Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 23, Number 46, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 October 1881 — Page 3

it

WEEKLY COURIER.

JASPER - INDIANA.

MONOTVSK.

Mf sad 4 op the day 1

Mli "1W WIS m MM

Saw, wwenea aim . ' T JTr VrttBitl'a hand to llsila beds HerbrMM 1mvI with a weary load, And bitterly abe I care not It the win toe . 1 know not tf the wind I re not if I trvor ttrt, M Only 1 ytsk my Ufa bed ssst. Mfj name with the rwturln ai'rtit. tos settled with (,4.rwpttr alri Mis awettatf wm formal etbrht. trum thai mr wiwlwuW bear.

TTidrM U, Wrr dusks

He found one of his sister! bonnets in m bandbox on the top shelf of aokmet. Mid this struck kirn m being eiMtly what he wanted. It wm til oovered with bowl of fluffy loco. Mid red satin ribbon, and It bad long tarings of lace, which he thcuraht would make beautilul etrenraer for the kit. " lt' a last auromer a bonnet, nad I know that KmUv don't went the old

thine!" be said to himself, ai be took

possession; ana in a vory aiiw f" time the bonnet, which had been a triumph of the miller' art, wm degraded to the position of tail to a kite. Ttay degraded, btit Roy and Teddy

. urnMld both uv elevated; it Ml aeneous

I i . f I J.... . ki,tlfnl i

unoB vnauwr vow whm

oonnev or a ueeumui n w important and useful thing. .

It wm a Tory fine kite, ana nor was

aw

He

bre4-

fhs Mil not kuowoommunions rest. Want to thebourorjUy tomer

lMT WW mj W mmt TtM MWM IP1 KM bitter tews. All aaant in drudgery the while; H ! itCT e? tSilnormer yew, Re4to- forvMtoa how to emile. AtlMMM iWher bunlenbri AthMt he wept, to vU hnom The old lUrbt nftotmed la her tye To Hg'it, alas, no mote. HV amouthd the faded hair . above.

The orow teat Prl . .rT -r-

iv her taei "-

Urn Mve !

That ooutd no wore

We chill with dreary commonplace Fond htmtt thai yearn tor sympathy, , m hard linn form upon the luoa The oul ferer ieatre the eye. Ah, roan enwmjrt w th slden jure Kolbou.'und from rrur pile kw nhanre that orttef work ot yours, Jter wl-tfuL. froMm -mile. Who cam not If her lot be ham, Whi minds not It she work orreat, U sbo tut meet with kind rejrard. If but ner life have benrtful Mt, THK TaIIOF A KITE, Anel What Hnm Thirfro

It wax a particularly laacinatbiff kite,

in beinn witn.

U wm made of gay

Japanese paper, wrnameniea wiwi njtres even more grotesque and charmW than usual A woman, who seemed. Zrum Amtmamd in a oink-anU-yoilow

meal-bair, with a red parasol over her head, wm blowing soap-bubbles from a Inner i,in. while three or four

chiidren -apparently put together after Um UmUinn nt lnminirtacks. and ex

porienuing no difficulty iu extending tuto. )ar mk riirht ansriM with their

u,r.u. wm Maneriasr. to show their

A-nut mnA Kyh eurioas animals aiood

on their heads. In the distance a pink

mountain stood on Us head, and a skyblue Tilla, tipeUy Mkew, seemed on the nt fMlliitw into a vellow lake.

wo w tn a. hurrv to tret the kite

AJ m-A h naatsMi 'the IMUMr Ott the

fMM i onm. aiilnd fuhion. so that

tv. nwn worn aome what mixed hp

w ikwu all riirht if You only looked

t uktiv whioh is the war with

great many thing, in this world. Boy boturht ha shouldn't mtad that, and he vZ3 a Brian wouldn't. The

VMVwaa for Teddv. It wm "a swap

Teddy wm Irish, hot there wm not a v..k!L. tn Millrilla who could out-

whittle him. He bad whittled a ressel . twtit Riw had taken a flrrcat fancy

MMi which be had agreed to trade for a vu. Txidf mMit have made a kite

ior hlniMlf whieh would hare rivaled

any in MillTtlie he wm nara anythinff-buthehad broken hut arm in the null where be worked, and was not ahle to use it at all a yet. He bad ha con lined to the houee for more than a month, and. m he expressed It, Uie halrt wm worn out iv him intlre1y wid tr9tn" He thought it might h a Mttle solace to ait in the door-way and fly a kite; for if Teddy had a weakness it wm for kites. Roy and Teddy ware great friends, .kLnLrh iiav was the onlv son of the

richest man in the town, the owner of 4k. mwai mill, where hundreds of men

.Jvmmm mm amoloved. and thou-

snndaof bale of cotton were turned it Ooth. while Teddv wm the oldest

th uTti ohildren of the Widdy

O'Brien, w hose chief worldly possessions . nn,. lltlka ehmntv. a ' umtie

natoh, and a pig. Then, too, Roy had vhwty of t' me Tor play, having a tutor Who wm very indulgent in the matter of leasons, and almost every arousemeni that could be devised, while Teddy worked ten boors a day in the mill, and had no toyi excepting those of . kit own make. Teddy wm a HtUe -ooadeerending to Roy, sometimes; he knew how to make and do so many taJasra, while Roy had only things that m , I Jm1 , .Mil

-OaUMI OUl oi sroroa. n T torn a somersault without making his head ache. Bnt Hoy never thought of being condescending to Teddy, because howaa rich and Teddy wm poor; by which von will see that Rov wm an uncommonly good and sensible boy, and Teddy well, you will soon know what kind of a boy he was. Roy wm glad that there wm one thing that he oould make almost as welt m Teddy-doubly glad that Teddy wanted a kite of his making. He would willingly have given it to him, but Wham Teddy offered the veaael ho could not resist if, besides, Teddy would not hare it other-Wine: he "was nfther oVn' business on the square," he said. How it was important that this beautiful kite should have a proportionately kMttitifut- tail. Rov wm of the opinion

that the glory of aVlte is ita tail. No newspaper nor old rags might be used

mcnamaaing oi know how to get to his sister BmuYs store of finery, and sho always had a gvont many ploooa of briffht-colored ilk andganM which would bo just the things for this line kite. Toddy might not appreciate this elawaacc; he wm practical and wanted a fllor,M aoovo ivory thing, hot Boy wanted it to bo handwmo, lor k own erodit Mid aatis-

proud and happy when ho carried it to Toddy'abouM. Teddy wm sitting on the door-step, with Dan, bit black and-tan terrier, on one knee, and his yellow cat, spitfire, on the other. The two were on the most amicable terms, although Dan tol

erated no other cat, ana nprenre no other dog. Eight fat little piga, every

one with a qutrx in nut tan, wnvw in the dirt near by. A flock of noisy geoM came waddling up fr m a muddy little pond; a strutting gobler paradod around followed by a great flock of turkeys, little and big. There were lordly roosters and matronly hens, with broods of chkkeua of aH sixes; there wm a woaL and a tame squirrel, and last,

but not least, there wm a parrot -a demure-looking parrot, all in drab, sare for a bit of scarlet, like a knot of ribbon, at her throat: she had a very wise

..nnuiinn at eounttitiauoe, and wm a

LI 1

m.mi rnns nv nini.

Thu w iinw ii'Krinn naui a lumirew

AMV 1 ' . - - . ' tM 1

for animals; but she wm not aausneu

with her collection. r he wm a aensioie woman, in the main, yet the more he

bad the more sue wan tea. aw

wanted a cow. And It wm not an un-

reasonabla wish. The twins. Bartholo

mew and Rosy, her youngest ana ner darlmire. were weak and ailing, and mmi. milk did not airree with them;

," til, Ik. itnnln,

they must nave cow ma, .

said, and that wm not easy to got- m

Millrille unlets one ownoa a cow.

Widow U' Krien at iMt ueverraiuou w

kavo th friW fAIin DOS JMlti louujt w

J ether, bad laid up just twenty-three ollars and slxty-eeren cente toward.

the porchase when Teuuy was orougn

home irom tne mm broken, and the doctor a bUla awaliow.i ,kA .yvincra Ha Michael Dolan's

cow, ' tne oeauviiwieev ww Widow O' Brian bad "iver put the two ,yg ir boron," which he wished to sell for onlv fifty dollars, wm m far out of

a . fa ItiMiMad nwalP

ner reacn m tne w mi j"'"'1,"'"' the moon. And her continual bewaillngi

had had more to do with wearing tne

flesh off Teddv' s bones wan tne pain

ai Li. hmkM arm. For he felt mmseu to

w . -- ... , . ;

bo the man of the lamtiy, wno oognv w

buy a cow, mateaa o urcaiuR by eareloaflneas, and perhaps thereby causing the death of Bart and Rosy, who, bio mother assured him, were dying for th want of eoWs mdk. Roy felt nad to see Teddy so pale and thin, but he thought that the kite oould not fad to cheer him. Ha sssTsl favorite at the Widow

O'Brien's. Dan frisked around his heels. Spitfire arched her back to be .,a iA lunnnthad. the Bouirral ran

nn w nw sDotuuer ' and though the parrot screamed hoarsely: "Be off wid ye. ye rMkitir it wm probably because

no more complimentary ootcwu

wm at her command, tne " n iuut having oducated her with the view of

making ner a wnw m -children, who often deserved the uncomulimentarr epithet. At all events, Roy always took it as a friendly greeting on Poll s part, and Poll wm certainly a very

Dolan to trust hint for the cow. if be had not known 11 would be in vain. MichMl never trotted anybody, and. besides, was short of money just then. Teddy could think of no way by which "the mother" could come into possession of the erathttr,, whieh she coveted, and he lelt alnaoU despairing enough to throw himself into the muddy little goose-pood, when, as the kite came sailing down, and fluttered its streamers in bit face, ho suddenly ciu-ht sight of something glittering in their folds. Ho caught it hMtily, but the glitter had dUttppeared. Then, feeling the kite-tail carefully, be aiaiuivKMMi a hard substance inside one

nt th laxw bows, whieh Rov had fast

ened on lust m it came from the boo

nk He drew it out An ear-rin lay tn hie hand, set with a atone which

cauirbt the lisht in myriads of fishing

mud almost dauied Teddy a eyes

a diamond! be wm sure, and he knew

that diamonds were valuable.

He clutched it tightly, and his ojm

,p!?Umhrlifc he the nriee of the oowP

..wi u. t itimaaii. But he'd had out,

he thought, before teUing his mother

what he had found; he would not raise her hopes only to have them disap

pointed. ... , ,v TkM wu a ta water's store in the

MAvt vitla.iMi. three miles away. Teddy

wm atill weak, but with such a hope, to kMi Kim he was sure that he could

wiir there. He had eot M far M the

wham, anddanlr. his eonscienoe

miaml a remonstrance. You may think

it queer, but Teddy's conscience spoKe with a brogue. It said: "It donHbe yours at all, at all. All the business ye win tt m to find out whoM is it"

tMv kH ml wars been honest, and ho

in tUm habit of heeding what his

nAnanianea said, butthat COW seemed to

be the one temptation tnac was wo

strong for him. Me tnougnt oi mother's tears, of Barty and Rosy s thin and pale little faces, and he started oft In the direction of the jeweler's, m fast m ho could go.

His fancy so far outran nia at. before he came in sight of the yil-

.... a is I

and he would not take tee uny oonar.

Vet. when ho wm urged, now oouta n

resist? it was jut the pnoe ot auoaaet

Dolan' a oowl

The Widow O'Brien aonght far ana

utti for Teddv. who bad never been

outside the gate since he broke his arm.

and she wept ana wrunir

feariiis; that Her reproacoea nau him to aome desperate deed. She called

,,.n all ika naie-hbors lO wiineaa

there wm not tne "a uu i Aavmnt. honest bve. in North

Ameriky," and that she "bad kilt him and broken tke hairt iv him mtirely

wid her impidence." Ana sne was making preparations to have the muddy

little iroose-ponu uraggea, wuu t appeared, driving home in triumph Michael DoUn's cow.

Teddy's bright visions were more ,k. Bart and ilosv irrew so

fat that the little "Japs on tne aiie looked a tually thin by comrariBOu, and

the butter that his motuer maae wis the wouder and delight of the whole

tra. And the satisfaction oi

Widow 0 Brian wm beyond the power of words to exprws. , ,

But, after all, Tottuy a great, m , iag satisfaction seemed to be that no

wm not a thate. ti .

"I'd be glad l dian t

didn't get the cow at an. at am said to himself, very often.

And be and Toll were greater irtcwu. than ever. T,. . . The Widow O'Brien says: Ths is a quare wurruld, and ve nirer know what' 11 happen, since Teddy is aither

findin' the foinest cow in tne ooanvnrY

FEBMIAL All L1TEBABT.

-Dr. OUvor WoadeU Holmes, alwayt unarming, witty and ave. feels Ws sevetutwo years oily hi ft slight deoA-

hankHn, to the tail iv a

Stfteet, fa 1SL Xichota.

-The late Sidney Lanier left two aompletod works which are yet to be prThe Ballads of the Bcottyshe Kynge," which is aahltobe the first printed lagliek ballad, la aoonto bo reprinted ht&oisnllo. -Borah Perry's home la fa .ftwvW

donee, B. L -a little knaaisanan branching elms, two farorh soft, aubdued Uifht, open wood fires, paotures picturM every where. The Loudon iffltenammaotiit down as a certain fact tbM the ordinary novela Mat over to England for notsoo from the United States are of better swneral quality than their aqulvaiente produce

ever there. -A recent visitor to LonsoUow aaya that the poet la not so white from age m hie portraite represent hbn. Hla hah indWd hare oark linea, and hit moustache hM a tawny ambmjhade of th vanished chestnut ot JkHh blue eyes are bright and hkeheeka raddy. A monument to Vktor Hugo is to i be erected in his ialaad home oTUnem.

sey by the inhabitants, wno are nauea sttached to him. It wm to Guenaaey that the novelist dedicated hiajTolleri of the Sea' "that small portion of Norman ground, severe yet kind, my nraaant asvlum. perhaps my tomb.

Orrvrifl-ht laws are so Inexorable

The Two Kinds ef Able Xen.

, ki kufnr ha came in abr!

isge, he bad seen aucnaei anuirlv ensoonced in his mother s

shed, Barty and Rosy grown as broad m they were long, and with cheeks as red a Baldwin apples, like the little Japanese children on his kite, ... ki mniW radiant with happiness.

showing to all the neighbors great balls i wtuZn hutiar. and declarina: it to be

the likes iv the ouid oounthry butter

t.if

wonder that with

bright visions before his eyes he ahould

nave iorgow " m.ii vAuut" within him.

U tnrcrnt that he WM Weak UUtiL M

k. in..M mom in sitrht. and a few

i. , would brine him to the jew

eler's shop, he wm forced to sit down Hit Aa ha tat there a voice came,

.k.iw (mm the hearens above, or the

eatth beneath, Teddy could not tell a voice which cried, solemnly: "Go home wid ye! ye thafe iv the wiirruldT It wm one of Poll's remarks, but Teddv thought the voice much more solemn tbanPoll'a, and what emphasis ,k. mi tha word "thafe!" It

made Teddy blush, guiltily, while he ! looked about to discover whence the

Toioe came. It could not poasioiy ve his conscience that spoke so loud! It came again-thls time muffled and subdued -but hoarser, more dreadful Go home wid ye! Go home wid ye! ye thafe iv the wurruld !" "I'm goV! I'm goV, whoever ye are!" said Teddy, getting onto his feet, witk kt. tmm uimed homeward, tbougn

he trembled so that he could hardly

stand. "It's a thafe i wm m aumf w be -the sainU forgive me! but I niver will be, niver! An' will yo kapa quiet

nrafibc-ewir ' jluis uavtm

There are still people who think that

nothing is of much account unieas n

mrtngs in nara easn. a wnp.--met one of these a abort time ago, m he wm inquiring hut way to the famous

School of Philosophy, hid every suramar at Concord. He wm a sunburned

farmer working in a Dew near tee i roao.

he to the oorreapondent, pointing to tk. nimnm wtuilW the School WM held.

r-Tr r . ... Li,

T ,, . . L MiU.l . . i ua nn IIUII :

J3f Wish, ugo VJV r J a

rJ "am . t .

in Groat Britain that no one can smg any selections from a comroaerwortM Jm'Siot to the law.

errs ana assisraa w vw

era

Th hairs and aMUrns

mand roralty from those wno smg any of the tones of the great composer until -It wm fifty vears ago that Johann Strauss composed his first walta Ha wm then aix years of age, and no one thought of preserving the music no had a sister, however, whom menaory retained it intact, and bM now naade it possible to reproduce it in eetebratlon bf the fiftieth anniversary of its oonesp-

Th wtf of the comooaar aas

oooor.M . . , I test had it published under the title el

tiueer iov, vnej are, - xhouirht" by a Vienna musw

snsr miii'n Lisa- t . --- - "

firm. It nt aald to do maiwu wt -ny, if juvenile spirit, and to display hv

i wonder now mucn tue

tmn ' - .- . , .

whole tot oould earn, put em nxni

down to good solid worx. nut i guess they've got tbelr bread and butter

readily provtuea, aau . u "Kirv""thev have to find out how much they

are really worth

dwatioM of a true musical temperament.

BUMOB0C8.

wkn mbmb aaes a new

We have known better informed men bonnet on another womaaa head.

ik. tkia old farmer wno heiu in con

aiderable contempt the gentler vocations, and were dbposed to say. with the cobbler of old: There ia nothing r.v. ith-r Most men have thou

it be Greek: it may be

M.niivtM: it mav be ooo-corn; bnt

whatever it k there la nothing like it

for them. , , , There are two kinds of valuable per Thoae who make life possible,

and those who make life worth having. The sun-burnt farmer belongs to

ftk. iMdmnaasablas who make me pos-

ihlff. Bosiness men. mMuxacnuwrs,

she declares it to be hideous. The next day, when she gets one aisobe sud

denly diacovers n to ve aw fwj can be. 2fem IrtmteripL

afMaara of church festhrala, hav-

ing heard that the oyster crop was injured by the drought, are prapextagtogiv. ri,e TJS

Monenea. im maw at the usual rates. foiled

Marvin's fifteenth wife reports mm

Minnesota. The returns arecoouag am

slowly. A few districts in fiorwa ra- - . e. - WmV 14- tat raTafsali

mains to no naara irwu, r

MAW v

J T - . i,

ti ntnttaraa rauar anzrar,

Poll s part, and Poll wm oenaimy arerj v,-7 kj; with hb. re-

friendly creature. u rivrTot

She aaiieu aown iron .. wid vel Go home wid

tenlkm. He nod PoU bath regded t ptnched himelf that with their heads on one side. arouno, a""!r" JlTL'rwM v "That as. i xr1

tot the ,hWol ;!! it W"1""1 MSLl.Ij.. iim. ukiltka k.

libte. tnulMH im "-5 uTZli Ttn m k. la titcfi to Ml, .

Ml wno asrwet, - "y; 7v, nit, ffrrik.

belotts to the same ctsas. u i w burntfarmer, who made your Fanners' -When you see T0"

Almanao that hangs to tne nrepimm j slowly meanoarmg a its loops of tape so considerately sup- jng attentively to each otkrer, y

pliod by the puWlMerr m. ffi,,;

aatt e rib-sut--eat

jfotwa Btgidtr.

An exchange saysi " i-oam tm my

no. il a man maaa "TTT i

which j on cannot grant, tau ma. once. Don't deceive him. ft

make him have unpleasant iww toward you at hrat. buthe wUlmbMqnently respect your tratfwardnssa.' We know a man wno trtedthja

no"buainoss. He aaht it wotwrn as

riirht up to the "nnpienoant lemuagw

Ana larmer, wno ibiwhw j .zzt winfj "a"

ma. dollar and IfftV center WttO vaIoimkL Jnst U UU H

found out how to make your boy's ao- going to buy a yard and a

rkA Mtmnoaed tne BOOK kn tn " niatoll" a new

aalltfhM OsLMif

sT TwAmwwsealiiMfl Willi (me Hundred of

the Bast rleoM of Music that came

wttJi iha instrument without extra

charger Who painted the beauteous r. r Rmma. ' and who made the

grand cbromo of WMhington croMint the Delaware that bang on your walla? kA wWn win nrau-h vonr sermon

t sacidar mornW? and how would

mmt ihMMie-h the Sunday afternoon

-t.u5..f r 71 an m I n a.t innal weoklv to

dose overr ine peopie ww irv these things could not earn much money k.i r-. but thev bekmA to the

claaawho make it worth while for oorn A k. VitA. Thev make life worth

having. 1'mthU Companion.

An Ark Boltt In Foar of Aaether Btt-

nge.

a k .nw halAw OCho. Ala., there

is an old negro named Mooasvwho elaims he had a revelation from the r!T u. Wkuk k. ranaired information

ti..t ka. wniii woaia aarain um -

part, but he did not wait long eeougk for the "subrnquent .rospoet ' to operate, m the other llow aald kelgj

been put on long enougn, a

wasn't settled in ten iZZ receipt it by thrnahlng tne

. a

. fl.i.. a.iiaaati wkiAh thatv nmo. fcjejeau mj iiiHfwjwwi . . i tjtaag. t mm wonu wt

nanraiu or i with Poll: but, down deep m nw , "- . WKi.r Ha was so

hnd not the 7?:""!"; Cart he was ' more Mhamed of.what TtiTat thT destruction would be

the

.nb m faat as the kite ruse. He racked

his brains for aome way w om it dollars, until he forgot all about the kite, and Roy, fooling hurt that Teddy

seemed to care ao nine ror v, 77 so silent, soon went home. Then Ted

dy wound up the string ana let uw aiw float slowly down. ...

Fly m highaa nmtgnt, ".'

he had been going to do, and tbankfnl

to Poll for having V "".Ji He scolded her at flrst, but he ended by patting her, and Pol) -cooked her .i.7-i.,. mm diii and then on the

other, and if ever a parrot laughed

with real enjoyment, Poll wm

parrot!

Aitnonirn m wwi w

that

r away w th his trouW. he thought, i Althou?h he J fJuJhUimilf wishing that MicHael quicklv made hi.

whira on the other aide of the hills, ao ; to temptation. . Mdtold

that hla mother would never hear of her asain. And while he wm thinking that

nia raotner umm w w - -rm her eyes on her apron. "tjh, musba, mnshal the likes o' that w.weasaMii gore the milk

she's afthergivin'dobe Ivory dthrop

oranto,, and the buttner comes it iu. It s prayln' prayers on us aotnebody mmt ha we do bo that wisfortuuitf 1

Hyo were not afther breakin' i w. nw imMlaasueaa.

have the money ng'tn' Lthls time, and o-T ...i uvA not be atarrin' wid

tee hungeV7nV eeelf hearusick wid the cowl Oh, Toddy, If atlvoajr haalt. yo iwakUir iSdV fott liko o irM2l aUve. Bo would have asked Michael

He gave tne ew-rwg w j TILTkl him that be had fonndlt inetonod to the imil nf the kite.

ni. that's Emity'a diamond

fine?, that she lost

ear-

last aummer, and

made such a rasa aw j.:TJ. We hunted everywhere, od atlest naoa otforod fifty dollars reward for it iTthey are big diamonds, and cost an awful tot. and EmUy felt bed. H

mut have caught in her rnuei-a-mx

w w. tkai ha at once besmn

work of building an ark. He has been thus engaged for several months, nnd

J the result of hla laooranwyo aen from the river. This ark is very

unlike the representaiions w u built by Father Noah, and would doubt.

w tlrrf, Teddy exin a Ke .ite'orfortydaf; andnr ThUdly

constructed vessel or nowe f on a high hill, ready for the irialng water. It is oomposeo! of "fVT menu, about Ave feet J feet loner, which are placed .outopof

aeh other. Bah hM a atnau porw and splrw with feathers moinMneate. Approach'ag the dweUtag of tstenerro onTEsTto pa through J7 Jorately decorated arbor, over Urn i oj-

trance ot wnicn are taw oW Peace, Beat and Htplsnm"OWamoaw (da.) MmqtHttt.

AM .

'"r; , , .k7k,. mj aWa never MW

V. , IMM mmwm . . . J

it Emily will bo awiui gma, aw ,Wr' k- mWa fashar asjtmarod,

Toddy oonl-swoa, wilinmo, Sf2J

A Mftsh

One night In the sswingof 'WOeiaaral Richardson, who then oornmaaded a brigade, took It into hla bead to inv the picket Une. Coming npona reaerred picket of about thirty men maaffoommnnd of a Captain of tU fitootut Michigan Infantry, the General saw fit to interogete M fWtown: t Captain, in case of an alarm lw tarn advaocVptokot wbMwonld yo dor

" Send off a rtiawosamaj mm "And if the firing continnedr I should move up with the remataxthe enemy should proas torwnrdr "We'd whip them." " But if it wm a regimentr "I'd form a line of battle end check ,k n.ii i aant back and srot orders

bi nkatve and capture test wlole

..wSl Mnnnaa a brigade I

,ovedowny ..TH aakri ' ahaWO. sniff tM

ama iu two, and whip both 1

aaSS aaaaaa , w a. 1

At midnight tne Brave uaia raliaved front further duty on pi

gypTaKh riVfor awhile hO Mid to abrotihtt

lot.

oo-

halvM hi

should bo

Mb;

win

of eToamd

wiUsoap ar

not tenure m

-si

tailor.

wsanadbenntto

ter over for awhile he said

officer: "Say.

afraid m;

whole

Tve struck itt

OldRiekwM

ay comrany might ttjj

llsni rt asm m swow warn u Jhmrm