile solar walk or milky way ' Yet simple nature to bis hope has giron wri-ter- §) ! ‘ ' - '' - i s ir : hill' an humbler heaven: tlieloiid-topp'- d -hind World in depth of Woods embrac’d me jiappits ilaud in tho watery waste tfcre slavefouco more their nattvo laud behold torment n Christian’s thirst fur gold ! No T6 be (jmteats his natural desire— lleuaskf nonhgol wing no ssraph’s Arc: ' Put thinks admittnl to that equal sky gouie Kifer SWT X bear him company THE SECOND MAIllUAOKL f " AVyRRE X WARUK2? SY TEMPLE ' r - IN XElT ESQDF TIIR ' V ‘ : x l - : ' V- -' CeXCLUDED " - ! ' - - p j -- t profndcst silence reigned in tho ccurtUi I rvitirateil tlui qacstioih ? ’You milk answer ’woman” said thie judge rtemlv “unless ydli know your answer will - D The I : criminate yourself’’ The wfotr® locked wildly round the court $s iTin’ warrh of counsel or synipathy but iTrouning and eager faces — Thorn dyke she cmihl not dUccTn in the darknuss— hc bc-l and Iscemed githly amlfeuiic-stricke- n all presence of mijiJi la f slie at last gasped he rtiyeil it I ilo not kni'v Ihitr how” Jsho ailthtl’ jiasliing back her hair and pressing her- liflni$ £in her hot temples ‘’can this be? O -- : ''I ‘ '( Th-lic-h- e” v can it moan?” : i 1 Vnio vein iru t unionjrs tli bystanrlcrs nf tliis nioiiKntittru't('l the attention of thet jittlie uiil Jib immediately exclaimed' “The - What just -- teiuliiHjf uuiit not fciiYG the court’’ Ah o- fuv’r pirtced liinsolf liide-- the wretched mur- -' ror jli ufs wclla former ami 1 resumed jtlio of thc"vitnCss Mrs Tucker please to look at this jetter (It was the iirst whichJuul been tfd- !n?edJo 5 1 ary AVpodJey by her soU): That 1 believe' is your son’s handwriting?’r" f cns-exaHiinali- -- j r I S' ! i Thc body 'ofJhU will has been written by ’ ihe saamjiamtfv Now Woman ‘ answer: Was 'if your- sons— this young man who you cannot escape from justice — it he who forged 'the names of tho- - de--j ceaseil AtrsThonidyke’ ard of John Gum- - per-iffOiil- tyi ’ I I attuched to it?” w:n?T “’ot lier— not ’ flr r done?’ - lie!” shrieked the wretched was T’h or ndy ke— Tli orn dyke And then with a sudden revulsion as the consequences of what sho wponi her1 flic exclaimed have I saiil—what have I v - - that’s nil you accursod levil!” with 'gloomy ferocity it for trusting such an' idiot floUaRd fupl that I was fur doing so” sank clowiY in strong conyul- hi1 was car-by direction 'of tlib court " of the luilh anions silence which pen aded the ( J?Wr!n? this scene in which the reader will played a bold tentative and hap- Iaa? ' gairic was broken as the wit- i ' tilf by a loudiiiurmur of in- ' Sahon followed ly congratulatory excla-- J ‘9nrs ‘n the fortunato terminatioa of the delenilaut’s counsel threw up their q r a??d h verdictJ was atoncc returned for I -o i iV 'fhormlykp - f Wful : -- s s I i j ‘‘WUe inculpated parties were speedily in the liody of Mrs Thoriidyke £fvy:" been dlsinten-eit was discovered dtroyeil by bichforhlo of -- - asiand I 52rVhe-for- I I i‘ : f W - - d l an old rabmlingand was there land of picturesque a ' yet windows and narrow about tall the beauty which to The old ' building gave high guides its quaint almost comical physiognomy The large irregular garden too hod preserved to a wonderful degree thejexpression of the old farmhouse You felt somehow that such a garden could only belong to just such a building There was the same kind o£ plethoric amplitude about it the same rambling disconnected details forming d not unpleasant whole The shrubbery was thick and indifferand the fruit trees stood up trimmed) ently with a kind of awkward strength and flung: out theirTong limbs in a bold manly sort of jvay which reminded you of the days of that priest-princ- e Oliver Cromwell and his army of solemn heroes Bat as I was -- saying it was a May evening and- the sweet serious moonlight Jay all about the garden and the p in the country' It touched up the old gnbles’jand it wandered off to the shadow’s that lay in the dark tangled masses " under tho great trees The moonshine looked into tho house too and there was one chamber— a corner one— where the soft spiritual light seemed (but after all this may have been mere faney) to drop with a clearer sadder beauty- than it did anjAvhere else' Tho window was partially opened and every few moments tho breeze would come and fold away tho dainty white curtains so that tho May moon conld look into the chamber but it looked very comfortable with its i striped carpet and painted wooden chairsi There was a bed too in one corner with high posts and chintz curtains such as you may have seen in your grandmother’s spare chamber and on this two ch‘ dren were slumbering The heads were laid cfse together and the moonlight as it quivered over them likoa faintly-spoke- n blessing out the two profiles distinctly They bright were very unlike ana yet each in its kind was of tho girl3 veiy fair The arm of one of her companions and wound about her brown curls frero tangled Up with the dark locks of the other But the character of the two faces was a study' 'Tliey were so dissimilar “you felt that if the life of one would be'a picture that of tho othervwould bo a poem” Neither of thoso faces had gone out from tho sunshine of Its tenth summer and yet there was a dreamy and a thought fulness bn the smooth forehead kind of sad sweetness about the mouth of the form-honse:lai- ge - - - -- 'A siiasmchlic shriek clicickotl by a ilospcr- -' iiti’ rffart artiajhr oscaixxl lier ami slie stood family gazubg tmh starting eyes into my fiiCVa Somewhere in the country stood jof May ’ j' nTtkll It was a bright evening in the latter part flirm-hous- ) lliihitlifui iog THE SUNSHINE AFTER THE RAlN v murder' ahd Hradly for ln-- theublie prints that ‘Wild -- frailty andixecutedt th w®n'a was- - if IHeadley remciis aImitted evidence for th Gmivn the-iicc- k 1 que 'sleeper which you could no more inisin-terprdt than you cdnld the energy and pride of the other You could trace this latter in the casting of tha whole face in the curving of the small ripe lips that "seemed hardly to repose even in sleep They were not sisters those sleepers but orphans and tho memory of either could hardly travel bock to a time" when they had been nearly five years had the separated Forfarm-houechoes of the gathered up the sound of their childish glee and Abbie Glenn and Grace Newman only knew they were orphans by name But we will leavo them and go down stairs or a sebno is transpiring at this quiet house which will color Inp warp of their whole se future ‘Come come Mrs Hill clonTt feci so uneasy about it You’ve ' altogether too iquch sense to give way so All our tears can’t bring the dead back and mahyimes they’ip a great deal better off than we could make them if they were with U3” Tho speaker was a man of about fifty years of age large muscular and wejl formed with a clear bright eye and a mouth which deslooked pite the lines of strong will about it liis Ho wore kindly and coat too just as the houto did its you felt atonce’ ‘angles and abutments he was itr proprietor “I know it sir” said the house keeper trying tb steady her voice and keep back the all tears that would moisten Jior eyes very true what yon aresayingj but theti James was my only brothcr lie was younger than I felt more I too and I always used to thinktoward him like a mother than anything else even when wb played together in the old cornfields at homo and now to think of his dying out there when- A fresh spring of tears bubbled up to tho poor woman’s eyes and concluded the sentence Air Glenn took out hU handkerchief hastily and walked tojth'o window as though lie were" suddenly seized with d strong impulse ' to inspect tho moonlight There wasafew Inomerit3 silence Inf sitting-rooand then Mr Glen asked abruptly “Mrs Hill didn’t your brother leave a son V “Yes” replied tho housekeeper “Poor Hugh ! he will be thirteen next August' md what will become of the poor1’ fatherless and old-fashion- good-humor- ed sa-th- ed at ' J OCTOBER - housekeeper as though it struck him! as a remarkable coihddence “Just send for your nephew to come here there’s room enough in the house and if there isn’t it’ll bear another addition He’ll be just the one to climb trees and hunt for blackberries for tlie hairbrains up yonder Once more I say send for your nephew Mrs Hill he’s Welcome as long as he wishes to stayf The housekeeper did not answer with her lips There beamed from eveiy lineament of her kind motherly face a look which 'epitomised Whole volumes of grateful thanks And in the chamber above the children slept on in the White arms of the May moon-- - 1 i !' - m light v “Your uncle is going to send for hint next week and now girls you’ll have a playmate” It was morning some two weeks after the decision respecting the future home of Mts Hill’s nephew hdd been made that she announced this to Abbie and Grace while they ! sat at breakfasts r Mis Hill had talked a long time dwelling with pardonable vanity on tho virtuosi moral and mental of her nephew and amplified considerably upon the advantages which would bo mutually derived from snch an association The rolls had boon laid down and the steam from the china 1 had been rolling off soft gray clouds for the last half-houwhen Airs Ilill' paused “Oh it will be so delightful Grace !” said the restless little Abbie “Vc can have Somebody now to help hold our ropes and put up our swings and pull down the plum brandies without going to Uncle Xdtlian and having him say as he always docs ‘Tut tut! wliat 4 half-dispatch-ed tea-pot- r- P Tom-boy- s i “Well I expect he docs my dear child” old the replied good lady with ono of her most genil9 smiles ‘fit’s true he was only six months old when J saw him last but the doctor said he was a remarkable baby arid would' no doubt make a wonderful child But dear me children the breakfast has all grown cold wtiiio we’ve beeii talking” 'So they sat long at the breakfast table that fair June morning and talked of the time when Hugh should be with them and painted bright pictures and framed them with the golden light pf the future For the next two Weeks little was talked of e at the but the coining of Hugh and if Uncle Nathan did ‘say “pish” ahd tush” everybody knew he had bceti down to tho statioii several times to see if the boy had arrived j Oh there was a great warm heart throbbing ! beneath the brown coat of the old bachelor Abbic’s father knew this when he said vitli his dying breath ‘Take my motherless girl to my brother Nathan and his gentle sister knew it too when-shtwined the bri girt carls of Grace round her cold fingers and whispered “Give her to Nathan and tell him it was his ‘little Mary’ sent her to him’ - It is true lie had a little outside roughness about him but just find the way to Nathan Glenn’s heart and all wo3 right then and here again it wr like tho old hettse —full of mysterious entries and dark corners and suspicclosets but all well chough ious-looking when yon got into them At last Hugh came very unexpectedly as long expected guests are so apt to do For five consecutive nights had Mrs!! Hill worn lier gray silk and best muslin cap1 to receive him and that morning she was making a delicious pie while Abbie anil Grace on either sde of her were taking their first lesson iii this culinary mystery when Mr Glenn entered suddenly atid jatd in his provoRingly cool way “Airs! Hill hcrc3 your ncpow” The words were like an electric shock to the whole trio but Mr Glenn had a bachelor lioror of a Scene so he did not £tay to imness this one and we can imagin it “Isn’t he a flue boy? Didn’t I tell yhu so darlings ?” said Airs Hill after the excitement was somewhat abated and the boy liad been duly presented to his new playmates The housekeeper’s pride in lier nephew was He was not justified by his appearance handsome bat his broad forehead his bright dark eyes and expressive month abont which the sprightly joyousness of his atum was ever effervescing in smiles Would1 liave won you at once to the bov "Abbie Was of course tho first to answer - : farm-hous- o i to be continued A CUEIOUS DOCUMENT vALrrrn 31 J VOL 18 64 CHAPTER L I do not know that the attempt has ever been made to improve soldiers by an address to their I propose to try the reason and understanding experiment beginning with the new recruits It has grown into a proverb that “one hundred regulars will wliip four hundred raw troops” ‘The history of all wars proves this to be substan tially true And yet the hundred and four hundred men are made up of the same material How happens it that there is such' a disparity between them? Can inert 'drilling make one mail bolder than anothqr? Impossible as it is proved by the fact that when brought into battle for the first time they are all alike all equally alarmed and all equally apt to run But the regulars soon become accustomed1 tb battle and nothing gives us alarm to which we are accustomed Tliey soon discover too that the roar of cannon amfi the bursting of bombs which terrify them so much in tho first battle are the most harmless of all implements of warfare brought into the field- They arebetter than raw troops simply because if they have got over the fears of raw troops ontherefore it were possible for new recruits to the coolness and gage in their first battle with of veterans they would be equal to veterans Is this impossible? Certainly not Cor most of tho troops with wliicli BonaparCe fought the battle of Waterloo were new levies and they fought An gallantly as any of the best on the field This they did irora the confidence in their General They doubtless felt all the alarms common to troops engaging in battle for the first time but they And td this point it did not yield to their fears seems to me any raw troops may bring themselves by tho mere force of reason alone especially when assisted a little by experienced officers Let each man go into tlic battlefield with this train of reflecAt what? tions:—! shall he frightened of course life to is the which at my danger exposed Why Weu now what is really tho extent of tho danger? In the most sanguinary Dattle not one-fil- ' of tho The chances combatants are killed or woundedarc therefore five to bne that I shall not be hurt The proportion of the slightly and repovcrably wounded is to the killed and mortaUy woundedats nybtoone The chances arc therefore fire to one that if touched at all I shall not be mortally wounded The camion are the common engines which unnervCLinon Now of the whole number killed in battle not more than one in ono hundred arc killed by cannon A hundred to one therefore that those noisy bellowers do not hurt me The alternative is presented to nr to stand my ground in' spito of my fears 'dr to ruu Now In which lathe moBt danger? Why surely in running lor as a general rule of a given number more men are killed in flight than in light While I stand my ground 1 am all tho time destroying weakening and disheartening the enemy and encouraging my companions in arms VicBut tory therefore is likely to insure my safety in running I may be killed by ther very men whom I would have disabled liad I stood firm I weaken our forces throw the battle upon a reduced number expose them to increased labors and losses become then an object of their hatred and icon- temp t dispirit them and invigorate the foe not only for this battle lmt for all future battles The regular show that battles lose their terrors when we become used to them how am I ever to become used to them by Tunning? If I save my life by it I increase tlie’danger of being made prisoner a hundred-folFear or rto fear then I will os us the light long ' regulars fight” Now in all this I put love of country Yankee insolence and brutality entirely out of the question for with' panic stricken troops carrying in their bosoms no antidote for their fertrs or moral remedy for their natural defeats those considerations arc utterly Worthless as has been most lam our last great battle Tie proven mentablyIs found in the foregoing train of reflections remedy of cowards they They cannot make brave men caiinot prevent lcars on thc lmtlle-ficl- d but they Rufely ought to make the couarfl and the timbb Oili-celight manlUily in spite of their 'infirmities should impress them on the minds of their new recruits and as such men fight well under a General in whom they have conildeucc they should always if practicable be attached to the 'brigade division or corps in whose Generals thdy Lord Wellington i have tho most confidence ' reported to have said that ly nature lie was U great coward but that' his pride of character and love of country predominated over his fears The consequence was that he became the hero of heroes I ere :no reason why every soldier in the Confederate army might hot become a hero upon the same principle ' I am aware of the military dogma that mcnto become good soldiers must first become lucre ma- -' chines If tills be true then it were better for us d (policy aside) to make np our armies of to than toil their inured of negroes high maided chivalrous but mors feeble masters ' At the opening of thc war our armies were composed mainly of troops of tho latter class —men or science men of jWealtli men of tho learned professions Congressmen legislators professors and students — ail accustomed to a life of comparative case There was little drifting of them or time for drilling them before they were engaged in a series of battles The conscript laws filled our ranks with men from all grades of society and of all descriptions of character in tho main hardable-bodistrong-muscle- d men accusworking hard-living to constant tomed and fatigue They hare been long in the machine factory long enough to have every attribute of humanity drilled out of them Hus this class proved themselves to be better soldiers than tho other? Have they fought better? Have they gained any more victo- fie? Have they endiireif any more hardships and with more patience? Let the advocates of machinery answer these questions The dogma which 1 hare been considering is not only false but ' is in the highest degree mischievous If scientific war be but' a c fallct of machines it necessarily follows that the power which has the- greatest number of machines must in the end be victorious IIow is it possible for nine millions of population — six we may say — to bring into tho field as many men as can twenty-thre- e millions? And yet we seem to be trying the to be called hopeless experiment Everybody to arms In Reason's name I ask whj? We have plenty of meu enrolled to whip all the Yankees in the field at this time if our men will but fight as they did at the beginning of the war Did we lose the battle of Mission Ridge for want of men? No but from the derangement of our machinery Ahd why should rthnt defeat rim us all crazy? I see nothing alarming in it One of the bitter fmits of the dogma in question itf that officers who subscribe to it will take no pains to inspire their men-wit- h and high- -' courage — V of I itate this npon the authority of a Eriidier-Gcavr- rs CHAPTER II: My first chapter was addressed to' raw pugg estiOns addressed to the sol-- BY TUB PIKES OF TUE CONFEDERATE STATES REV A B JiONGStKEET L L D ' The following’ ringular essay on the conduct of soldiers in the Held and under fire the unreason: T able-bodie- ed - I Vic--to- -- ? :VV 1 ’ - I'lc-burne- ’s - -- u ’x - i’ -- in-th- eir of-thei- r f coin-mawri- er -- cx-liatL- st - e 1 - h K r ol-die- rsr imuicr-Johnsto- i r- 1 a'-iiia- -- t HTY PF GKXERATsijTP: — CotftinTy there ia no can: for fear from this source u yet Reason down yonr fears then soldiers but if you cannot fight them out ' - ui'-u- al wcll-know- vf rt apologies fur running than the achievement of Now I can conceive of but thce- four things which can induce a rational bcinf toexptet defeat in' battle: ' il Superiority in numbers opposed to hiid 2 Superiority iu uf ms 3 Superiority in valor 4 Superiority in generalship Let Us consider these matters irj order 1 Superiority is XiraiEEiw — This is tUc bugbear that madccowards of us foMldrty yelirs before we seceded which— seems to Irave tuned the heads of half the nation' civil and military within the last two (months t"and which seems- li relv to make us destroy ourselves to keep the Yankees from destroying us j I have hireailybestnwed a few remarks upon this head let its consider it a little tuore in detail To give the instances in which brave men conquered twice and thrice their number would be to write a book Take u few cases from our own hist try At Hip Bethel 1300 Confederates put to con fusion and At the battle of Blackburn's flight 4A)00 Ford (Bull llun) one brigade whipped titico its number At the firt battle of Maiiassst? IJSOCMF comiiletely routed 75 0(A) It h will that tlwYun- kecs tight better now than they did then and that tlifc Eastthe Western Federalist tight better than ern This niny be true but it wonlJ be a harmless truth if we did not fight worse We wliippeid Western troops at Chicamauga and we would have whippad them again nt MLsinn Ridgd if ajbrigade or mofe of onr men had not played the coward Even in the roiit which these inert INI r IT gallant ltand arrested the whole noJeral army when they were pmhnldy four to one iga:ri-- t him This I regard as by far the most lii iiliiut feat of tlic war To have stood his ground wool 1 have been creditable to him and his men but in tho midst of confusion and flight to have (Gru cd his men in an advantagcous'positiouandtbl av ? main- tained it against Repeated assaults of ovcrivl elming numbers and to have defeated Iicmh entiti ’s him ' to a monument as high as Ibukout and to ach of his men one as high Mission ltldgeII pe ho will preserve with peculiar dare the name every man that stood by him in thiitineriiombie c onflict Here then we hare an ftlurfratlon frnT tho same battle-fiel- d of the diirerence between run' ning from superior nmnbcrs and fighting them Cleburne demonstrated under every bravely discouragement Western troops even in' th “ir exultation of victory may be whipptil by i inferior numbers when possessed of superior valorl Ix?t tjro renegades reynember this and retrieve their-credit by fighting gallantly next battlcf are There other considerations which it seems tenors ti tome should divest numbers so as to at far least reflecting troops raisp them above cowardly conducts Sliese truths all will aflmit: the more men in the army the more unwieldy arid sluggish does it become the more difficult is it to make tljcm ef-feclive iii acliontlic more oa the rick 1st tlie more killed by a given number of Khots lh more ami provisions do they r qnirc ' transportation ami tho more unlikely that they Will have i capable of directing their inovi unents These arc most i crions skilfully and Usefully drawbacks to a large armv c?ucially wlnn far away trom lme ?TiuywilI of themaelv a it in time - A small army then cvcrv-- ' advantage of a large one except in the single matter of numbers They are more mne iateiyof tlipir caimnander more readily under the-eyconcentrated more prompt iu reaching the point s of attack lose fewer in battle anti in retre it (orderly retreat I mean) are absolutely unapp reachable by their cumbersome foe These facts are uf themselves milScicht to account for the ma y vic have" gaiuejd over tories which inferior0 numbers —: superior Let us snpph'e that Grant cor?mnnds 100000 men and Johnston but 5000!) There jare wenty positions between DaUonand Allaata wiiic! Johnston may occupy with the certainty of whipping Grant ’ if ’his men will light braveiv (It M to ho ' ' ' fhoiibi aftdr hard pared with those of the enemy will be about as one to five Am so of all the other positions Rut there is one i icw cf th subject which diuuld (uict all fears of tc on the score ot liiimbcrs and it is this: That n it isf absolutely impossible' for Grant to c iu the lose Supposed because it i: absolutely impof&nilo fur him to force Jo!iiistn into a fight upon ground of Iris own choosing Uijontho whole then there is no great cause of ah rm'to the soldier in the numbers opposed to him The' Fabian polity avoids defeat at least 2 Kui’e'ri'oritv in Aums— Except in I know of no advantage the enemy haveartillery of usin arms certainly none to i be featcdr Of artillery I hhve already sjniken ind shown that they crctho least fiinuidahle implomeraciits of vrar if any that rare u&d For tlie destruction of fortific atious ships ami towns Cannon are useful but fj r field service they are the moist incorvcnient c tuber- soriie iuefiieient expensive worthies eng ines of warihat ever were invented A man tobl me he liaodkren in six battle? and h“ hadpover seen killed by a cannon or bomb In his life A noth ch told me that he had beionged to an atiilcrv-corp-s for two years that in that time they had broken down fourteain-- of horses and been brought into aelioiCiui: oucc in which he iad no reason to believe they had killed a piugjq liian They fear canuw) simply ficaurp uen cease to reason whcn tliey engage in battle and surrender themselves to' their instinctive im uLes 3 SurKBioarrv ax Vaioe — This the Yi inkchs liave never shown and never will ‘show uii til our troops become the biggest of fools and thejmean-es- t T of cowards v ablencss of fear aad the best way to prevent panj ics was picked up by a newspaper correspondent If the paper speak tinth accorfin? fa Bragg Bite t r ana his small brigie ars'ieititiod ' the criHliM thy I motherless child?” : on one of the battlefields near Kenesaw Mountain Riven todbhurn uiI hi Icr ttid J1! ' was a SouthcLanbd iiikI '“Precisely what I tliipking” said Air in Georgia It iswrittenbj a j many biltlrf who has turned hif attention to this matter le Glemr: tiiru lug rwuul and cor minting his ern clerjinan— N Y Tribue? on the livid (‘ONtfifyEIv O' I'AWE SECOND) j seif-confiden- t - -- self-respe- :U in battle expecting to lie whipreason ped ore very certain to bo whipped: The Vrithout is plain ' They fight without object and spirit— tlicir thoughts arc more occupied iq finding lien Who engage self-possessi- on rs ernits It was not designed to dissipate their fears jin battle for no counsel can do this but to teacji theiu to le good soldiers in spite of their feanj— to show them that if they will consult their own ilersonal safety they will tight in fear 1 ntfw address tho Much that l havc said to tho soldiers generally first class is equally applicable to this : d' 1 toned patriotism but will treat them pretty rnneh as they' would so mauy prize-lighteAway with the false demoralizing dogma! Soldiers you arn moral Ttgents do for yourselves then Svhat would do for you If I could Nerve yoursdlvcs up : by your own mental citcrgies to deeds of noli IS darmg and unflinching valor though yourf enemy r be three to your one Ui Grace laughed a clear rich laiigli that no matter how weary and jaded and anxious your heart might have been would have fallen upon it like sweet music “Yes it will bo delightful Abbier said Grace “and then when the Summer days are so long and hot1 and we cannot go out We will all three sitin the house and play fqjry-lan- d or build great castles among the beautiful clouds of sunset you ' and I and Hugh Abbie Does Hugh know 'any stories Mrs inn?” - ! -: !i ‘ 1 i i t : 'Mp 4' :K TT '21' - H Mr - 4 |