Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 6 Mar 1890, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

 ^lff"'*^"i-i-!." '•" â„¢^ jyJL^lWtjpjJJ^ILJjgiM^.'f.^^'gg^ i! St. Mary of the Angels .: OR, HI* fIRST AND LAST I|rn^ BY THOMAS A. JANVIER. CHAPTER n. tal^ with the Greasers, who did not count. Hardy scarcely had said a dozen words to a The superintendent w^ Ovt^rw^th wom^ during the whole of the past three line on inspection and took Maray out witn ai*„=„4.v-„- i,-.* a ^urZ^^^r^^c-t him on a special. They had a clear track, y^J^' and made the run of fifty miles to Santa ^iaria in a trifle over two hours. The last five rniles was all down grade,' from a high divide to the point where the track crossed the broad valtey of the little river on a long trestle. At the southern end of the trestle was the tank. The pump was down below, beside the stream, and hidden by the high bank. Three or four hundred yards further down the line was the station â€" a little frame building painted dark brown. It looked hopelessly out of place, and desperately hot and uncomfortable under the blazing Mexican sun. Away to the left, on tlie bluff above the stream, was the to-«-n â€" a cluster of shabby adobe houses, built irregularly about the old chapel. It was a dusty, dirty, dreary-lookhig place, without a shrub or tree for shelter against the fierce heat of the sun. The only visible signs of life were a few naked children bathing in the river and some ill-favored dogs drowsing beside the houses in narrow strips of shade. A great plain, covered with cactus growth and studded v.ith pita palms, stretched away tov.-ard the distant mountains in the east â€" the very realization of arid desolate- ness. Across this plain went a yellow, dustystreak, thetrailleadingtothemines. An American company had bought these mines, and in a desultory fashion was working them. It was for the encouragement of theAmerican company â€" it needed encouragement badly^ tiiat the station at Santa Maria had been established. Hardy v.as not as much discouraged by the, looks of his prospective home as a man fresh from the States would have been. He had lived in some pretty hard places during the past three years, and he had come to know that in to\vTis quite as ill- looking as Santa Maria was there were possibilities of comparative comfort. Like all men who have become familiar with the ' Southwest, the sight of water cheered him â€" for running water is a mighty source of solace in a hot land. The refreshing wonders which water can work were shown at Santa Maria by a delectably gieen expanse of a dozen acres or so stretching along the lower slopes of the hill-sides beyond the town â€" the cultivated ground that drew its life from a great aceqnia fed from the river. It did Hardy's heart good to see this liit of green. The engine slowed up as it iieared the bot- tom of the long down grade, and stopped be- side the tank. The gauge showed that the tank was full, and -the pump was at work. In a moment the pump stopped, and then a man came out from the engine-house, and climbed up the steep bank. When he got on level ground he walked toward them in a slouching fashion that was in keeping with his surly nianner when ho got near enough to speak. He was a tall man, heavily and strongly built. His Idack hair and heard, his dark eyes and dark skin, gave him the look of a Mexican. '•What tlie devil â€" " he- ijegan, and then stopped as he saw the superintendent. "What are you running that pump for when j'our tank's fidl?" the superintendent asked sharplj' "I ain't ninnin' it. It's stopped Altogether, he found the prospect of a bearable existence in Santa Maria enlarging in a very satisfactory manner. Unless some row broke out about the waste of wood at the pump, which he was beginning to think was not likely, there was no reason why he should not be fairly comfortable in this Mexican town. The presence of an abnormal number of hard characters did not bother him. Having that lofty contempt for Greaser toughs that characterizes the frontier American, he was not at all afraid that he could not hold his own. All that he would have to guard against were knife-thrusts in the back and shots in the dark. He had been uccessful at various times in the past in taking precautions against annoyances of this nature, and he felt reasonably confident that he could continue to take adequate precautioni against them in the future. The locomotive watered at the tank and came on to the station. When the trans- fer of valuable property was completed the superintent entered his car, and the special pulled out for the southward. Hardy and Barwood watched it sliding away down the track, the steam rising faintly in the hot, air and a long trail of black smoke hanging almost motionless above the lines of rails. "I'll go over t' th' house an' see about dinner," Barwood said. "I guess my wife imderstood what Jose told her; but she ain't sharp about th' language, an' maybe she didn't. There'll be nothin' t' do till the 4. 10 passes, so you can fix yourself. You've got blankets, I see, an' you'll find a cot in th' inside room. There's a basin there, too, an' I'll send one of these lazy devils down t' th' tank t' bring you a bucket of water. I'll come back for you in' half an hour or so, or send one of th' boys over. It'll be a lit- tle less like hell for hotness in here if you'll open that back door. I don't believe you've ever been in a hotter place 'an Santa Maria. I never have. But there's ,one good thing about it, it's always cool at night^^gets cool right away after th' sun sets, when th' wind begins t' blow down from th' hills. " Barwood walked off through the hot sunshine. Hardy carried his roll of blan- kets, and the battered black oilcloth bag that held the remainder of his personal belongings, into the inner room, opened the back door, and tried to fancy that the waves of heat which slowly drifted, in at 'I. and out at the other made an at- a trifle less baking than that of '•oat otitside. He seated hirn- L'-.i'ty chair and lighted a pipe 1\- filled her. If I'd run after she was wouldn't Look for one iloor nil);-);:"!- the^s-;' self on a Presently a- ))oy brought tlie promised bucket of water. It was lukewarm but washing even in lukewarm water was refreshing. In the course of half an the boy came again and said that dinner v.as rcadj-. Hardy closed and locked the doors and followed Inm. The ground was hot beneath his feet. The weight of tlie liot air through which he walked op- pressed him. Over the broad str'^tch of cactus-covered plain the rays of heat reflect- ed from tlie ground rose shimmering. The boy led the way to an adobe- house that stood beside the partly ruined chapel. It ve just had been the priest's house in the time when full a priest had ministered regularly in Santa Maiia, and stood upon the very site of the little hut in which the fir«t of the Mission Fathers had dwelt three centuries and more before. It was larger and in better repair than the houses near by, and it j)osse3sed the further dignity of a small window, set "not what we used to have athome there's • with ;». ^r .Jardy^ Yon^ find it prettj not much..8Lanj,thing 4omMrp^t^^ ' f^^^^^^^j'^i^^'ifYdiitfa/^l^ like home, rfave you beard from home ^Sette^than anybody else here can tS shock of tbiB meeting had been more Uive you-at least. I nfean, itOl be more BeSrtoHa^y7Tven,-thaiithadbeento |«J^* ^^^ " " Save that his life had roughened States. Ihere \i Mary. -r ty him a little, she saw lum unchanged. lut the change that Hardy saw in her was a pitiable one. All her freshness and look of youth had gone from her. She was pale and thin and worn. He had thought of her always as the very embodiment of neatness, but now her dress was careless, and her beautiful gold-brown hair was knotted any- how ujwn her head. Seeing her thus. Hardy found added to the moral wrench given him by this sudden rousing of a sor- row that he had believed was dead, the keen pain that ca,me of knowing that only through bitter trials of flesh and spirit could she have been so changed. And there was great pathos to him in her dwelling so strongly on that word "home." It was with difficulty that he could control himself sufficiently to speak. But he perceived that she was right in forcing commonplace talk, and he tried to help her. Bkirwood main- tained an ugly silence. "It isn't m.uch like the Wyoming Valley down here, and that's a fact," Hardy said, trying to speak with hearti- ness. " But I've been around in these to getting in the States." There was a touch of apology in her tone, and a half-dq)recating look toward her husband as she made this correction. " We have supper at six." She came close to him as she spoke, and as her husband turned to pick up a box of matches from the table she pressed a scrap of crmnpled paper into his hand. When he opened this paper he read " Don't have words ivith him. It will only make things worse for me." (TO BE CONTINFED.) A Bear Story- The prospect of a green prairie was so pleasing after my long experience of the dark woodland, and the sun was so hot, that I dis- mounted, throwing the bridle-rein up(Jn the ground, which was the same as telling my horse in English that he was free to graze, but was not to stray more than a few yards from my side. I lighted my pipe, and sat with- in the shadow of a large black walnut tree, i with my back against the trunk. Within a couple of feet to my right, the ground sloped ' steeply to the grassy prairie below to my left parts so long now^in New Mexico and j ^asa small belt of tall hickories, whi»h grew Arizona, you know â€" that I've got pretty 1 in the midst of a dense clump of bushes. I well used to it. And I've got to lik- had been smoking perhaps ten minutes when Mexicans, too. They're something lazy, ing the I know; but there's ant about them, for all. You ought to learn the language. It makes all the difiereuce in gettmg along -ndth them when you know the language. Your husband tells me that he got a teacher. Xow, why don't you get a teacher too " "Yes," ^lary answered, speaking slowly. "My husband did get a â€" a' teacher- â€" " She stopped suddenly, as Barwood shot a Ipok at her across the table. Hardy did not see this by- play. Then she v.ent on "Well, there's a good deal in what you say, and maybe I'll try. But I'm not good for much at study nowadays, I'm afraid. I don't believe that even Squire Rambo would think that I was fit to be a school-mistress now, Mr. Hardy." She tried to smile as she said this, but her lips quivered. "What good beans these are" â€" Hardy was rather desperate â€" "They're as good as the Mexicans cook them. Frijoles are about suddenly I heard my horse give a snort of pleas- alarm. I looked to my left and beheld him quivering with terror, close to the thick un- der growth. Wondering what had startled him so, I was on the point of springing upi when I caught sight of something, just inside the bushes right in front of me that brought my heart, as the saying is, into my mouth. What I saw were two bright eyes and a nose prominent, mobile, black, shining. Dangerous symptoms these of a bear. Keep ing my glance riveted on those two gleaming eyes, and not daring to move niy body, I felt with my left hand for my rifle, which wsys luckily lying within reach, and brought it carefully across my knees. I kept my pipe in my mouth for the sunple reason that I was afraid to lift my hand to remove it. Slowly, and with the least possible movement, I got the rifle in both hands, imd then without moving my legs, I twis'edmy body half round. I hesitated for one dreadful moment, and then, quick as lightning, up went my tt Throws a Foimtaii^^ ^^ JThe artesian weU J^ Warrego River. Qu^l,^!^ and most remarkavSSL. resources of marvellonH!!!!? »f C IS situated quite St£^\N but in one of the mr.»t '^OO^ could have been Si""M» would have expect?d.«| which is_ the best in\tt^,««iSl events yields tlie W °f **1C was sunk on the top 6f' ^^o^it hydraulic enghieer, J r' '^W reasons only known' to W^^S^ have been amply justaei*'^- W^l Crossing the swampy L, " hummocK, attention is H°, '« -, nelout through the drifti'^^^1 plamed that the outflow ofS,*^ig this ere the apparatus for „'" 2 been obtained The k! """'^H^ harmless enough ki^d^rt^^X" have been taken for a ratl^^^' placed in an idiotic po'f^i^ of a hole sixty or seventv "-- broad, and ten feet deep ^l^hi observation showed that tW *» ing standpipe had made the IrH ter oi fact, the vatorwho. f ' rusned up in such volume tW^ away. the sand around tl " minmtes and cleaned out t^ t "" 'ii the derrick and thre^te^'^d !*S(| pipe there has been fixwil^li?""' so that tlie water ca:brt3i the l)e3t thing the Mexicans turn out, accord- gun andâ€" out rushed the bear. The eve is ing to my mind. You oughtn't to call your- self stupid when you can cook beans so well. Ma â€" Mrs.' Barwood. " "She didn't cook 'em," Barwood interpos- ed. "One of our â€" a Meiican friend of ours sent 'em in to us. Mary's not a bad cook, but only a Mexican can cook beans as good as these. Take some more. " "I'm glad, any way, Mrs. Barwood, that you've got some Mexican friends," Hardy went on. "It must 'make things ever so much pleasanter for you, even if you don't speak the language. Their sending things in this way is just like the Mexicans. They " ' certainly are a goodnatured lot, just as I was uour aaying. " Mary was about to reply when another look from her husband â€" Hardy saw it this time â€" made her remam silent. There Was an awkward pause. Hardy was sittuig with his back to the door. Maiy sat facing it. Suddenly he saw that she was growing pale. At the same moment he heard a footstep and then there \1 be water under the escax* there Well, there ain't any. yourself." It struck Hardy that tlie man was very eager to make this point in iiis o^\^l favor. If the same thought struck tiie supermten- dent he kept it to himself. j high up in the side wall, and protected by "All right," he said. "But you burn a j wooden bars. As he passed beneath this lot of wood, all the same." And then he • window Hardy distinctly heard these words added, with a touch of that odd formalism j " an' if you open your fool mouth an' that leads certain classes of Americans to let out a single word I'll knife you " refer to each other as "gentlemen," and to j This curious utterance, fell upon his ears adopt on occasion ceremonious forms of ' so suddenly that he had turned the corner address by no means in keeping with their of the house before he fairly liad grasped noniud speech " Mr. William Barwood, j the meaning of it. "Por ar/ui, Senor," said let lae make you acquainted with Mr. Jolm j the boy, pointing to the open door. The Hardj-. ilr. Hardy is the gentleman wlio sound of his footsteps must have lieen heard is going to take charge of the station, you â-  inside, for as he reached the doorvray, Bar- kuf.w. I witnt yoii to do what you can to j wood met him. make things pleasant for him." j "Hot enough for you comin' across Din- Earwood looked sharply at Hardy for a ' ner's ready. My wife's just cleanin' herself, motnciit tlien, drooping his eyes, he sliambl- Here she is now. llr. Hardy, let me make Quicker than the hand. I saw his shining ank clear of the bushes before I could touch the trigger. Crackâ€" crackâ€" a huge black mass almost upon me. I am rolling, self- flung, down tlie steep slope like a barrel, yet consciously guarding my precious pipe â€" a glance upward from the long grass belOw, and a vision of the bear lying with his head on the top of the slope^dead. That was all there was to it. He measured close upon five feet iji length, weighed th.ree hundred and nmety-six pounds, and my feet are upon his skin as I v/rite this. Making. Play of Â¥ork.- In England a company has been formed for the manufacture of direction. " """« ia« \Vhen tlie visitors arrived at « i I wasseen that the v,-aterw2ttSH tmy stream from this bend int„ri sandMow, butiuafewminTteH was changed Mr. Woodl^SS laiid Boring Co,.pa„y, which s,uiJl opened tlie valve, and W.hever7 w-ieel the thm stream thickeDed'a™„e» ed from its former perpendicuk ;* Gradually the volume of wa'er â- â- / and began to rotvr through th^pi^T like steam blowing from a siL* riJ Every mornent tlie sight kcameiil estmg, and when the valve wasiiiUv/ itM-asa spectacle to wonder at R from the bore and by its own kceert itself for a distance of thirty feet kai? zontal direction came a coluiiin oi i white as milk in appearance. In a « or two it dunned up thesaudkforena coffee-colored mud. This was the first singular thing nota for the railing white torrent driviiu It, as it seemed, the brown mud; pwd a whimsical effect like the pouriagoid and coffee into the same cup at ties time. But this did not last long. Ins^ few moments a little pond was ioa which filled up until the level surroundmg grounil was reached, anlij tliere was seen at first a rivulet, amlti stream rushing dovni the hillside. is said that this well fills attO-gaBojiJ in thirteen seconds it can be readilvs formerly imported into the country at the almost incredibly large sum of $2,000,000. ^Vhen it was learned that most of the work of manufacturing the toys was accomplished by little children, who enjoyed their em some one calledâ€" the voice was very sweet ployment so much that they preferred" it'to I" Tln.V. tllia rn,nTn,,»r oof ol,i;„l,,7J i1. _â-  ed up to him and held out his hand. " Shake," he said. Hardy shook. There was a crratifying friendliness in this j you acquainted "What th' hâ€" I's th' matter with you now?" This abrupt break in Mr. BarwOod's for- deir.onst ration but it did not prevent Hardy mal introduction, and still more abrupt from entertaining the possibly unreasonable transition to his customary vigorous col- notion that wi-.at this man really wanted to loquial manner, was not without cause for do Avas to stick a knife into him. the woman advancing toward them from the "As for makui' things pleasant for Mr. inside room â€" whom Hardy, coming from the Hardy," Barwood answered, "or for anybody â-  glaring sushine into the scantilj- lighted else in this hell-hole, I can't say that the house, saw but dimly â€" gave a cry of fricrht prospect's proniisin' But I'll do what I can or surprise, and then, pressing her hands for. him to make it. a little less stinkin' upon her breast, sank down into a chair. S'pose we go up to the station an' I'll turn j In a moment Hardy saw clearly, but he things over to him â€" though beside twelve did not recognize her. Then she looked blank tickets and th' way-book and a kero- â-  up at him and spoke sene lamp I guess there ain't anything in j "Don't you know me, John " particTar t'tuni. I Her eyes had not changed, nor had her "You'll bunk in th' station, Mr. Hardy, I voice though the tone of sorrow in it was s'pose. I did at first. Now I've got a house strange to him. It was Mary Wade, over in th' town. You can feed with us if j "Mary! You " was all that he could you want to^â€" an' I guess my wife won't be ' say. sorry to have somebody t' talk to. She can't I "Well, there don't seem t' be no very 'vin' need of m^7 intT-nrli-iMi'T,' t-.^,, " tj drivin' need of my introducin' you," Bar- wood struck in. " Knowed each other back in th' States, I s'pose. Like enougli you're th' man Mary told me she shook just before she come West. I didn't pay much attention t' th' matter when she told me about it, for I got her, all th' same an' I sha'n't much attention to it now, for still. An' J won't say which most ' " ' you think let's have iTe got^TeU^oSi S^X^^ ""^^^^^^^^^^^ ...„„ „.^ of us hasth'^^XJ^^ ** you want. But if there's t'be thankful for, either. Mary, when ' w^ ^.? vu'^*"*t***** *â„¢' tJ^eV-e, let me hink you look like a stuct pig long w T ^^^w^^ J T°' ^^^^ it either- rh. lust set no. tiHII vm, =.„' ^ZtZ i,„,.5 9"^* might. We don't 00 in mn^i, t^^ „*,.i„ get th' talkin' hang of th' language, she says â€" but I guess her real trouble is she won't try. I got a teacher, j-ou see, an' I learned good enough t' talk all I wanted m six months. on speak th' language, I s'pose?" "I can worry along," Hardy answered. "Oh, you'll be all right, then â€" at least as right as anylxdy can be in such a hole as Santa Maria. I don't know where I'd find a white man's dog, let alone a white man, that 'u'd stay here if he wasn't paid to. Come along t' th' enough, just get up, will you, an station, now, an' we'll attend t' th' transfer. I dinner." An' then we'll go over t' th' house an' have j Hardy felt the blood come up into his somethin' t' eat. I can't promise you much, face, and his hands closed into fists • but but it'll be th' best that's t' be had about » look from Mary made him restrain his here." Turning to one of the group of boys strong desire to knock Barwood down and collected about the locomotive, he added i then kick him. " HeUo, there, you Jose, anda a la Senor "Ii^it was such a surprise. Will " she yjMe yo mgo d Senor huperxntendente a said, speakmg m a fumble tone that iicreM- otrocabaNero para la comtda. ed Hardy's pugnac^ "I never ew^^ The supermtendent dechned this hospit- ' to see Mr^ nLg^yhere. y^kn^^ able offer. _^He was gomg further down the his comme in suddenly th4t way upset me bne, he said, imd could not stop. I'm aU ri|Kt now"-sfie was veij w^, ^d Hardly rapidly was amvmg at the con- she rose slowly and with diflicultv "Well elusion thatmsmng this man up he had have dinner right away. I'm sottv I kent vo» made a murUk.. From the standpoint of watting." S^waiS^^ i "u^^JS^yTU^, the frontier his mann^ J^^' *1 «'°^- t^ *« "tove that sto^ in oneir^rmh^ S mentofpobteness .a»w.««dc and he riom, and thence brought the dinner to S ffi was hospitable. It was a pleasant surprise, table. "**!"« •-" me cam* moreover, to find that there was an Ameri- "ItV not much of a dinner, Mr. Hardy. and soft â€" " Guillemio Hardy turned involuntarily, and the sight of the woman whom he saw standing in the doorway fairly took away his breath. She was one of those magnificent creatures who not infrequently are met with among the common people of Mexico a typical descendant of the sturdy Spani- ards of the sixteenth century (very diflerent from the degenerate race that peoples Spain to-day) and of the softer race whom the Spaniards conquered in Mexico. She was tall, vigorous, stately; but her strong, free action of body and limb was full of grace, and her stately air was softened by a seducing tenderness. As she stood there in the doorwayâ€" ijartly in shadow and part- ly in sunlightâ€" the large, beautiful lines of her figure standing out sharply against the glaring background of the sun-bathed adohe wall of the old church, one Ijare arm half raised, her body partly turned as she started tocK on seeing a stranger, she seemed to Hardy less a real woman than a woman in a bewildering dream. The vision lasted only for a moment. ' ' G °?i"j .f?""'" B-'^i-^'ooc^ said m Spanish and added " Later." When Hardy turned again ilarj-'s face no longer was white it was red as fire. She rose from the table- hastily and went into the mner room. Barwood and'Hardy tte'Lw^^l^ '"'^T- â- /' *^^y got "P from «ie table Barwood said " Try a cigarito They re pretty good ones. " " No I'ni obliged. I guess I'll stick to a pipe. Hardy answered. T „'l^?" ^^P^^^tl^at's til' way you feel now. I used t feel that way about cigaritos my- self. But now that I've fairly |ot into th' way of 'em I don't care much t' smoke any- thm else. It's a good plan when you're in a foreign country t' try t' do what's done by th folks that live there. I can't go all th' Mexican ways, but I try f take in as many of 'em as I can." â- ' "Yes," Hardy see." ' play, this company estabhshed their manu- foctory in the midst of a crowded district of Birmingham, and advertised to teach child- ren tlie work free of cost. As soon as the people learned of this offer, women and children besieged the place in such numliers that the street was literally packed with applicants, and the police had great diffi- culty to force their way througli the thronf. The chddren after, learning how to do tlie work are allowed to take it to their homes, and, surrounded by new comforts and luxu- ries purchased bythe proceeds of their fasci- natmg employment, amid the refinin" in- fluences of home hundreds of busy little hands are employed in delightful work. To call out the most intelligent workers in the trade the company issued a list of prizes to be competed for by the children imder 12 yeare of age and awarded to the child who snail construct the best outfit for the com- pany s paper doll. The largest prize is £5, the smallest £3, and other prize lists are to toilow presentlv. answered dryly, "so I Gave Her Life to Save Her Dog. On Thursday, a week ago, as the lightning ^^Vresspfiased through the suburban toWn ot Oak Park, near Chicago, Mollie O'Brien. finished ll^?â„¢^H"""H' employ of Mrs. R. H. Tf'^l ^^^^^'â- ' attempted to cross the track. She was accompanied by a Scotch collie who '^rfr/T'iFf*'" the family. The' young turned to see where the dog had gone Seemg that the dog was in imntinent df^er of being run over she started to save him. ed for wV° t^l^PPO^te platform scream- hJ^J^ A^"" back but she heeded not her own danger, and as she reached the Steps, slipped and feU, just as the great iron monster rushed past. The train^did not cnish her, but the driver on th. wh^k of the engine broke her neck instantly. tl^t ^vY^- *° ^^' ^««i«tance, but it w£ too late. Placing her on the platform kind valve vi-as next closed and the righ" bent removedi On the second opeuiiigo: valve there was witnessed a spscta!^ once beautiful and majestic, and wiiicsi well worth the long journey from Bria to see. The water rose in a suovrj- cd like a stalagmite of wool to a heiil thirty feet, and descended in torrent so heavy and close as to qniEl sciire the pipe itself. It was a mm beauty, and a picture that will Devsl effaced from the memories of ttef witnessed it. Subsequently a nozzle, one inciiiiil meter, was attached to the pipe, the water was turned on it asa even jet to a height of nearly one :3^ feet, returning to earth in a heau m or dissipating ni mist clouds througl'" the' rainbows played with an effect tlaj as lieautiful as it was wonderful. It^ that the visitoi-s \Could never tire of 1; at it. Thev simply stood and gazfti. sj saying a woi-d, for in the presence o:j marvellous phenomenon! speech seeaeJfl and commonplace ami the wind simpij itself up to childlike wonderment How to Eude the Doctor. .J A popular pliysician was rfc«""' ' on by a fiiend, "to wliojn, in tn^ »-| conversation, he saiil '"' ^^i simple precautions wiiich foim m «••: nde of life, and if people would l«'«-^ them I should liave to resort to w'^;: means of making a livelihood. the f.dlowing: Doh- " other jolting vehicle^ Its ^lumerated street cars or pick the teeth \vith pins or otner t^;.,, stances. Don't neglect any opF_;^,- insure a variety of lood. Bo" ' '., hot and cold things immediatelyiii Don't pamper the appetite wtft s of food that may lead to excess. write or do any delicate work w ing the light from the lettj' direct special mental ovvmf^j2 more than eight Iwu" "j-jV â- â€¢â- ' the parlor (i»;» Dont* side. answer but he thought better of it "J'" cpmin' over t' th' station after Ss' *Th • '"" ' °*? ^*^" "^^^ *^' settle things. Thmgs is pretty much as I left 'em Barwood gave him a sharp look, and for a w ^.TI '""*»«'ty seekers crowded around l^^f, moment seemed disposed to give hhn a shar^ ' ^^ l^^ 8^^t noble dog she had tried '?^^ J 1 w innntivity, but he tho^bf l^ff° .!.?^' "" ^^^" 1 to save kept all away froln her PUo n^ '""' ^^ absolute "»"vay, himself by her side^he Hcked he^ Zf ^^^" " """ """'""' ' aWaS t:'^^^ ^. "^y way tried^" awaken her. No one dared touch her and wouia ne leave her for a moment. Miss Q^ Brien was twenty-three yeara'old, ^d'w^ bom and raised in St tâ„¢;. ' " ***" hours day. Don't keep value you own and your i ^^ Dont delude yourself into tne you are an exception so-far as the nominal -^^"f .^^^ hours. Dont endeavor^ .^^i work in 1 tired part of the brain. How Some Engs Died, ^^^ ^^^u^JL^f "^^"i ^*^i« P^lid^ blood The Emperor of (jemianyiw- his resolution to put aovn dueling merits i^^ "'^fZjti course there is really no u ^5^ the duelist and the m«r.'l*rer j, the fonner more frequently But it has taken peop to learn even and in Germany, this ffhiok »ucii,iici -Louis, ight. We don't go in much for stvle Wyorckiu^^°"'^^^-^'^^*'^-ni' Hardy was puzzled by this fresh disphiy too, "oTSTing hafh?mSt St^dt^do 'ISTf *^^ «^Pt"°^ "dlg^^tior' c^^rturie; ind '^!l"tli"fe.-^Tr?^" ?«^-e^^^^ w^ norJvl..lPi1?!.^!".Hey I- and truth, a« him. mtention v,„o^cu. m me way tnat Barwrwl over roaH â- WK»t '-T- "" "" ""' aau- 1 uuucou u1u.11 i" ,....-- ^^ â- was cheeking it Nob«iy f^u lie^^ pall ^rn^^^^-^f^"^^' ^^^^^^^ th^tlhoweyev, wh^^ ing a man, still less like sendintr a b^»t DMor ofT^ ^th Frederick HL, Em- and it may safely be cone through him. whenhereaUy^^rh! !^diS tS°?' '"' ' ' ^MiiuliMi punishment which the Empe^*^ trying, according to his rightsfto^'^tl^ mil^ftOdXr^"**^^ '^«" i^P'fl*" "P«° " "^^H'X d^ Hardy o^y co^d hope that thiT^nS SSa^S^pK^' ^^,^**«*»teBi. effect of stamping out the ^isp^r of iKwd.wffl «.«M i«..,-._^^â„¢^ rff5L^«**??3^ -*Wto IJ3tr!of Spi^^ pf thelGei»an Army. fft^i|9.,t(t be :xaasted b*-]" ' "^affln*' i»4 mm- wboiie • *° remove it, and Si emto the room agam. She had retiiSI _^ • *^"?P»°«. a»»dVhenahe^^â„¢ Excepting casual she said with an obViouseffort^^u^^J'"*^^,^'^^ • '^^^edthiwL^^dta^n^^"' '"'??*»• 1 1^?"*^°^'" ui»i..c«uK,| wmteltoinetoatyOTaregoingtoboard^^ytBkit»l^^^^^"^88®^»eeident- bef^^ that is â€" râ€" -M,x««. I must again be inet hercompo.n«. andT^n A^^k^" Ki^^f p"Cd* *Pd^*»^^^"'««WM2^ '" *a??5t. ?T«» voice. ^,mSvSSJShli^?*^^^^â„¢Sh^ hose JWSj^Cj We Jleiimelt: Tglelauw S^' '4 B^ ot gentlemen ^aI Chien swamps TstS^cted to the Bayc '*^T«»roaching the ov«i they saw an "body was heavdy «^g the voice of 1 liSTlookedupand » tS^ashe^beheldtb ^-Mhesawthe men ht th the water and en ,nds near the opposite sTe party, suspecting he ,nt£e opposite shore, bridge and were th fwhen he rushed out of Wmen made a dash for Uerful blow he sent ont driver, while the other cc ' The wild man, with ox hurled his antagoni rth'is time the first par " and with the as who 1 elf, toys, which were ' stood that all this did not take loffiBB^ted gentlemen, ridge, undertook to hold le five men had now ur this wild creature, but hough they were me) go completely exhauste that they gave up tryj 1 came to Columbus, wh lir encoxmter with this r [organized a party of t jt for him. The party left Colun lut 2 o'clock and went d wild man had been se ik hun pretty well by bh one of the attacking pi on the left arm. The ined until dark, when thi for the night, expecti lase the following mon k that night they wt „„. they thought the sere id all were quickly upon t idling, a fire it was not J party, P. Pearson, w .t the men to thinking, a included that the wild ms le camp, and had made fearson. The party coul imainder of the night, anc the capture of the wi (cue of their friend. A ill stick from some dea would ensue, and al ^._„ Sh-h-h-h We endi itness of the night until 1 party divided into two •eement to meet two mil -dge at 12 o'clock noon. The party to which we Ix rath bottom of the river, juad went north. Our pa lore than a mile when we thicket; and Mr. Haile, foreman, led us to irehed thejlace, but cou â- hence came the sound, bu' ut this time said Boys, I believe here's a Upon closely examining j rasmuch larger than a leader, a courageous ma id exclaimed " Pearson, are you there ' To this interrogation cami "Yes. Leave guards a,r. lovels, lights, c., and res A posse of four -was sent t ficks, c., while one of om inform the remainder o; earson had been found. le picks, shovels, c., we te entire party set to v.-orl lirt. The hole was about M at this point grew lar bliquely to the east. AV( nnel for about twenty Iroffress was impeded by an- Prders were given by the lei poor open, and we set to v/ ^terwehad torn it down, nat not a man preseiit w^ lying day. A dirt room a' ^uare presented itself, and Pe room, the wild man, his i 71 "^bey saw that resist; nd allowed us to go into po^ested. Ropes were at oi Pg the wild man and his ' mid was given to Mr. Eppe J-o our interrogation of ' prisoner?; camel guttural I-s-h k-i-U-e-d h-o-m. ';?-dh-eb-ef.r-e-e." •h«r"..Pr°"i^^ng the wil â- ^^ if he would inform «mpamon was, he seemed P« jumped five or six feet â- minted to one corner of ag a lot of fur skins. J tHi^ }^^^ corner reveale. riS 'â- ^P '^««^' and at i^k ^^^ companion coidd below. He was spoken nd \f '"*S^ '^^ thrown ov.* L â-  Person was resci i-ripl â-  ^^" terrible h.with the wild mar Pibhcation, so we omit i en«' 1 *.^® '^d family «^ to Columbus with o, «?yeannow be seen at tl Th/^" .baving been obt lWi^°'^5'^«et4inchesii ^- !^„i?* jwoads, and has ^nponhig entire body. Nlteh '^^igbsl^po E«ft heavier coat of hair "Vi»r husband. The chil trfl,y®*"°^"»n'ihas 1 ^^hin^'P^"^*^"^^ ^Xtu^^ very much re " i^^ â„¢*'» can speak hut his wife articu J^^PM^Wetounders "^Hination we ca JS^rfl bave christeii iina%iie and his coi r^^^awayfromtheii I ^S^w^' ^** bave i^^tune. Tot 4gdren, aUof wl ^f^Ui juamted witl v^.â€" said the yoi ' oe your wife. W 'V^'*bee!!tc!aimi ' sboul 'ec^iiwnj) 1 doixw my 'J»b«Wyletia«d( Mj"'^wtet«nt

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy