Bloomington Progress, Volume 6, Number 48, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 March 1873 — Page 1

TUB BKSCVK. Nearer and nearer and nearer aud near. Hark how his horse's hoofs ring out On the rlTer-bottnm, loud and clear. He waves his tmnbrero ano utters a ahout, " Hiajou blaok hair floats free In the is hid, Htt grar-hued tempt la fallen bihind. . , Nearer aud nearer. IJa, haa readied the river, yet does uot aeem To notice tho ford Above where tis broad ; Sat atralent down theahelving ant into ths itream BMIM his ataed.Uk a man m a dream. (treat ued! The norae's head is itn ler ! Not ao, h mrtms 'twae theuickad, 1 14 lat StMhu broad, brcaat cleave the wares asunder. Hrjinis ateaight onward, he's ore: at last . He is here.

ntina and torembli i(t and faint!

f t-n3ght aliaUyeHlir.

Th)Sky rider aprlngs to ground, And looks with questioning glance itround. " Amerka.j(Ht Ah! Serum; What hand ao quick to save as yonin ! Pff amor de IH ' Mount and ride! tee CkiiicAi ."' The oapl.-iiu cried: 'BtraHRer, enough, we kr.o- tho rest, God wBag, we will do our bo.it. '1 Hark to the bugle's roundelnj ! Bwt and taddU I TJp and away ! Mount and ride aa ye ne'er rode bef ore, 8 pur UU your horses' flanks run g re. Bide for the aake of human Uvea. Bide aa ye would were your sisters and wlTea Camming nnder tneir acalniug knivea. Boot and saddle ! Away, away ! Kwrer did order Ccme'Swre welcome to us on the tHH-der : Kever more promptly did we obey. Everything dropped in drinr disorder, Supper half-flnished itw left on the ground ; KMt'nai sprang to his horse's aide, Chierily the word went around, Baawaa! Beecnel Mount and Tide! leath to tl.e redxkina far and wid '. Then quiet we galloped of." into th. night, All saddled, att bridled, U fcr a fl8Q'-" ' The evening sun has sunk full soon, Tinging the west with crimson and. gold ; But ov eaah man's left shoulder he moon, Evil omen .As o'er foretold To Other foeraen In days of old Xnger and deth,-!-in majety Kileutly olivba the eastern sky. The moon behind, the atara shining o'er ne, Shadow and darlmera around ; But we only know straight betoro xa Are twenty miles of ground. O God ! To think of the terrible fate Awaiting that home if we come too late. To think twenty miles and two hours henoa May make such fearful difference. Ah ! Noble steeds, do all ye knowThat twenty miles we draw not rem, Uutjtfter thai ye shall rest again. flaUoptng, galloping, galloping on, Four times thirty hoofs as one. Galleping on at a fearful pace. In terrible race. One by one the miles go by, Quickly the horses and momenta fly. "Stranger, are we almost there?" The Mexican he shook his head " Ten miles further on," he said. Then bowed hie head iu muttered prayer. SFea nuies morel Will they never pass? ttManeVoiiand.on'wegn; We brush the dew from tho buffalo-grass, We're in the Badlands now. Utffl the uiilca are passing by. Still the hones and momenta fly. Stranger, do we near the place T" The Mexican nods in mute reply ; Then suddenly, with ghastly faco. Points to the western sky. Aha ! "What means that lurid glow 1 Sorely the sun set long ago. "Pause not for your lives," the i-aptain said, " Tia a house in flames, five miles ahead !" God grant that rarely on human sight There dawn such a scene as we saw that night ! Such horrible pieiuvvx brush could produce. Such terrible story no pen could tell, Aa If in an putaut had Men let loose A thousamt$ende of .ubU. . A bit of timocr, a patch of green, A houULina winding sheet of bme, SmokeTuuf fire and ghastly glare The shrieks of a poor wretch tortured there. The cries of women bemoaning tbeir fate, The yelle of the devils incarnate. Playing their devi ' game. This is the story S ling the air, This the terrible scene. A painted savage, with rapid stride, Fiaccs hfmjMf by a captive aide ; A moment toys with her beautiful hair, TheniMM Us haeebce high in air. But the threatening weapon never fell. Something tteya their horrible niirth. What thunder is that which shakes the earth 1 'TIS a thunder the redskins know full well. Fnll well they know they have cause to dread The headlong charge of our cavalry. See what a change in their revelry ! Scalps and captives are heeded not. Hinder and pillage are all forget, Now let the fiends escape who can, We're down upon them horse aud man. We follow them far o'er the grassy plain. We hunt them down amid Uie tiees ; Ah, devil, well may you come to your knee. Ye ahaU never slay women aud children again ! But hark, the bugle ! What does it say 7 Methiuks the notes were the Recall. Never leas promrtly did we obey. Why should we hold our hand to slay ; The captain spoke and shamed lis .11 : ' 'Vengeance is Mine, I will repay.' Una He that brought us here to-night In time to save the tight is won,

Vengeance la His, let bim requite :

00!ttt!tgX01t

.A. Republican. 3?ivper,

Devoted to the Advancettnenc of the -Local Interests of Monroe County.

Established A. I)., 1835.

BLO OM I NCtTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1873.

New Series.-rV0L.VIe-rN0.4S.

Band ; may bo more, may be double ! Wonder if I'm to have half. So Moses is dead ! Well, what will the old woman sav to the gal and the money? She'll think 'twas her dreams; 'spose that must have been Moses she nee laid out ; well, it better be him than me, for he was one of them kind o' men who went as straight as n string. Glad I gave tho boy notice that we should quit working Sundays unless we get in a hurry." . Mrs. Applebee had not been surprised at the eirthquiike, and the letter with the newt, of Moses' death was a natural sequeneo to her dream. The money was their divs. Moses had more help than Sara : "but the gal, if she took i notion to come .out here, what in the. world would they do with her ?" , " The ugly business," as Mr. Applebee styled it, "involved a trip to the East. "Couldn't have happened in a better time, " he said ; " business iB slacker than I've known it for a long spell." Mrs. Applebee sent him off with many admonitions about being careful of kimsnlf and not eat fruit at the Isthmus :

and her parting injunction was : "Snm, you'd better .not let on to home 'bout working on Sunday, and well, yon Iuhw, some other things ; they wouldn't understand, and 'twould seem queer. Go to meetin' while you're there, and put

silver in the contribution box every time His passed, especially if 'lis for the heathen. I always felt a grnt interest in them ; and, look hero, doiij't you bring that gal back with yon on no account, for I never had any faculty with chil

dren. Get her boarded somewn?re rea

Miscellaneous. is unmarried, as witness by

according to tho directions, ho soon canio i in sight of the grove, and in the dusky j Ti.rtwt

twilight he could discern the fluttering j tjje etnfojaent that infants do not know of Sybil's white dress. j how to ween until thev are several days

He would have placed lumself oewde ; D,(1 stirtTwaik? I'm a trifle cold j Thbbe are W;000 male Ceso hi Sa,, sittinffhere " Francisco, and it is estimated that they As he folded her shawl around hor he j occupy less than 700 dwellings and conlrihardlv resist the. temptation to fold stores.

her in his arms, but he was wise enough j , nox eight years old, at Lowell,

to bide his tune.

You should have been with me the

other day, Mr. Krayton ; yon could have looked upon a picture far more interest

ing than me.

" I cannot conceive ot an;

lier or more pictiiTcsae, bn

like to have been with von : that always

gives me pleasure. Oh, Sybil, tell me." " Have patience one moment ; I want to describe it to yon while I have it fresh in mind. You said once, you'd ' rather have my word-picture than the real scene, for I caught nt things you would hav! overlooked . " He touched the hand that rested on his arm, repeating the words which seemed such a delieato flattery to him. " Under that tree were two figures, a boy with ftfcwket of pebbles, which he was tossing right and loft, giving a gay shout as they fell around him, and an Indian woman, who looked far too hopeless to be the mother of such a beautiful child. As I came np to her she snatched him, aud would have run away, but I called to her, and offered the boy some bon-bons. As I stooped over him he raucrht at mv watch chain, aud I coaxed

! him to sit beside me, showing him the

writing-

held at

measures

Mass., spelled 7,000 words without a miss, and he put 100 to tho committeo and they missed 15.

A nationati convention of

vthinc love-' paper makers is shortly to he mt I should Springfield, Mass., to discuss, r

ior increasing uteir ptuuw.

The subscriptions to Harvaifd CoMege, to make up the losses by the great firts, have already passed the' $150,000, being at last accounts $151,788.50. Voltaire said of Mademoiselle Io Livey: "She was so beautiful that I raised my long, thin body, and stood bofore her like a point of admiration." A Parisian savant has 'discovered that when young crawfish are deprived of their eyes new ones will grow in the interval ' between the shedding of two shells.

I r. w u f)it dvin or to it a-m

'Jf.wraalMIM :

MtMi mv.um mvPmmymmv

Hang , cant jf qm weesati. aT VHaVflM

4bink job ougit to beJilCrtn ewtod

USSm IMnk yra eoM &iam?ai:DmXllm

An' when my groaua is enoeo, tlasitf lawmr rirrnoon'neOTde rSfitf

tell ' -r, jaiia

Tbawfa'ayaa.aaiM mttom'tltumt

tlgiliiajtrBglitt )h Ounkfttl-jinieyBrr aajf

Mark Pvrain on Mnrderers, Iawyers, and Legislators. I have read the Foster petitions in

Thursita-f's Tribune. Hie lawyers'

'opinions do not disturb me, because I know that those same gentlemen can make as able an argument in favor of Judas Iscariot, which is a. great deal for ane-to say, for I noverean think of Judas Iscariot without losing my temper. To my mind Judas Iscariot was nothing Vint i low, mean, premature congressman. The attitude of the jury dseg not nnsettife a body, I must admit ; and it seems plain that they would have modified their verdict to murder in the second degree if the judge's charge had permit-

lea it. unt wncn i come to tue peni'ons of Foster's friends, and find out Vrt(r's true character, the generous

tears will flow I cannot help it. How easy it is to get n wrong impression of a man. I perceive that from childhood up this one has been a sweet, docile thing, full of pretty ways find gentle impulses, the charm of the fireside, the admiration of society, the idol of the Sunday school. I recognize in him the divinest nature that has ever glorified

j any me te human being. I perceive that ! the sentiment with which he regarded

temperance was a thing th&t amounted

frantic adoration. 1 ireely coniess

to

AcooiiMNrt to the Boston Journal, i mat it was tne most natumi tiling in .me r ,.ii. onr.,1 i world for such an oriraniiun as tins to

i l:... 4!'(7C(f, . Kifio tnr t e drunk and insult a stranger, ana

every child between the ages of '5 and 15 years.

sonable and where they'll kfep her j truikets I wore, your iittie locfcet among

straight; 'twill be doing our duty in the easiest way, and that's what I believe in. " Moses daughter proved to be i young lady with a mind of her own, aud her uncle found her fully tiet upon going to California. Mrs. Applebee imagined everything, worked herself thinner and more dyspeptic than ever. Her dreams grew ominous and the signs numberless, all indicative of stern trials and perplexities, so that it really wae a relief when Mr. Applebee arrived with his charge. There seemed to bo weighty reasons

why the Applebees should desire their niece to marry before she became of age, but, anxious us they felt, they dared not move in that direction, for she, with the most charming naivete, was sure to do the opposite from what was expected of her. When she h id been there a week or

she l:.au only

the Arctic regions is believed to be that of Lient. Viscomte, one of Sir Joliu Frank-

therest. The woman talked very good . Im's oiticera. XI nas Deeu onneu ai English, and I found the child belonged j Greenwich. to her, and was three years old. But ; ther15 are three hundred nnd fortythe time for you nnd the artist would j tnrec towns jn Massachusetts, and there have been when the case opened and dis- ; are rpsi(icnts jn an but sixteen who own closed your face. She caught a glimpse j morc or css mterost in some corporaof it, and her dusky face grew nshen, i Uon iocn.tei in the State, while a terrible fire leaped from her eyes, i ... With one wrench she tore it from the ; The Boston Advertiser intimates that chain, then pressed it to her bosoni, , it nught not be inappropriate to change

while she moiirned and wailed hko a lost

drank and insult

then beat his brains out with a car-oook

beesinso he did not seem to admire it. Mnr.li in Fristor. And to think that wo

Thk skeleton found by dipt. Hall in ! came sn near losing liim ! How do we

know Imfrthnt he is the Setwvnd Advent ? And yet, after all, if the Jury had not been'hainpered in their choipe of a verdict I think I could not content to lose

him.

sriirTE

"He eall her pale-face wife, nnd stay with her always. Poor squaw only have pappoose and no brave," she said, wrath-

j fully. i i TV..'.,!'.-. rt li iliiTl alio hold n n

l.UiUlJg tl ' li.v . ....., ....... " J your picture. Perhaps you would have chosen thtit scene for the canvas, when I learned the true chnrncter of the man

j who had offered mo his love. ! " Mr. Brayton, you have my answer ;

1 nave no ituiey to uiajto uire m i , . . , -i

one whose

the name of the Massachusetts Agricul

tural College to "a school to wean farmers' sons from farm work."

harem,

A California firm has set np an in-

l abator of 2,000 eggs capacity. It is 9 I feet long, 8J feet wide, and 16 inches, I high and is expected to turn out live : chickens promptly and unerringly. It is safe to say that the m ost popular j humorist in the United States just at ; present is Bailey, the ridiculous genius of the Danburv Nnvs. And yet he does

never has imblished a

book. Bring him out I

Tho humorist who invented trial by

jury playod a colossal practical joke upon the world, but sine; we have the system, wo ought to try to reipect it. A thing which is not thoroughly easy to' do, when we reflect that by command of the law a criminal juror must Tic an intellectual vacuum, attached to a melting heart and perfectly maccaronian bowels

oi compassion,

President (grant's Second Term. President Grant enters on his second term nnder favorable auspices. The difficulties which surrounded the Government when he first took his soot, and which were greater than ho himself then understood, have nearly all disappeared, and none of anything like equal magnitude have iirisen in their stead. No

foreign question presents any prospect of enioarrasment. Tho process of reconstrnctior., which four years ago was involved in deep perplexity, has been completed. The principle of equality in eivil and political laghts has been embodied in tho Constitution, and its authority acknowledged, without a dis

senting votf, in a national election, ine State Governments of the South have been perfected: representation lias

been again Mly granted: to them ; political disabilities the last trace of the rebellion in the laws of the country or the condition of tho South have been substantially removed. The President takes his position to-day sustained by a popular ma jority in all but six States of the TJnicu, slid including all but two of the ten States which went into rebellion. And for ibis condition of things he is himself largely entitled to credit. It was his firm and prudent administration of the law that brought political disorders to an end in the South ; it was his sagacious counsel that secured the

passage of the amnesty act, and it was his proven moderation, patriotism, and

sense of justice that won ior tne Kepnolican t;icket the very considerable support it received from the Southern whites. On ihe prospect thus presented the. country may congratulate itself. It may do so, also, on the complete failure of the opposition to fasten upon the President any of tie numerous charges so freely indulged in during the campaign. There has been a period of painful and

disgusiang disclosures at Washington,, and we Save seen characters hitherto without- blemish r lifelessly stained. But the President, cfarerning whom no libel .was too bast., no slander, too ex-

I treine for 'the license ofc-uraorhpulous

a right that they its heard, and that their wishes be respecied. Men, however thickly clad in dignities., cannot alford to sit unmindful cr! pubhc opinioc To sneer at and decry, thi sentiment is to show that they forgot their duty .and

have outgrown their station. J.ae peo- ljMwfai!.M dpaan Omr, me a nl nre not to reoreserrii their ffeirsffctlt rj3ft?SCk yt W tto

they are the people's. . When epreseit- f' ""lffl&S'iaBli

TWmaan' AeDaie to MarVnj? 1

An'fre'hnn'r'd &aaPrTD 'in

Tgvr ex. ettar Mall ,' , f f flAJ'

.1 .... j

tatives can no longer do this the cOttntiy will accept their retireioent. and cheer

fully nil tJw.ir places wiui men wntj.paji.

(Jhtcago inter-ueeq.r., Mf

I have had no experience in making to his country iSj therefore, unimpaireds

OuapEorkiedone.'

TBBII AID MOW.

Then, yon whispered, Love, I vow Yonr eves ae dark and rare ; . . 2o woman has a whiter brow, -T Horannnler-tinted hair.

' o. vrsU yon know your prond, red moutU, Is eloquently tender ; And that yonr face is graced by youth . o Ad nefiity'R magte splendor." Toray, yon do not care to we ?ha ssrrne face e'er again ; Too'djgrieve not though my life should be Henceforlh, through you, all pain. Then, woman-like, I thought you moved "SOngst other men, a Sing ; .. To-day, I scorn niyeelf, who loved " 80 false, so base a thing. ' Then, eabh avowed to each, " Ob, 1 - Could live without thee never S" And bow our lips have said " Good-bye," iForevel and forever.

i nl.n onnminAAfl t.nnt.

L DUO WUUU ...... - - t T . . , ... met two persons who interested her in ; trusted to my care I left with xi.- 1 i ti.o TtHoho- 1ip claim was stroneer than mine,

U1H ieH.1t. VJL'XIJl "iv, ; ,u i t r -n t " 3 TT:

thought them vastly superior to the ; wonder yon snowed sncn a cusiiKe to ; nenry jjerry joweryw u. x wSte people i ramblings in . this vicinity, but I ; said to be m New York, from which Tell me 'something " said she, " of promised that poor creature to bring j point his wife has recently been receivMr. Brayton, who seems to be the nabob ; you here for once." ing packages. The reward offered for of the place Is ho rich as Craisus and ! She had talked so rapidly her listener , lnm, dead or alive, is 11,000. wise as Solomon, and are you nil unani- ' had no time to arrange Ins speech. It j TnE hisses Greeley will not hire out mous in conferring every bono:: in your ; mattered little, for before them stood : tho fam nt 0happaqna the coming seagift upon him '."' 1 the woman, like a dark Nemesis, holding ; gon bnt intend to imlmge it themselves. " Ben BravtDn is the richest man this S m her arm the boy. He was sleeping, T 1 1 chappaqna enrly in May,

sida ol tne Bierra ievaaa mfunutu uu uu ..... j- -. ,

nwna mnra ntrmk in our mines than any i case,

n4-t.a. olv mam ia n amuli-into of RlllTie of 1 Svbil

O-" " . 'V. 7 ! .r xJi..l 11 1.1.1,.

the crack schools m the JKast, sb Dig at me ucauuiw gruvu, uium yr.. ,

and free-hearted as a prince be- I Peach, and into tne pain which ntiu oej come so familial to her iu the last few

days. i Pluck Armstrong came to the breakfast table tho next morning, and Ben Brayton was absent from it. The Pnl"t.7 j returned without him, and only Sybil

lows or amending them, hut still I can-

' not understand why, when, it takes . twelve men to iuflwt tho death penalty upon a person, it should take any less than twelve more" to undo their work.If I were a legislature, and had just . been elected and had not time to sell out, I would put the pardoning and commuting power into the hands of twelve able pieu, instead of dumping bo huge a ! load upon the shoulders of one poor, pe- . -. . . . i . i i i

TircnE is a report that the outlaw tition persecuted individual.

ftDBK xwaht.

- i ,i 1 i i xney go out 10 iiiiappaquu e:triy iu muy, ,n , w8 ?tck Glitlcred the jeweled ; a,, ied bT their aunt, Mrs. Clevee held fast by strings of gaudy head. lantl hcr "two daughters, who will iybil turned and fled back through . mak(i chappnqnn tlieir Bvmmer Tesi-

law, sides

learned through Pluck that

When Ben Brayton came back to his j

home there was a long, mysterious story j of peril and escape from Indians, and j

his faco bore frightful evidence of some terrible assault, whereby his wondrous

beauty was marred forever,

JHtftV APTUEUJEJE'S WEDDING. At breakfast, one morning, Mrs. Applebee seemed low-spirited, and without ' 'Tier -usual appetite. "Siek?" asked Mr. Applekee, sen- '' tentiously, between huge swallows of ' oofee. - ' " Not sick, ecart, for I've had u warning, and we are going to have trouble, ,M9ar a& my name is Mehit&bel AppleA bee. I dreamed of my picking dande

lions and. daises, last sight, and eating

cherries, and this is the dead of winter.

' rXon know the old saying, 'Dream of "rStut or flowers out of season, yon are i l.i u.1 i. ...... rrl.nn

Sure Ul uouuit? wiuiuub ikoouu, xucu 9mm&- morning I dreamed of my eye teeth dropping out. When I was dress- ' ing, Hooked out Into the kitchen to see if you put on the teakettle, and I saw you laid out on the t able as plain as I ever saw anything in my life." I "'Nonsense !" interrupted her husband, -whose digestion, evidently, was better than that of his fpouse. " I never saw any sense in signs or dreams, and I think you'd better put in and eat a hearty -breakfast, any way, for if I'm going to be laid out m earnest, a full stomach

is best to take trouble on. ' "Now, Sam, you oughter be ashamed, making light of solemn things. Tm afraid something will happen to yon right off, and I do wish we had been ' more particular about going to meeting. 1 say, Sam, did you ever wish we had "staid on the old place, and worked and saved, as the old folks did ?" " No ; Calif orny is the only place in the whole world where folks can live

easy, and 1 only wish I had come years ,

ueiore. wnen eoia was pienuer ; we

" Oh, don't tell me anything else ; I shall never want to set eyes on him again. Now what can you say for that man with the long hair and ouckskin suit, who look 3 like a hermit ?" . . ii. , - Tvi i .. v . , n.

imi. mat la Jr .men. .u.iumiii, . , 1 i i r 1 : ' , . T l " : : had well nigh had a fatal termination. nneprpst man iivinL' : some sa lie is a " " t . , , . ,

little bit cracked, but I don't believe it. He's been through everything Vint death, and come so near that that the f Tave had been dug three times, but he come to, and objected to the arrangement. The Injuns say he has a charmed life. There isn't an Injun that would hurt him. His long red curls are their greatest admiration, and his word is like an oracle tc

them. The summer following was unusually dry and dusty, and Sybil declared she must be taken to Lake Tnhoc. Mr. Brayton urged a visit to tho "Big Trees," and mentioned Yosemitc, which was then ju&t becoming accccsible to ladies with courage enough, bnt Sybil preferred the lake, and she carried her point, as she always did. It was a merry

party which set on, ana you was me ; gsgi . . ss life of it. She laughed and sang, gave i I)lscoTCrT of Buried Cities in Africa, glowing word pures tiio scenery diMOTOlie8 in the South Afri-

anu cameu I"?" KI4 Trinonl W tn r.h

: dence. " Womev of the age of twenty-tine j years and upwards shall bo eligible to j any office of control and management - unclcr the school laws of this 'State."

These are the new and progressive words just incorporated in the organic law of

her plan i Pennsylvania by the Constitutional Con

vention,

Imi'obtation of tobacco from China is the latest novelty in English trade. Large arrivals have been received during tho last month. It is used in some measure as a substitute for Turkey,

Svb'il disappointed her aunt and as-' which it resembles m appear ince.tnongh

tomshed her friends by marrying Pluck ! not equal m quality ine leal is quite Armstrong, and perhaps I the noblest j yellow, nnd is almost void of flavor, deed life will have possibly for her was ! Thb Greeley (0oL) Tribvnc tells of a the setting apart a portion of her prop- f which W!ls cnfc ont oJ a rook uear

erty for the maintenance and education j of a bright little boy, whose mother 1 rests in her grave, and whose father is

reckoned honorable among men.

that place recently, where he had lived quietly for some hundreds of years, and which was still living. But this is not

all. His frogship was cut open, and

Then time and its changes brought j jonnd to an anciert Aztec'coin,

Mrs. Applebee a widow, without money.

and prostrated by physical suffering, to Sybil's home for comfort and support.

fascinations. Even her aunt forgot to sneer, and Ben Brayton, who had been desperately smitten before, became hopelessly entangled then. The first walk by the crystal lake brought to Sybil Applebee the story of a love. Sybil listened like one in a tlraim. "Do you mean all you've said?" she

asked. Then came the. ardent protestations which lovers make, only this man's wooing was something beyond the common, and his words flowed like the rythm of some improvised melody, rich, full and unique. For a moment he seemed tempted to press his suit, then beprged her pardon,

and said heir word was law to' him. j "Grant mo one favor, however," said lie, ;

and he took lrom his pocket a tiny oaso j of rare workmanship, and touching a j spring revealed hia own face, confident i and youthful in its expression. " Wear I

this while you are nere. ax snaii pienu for me while I am compelled to be absent ;" and-he fastened it to her watch chain. Sybil made a faint protest ; but lie told her she could not temovo it the clasp had a secret spring that would not vield to her touch.

Svbil strnved off alone, whenever she

could make her escape from the others,

with an - undecipherable inscription.

Either tliis story is true, or the Greeley Tribune is a horse thief and a liar. The Kev. Fred. Bell, formerly a pugilist of considerable note in England, preached Sunday evening in New York. He stated that at the ago of seventeen

he was an habitual drunkard, and used to support himself by singing in taverns and bar-rooms. Ho subsequently went into tho ring, and later still into the ministry, where, as he says, he has " fought his best fiRht." His remarks.

The ruins of one of these ancient ! it is said, showed him to tie tnoroughiy

cities, situated on a farm near Bloemhof , ! in earnest in his profession, while the

suppos ition that r.t one time the east

coast of South Africa was inhabited by a race of men who were in the enjoyment of great wealth and far advanced in the arts of civilized and refined

people.

A Cannibal in Ireland. j An Enniskillen (Ireland) correspondent of a New York paper says : A hor- , rible scene of cannibalism was enacted in Trilee a few days ago. The princi- ; pal actor iu it was a pig-jobber who had

. long oeen completely aosoroen in me : gratilieation of animal desires and passions. This two-footed brute came ; home drunk to his poor old mother, who has passed the allotted " three-score 1 years' and ten," nnd the old creature remonstrated with him. A row ensued, in which tlie mother was knocked down on ; the floor, and by sheer .'oree one oi her legs was broken in two places. This not satisfying him, he commenced to eat the : flesh off her arm. A watohman named j Mam, who was passing at the time, was j attracted by the woman's ucrcams to the ; house, and on Mara forcing open the door ho saw him actually eating the flesh,

as if he had a taste for it. The watchman not being able to rescue the poor creatmre from his savage gluttony, he went; off for another watchman, and, on

their returning to the honse, .he was at the same inhuman feast, and his face and breast were all smeared with blood. Word was sent to the police, and the night-patrol, on coming to the houso, seetred him. The coolness of the ruf

fian was extraordinary, for he had the audacity to prefer a charge of assault aga;nst'Mara for attempting to make

him desist when ne nrst entered ana saw the horrible repast he was indulging in. The poor woman was conveyed 1 to the County Infirmary ar .d placed under , the care of Dr. Lawlor, where, on examination, her body wan found to her frightfully lacerated ; the Ixine of one arm up to the elbow was quite bare of flesh, and the sinews of the other were quite exposed. It is thought she can hardly survive the treatment Of her cruel sol.. Her depositions were, of course, taken, and the prisoner, who had been in the Bridewell, was transferred to the county-jail for trial at the Assizes.

on the banks of the Yanl, are to bo thor- ; oughly explored, and the results of cx- j cavations already made are such as to excite deep interest among archxcolo- j gists. In another buried city, which is I being explored by Herr Mauch, the ruins cover an area of -two square miles. The walls of the city were thirty feet

i high and eighteen feet thick, built of blocks of hewn stone, laid in cement, ' which is hard and durable as the stone

itself. Within the walls iron pots have been found, and vases with ornamental handles. It is supposed that the inhabitants of these cities in their day utilized the rich mineral resources of Transvaal, as there are numerous mines within the limits of tho republic which were evidently worked in former ages, bnt have been long abandoned. A Mr. Guzman, who is promoting the

organization of a company tor the con

accompanying gestures proved that he had not quite forgotten the old one, as they were emphatic in the extreme.

He will retain the profound respect his' fellow-citizens haye conceived for him. Nothing oonM'be' of more value to him in the perfcrtawice of his duties. Wo believe Gen. Qraut's second term will add s much to his reputation as his first has. In his first term-he has established theeonfidence of the country in liis fidelity, his disinterestedness, his firmness, and general good sense. He has met the greftt probloms presented to him in an excellent spirit and with

marked snscess. In Iris next term he will piobably have fewer large questions to deal with, hut if any present themr selves, the country will feel sure that he will meet them with prudence and with frank regard for the wishes of the people. Bnt it will not be necessary for

extraordinary questions w arise to enable President Gaunt to add still more to tlie debt of gratitude and esteem the country already acknowledges to him. He has shown that his capacity for exhibiting in the discharge of the ordinary duties of hiH 'office unusual strength of character and elevation of purpose may well flonfer lasting heneiit, If he can carry nut, in the spirit he has'thus far shown1, the radical reform' of the civil servic? which he has inaugurated, he will do a great deal toward strengtheninr ar.d iraprtMntr the political system

of tho country. That he will continue

.as he has negus, is not open, to doubt.

He will move no faster, than lie can move and carry his mo:jt trusted and necessary advisers-with him. But that he will continue to move with steady

fidelity to his original purpose of making "honasty and efficiency, and not political activity, determine the tenure of office," there is happily no reason to, question. . . It is plain to every one that the President possesses to-day far more facility in the work of his office than be had four years since. It would be strange if he did 'not. With great 1-esolnteness of ournose. he is erninently a teachable

man. He is ah apt student of character, too, nnd he has: gamed rauoJi,$uable knowledge of botji the strength and the w'eSfcaess of the men Who surtdund him. The next four years ore likely, te have much of the character of a transition period. The country has abundant reason to expect that - the- Presidentr will respond with the same good sense and sincerity ae has heretofore shown to the demfuds which that period may make noon him. We could hardly have a

safer man at the helm in oahn or stormy timeu, iTcw York Times.

The Hull-ways and the Feenle.'

To deny that the ex iitejnent on tiie

-railway question m Illinois is intesae would be to ignore fcts. .jAt distinguished citizen,., jfamiliar for twenty

years with the habits cf thpugM of the people 61 tfiS Bte!,'' iiiii?eer saw the people, ao wrought up before in

mvlvfo " At thn non it, wnen u riii-

way monopolists began to' tighten t&eir grip upon the industries of the comiiry andmaketl.emselves felt as an oppression the war of rebellion Dime Gul Thepuril of liberty distracted the attention, of the people frora the peril a',, 'property inter

ests. But while the farmers and mechanics shouldered' their muskets imd went to tho front to crush out the netiellioii, the railway xmpuiespontinviel to sock and obtain grants of special privileges, to build new lines, water stocSr., eharcre exorbitant rates for transporta

tion, and to rivet the chairs of their

corporate desrctigniniore firmly upon.

the people, in iBrji, wnen tne war commrm ced, Illinois had Imt ftiT'mile railway. Dnrine the period f tairaolt.

and war and of the souroely leas exciting period of reconstroctaoa, the companies

added o,WU miles to tie system raore than duplicating pre-existiag lines, imd fastening then; power mow, firmly upon the necks of the people. .It was not un

til ltSYU that the people oegan to. wane rm to a realizing- sense of the htftPEhess

hshed ovnr them. It now turns but

that the 4000 new miles of railway were built, not to aeconjmodite.them,bnt to. oppress them and at sorb -their substance. The American people are "long suffering and slow to anger," bat when, once aroused no power can successfully antagonize tlem. They have determined to throw ofi' ths iiicnbds of the system of abuseit and extdttkms

which have become railway laanaeement

have determined upon the mode of its

accomplishment; ano neitner courts, nor learislatweB. nor Kt vernors, eon de

feat their solemnly-forned purposa .any

more man a civu engineer oui utuu Niagara. Tnter-Ocean. '""'

WbeivroBo

nan Kr

An' M 6' four HUJJtwua'aortKav i aaaaav jaaap

IB'SlBKlBaBSIIWarTnisw.-- '.

teiwepatyuiirtea-

. .arallW.I.H.fSto

k lanVe vn ntrnction of S.'l

( RtvM thfi rtfi anaFsMve tirisfc

AaoW ln4y deseribes man -what knowti mereTi he can mVTGtat, and spBls -ritteWpH hiBles.'' W Micja hajm the cheese, bhtjSjflfmn ttHe's,;Tn'sarjw!TS ttwJ'of wespieatWof eeesndohemttsiof he's.' ... ? :.. ts$) Whes a ytng lddreame olauaoaVn, it hocntena lhat ehc ahonld instantiy die-

"tTtte the j&mtnh,irkm ' ' Ilh exchsnOTtailiittesTOWs

this slnqrity Have -yon Wirrl 'olne M wsjjjt-"' etoaVsswsAso ; how did he get slwt??.cff,P8Mrht

-" Toaares-OowSfd .saIo

conntrynranT I hisV) -tlotliiv-ldo

IftsBTKaltt MWH, !-te'lSTtag S

tUXmons wth bW shot at while tatoigitowrf . E S" kS maris could fentofWgli,

but lynx-eyed piftpniapftwinaW the

explssion of tlAbi. mmt0

caused tne atacn, . , . Now that Amadeus is. pafely 'ft of Spain, he must feel pretty mora as the mcoefSdwhotoariWfcn'' one Smday, nnd totted, whea hisaiat

WBsrvtTtcned, utrt.teere asftien

my Ood," saidfOj Bjoniide down and tapping. the

. Beiwrt of Britf8 HarKr.

.m . V . . 3 ' J . A.

"ine DUSinees 01 tne isiudwb nt urreai - T tt-,i-,

Britain in the year jusi snows uoi- . h diiami tapping. the

lowing results, tnengures.peHig;uuwu.; otf j with his hand, " that 1 i

miles.

Number of passengers earned :

SS.712,18?

..;.....:'. MflSa.SlI .v.256,5,615

;iS8

to Federal money: .mAyhai back from tliicniuneiEiQii."

Authorizod capital .fS,98ff,118,l . a-. tw, rnKliun(? .fnanced Paid up capital A. . ;x7t, HU47 A K&N

ilesT " ' j kept lus eyes open amang.piryiuBj,,

wnen one dot tnrusi. a put iuiu i .1 . 19,

ne marcneu uu uio ausac, 1

amd miffod ihatbrrv's ears, and j

ag&in, prayasg. . iWeWW master of the situation, for tue boys

thought that a man -who cookf watcb

ana pray use mac coma wrw toft, - - i '

: 'OrBs," saidaararthy oUlsiiier

irr-nddanghterfc "wW 4

pops the -ssfao doB.fMh syl iS-re

at TOUT IOO alUSt UUOW twui, "m

arounnsiaf mac, tom . fse& a-d wnm( trfkW 0w4i;he

farmtwjft. nn WW

first class..

Secouiolma..

Third elasa v..

'Xotal a. Ail.;; . ,.,, 75 Nora 188,392 seasoa -oketo sod passes are not included in tlieas, figures. Recepts from passer gers : Fret ciaws . .'.itf20,076, 942.72 Second class 81,ei,B0 Ttuii, claim . . .. , 3258,fHi.tt

wonldn t have any care now ; but I ve aDd several days bIio was missing ior

got something ahead, and if your dream : hours together ; she came back with her comes true you won't bo ba'd off for a j hands full of flowers and cornelians, bewidder, and will stand a good chance to sides many a quaint and curious stone

marry some other man that wants a ; that looked like bits ol antique eartnenhome and don't like to work for it." i wnre broken under foot. - Mr. Applebee laughed heartily as he j Mr. Bray ton complained that ho wasn't want out, and langhed several times dnr- ' allowed the privilege of escort and proing the day, when ho recounted the ! tector, and he only prayed for patience whole, with various embellishments; bnt until the willful beauty should confer When there came, just at dark, a low, j lnion him the rieht to dictate instead of -i .1 .. r.. : . . . - e 1 ... .. -, , 1 1 : ..

rammiue bou u, urcu uuiii ueuiur oi sueirest Wvbll seemed W lose uvs

A H0118O in California One Thousand Tears "Old. The loftiest house, and the most perfect in the matter of architecture I have ever seen, was that, which a wood-chopper occupied with his family one winter in the forests of Santa Cruz county. It was the cavity of a redwood tree, 210 feet in height. Fire had eaten away the

trunk at the base, until a circular room had been formed, 16 feot in diameter. At 20 feet or morc from tho ground was 1 11 knot-hole, which afforded egress for i the smoke. With hammocks hung from j pegs, that house lacked no essential . thing. This woodman was in possession

of a house which had been 1,000 years in

uuiiding. remaps on tne

Lying in State. - Apropos of Napoleon's body lying in

stuto an English antiquary writes : ' In the year 1133 tl.o body of Edward IV. was exposed, bare from tlie wsist up, to show that had not died by fo-il means, in the Paloco at Westminster, and was visited by the Mayor of London and many other persons. The body of Henry VIL Ivy n sta-te at Iliciimond,. as did that of Queen- Eliza

beth; but wax effigies in armor represented James I. and Oliver CromwelL and we donbt whether the body of anyEnglish sovereign has been exposed since the death of Charles II." , '.

Total : 109,416; 788.48 Receipts tor mails, ersjqai,, j, ter, etc , on passenger trains. .$11,5-5,09.68 Merchandise carried, tons 81,650,53 Mineral carried, tons, lliLJStlO Total freight receipts. .....'..! .ftW,8fr,mM Total receipts A-. . .88M!t8,U.16 From passejngerav2.18 per cent.

. From freight, ov.oa percent. Total eypomM. i . . lli,059,aa

Wet receipts.. Ui..- taVMLm

Or, e:rpenses, 47.35 pel cent- - JJet receipts, cqrialing 47 pjr cent, up an paid capital. ,

Jinmueroi miles nm.iry warns .

PassengtTs. . . ;,. . . . -.l.v.V. Fflight ......,....... Boiling stock : ' .,

before

grandfather;

i-tesiBV how, to

8KW6.876:

.,i.;... f ;i,.nn,i !t..mo i process o.i

Tnl,lrm Bnv. savs that near the Lim- : vel7 dy lk .w.as hiiished he camo along

popo river he found one hundred and ! etPd m. How did all jack-knif Sixty pits which had been worked for j a1 hand-saw architecture sink into m minerals. He recently exhibited at the I gnihcanee in contrast with this lions .1,-,1 fir.llu uoVi,T,,.,1U nf nrfH tnlron i m "10 Solitudes of the gTCllt forest

from these pits wliich were very rich, and included copper, tin, silver, bis-

the earth, followed by an earthquake, and in a few minutes after by another,

he began to tbsik theTe was 'danger of "tA'r dream" ' coining true, and bethought himself of his long neglected prayers. Un his way home be was hailed by the Tbstmaster :

"I say, Applebee, there's a letter come for you with a black rim round it ; guess somebody 'anther is dead or something, in the States. I can't make out the rk." Applebee read the letter. What's the -news?" inq sired the Postmaster, hungry for something sensational. , , " Moses is dead, and he's gone and left his gal to my care, nnd all his prop-

rtv to be divided a'tween us, and there

its, and as the time grew near ior them to leave, bIio grew pale and silent. Her &nntf.aid "'twas all airs," bnt Mr. Applebee was really alarmed. Bybil petted him and snubbed him, according to her mood; and hi i heart, which had never known the joys of fatherhood, had gone out to the yonng girl with an unselfish love that went further toward redeeming him from his worldliness than he was aware of.

" Uncle, darling, will you do something for me 1 When I've been gone an

hour, please give this note to Mr. Brayton, and do yonr best to keep the company from walking on the beach tonigfit." The note was faithfully delivered on the moment, and the next, Mr. Brayton

was wallting rapidly down the worn foot-

mnth, cobalt, n.ckel, and quicksilver. Alluvial and quartz gold has been found in different places in Transvaal, but reports differ as to the. richness of the deposits.

the stories in relation to the buried : cities seem to be fully authenticated, ! but a boast made by the inhabitants of j Sofeir, a port lying parallel with the largest of them", that they have doeu- ! ments which proved the ruined town in ! their neighborhood to be Ophir, and j

"identify it with the yueen ol wneiia, remains to be substantiated by the production of the documents.

must all been nigh on to a hundred thou- j patli to the lake. Turning to the right,

Bio Grain Th.nsactioj. -The San Fram isco Commercial Jiullctin reports the following as the largest single bona fide transaction in grain ever made in California, if not in the United States.

The whert was all in the city warehouse,

Moreover, the tenant fared like a prince. Within 30 yards of his coniferous house a mountain stream went rushing past to the. sea. In the swirls and eddies under the shelving rocks, if one could not land half a dozen trouts within an hour, he

deserved to go hungry as a penalty for his awkwardness. Now and then a deer

came out into the openings, and, at no great distance, quails, rabbits and

pigeons could be found. What did this man want morc than natnre furnished

him ! He had a house with a " cupola 240 feet high, and game at the cost of taking it. This Arcadian simplicity would have made a lasting impression, but for ft volunteer remark, that nothing could bo added to give to life a more perfect zest. " Well, yes," said he. " I j reckon, if you are going back to town, ; you might tell Jim to send me up a gal- , on of whisky and some plug tobacco. " 1 It will not do to invest a hollow tree with I too much of sentiment and poetry. If ! that message had not been suggested, ! we should have been nuder the delusion

to this day that the lives of these people

How Son, w.vs Made. Prof. Agassiz i says that all the materials on which agric lltural progress (Upends are decomposed rocks, not so much those that underlie the soil, but those on the surface, and ground to powder by the rasping of tie glaciers. Ice all over the continent is the agency that has ground ont more soil than all other agencies put together. The penetration of the water into the rocks, frosts and baking suns have done something, but the glaciers more. In a former age the whole United States was covered with ice several thousand feet thick ; mid this ice moving from north to south by the attractions of the tropical warmth or pressing weight of the Know and ice behind, ground tho rocks over which it putted into the paste '.vhieh we call soil. These masses of ice inn be trucked as gttmo is tracked by

tho hunter. Tie has made a study of

them iu this country as far south as Alabama, but has observed the same iihenomeuim in Enrope, particularly in Italy, where, among tho Alps, glaciers are now iu progress. Tho stones and rocks ground and polished by tho glaciers can easily be distinguished from those scratched by running water. The angular boulders found in meadows and the terraces of rivers not reached by water can lie accounted for only in this way.

was of uniform, ffeiod shipping finality.

nnd was tneuronertvof Srliolle I'.rothers.

I 1 . . . ... . , r ii .

liHvuifT oeen purchased by them ill lots i dwelling in a nouse iasnioiieti i,oim jmra ,

ago, were rouiiueu in a pvtim mum,

itunng the fall, at, lw prices. The sale

Cfinmsteil of 12,000 tons, alued at $50,000,

withont one artificial want.

Monthly for March.

)i'i ;, )!

A n.vf'HKiiOR sea captain, who was remarking the other day that he wanted a pood chief officer, was promptly informed by ft Indy present that she had no objection to being his first mate, Tie took the hint and the lady.

" ' wflie Howling of the Mob." We ooia words as we coin money, and constrict sentences much as we build bridares. When reason, lofrio, argument

fail, a deftly-turned phrase will some

times aiinrd an avenue or escape irem a logical defeat, though in ifeelf utterly meaningless. Just now we are having a striking exhibition of this. When criminals are confronted with the crushing evidences of their guilt, and the feeling of alarm nt tlie general laxity of morals and the

taray or uncertain numiniBuauwu ui justice' ftnds expression in earnest deSnands fiarspeedy punishment, the utterance of this sentiment is denounced

by the defenders of guilt as the "howl,ing of the mob." This phrase is very popular, and is having a great run. It was used by the eminent counsel who defended Tweed, and it had its effect on the jury, we suppose, because they refnstd to lie "intimidated" it was repeated over and over again at the trial of Stokes, and the latter boldly declares

that he was convicted by the " howling of tie mob." When Oaken Ames spoke in defense of his Credit Mobilier transactions, he asked the House if he was to be oflrd up as a victim to " nppease the clamor of the mob." The efforts of the oeople to relieve themselves of the railway expression which boars ao heavily upon them, and wliich is slowly crushing tlie life out of them, are coolly termed the " ravings of a senseless

mob :" BJitl so we have it on all Bides.

Whenever rascality becomes bo palpable as tc be known nuel seen of all men, and when the public conscience, goaded beyond the limita of passive submission, cries out against the sin that stalks at noon-day, the appeal is put aside as the " howhi g of the mob," that deserves no

recognition and merits no attention. In all seriousness we beg to say to CongresHmea and legislators, to judges and Sena torn, they grievously mistake tlie character of this manifestation. It is not a mob they hear; it-is the voice pi' good, earnest, patriotic men, who would save the country from the danger and the disgrace of liecoming a partnker iu crime. It is the voice of the people, and smooth-tongued, unctuous nnd nattering, begging for favors; but bold, frank, fearless, demanding as

-RiiirinAfl ... . ................ .11

Xa38engcir carriages S Freight lad Baggage satt . . . .19,164 Accidents: - ;' Killad from canaea fosvo id Unoir owaisbfr-

trol 12 r : J! r.v. mhu. lumwiil tTMti, -m n m-

.uurou j nontro . ...:-- .st

Killed from miacondnct or f apt of eommon ruon caution !...; ....:.!?....' Injured from miacojidSfgHir'wapi ofacp!common caution H - " . The Irish UidreraltyWII. -

The bill iatreduotd into the British

Parliament bv Mr. I'remier Uladstone,

and the defeat of which has resulted in tho difsolntion of e Mmistsy, is a

feehmne for the estsbliBlinaat of am Irish

University upon a plea intended W meei the approbation of both Pyotestnts and nutholW Briefly fiiatecL it is a propo

sition for merging the Catholic aad Protestant Colleges of Ireland in , University to, be HberaJJy endowed, s tliat lil;e the colleges of Oxford or Cainbridge they shall oomttitttte cne tJm" versity, and like them be snbjest to the control of one eentrnl governing body. But, unlike the Unijiersities of Garford

and Uambntige, me new xtibjj jhvc-

ines.

btsLdssr

1 -vomri

MT On 'HbtaiBst I

lfcafteRS!Hrfcsl4?wc:

A -NTow Tort HUrtOd ireiobrter5 reesfatir

ntorimai Prtwdeiat OoabtUsteM -

BrAad as,saiartlart JK..hsJl9 to

take, place, in the Uanrne

wV.ir.li "Heeretarv BstttweD S

will ooeasion. xtjvwTOicamo,

ami rioScy of. the Admliimntl iwm

not beon-ipOWl . fLtH'.iC-JS-K

weCTgulf eSt-uf Si tn iDdepPfiiM

red. expected with H:

. fesmTip tlwdswlopimtrjr sithstir Qaw-

No trouhto. p W HJ".

ptilicT saioeeecb so

reatMrjBaai&it

rmtomirhen

sity is prof essedly 1 be" non-sec tansn r

tts cnaracer. xnis lessnre tutaon might readily be iooeplef as a sensible compromise if e proisions of tiie bil,l were certain to insure Bach a result, but here is whete the trouble arises. The Ca-thonos-. msnw of them,

see in the bill only a - top for bringing Catholic institutions under Protestant nnd control, while' on ths

other hand -some of the Protectant ei

rrmiR have demonstr ited to their ami

sBtisfntion that if tlie measui is ear

riedtbe Catholics wll soon have entire

sway in the Unn-ersitj't

PofcTAt. Oarph. Tlie contract for (Jm

mnnnfanillTe of the :1M POStsi Caldlt

has been awarded to -he Morgan Envelope Company of Springfield, Mass., at

$1,881 per thousand, ine Poniraci is w run four years, and calls for the deliveiy

of 1 (XI 000.000 of oar Is the Wst year,

though the number may be inoreasBd si

the option of the pepartment. Tronr millirlTIH of the cards; are to be marie by

ii.aiaknf Mv whsn tike eofttttet takes

nfl'L Tliev are to Iki 8 by Blanche in

size, made from bona paper, ana card-loard must weigh B ponhds per 1,000 sards. They aw to badone up in parcels of 25, aarhpaw:edtos161DSfpsieboard or straw boxett, each to. fltmtsso 500 cards. When 4,000 or mpj eafte; are nsqnired to ml tha order of a postmaster,thpy muf t . bjso be packed in strong wooden boxes, well hooped with iron, the expense of peeking and freight

ing to Washington to be borne by thf

contractor. MruiTABYf nxuitnre- -Theanny bureau.

merrf -orrast oMntrr

eRunast will piissM

HomethiiurhkeSlO.OOO.O

The peogb of Uth,bi says.

UftWIt. He is. satisfied wifi

poucy. The Indian peace well Cia t he has the g;

A visit ib St IiOnis i

the first oppctun in his I nennife , f. . .

asaa MM&jama&n&&V&Mt seems temkef Btoafer0 do.

slid if bei

dontsetah tewj

the to

Tia mmim man IS as 2

;ia it & mniw iianirwnoL xr ne hd mt

tmvtlung eliiBj Ms WclBy- toyff'jatowa

lives tricing tew i

nearer rniRfjieed WtA JAV. . -

Tliere uratmffov omcions TBiiy who

only pestnptea M hmvaaWSMxety tew be oaefnl ?w. Pfto tritiA from ennv coodness ot heart, on

simply from aesir etriiuwhii bow ito things. 9rnT

xne omfaous man a Wawm an use whatever to himself, art' a Jwiie tew everybody else. 5

man's, fveniB's venr'iWMv ll e&cm mekeeeds in a?eaiiPBl for

its laliorfc-with qfisamnm iuWnafcwi

Fabk Fo SEr. Heni wen-kmrwneObyjOi

solved -wobksa w

plajajsiit smI

profitable

farm, andne'toeapo.er eight rffo4,.hl

corn tso

fwy HKJ vn

snrnttpuse..

aftnnlr tMrrm PBHa.

mors 4wmoiieslly,-e5 W

isfedthemisttrwsneHefl. aire is saved also. Ommkm:

A PBXmKUUMBaR' from life.

'rft.jti-li.