HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1883-03-02, Page 2•,)
THE HURON SIGNAL, FRIDAY 'MAIC. ;, tS� �•
FIRE AND SWORD:
A Tale of the Massacre of t(ilencne
CHAPTER VII.
-rue BILL 'moon.
A thunder storm among the Argyll-
shire hills, wheu accompanied by
heavy and ouutinous rains, was a much
more serious thing a hundred yesm ago
than It now is. The excellent system
of level roadways and channeled drain-
age now everywhere established through-
out the Highlands very much diminish
tae the tendency of the hill -currents
to overflow and destroy road tracks and
low-lying parishes,
But a storm of wind and rain, if of %lug valley was a tumbling sea of water,
,narked severity, is still, above anywhere shallower, but proportiun•te.ly broader,
else, perhaps, in the whole Scottish
eaist attempt other relies of apo ent bar-
barism in different quarters of the Scot-
tish t I ighlauda
As he neared the spot a figure seemed
to be eroechiug for shelter from the fury
of the flood on the top of this utas of
rock, but tie aoouent of the driving mut
of rain he was for • moment unabtu to
def ins what the object might be.
t,,ncluding at trace that the figure
ptr4hed on the solitary boulder atone
could bethine else than a hill goat, or
some wail ring blackfaced sheep, which
had thus got soddenly uupriseueed ageiust
its Inclination, he continued his descent,
being forced into an irregular detour by
the course of the water. That the im-
prisoned object might possibly prove a
human being never once entered his
mind.
Ilens•tL where he new stood, the shop -
llighlantts, au awe-inspiring power
emouyg the Glencoo hills. The great
:sod precipitoue height of the peaked
and cloven mountain ranges enclosing
that lonely and gtooneinvested valley
still render the habitations of the Glen
subject to sudden floodings. The path-
ways of the Great Glen aro to this day
to many parte overflown and torn up with
every succeeding winter's rain. The
water, converging front many points in-
to some of the deep gorges lying at the
base of the hills, overflows its natural
channels and, rushing precipitately to-
ward lower levels, converts for the time
hillfoots and roadways into a brawling
sea.
A century and a half ago, however,
the condition of the Highlands in this
respect, as in many other ways, was much
less unimproved than it now is. Gene-
ral Wade had not yet cut his (treat
lengths of militaryroadwaysthrough the
heart of the Highlands, and agricultu-
ral drainage was in a measure unknown.
I -n such circumstances frequent flotd-
ongs of roads, and even entire parishes,
by the winter rains or the sudden melt -
Ing of the accumulated hill snows were
the common experience. The moun-
tain torrents and hill lochlets would
then rise with extraordinary rapidity,
and the lives of both men and cattle be
suddenly jeopardised. In the district of
Glencoe this was especially the aim—
the great height and steepness of the
surrounding hills inducing the/ forma-
tion of suchsudden and destructive floods.
The thunderstorm, as described in the
preceding chapter, had no more than
reached its height whew Malcolm Mac-
donald resolved on setting off to Bala-
chulish fur hale. In taking such a
course he hoped to solve at once the
cause of Helen Cameron's disappearance
from the betrothal "Well," in Glena-
thoalaia. If she had gone thither for
shelter he would in all liklihood find her
there, but if she had not bees seen
there, then the. probability was strong
that she was still wandering about on the
hills, exposed to the fury and danger of
the storm, or had met with some acci-
dent during her descent.
It was just verging on the grey of the
gloamin', with a soft and violet -hued
sky, when the lovers had had their
plight marred by the incident occurring
la the betrothal "Well,- and within an
hour the gloamin' had become engulph-
ed in a darkness blacker than that
of calm to the appalling fury of tempest
and thunderstonu.
With energetic steps Malcolm passed
oyer the saturated and uneven ground.
Around him turrenta of ram water were
banging in ragged strips from every
shelving cliff, and ntaay portions of the
surrounding hills were fast forming into
tracts of than!. The thunder was abat-
ing, but the rain was still falling in un-
diminished volume, and the wind was
driving in furious gusts and howling
among the conies and gaps of the moun-
tains.
Resolutely, however, and with as yet
:to sense of fatigue, he pushed on in an
oblique ninth -west direction,
Nothing; noteworthy occurred to in-
terrupt his progress till on reaching a
crest of n Lowe which ruse abruptly be-
fore him, he was astonished to find a
large portion of the sloping ground be-
neath him already in a state of danger-
ous flood.
Pieces of loosened rock, branches of
lir trees, and tuaasea of gorse and heath-
er, torn from their scant rootage, were
being b ,rne swiftly down on the brown
bosom of the rearm„ tumbling flood.
In the nunky darkness which prevail-
ed he was unable to trace the source of
the flood, but he saw that it occupied
the narrow, alopi.tg strath beneath him
to the dept h of se%i i d feet in some
places.
than it was in the narrower strath from
ous small pieces of ruck which were
rumbling duwn the bead of the current,
and so continually striking against his
lags. In this way he was several tittles
vary nearly thrown over ; upon notable
by the bow of • small dr 1-s., which
Brat struck against, and thew awircing
&beat careered swiftly pant him.
Chaos or twins, two, as be sank to the
waist the stress sanest caught hien, as
if tilt groom" nits leaving him, he would
It»eotarily patty to steady his footing.
The hoe of Helen Camsruo, however,
was turned to bins, and often as he look-
ed towards her he caught fresh hope,
•ud stepped determinedly , n.
Already her rescue was on the ovo of
completion. He stood within ten yards
of her and could distinctly observe the
expression of her face. Her counten-
ance was deadly pale, She had been
watching with almost suspended breath
his every step of progress towards her.
Once or twice • alight ery of horror
escaped her lips, as he seemed to stum-
ble and was like to be carried away. He
was now, however, within hail of her.
He had braved all risks to reach sod suc-
cour her, and she longed to throw her-
self into his saving armi, and so weep
out her warm love and thanks t n his
breast.
Another last grapple forward, and,
with the water leaping up almost to hie
armpits, he struggled towards her and
clutched at the island rock. • Pausing' to
recover his spent breath amoluent,with an
agile movement of the limbs he was pre-
sently safely on the top of the Crom-
lech.
God ! how his heart throbbed and
leapt when he was at last able to clasp
the maiden in his strong arms ! The
holy ecstacy of the moment was worth
all the risk.
"Helen !" he could only find breath to
exclaim, but in that one fervid word,and
the responsive "Malcolm !" of the maid-
en, a whole world of love and trust were
mutually enshrined.
In words few and brief she explained
the circumstances of her isolation on the
boulder. On Malcolm leaving her at
the "Well," in pursuit of the unknown
spy, who seemed to have been oatehing
their movements, ahe had wandered
about the hill aide for a apace impatient
of his prolonged absence, and in the
hope of meeting him on his return
from the pursuit. A fear of her lover's
safety — not knowing whom the spy
might turn out to be -•-and a natural
fear of the impending thunder -storm
which had suddenly obscured the grey of
( the gloaming as with a black -pall, cora
junetly induced her to the step. She
had not proceeded far, however, when
the driving mist of rain enshrouded her
blotting out the configuration e.f hill and
veil as if by some malign enchantment.
The fury and rapidity of these hil
storms is proverbial. In a few minutes
mountain srie and corrie were drenched
with a pour of water, and every thin tor
rt nt was roaring in sudden pale. The
successive thunder claps, which seemed
to break directly over head, were awe -in
spicing, and the vivid jests of lightning
which preceded them dangerous. Her
isolation on the hills amidst such circum -
matrices of the danger was, to say the
least of it, distressing. A sense of the
extreme loneliness of her position excit-
ed her into a frantic and irregular me-
thod of search. She went and came be-
tween Glen and the tract Malcolm had
followed up in the pursuit,with a deviat-
which it had just escaped.
The flood, it may here be premised,
was strictly loeal, and was the sudden
overflow of a mountain tarn ur hill -loch,
a little west of where he walked. The
drenching mins, forming quickly into
numerous confluent runnels, had poured
into, and almost immediately overflowed
its broad and shallow breast. But the
main cause of the dangerous overflow
was the sudden bit cking up of • neigh-
boring torrent by a masa of rock beann-
ing detached by a stroke of lightning,
and so diverting the deep current of
water as to throw into the already over-
flowing hill loch,which had thus sudden
ly, and without warning,sweptwith great
force the sloping strath below.
Coming directly opposite the Crom-
lech stone he was both surprised and
alarmed to find that the object on the
top of it was in reality a human being.
Shading his eyes with both hands from
the blinding mist of rain which was driv-
ing against his faoe ho was further startl-
ed to find that the crouching figure was
that of a female, and that that female
was none ether than - - Helen Camer-
on !
Her face wee turned from him, but
her familiar and worshipped form he
well knew. She was kneeling on the
stone as if In prayer, and the water was
dashing up and rushing past her with
threatening fury.
It was a maddening discovery ; • mo-
ment of supreme agony to poor Malcolm.
His breath went from him for a moment.
But, recovering his presence of mind in-
stantly, he resolved, with the courage of
a true man, to ford the tumbling ford at
all risks, and that at once too, that he
might so reach and succour the object
beloved of his heart.
"Helen dearest !" he shouted through
the driving noise of wind and ram, and
quick as the words the astonished maid-
en turned her gaze on him.
It was a joyful recuenition on both
sides, but Helen's joy at the sight of her
lover was inatantly blanched by the sight
of the fiercely foaming barrier which
swept dangerously between them.
Her isolated position on the boulder
stone explained itself to Malcolm's
quick sense at once. She had been re-
turning to 1talaciulist--as he had sup-
posed she was likely to have dune—but
had been overtaken by the first, rush of
the projected loch waters, to escape
which she bad despairingly clambered to
the top of the only shelter at hand—the
ruined Cromlech ur mass of boulder rock
described.
Her term of imprisonment had been
as yet short, but brief as it was it seem-
ed long hours since she had stood by her
lover's side at the betrothal, "Well."
Malcoln's first impulse was to rush
straight into the midst of the tumbling
current of water and make h:e way to
the imprisoned one. The probabilities
comprised in the attempt gave Lint no
fear, grave as they appeared. Ile had
by instinct a high-minded contempt of,
danger wherever met. If he could but
reach her ! That was his first and only
thought. Once by her aide, assisted by
his strength and courage, they (night
then both bo able to ford their way hack
through the flood with comparative
safety. As for himself lee was resolved
at all hazards to reach her ; and once
there, if a return journey through the
flueel was found to be impracticable, then
he could at least 'cumin with her until
the stoi in of wind and rain had subsided
r help out if their difficulty had in
some providential way come about.
Strong in these resolutions he hurr.eil
down the eloping ground and was pre-
sently struggling and fghtiug his way
through the brawling current, which, on
account of the uneven natu:o of the
ground, was comparatively deep and
shallow by turns. Ono moment he sank
Hurrying along the Licher tf the two into the water to his waist, another step
an attempt to escape a prolonged stay
on the boulder --which seemed already
woving under them—was • prospect
apparently nut less fatal in chance.
The rain was still driving rettwrseless-
ly down and the sky lying so Iuw sad
bleak that the presence of the surrouud-
iag chain of hills was alone manifested
by the revsrberatiou. of the rumbling
thunder, which seemed 119 strike against
their doves shoulders au( auk up into
a myriad of detonating echoes.
"1 fear to leave the stone,' said the
trembling maiden ; and yet what if it
rolls over with the weight of the flood !
It already feels unsettled under our
feet."
"If the stone lifts, Helen, we shall
gain the bank safely, or both go over the
ravine locked in the last love -devoted
sad 6NTale of • M
•
The g►Ierate d far•el a
.e.
We hove luny( advocated the planting A western miner thus describes the
farmer's vegetable garden in lung tuaanes sat which he Utttwitted a bltasal'd
to the
rows, and W far . wart that most of the with the aid of his dog :--
work eau be done by purse cultivators. I was in Cheyenne after Jim had got .N
viol' and persuaded bite to give pie that
dog of hiss. Bose.
I was out hentin' one day near Lara-
mie when nae of thea hurricanes carne
up, and I didn't know what to de.
It was perr•ire all around. l could
our en storm accomin', but two miles
it is to have s garden that will not only
aider. It has Cutue ill the shape oAO
supply the family, but bring in ' r„fit lc-" if 1 rely ti k1"41141 ketch w(L It 1 stud
Joseph, Hassle "(innenutgor uf Mr.
(
i � f Y nuR still it l”" dial"'
nose axis a bank and yelled "rats
If we have striven for any one improve-
ment in farm life, it is to convince the
farmer that he can easily have an &bun.
danm of the choicest vegetablesal a very
little cost. We aro tad to have help is
dsaver to s h, w farmers how easy
go 1 w took and shoved Ids Bass's
and Old," In which au attempt is trade I J
to interest the hays in gardening, and�•aw urlrr ha,• seen that ding scratch
farm gardening is there treated in the br thr wed the dirt behind hiul li e a
attractive manner ni which forming was brwkutg plow drawed by twenty yt•ke e
resented w ':Walks and Talks." Far -
Id on to his tail and h
embrace. " [ sax* u. 1 +
rose sat the older States, especially d scratched We hadn't taut las the en and
That would be madness, Malcolm ; (tear large towns and manufacturing vil-
save yourself. 1 will remain horn seduture n two hundred fret when the
leges wort inevitably become market storm struck ua Birt Bose kept 'crate meet of fete alone." ardeners 00 a large scale.
"Not if the heavens were to fall, der- gIn'. I let Aim goo tin for a wile or so,
Raving plants, to have them ready to i but i toll hint to let up which he aid,
ling," eueyou life
rejoined Malcolm ; set out as soon as the weather is suitable
"Without you life were valueless Still
is
surpri.edest dog you ever seed, be-
im an itupurtaut matter. Thessare start Guse he hadn't caught up with the tat.
there is hope of rescue. The Cromlech in but heeds, ill cold frames, And in
I gut back to the top of ground went
stone may stand till tho storm subsides
boxes in the windows of tit. dwelling
itot Laramie and started the story t'av 1
Already the thunder is passing away house. Sufficient was said on the bot-
ftum us, and nay take the rain -clouds had Found • cave.
with it. Let ur preserve our hearts." bed and window -box last mouth. The
i diads $100,000 by showin' Gouritts
"Malcolm !" and the maiden threw "'dd Emma is simply shot -bed (roma and that cave, but lust it all spcculatin' in
her arms around him as if for }motet.stain, placed over a spot of good soil. It urines,
tion.
The exclamation was sudden, and was
uecasioned by a loud, crashing, sudden
noise which seemed descending on them
from an upper reach of the hillside.
Presently, in conjunction with the
alarming noise, he observed a great mass
of rock tumbling down the inclined bed
of a neighboring torrent. Keeping the
track of the torrent, it fell with a loud
thud into the heart of a deep corrie, at
the head of which the wates formed it-
self into a natural linn, and momentarily
was engulphed from further view, mash-
ing up, in the act of fall, great masses of
brown water against the pouring skies.
It seemed for the moment as if the
very hill were being rent asunder by the
fbroe of the storm, and the startled lov-
ers, thinking their doom sealed, clung to
each other with a closer embrace, and re-
signedly awaited the issue.
TO la CONTIMAto.
A Raws.an—Of one dozeu " Teepee-
sT" to any one sending the best four line
rhyme on "Tsrszsay," the remarkable
little gem for the Teeth and Breath. Ask
your druggat or Address.
receives its heat from the sun by day,
and this is prevented from escaping at
uight, by covering the glass with shutters,
draw mats, or even a piece of old ttittpet-
ing. The soil of the cold frame should
be about three inches higher than the
general surface, and the frame should be
where it will be sheltered from cold winds
and will receive the full warmth Of the
snn. This, having no heating material,
will not force w rapid a growth, but will
he found very useful to start wise kinds
of plants, and to receive those that have
been started in a hot-bed.—American
Abriculturist for March.
An old man would not believe he
could hear his wife a distance of five
miles by telephone. His better half was
in • country store several miles away,
where there was a telephone, and the
skeptic was also in a place where there
was a similar instrument, and, on being
told how to operate it, he walked boldly
up and shouted, "Hello, Jane !" At
that instant lightning struck the tele-
phone wire and knocked the man down,
and as he scrambled to his feet, he ex-
citedly cried, "That's Jane every time."
Free of Charge.
All persons suffering from Congha,
Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis,Loes of Voice,
or any affection of the Throat and Lungs,
are requested to call at Wilson's Drug
Stere and get a Trial Bottle of Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
free of charge, which will convince them
of wonderful merits and show what a
regular dollar size bottle will do. Call
eat ly. (3)
Simply miraculous is all can say,l.f
the effect of Dr. Van Buren's Kidney
Cure in my case. An elderly lady
writes this from Antigonish, N. S., who
ing and irregular uncertainty of step. ; had suffered from pains in the back for
twenty yearn. Sold by J. Wilson Gude-
Not a human forret anywhere to he seen. rich
. I2m
Again and again her eager eyes had been'
deceived by jutting ledges of crag which
seemed in the darkness to body forth the or Capital required, JAaxs LRR 817(502. Mno
e fr
11
shape of her lover, but nowhere,. trial. Quebec -
Malcolm Malcolul to he found. ,
Convinced st length of the uselessness i
of a prolonged stay on the hills, she re -
A
a Magi. Res
Of Dr. Smith's Great German Worm Re-
•
inedy will kill a thousand worms, and is
as pleasant to take as the most delicious
candy. It does not create nausea, and
can be given without a particle of appre-
hension of doing injury. Sold by Jas.
Wilson, Godench, Ont.
An Ertraordinarl Offer !
TO &G ENT8-
000DB UNSOLD RETURNED.
If you are out of employment and
want to start in a business you can make
from $3 tri 110 a day clear, and take no
risk of lou, we will send you on receipt
of 111, goods that will sell readily in a
few days for $25. If the Agents fails to
sell these gods in four days, they can
return all unsold to us, and we will re-
turn them their money, can anything be
fairer 1 We take all risk of loss, and 'the
Agent gets started in • business that will
he permanent, and pay from $1,000 to
13,000 a year Ladies can do as well aA
men. We want an Agent in every
county. Full particulars free. Address,
U. S. Manufacturing Co., No. I lti Smith
field Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
A CURE G1'AItANTEEC•
MAW1ET1CMEDIGI to
--r
TtAoa. fkfy ,+^'"'
owsl BRAIN &NERVr
Ler Old and )owes. Nate sail resale.
Positively ono•+ NrU.1114nrwe in all its Pta;r,•r.
{Veale Manorsy lona or Hr.ein !'ower. Ne•rwrel
Prostration, .Night .Ytr•rd.., 'epermntorrha•n.
Lewrorrhast. Barrettes :w.',, .Nenrnal Weakness
and (fennel Los, of !'otter. 1t repairs
Nervous 11•ustlr, Ref urea,dra the Jarred /Intel -
lett, etrrnpthens fat Kale .bled Brain. and Joe -
storm surprising Tone and rigor to the hr -
Moored (lenrratire Organa. With rash or -
■terrtg•e•s *greedy Care.
From the many remarkable cures
wrought by naing A1cGregor's Speedy
Cure for Dyspepsia, Indilrestion, Consti-
pation and Affection '.f the Liver, and
frum the immense sale of it witho it any
advertising, we have concluded t , place
it extensively on the market, s•• that
those who suffer may haves perfect cure
Gu to Geo. Rhynes' Drug Store and get
a trial bottle free, •.r the regular site at
8 fty cents and one duller.
Wanted. Iitg Pay. Light der for Twra.vl: packages accunipanimi with
GEI 1• � Work. Constant empleyrst• five dollars, we will send our Written Guar'
entre to refund the money. if the treatment
does not effort a cure. It is the ('beapr.t send
Seal Medicine in the market.
'Full particulars in our pamphlet. which
we deeire to mail free to any aldoses.
�tiet'a Magnetic Medicine in sold by Drug-
gists at IN ens. per box. or 1E boxes for ea. or
will be mailed free of twed:eg.'. on re.eipt of the
money. by a.lrtree.ing
11 tl'I►'N N.l(:Yrrt.(• NEnitruic('o.,
11'intl. or, Got.. ('.mada
Sold in (:nderieh, by J tIIEic N'ILnO't, and
all Druggists evervwiere It Iv
M
a t,n.(:OUAtw T,O seas. owl NOee.r►.y -tea,
solved to descend on the main path to .I r ,r, _safest .rw.w.rw� rT..at*ear
Ralachulish, and thecae walk Lome thin'
the Glen. ,
In this course she had net proceeded
far when a rushing, hissing noise ',Auld
her caused her to look around. The die
covery startled her. A mass of hater,
she saw, was rushing down the centre of
the narrow strath wherein she was stand-
ing, with a front of foam at its head
which threatened to engulph her. A
ravine of firs lay at the bettoi i of the
strath ,towards soh ich the flood was driving
Instant destruction threatened her ; but
with a saving presence of mind she had
run for safety to the massive Cromlech,
or boulder stone, situated a little way
down the valley, and Ly ;.n effort of
speed was just in time to scale it when
the angry flood was round ler fcet,fuam-
int and dashing itself . meet and around
h 'r ark of safety.
As for Malcolm, new that he was be-
side her, his first earnest thought was to
have Helen removed from the p rriluu■
position into wLich uwtuward accident had
natural hanks of reek which aedged in and he would rise almost clear ,.f It. He
thrust 6.r- a position whic:l now, for
his e r Pmnt, Two
e well, and l a so n tt e o sad Yotsonn R ve
the fled he ft 'lowed l its downward held his fret firmly and e both of thorn, teetue•i every moment ice WI t;; Cbi.- cages ..a H,tv e.pe:,e ,nor wo
(rhlrgt• until it opened into a wider area I only fear of defeat lay in the feasibility Te Lassie Temente
nnu r.; mora pcr:, a- vii in.:tur.
"ALBERT LEA ROUTE."
and afterwards Lrawled m broken, on. t of st we porton of the wbmetleil ground h A waw stwt tare -t L.nr, a. Moo,* MIA RAna -
•lllklltg to much as h take Ilan pwe k N w L I~ Atlantic
tl as
ally Teyttnd his depth — a baffling predic "Inst to renters the tl'" l.am sirens { "')"'T
Imluutpene a.d Lea�rtto .oA Omaha, H,
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
was the first preparation perfectly adapted tomer*
dew -ares of the wwlp, and the Ant sueeasaful re-
storer of laded or gray hair to Its natural color,
growth, ao,l youthful beauty. It has bad null?
imitators. but urine have so fully met all the re.
quirementa needful for the proper treatment nt of
the hair and scalp. Halt IIAIa Her r.wtti has
ate/4,111y grown in favor, and spread Its fame and
usefulness to every quarter of the globe. Its un-
paralleled success can be attributed to but one
capse: tae ea fare Jalfitweet of its',now Tars.
The proprietors hare often been surprised at the
receipt of orders from remote eouutrit,, where
Uts-y had never made an effort for Its introduction.
The use for a short Ume of 11ALL's 11Atk
Rea,wSit wonderfully improves the personal
appearance. It cleanses the satp from all int'
purities, cures all humors, fever,. and dryness,
and thus prevents baldness. It atimutates tin.,
weakened glands. and enables thews le puss for-
ward a new and vigorous growth. The effects of
this article are not transient, like those of alto
bode preparations, but remain ■ Wog time. which
males its use a matter of economy.
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE)
1.•11 rHF.
WHISKERS
ci1't•hnnge the hrt••lt to a ratnral hrnwn, c'
1 • soak. Ps tlesi real. It produces a pc rma sae h t icier
;hal will hot wash sway. Consisting of a sing:
pn {iteration, It n applied without trouble.
PREPARED BY
R. 1'. HALL b CO., Nashua, N.H .
1,1 by all Dealers in Medicines.
FOR ALL THE FORME'
o►
scrofulous, Mercurial, and
Blood Disorder■.
the hest remedy, because the n. -
.erreAinR and thorough bl.w,•.
purifier, u
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
sold by all Druggists ; sl, eta bottles, 50-
4
PRINCIPAL.+LINE
CII GOPROCK ISLARD&PACIFIC R'Y
IW a i rs ee""ssag and ih.
I I
liitli
sire.
rwate
IMO rt .efr •sit CoMa
mfortable Se
xlafnt cent Horton Reellstla air Car., P.U.
}arab etutstt Palace Sterol Cow scA the Wan
't. of Duteos Care in the World. t1'Aree T. aloe
to \\e cannot remain elf. • kr,b.e recently ext o ,d between Rmnoond,
• • ,roofs. tea,, attasoees, Holt.
u.•s. N.rthtt 1' Vn a lt,, •t,•t.loh. no,,n
antent, Its no swi mer, however strongof aim and heart.' ear an mor.,:+ .tA ,nte:.nrawe
Al/Taro,.-t Ipso ;ors Travel on rs.t I'a tr«
for a Not the maiden trembling hesitated t..
of area could hope lin contend leoer•e r:r.aa .t ui..in• pal t:e.eet e'.
6`1`;:;;;',•;:',;';‘,1,,,' , .r.••* t'.-,'.,
siugie t:r mrnt with such a sweltering, accede, and even while he yet waded , 1 .nr „n .n•I
e'.'Ye ►. lrtr.,l.-l.,.rs Ian*
rapid -running thiel. Ret that extrem- her reply tLe flood sec:r:ai ti, forewarn )w n . 1...n•
him against ilia pertl.us attempt Ili around ris-
ing
ing arnd their solitary 11ot of refuge
with an increased swell and fury
equal masses over a shelving ravine of
At the lower end t.f the s ,nr.ing8e'al,
and near to the edge of tie ravine men-
tioned, he noticed a lar_e mass of ball.
der rock which mooned c•.ntpletely
Salanded by the surn,el,ding 11.'44 This ity, fortunately, had nut yet .-'ecurr-
boulder he knew to be a " Cromlech ''eel.
alone, for the retrains of one of the Drui The chief hindrance le his progress, as
doral alters of obi, several of which still far as he had yet cone, was tin.• numer Bat .1 death cunfrente.l the havers in
o•dlKa.IM twfervetntlon, M Hae MipsaM Fold.
ars of Ili.
GRIAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE,
of sown .e%re,t T,.. s.-• uta-,, or adds,'
R. R MAMA. [. ST. JOHN.
sea -Por.. A t:en w s- o-ri,l Tit a r... ass
OMICACO.
hit it llt adnrhr and rti,,n all Of t rn•tblee :nri-
de:ttoabit u, state ofthe system, rueha.1)ir:
Nsur.•s, Drowsing+r, DIntrwe after eating,
I's n in the Ride, de. while their most runt:.rk-
aitle sued., live leen eh..wn In curing
sic
Il -'.1,, ...1 t'arte,sLittl'T.I,rrrlllser.egna'ty
reknit -it, in Con -dip -won, rnrosg and prevent:ne
this annoying complaint, while they also torn • t
all d'•..rdere of the stomach, stimulate the 1
sod n.l-ulaoe the bowels. Iso.. a if ib, y only . t
HEAD
A elle Pry "mem betiiassttpktekw to 'bow w An
sniffer room umesylalet;oat fneln-
aatNyflask Hid iters, and !Mri
"memos Orr Ham Owe little pp Il.,siu-
aelelatyoarrtoep "Maid Mwili;ug
N M w�t (boat. ghee ail mkt bead
seeNstii
CHE
ie the lune of P. Inlay lives that herr 1. whets w •
Mats ser great naliel. oar pills Cure 1t 'taboo
mar
AIrakWe (lois are very amall and
Mr1LMt to saki Ire poll. makes dose.
'feed are strletly M do not ger or
paeer1agee bat bythe*action {.tense all wine
ieeiantt. fa vow •ss•rs: flee for $1. Sold
by draggats rvwywtws` et asst by
CARTER MEDICINE CO.,
Now York City.
the Sllul(TE.T. IICICKE•T and
REST Use to et. Joseph.
Atrhlsrn. Topeka, Dent.
son, miles 0.1
vesWA
And alt
Points In Iuw.,
Nebraska, M (wort, Kan
s.s, New Mexico, .trtron.. No,
taxa and Tex,,.
CHI CAGO
his L'nnt, bas rro.ni,•rtor fur Albert
Lee. Mlnnrsp..;ls and et. Pant
Nationally reputed as
1.'n the Greet
4a,..eaar
Lids
1'nI yr real
ly .1..1 to
bit.. best equipped
Railroad In the w..t
sol elapses oft s
KANSAS CITY
Through
Ti‘ i•
Ct labral. •1 1
sale at ail o1T1•
the 1' ft, sad
Cnaada.
Try 1C
and yea will
so 1 'raveling s
,1 7.1...•, vd
N>� stout M
Tarr. Sleeping
• ors
rte .'heerfn 1t Cv. n
T 1 PStTta, PUCVIAL LNIB1L
M (lee heft & Gra •; H r en,n • • thus, def.
Chivaso. 111. Chianuw■ Ili
J. t., ren,,
Caned nan3Pama. Aptt,
rot ono, (hr.
-lilts. 11. ,1iHisaTnv,
Ticket A`ent:(oder ch,