HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1900-08-16, Page 3��"
;1
",It�_,A
PAY OF BE FAITHFUL,
I I I . - I'', I -, _______,.__ --..-,.
4. tu*agar, and It., having poluted t
. 11
no
his birthplace, It boo ever *I 'HIS. QUEEN
B01t you pay for your royalty, Ron.
neth, my bOYk" OrW4 G38tOU, WW bad
"
I , � ... ----.-- �- --- ,
wits a small eoUXtvy%r4 below, half
filled with A mosoy 014eirin and v, ram.
Yor mocklul-blird Alai my prapittyp no.
I
waudewlas through the h( �avEo
0
$101041 upon them unperceived.
,
olluokle, bench, and a outlook
withering glance at Mayblu - 1149aut
�
lie jq#*40114�41 rlr,, pjr,q a� tile V,poure 0 �
W001XIng to goo boW the World WoZ
I �
"The ualvem, Itself-" began 3tay-
'Pleasant
upon a mass of flowering geraniums,
B;Axter's rich voice became tenderly
General Buller ought to be able to I
treat blink. When Adam awoke lit the
...."
bin fervently.
In a dowmer-window which jutted like
�
Dr. Talmage Discourses oin
gardeak in the coot of the day, hosaw
lit the
OHAPTH� I. .
"011, the price is, not 00 costly I You
a ,gray bood from the roof of a house
,
Recorder Nolan. .
govdou cool of ,the day, be saw
x0aneth Xayblu, somewhere about
simply P14U far Your Queen, wit,1114
Just across the street. lie took pos-
,Rev.
IN ..
,_ Their
-coinlug out through tbi). dusk of the,
evening this game worlds that
, the middle of the long line, found lilm.
into
the mouth, some little fete in return
for Royal
seSsion At once,
11141,veward.
�
begaa. torty-two years ago, when he
00004
self, suddenly drawn, dancing,
your houora-_',
11 I shall got on o4pitally here", he
"410i - �, .
- __ _____
,Just
,
MUUAY was at an end. But, Unlike, .
I
us on am way to church to-aight.
a high, asolloa doorway, and along a
,
"But, I May keep the -bean I" 410-
decided, looking over at the Cathedral
I
I A, Oespatch, from Wash
. Ington says,--
I , . ,
at llgblt staguate- and every chariot
Safe fair over-all Christian workers.
No tQ11shall tati,;ue them; no boatil-
lamp -lit corridor with rat tored ceil-
ing, &lone pavements and stuccoed
manded Kenneth, tatning to his
whito-robed compaulau.
towers, and hearing vaguely the at&.
Rev. Dr. Talmage preachod from the!
would become a hearse, and every bell
toll, and there would not be,
ity OveTooana them; no win pleroe
walls.
She nodded assent, blushing Again
taut hum, like wind-attirrod forest
leaves, of childrea's voices In the con -
following text* -,,Whey that turn
1.
m"y, to righteousness sh*all shine as
. ,
would .
room on this bill aldea to bu, ry the dondl
.
th.sM, A0.111ght sb4do(w them. For
civet the river of Jay flows on; for
To the stranger, fresh from big
proo.alo matter-of4mot existence in a
U,nd,W his direct gage.
"I shall keep my i
Queen alsol" he
vent school near by. 11 I shall look up
. the stars for ever and ever.,�-Danlel
.
of the great metropolis, for there
ever the jubilee progresses. The Lamb
distant State, the experience was be-
prophesied exults ,
, utly
� under his
data during the mornings and write
.
say brief 0, nights,,, I
. . I x1t. 3. -
It would be absurd for mie to stand
Would be pestilence in heaven -L But
Jesus lives, awl so all the redeemed
whitih Is in the midst of the throne
load thew. to living fountains
wildering. Hurried out of the hotel
dining hour by
bireAth. This, indeed, seemed likely
But he calculated without that un,
. . .. �. hotel aad, by � elaborate argument, I
. � I
live % - ith him. Ile shall recognize
oball. of
water, And God shall wipe away all
-room halt an earlier
.
his old collego-chum, Gaston Lorto, be
enough. His wooing, so boldly b
� egul),
procooded.th n eforward with
0 4 (138b
known quantity which is said to lurk
.
. prove, that the Yviorld in off the track.
You might an well stand at the foot of
them as his comrades In earthly to 11,
and Xemenlber Who# they did for the
tears from their eyes.
. I I
bad been plunged without a moment'a
.0
and a Pewslotenoy which took hia own
behind -all human mkonIng.
The same alght he meate4 himself
I
an embaglirment, amid the wreck at a
�
hoixor of his name, and for the spread
I -
But none of these things for the ld-
lers, the drope4, the stumbling-blooks.
warning into a new, and strange
. .
world.
breath away whenever he paused to
think of it. The mouth sped like %
at 4 table, spread out before him the
,
.
. . . eavalle xall-train, proving by slabor-
� � a ., .
of his kingdom. All their prayers,
� �
They who have, by prayer mind exam4
, � .
"Yes," Gaston had remarked, steer,
lightning- flash, I
fair pages of legal cap, dipped his pan
�
In the lakstaud,-and his chair
ato Argument that Something is Out
1
I
tumbled over the euw
And tears, and work will rise boter a
liliv as be looko into their faces, and
ple, and Christian work, turnedmany
Ing hire rapidly along the narrow
4 ,
"He has the ardor of his twenty-
pushed
back with a frown of annoyance,
�
I of order. Adain
bankment sixty centuries, a,90, and
he will divide his kingdom with them,
. �
to rightdousness, and only they
I. shall &blue an the stars few ever,"
street under the shadow. of overhang-
Ing galleries, "this Is indeed that,old
.
two years, this. young, Americall,",com-
,
mented one, of the gray -bearded uncles
A mocking -bird somewhere In the
I the whole* raois, in on a long train, has
his feace-their peace; his boliness-
�
quarter of New Orleans about which
to Graide Cousins, the stately maiden
neigbiborbood had begun to sing.
. To others listening in boliday moo4,
gone on taidbling in the same dirso.-
. . tion, Crashl crasUl The onlY ques-
their holinegs; his joy -their Jay, The
.
glory of the central throue-reflecto * d
� - I
HE PAID THE PRICE.
YOU Others are 80 curious. Myself,
I ,
I prefer Paris. Or even lyaw Yorkl"
lady who .
presided over Le BretoP,
mansion. And lie sighed, a little six.
I .
for th, time was Illard Upon Christ-
I tion now is, By What leverage can thle
. I
from the surrounding throneo, the la4t
I
�
he added g yly, "But you may not
a
viounly. . .
man, the song was a flood of melody
I
.
� crushed thing be lifted I By what 1141114-
spoft of ain struck) from tbe Christian
. .
.1irs. 041141 R. 19411MR14 Innuesice WWo
..
. Ro.,rdelod. crillialia14"
stop I
to anif the must, and mould of
I It
.
O'Sh a has 'the heart of bar eighteen
tender, wooing, joyous, sad -a cap.;
-
tive,, Sang of the green wo9d,. I and
. . 0 . . Mer may the fragments. Ila. reeon-
struotod I - - i I 1 1 .
orb, and the entire nature a tremble
and a flash with. light, they shall
I
, To -day there is av more devoted or
it now, Kenneth. 00010,011, Old man,
They are waiting for us.,' .
aummera," responded Grande Cons -
of his forgotten mate calling from her
I
I I . . First: We MAY turn. thom by the
shine as the stars , .
moire beloved * evangelist than Mrs,
.
�
"They I Who V" demanded Kenneth,
�
ins with a soft, fluttering suspira-
tion. I . � .
uest in the ddw-seented magnolia tree;
..
I chart .. -
li of a right example. A child,
'a
FOR EVER AND,NVER.
-
Maud B. Booth. Thousands of pris-
pa unin g to starer up( at the t . win tow-
Twenty-two and eighteen were at
a pass .
ionate love -lilt, vailed by mus
.
I . . coining Alithy home, was
I M from
i rr shall be
coam in United States jails, count her
an of the CAthedral outlined against
that moment pacing the prim.walks
Leal and mischievous imita,tions,.of a
taugbit at ncboo�l to Wash itid faco. 'It
like the stars in the fact that they
as tl
wir -personal (riand, and she has
a tender sit ,, I
, 7. .
of the court below in the falling dusk,
dog's. bark, the thump of the police-
Want bolas so muoli improved In ap-
.1. � I �
have a light independent of each oth-
helped hundreds of diseharked can-
'
As lie apokei the expectant group,
The supreme hour had, struck. They
man's staff on the banquette. the. call
,.. . pearance that its luctliai wAsh6d her
. .
or. Look up at night, and see each
viats to honorable and useful lives.
numbering some twenty-fivo or thir-
, �
.
q
were discussing . the final arrange.
of the milkman, the long -drawn cry
I
.
. . . . . tace. And Wjlau the father of the
� I household came home, and saw the lra-
world, show its distinct glory. It is
Bien in prison are usually ready to
Pretend anything in 'order, to gain an
ty young People of both sexes, station-
ed in tbealitlike,alley� of St. Antoine,
Wants for the little return fete -%vblcb,
a
of the praline woman.
To Maybin it was simply noloo; bru-
. �
-in domestic appearaileep lie
V .
. .rovemout
I
not like tlw conflagration, in which
.
you canno,t tell where one flame.stops
earlier release or increased privileges,
I
opened with a noisy welcome, and
t he same evening, was -nominally -to
.
end the King's brief reign.
tal, insistent,. outrageous. He had,
I
. washed his face. . The neighbours
aud another begins. Neptune, Her�
and can assame penitence and piety
I
closed around the newcomers. May-
"But I shall keep the bean, you
never liked mooking-birds since -but
. .
I 1. the cUange. and tired
. coming In,. "Wl iment, until all that
. the same expor .
schel, and Mercury are as distinct an
. .
without undergoing any real Moral
I
change. , But to show -that religion
.
bin',s balf- comprobanding cars driank.
.in. eagerly the soft babble. of foreign
know,,, 'he said. . .
o-tas.-,
no maiteir I
He &rose. with an angry ejaculation,
.
. � . street was purified, and the next .
. .
if each one of them were the only
star,, so "our lndivlduallsua� will not b I a
makes tharough work with the worst
.
speech wthiob-assailed biek guide, white
She returned, faintly, the
. aand. Bat,,
significant pressure -ut his I
,ad looked oat of the window. The
.
. I vlop *and the
street copied its exan
. Be ol_
I � city felt the result of one he
lost in heaven. ,A great multitude .
material, Mrs. Booth tells the -fo I-
,owing story, which is only one of
he bowed right and 'left in response
..
know in their hearts that lie. would
.
offender, As he -had instantly divined,
.
was swinging in a huge, cage, -May-
whole
.
: . I . boy . .washing jT,bat is a
, I his face.
"yqt odeh one as observable, as dis.
tinctly recognized; As cele-
.
Many .
In her - experielace of prison
.
to rapid Introductions. A moment
later,� marshalled by LOrlo, bimselts
also keep his Queen. i. �.
Alas I th4 C and the Llp'l
up
Win pould see the outlines of it plain-
. . . . table, by whieN we set. -forth that the
1. . . beat way tQ got the world-waslied of
. .
greatly
brated, as if in all the space, from
.
woXk I She is knowni among the pri,
. *
son population as the "Little Moth-
. I
they went sweeping down , Royal
'Street. . ..
Cfiiwt, 1acetiously known as the.
in
ly-in the do�msr�window opposite, He
I . . '
slammed his owablinds ostentatious-
, . . , is to b4vid.oar
. .. . its air's and pollution
1114 ii�
gate to gate, f rom -hill to bill, he were
. � I
the only inhabitant; no mixing up-
ex," and she calls the Unfortunates
,�my .. I ..
',What.i' , .
a it - may .1 ask, Mademoi-
. , .
Qaealm's Pool, was singing his cage
a - the rose-wreatbad
in balcony. His
. . . .
ly and went to ))ad, work for. that
.
29,
. own heArt and life cleansed P
� L. . a
. . tied. Al man witu grace in his heart,
. Lb -no indiscriminate rush; each
no MQ .. I �
i*Y1,.11 ..
. .
One convict, who Attended chapel ,
Belle ? Where Are we golugl!" H6
put .
the awkwardl trying
song, rapturously. exultant, might
.
a a ilapossible. - .
night b ' .
Work at Any -time'was out of the
. . his face,
11. . . . and-Chriatian cheerfulness in
Christian wor6r6standiag oat illus-
. .
.
on a cartain Sunday Morning wihen
. � question. y,
to. frame the French syl . tables,: with
havebeen an epithalamiul3n., It'*as
. I �
knell!
.
question, or so, at leaist, the irritated
. I
. and holy consistency in. his behaviour,
. . . .
- ,Bar-
k-rions-all , the. story... of earthly
.
achievement adhering to each �one;
. hardened
she gpijkie, was of. the most
� I - .
grammatical .exactness. I..
. I .
a , ...
lil wish- , ". said Kenneth, pa I
using
lawyew decided, during the days Which
.
. I is a perpetual sai=ou; and the
I.. ' �
ditters from others in that it line,
I
his self -denials, and Pains, and, ser,
class. His was a crime committed
in cold blood, noit by impulse, ot un.
"My brother, Gaston, then, has not
. . .
nbra .
pttly-'11 Wish 0hicot w6uld stop
.
follow6d.. The mocking -bird, first on
. . . .
, man
- . � . .. .
I � . but one theaid and this longer it runs,
I . .
.
.
vices, and victories published.
der the crazAng .influence of drink.
. .
informaid YOU too smiled his, companion.
.. . - I
.1tAs the Eplpha�uy,-Twelftb- Night,
his noise I I cannot h eai myself talk."
"But, Kanueth," inarmured Odette,
the. ground, was evidently- .
I . . -
stay-aud 'to conquer. His: exasperat-
.
I an who
�, . the better. There are honest in
I .
I . .
A -gain: Cbristian, workers wilt, shine
I
liketbe stairs in) swiftness of motion.
The mam* h4A bdon a constant menace
. . . .
. . ..
.
. . . .
you know, And we go. ,to out' ,a
t is in
euderly. repron6hful, "Chicot Y
Ing. per(aimanoes began with unfail.
.. walk down Wall Street, making the
'
The worlds do not stop to,. SUL1306,
to the. coal muAi ty-a de pr� ved : orim-
King's cake at, my cousin, Miss
. Le
. ,
biirdl" I . . .
Ing regularity a little before nightfall
.
'and
p . teeth of i4lquity ablatten'. iThere are
L�' . I
%, happy men ,wgo. so into & sx&-room,.
�
. 1. .
Thei-a are .no fixed stars Have .as to
.
inal, from wbos8 nature the last:spark
I I .
of good seemed to'hrtve been -snuffed ,
.
Bretca's." The slight twist of her
Creole tongue - - .
added.a flavor
* .
"I do not care," returned Kenneth,
. . � I ,.I
ad continued throughout
� all. day,
the Ii velong night, no* enveloped I n
-, I
and by. a lo6k, laillp i9q broken! bons
.
to.
relative position.. 0a. -star - most
� .
t1horpughly fixed flies thousands of
Oat, . . ...
. . . . I . ..
.
Ae lie his
. Piquant
tb her English. . 1� .. .
. .
'.
half in fun, yet half.nettled, too;
. . - m
would like to tie his..head. up in a
�
gi ' -of a waxing r I .
the effalgeat ory . noon;
.
.11 . to knit, and the excited nerves drop
I
,
miles ' 5troo oniers
a. minate.. The A
sat 1hero With thousand-
.
fello.w-oonvicts-all
"011 I" Kenneth breathed more
� .
towel,,or oboke him*witb_oue of my
while Maybin's hard.-$6ught notes ac-
.
�, . calm boating. 4%,ey are pure me n
.
. . . 8 of
whose sirenoes -the t(ingu
�
using his 'teileseope? for an Al�ine
.
I'
n uniforms of
' 1.
�at;ripejtl gray -his. 'face wore * -
freelyi Wis. 011ondorf slipping, like
.
. �
. .
guitar strings V1 .
. .1
d .ihe likal cap, gathered
aumutitte, a
. .
dust, its
presence -
� . - I . unclean . ness.. -FJ%e,inightiest Agent
. � . I I .
stooki leaps: I*m. worldl-crag to
., . .
. .., I . .1
. �� AN UGLY. SNEER.
. .
r
. Ch lotian's burden from hisAbouldersl
as they.sped on in the wa;ke of th 0
-Mr. Maybin I How- you ought to
be - ishained d Chicot's is.
and dust 6uly, on .pristine
. I
part nd his alway4-impetuous tem-
ity, a
I , .
. �. I I . h. is a consistent CWIa_.
�... . . of good on eatt , , ,
Olin, I like.the.111ble folded,between
porIA-crag, And finds no star stand-.
I till. The chamois hunter' has to
Ing a � .
. .
� - . '
A4 pattet�of hands announced the an-
. I I �
. . 1. 1. 1. �., �. . �. . ..
.OthaliG,. . . .. .: � .1 . .. .
I
. � I" gasps in
tress, releasing -hot band .from*her
' '
. .1 1. . . I
Pax afeadilyrose� . � . .
: I . . ..
. a. lidav of cloth, of calfskin, or of morojeo, ,,
.
- �
fjY to�clatch hiA'pri6y,.,bat not so swift
. I
trance. Of the, Little �.Mothar. - His
.
mates ,tvaire. all: applaading'her as she I
. And Be it. a . t ,
. was - th t i( ,Ieng1b a .love
'gh, arched ' I
door. had swung open
r1a ciaep I ud moving away h .
a -6131
. ..'' . .. ,
.
AtAength, affer.some four Or five .
� .
I
days of constant feeding,,the temper
I
I � but .1 like it better (when, in .the
. i *
I I . .
1. shape of 41ja4p, it goes out Ilito the
'18 lils Ile, icjant.� �
� garne, as! that .which.tJ
ist tries to shoot thr .
q.ugh the'tower
. .
. I
walked up Ilia aisle. His - face. sb,ft.
. I
. .
,lit I
.hand had caught hand, the human line
. I
him . , I I ; I _
... .
Needless to� set down the' extiava.
..
. ' �
a .eat...Movet Neveir I
reached a whit h . . .
.. �
.. I � .
. .
., . . world--� : -.
of the vbtiervat�oryi .Like potra(s,mid-..
ened as lie cauglit the enthusiasm of.
. . . "
had uncoiled its swaying 16ngth,,a gay
. - �
gau t ste,*V% by which! the ,foolish quav�
.�
. liked' his quarters, he had a most
He. .. 'rite,
I . � �' I
. I . - I I . .
.
Atlantfoi that, 'seem to come from.
the. moment, and lie was soon smiling
I I
clipirus- had burst upon the night air, -
. .
rel allmbed..to its explosive conolus,-
.,
h needed
important brief to .W a L .
. I �
.
. W DME ILLUSZRATED. -
.. ... ..
... . . .
. I
no shore, and Itio.-boiand, to no'landing
I
and clapping:a' .. �. t'
a heartily as the res .
. I
and'Lhri
. . 0 was loading the breathless
11 . . .
. . I
.. . . .. . . I I
ion i � . .
I . . .11 .1 . .
a:t least L owdinary quiet-that:infernal
.1 1.
' .
. Courage: is bea.atiful'to read about;
. I .
. . I . . I I .
place -flying, flyftlg�sa these great
.L M , . .
rs. Booth began to speak. She
. '
In. ando
.. r . Is along the flagged corridor, .
. . . .
. .
"Do. you. maau'to,tell me,.Mademoi-
should be hu'ihed I. _
bird �,
:imipewious,
.
11 but rather WOU14 I W a MAIN Witk all
I . . 1. .
I . .
. . '
flocks of. worlds rost�not an t bay
was Chri.qt?s messeng'er' of love, and
. ..
across the moonlit court, u a crooked
no . .
"Ile," demanded'Keniketh. at length. .
. .
- Rich' succes ful, Mr.
. . . .5, ., I .
I I I -
. . the worldagainat him!confident ai
I I
. ... . .
iv��g:. and wlng�agei After .9�_�;`;
.
bed , ' htly at the past. -Her
toun but:lig
I .
. I .
the vast salon -above.
stair, and into . '
. I i .
.
lid to N vith unaccustomed wrvAhj "that
Kenneth Maybin was unused to: being.
I
. . ,
. though, all the tworld wua for. hlin',
.
I .
.
a d ever.
evor n ' " Tbi sagle'* hastes to
. .
* . I
words 80t` be
. fore the ..men a future
. .
The , stranger, having been :Passed
.
you Prefoi your fool,of a. Chicot to
. . - -
-balked-In, h es f .
is'd I as.. One or Ing
. in a .1
. . Patience is beautiful to read. about;
. I .
I I . .
preyj lbut we . sthall in speed the
Promise -and a.divine hope for all.
. I a*
ceremonious Y round , the circle
. . . .. . �� . I � : `
Me?!, . . . . .
.
lie descended his stak, crossed the.
. I . . I.
.
. but rather would'ISee a buffeted
___10 . I
, .
. , ..beat,
eagles.. You have no.tkoed . the Vale-
Many a long- uncaiing hear r hung his
- 0
.
Of clde�s, I was - brought at Ion th ,to ..,
. . 9
I I
4
� 11 certainly do, Mr. Kenneth May-
#treat and ran at the 6nemy's door.
1 9 .
. . . .
... .
1 1"64- Paul ealmly waiting fair tho t1alo"of
. �
I .
city of the swift.borse,ira4er whoso
I ,
head and iecalled his own ideal� at
. . .
the L
. _ .orphaned chatelaine of the
, I %.. �
bill,!' retorted ddette; "and I regard
So fa.r as be knew,, th6'efiemy was: ill
.. ' do I liverande. FaithIs beautiful to read
, .
.
Leo,t the mbibs �slfp I like a ilmlooth rib-
I .
I .
himself I n better' dt Lys. . To "Tdm,'�'
-
. I I . . . . .
house- -
. ;
. .
you,"- she- added del . lberatel Y' L "as n.o
'had n.*
4ole possessilon; he ever caught.
�. . a.boat; bat ratk�,Br would I find a Man
!bon and as be I passeS*1 the fout.hoofa�.
.
ad we will eall.himi'the address', a4d
I "Miss Le Breton, Mr. May'liin, 'Od-
.
be,tt,e,r,_thanan-assass1n'I" - -
so much as a glimpse of. any other
I , .
I
� in the Midnight walking Ptraight
.
.
strike the earth . in such quick %beat
I I .
.
-the whole *service of I the boar, came-
� . .
eitte.- thia 4 'my Old friend,' Kenneth
.
"Then, Miss Odatte Le Breton, - Is t
inmate of the dormer-windoWed room.
... I
. . I .
,,,
I on as. thow-gill he saw everything. Oh,
. � .1 I .. .
, .
youe palses-Aake the same� viibra-
an . �
like - i ' awakoniug�shook. Here wag
I .
Kaybln�.. Make him welcome.-,
.
. ' I .
its say -good-by-foireverl". .
or of the house itself. , - .� I .
. � .
.. how many souls liavos- beezY turned to
. . . I
thon. But all 'them. thLnga, .are -not
4 .
something he had never' dtoamed of
I . .
Kennethle-eyes were still dazzled by
. I . .
'
H- flying footsteps solluded-along
is .
His ring was an � swered.. by a.fat old
. I I '
. . God by the oliarni of a, right exampilel
. .
.
swift in eqmpaTisou.w4h th-emitipil
before. Could he attain the manhood
. .
the sudden. blaze of gaslight; big
.. . .
I .
the tun-nel-like. corridor. The next
.
negreas With a shrewd,, good-humored
. . . .
I .. . Agalq: A"e, may turn many.to right,.
Of whieh I . speak.,,Tbe moon moves
fair . which the lady Pleaded I'
.
mind was Confused by the variety of
.
;* : tbb street door opened, and
moment .
face. � - I .. ...
. _ . I
'.
. eausuess by prayer. T.1here is no sucV
. I
.
Ofty-fout thousand. inifes in a day.
' Fair mouths be worked as if ln'a
. �
.
novel . impressions crowded into it.
I
. . .
closed with a 'reverberating bang.. .
-
"How do you - do,. Auntie V began
. I . . I
detective as prayer, %or. no one can
y(m I I . - Lashes. on eleven
der, ,,Neptune f, �
trance. . . Un consciously his' turbid
BUt'the mare sight'ot th I
_ I a Young girl-
8 mou'Maybin
, I'Moa 6be.r Chloot. TresO � ,
with easy famil larity. "I wish
I I
11, hicla away from it.. It patalts hdnd.6n
I . . .
, I .
ihotmaind li�!-;ewfu-.an hour. Yonder,
� 1. . .
. .
goal was casting its dregs.. His gon-
. . .
before him rest rail him with some.-
. .1 0
.. .1 .
eoeur,11' murintired, Odette, *Jifting. a
'
osee the lady of the-housic" He han&
.t '
. I �bb shoulder of a';maia ten -thousand
.1 I . I . I
. .
I Mercury goes onNi hundred and *I ne
.
. ..
-tIa. teacher had given his a 'now
I . .
I .
think like.a physi
ieftl shook to himself.
. -
pallid face-toward.'ibe hidden cage and
I .
'bar his visiting-eard: as - hs;.Apoke. .
ad I I
.
_0____�_
miles off. It -'IalikhtS -an 0, sh*; Mid,
thousand Miles, an hoiar. So, like
.
thought, *andslowly. something like a
� �
Shemas so differeni, lie -naively de.
1. I I
P. .
reking a white hand against her
"Yesl.'.suh�", she bobbed, an old-time
, . . I
. Atlantic. The little child cannot under-
. .
the stars, the,Chriatian "rkerahall
pare axabitioa'and all honest wish Us-
.,
aided, from all other Woman in the
.
. I -,
throat. , % .
plantation "curchy," "Ulm do lady of
.
.
.stand the.laW of eleetricitY,-Oi how
� , - .
. shin, -, in swiftness of motion.. You
I �.
yatallize round it. .
gah to or ,
I . .
world -I. . - - _ .
,slender
. "it is I who� am the Queen -a Fool,—
do house. Mis' July Anna Baxter, sub.91
� . I
'Voice.
I the telegraphic, � ,4 operatori ' IbY
. -
.. I . . . . .
hear now of father, or Mother, or
'
I
.. - The- next -time Mrs. Booth came Tom
.
.I A. slender, dainty figure, robed. all
- ' .
'laughed Kenneth bitterly, as he specl
.
She had the iriell, .unctuous, Of
. .
. . I . .
touching the :1ustrument - here,
. . . I
child sick- one, .
-thousand M11138-awaY,.
' a
wa in -a fever, IlLs'mind had been
. .. . . .. . .
in Parest Whits; gray a
. . yes with loing,
. ,. . .
northward in the railway train at the
� . I
the plantation dark ' . .
. I I . Y.
,. - may , dart -a .,. measaii " . I under
,
I
. and it .. takes yon, . � two days , to
. .
wrought -up tokeen, ex . .His
, �pectatlon ,,
dark tashes, dusky hair falling 'over I
. .
very hour , sat for tie Q - I I
ueen's fete.
,
.. d . fo
the sea to - another - cont'
inent;
.
gat ti, them, You, heaw'ot somecase
I .. I
dead conscience lived again. The
. .
forehead, and giving bar,
11017 . I I game,
I 11� . ,- � .1 1. .
- I I
. . .., ....... % ... � .
"Then I Suppose, - Mrs -ell -Baxter,
I .. . . I
. nor can we, with our:pmall.intell6et,
. . I .
. -
of suffering tl*t.!, demands -,your im�
,
.
wiekadi)ass in.'which he badhitherto
.
how, the , innocent, stairtled. look -of
. . . .1
I
- .- , I I . PTER LI.. ' � � :
. . CHA - . . .
that .'the bird on- * the: to f loot in
. . I .. . . oP ._
� I � . .. I unde.wistana how the touch%of alChria.
. . . .
.mediate attelitioni.bui it takes you
.. .
delighted : bad. become 'I ' th 0 �to
Oa . a0114
the blooded,, oolts in his father's pan-
, , , . I
' ' ' .. I .. I I . .
I . Five.. years later. - Kenneth Uaybin
yours ?'I . .. . I . I
tijg . . - �
tian's pway.er.sball instantly strike a
. * .
'win bour. to get there. Oh the jay
., .
him.' Thethought of a1appy'future
I
I .
tiars at bome, --- Athis Is. aa far as Ken-
.
'a
.. L ., . I
strolled once more, down the. quaint
01 mull. I keep roomers. Dat
. I .
, �
I . . split. CA the other aide of tA4, earth. .
., .
I
Some.,
when ; �j.the
, YPq,�slJa1II,.i4 fulfilment .
. ,
.out of prison awa . I
11 I y from old Associates.
got in a d
neth ,ever . . escilpti .0. of Od-
. . � I I
otte Le Breton.
. . � .
I . I .-
attest by.,wh" he had. first entered
niockin!,bird i� do prapitty a' one'o
. I . . I .
- 4 I
roomers. .
- Va4 take shili* and go to other.
. .
0ou4try. and got there %t . eleven
tew' and beequal
*
to one bandrsd thousand- Wiles an
.thrilled-him.with passionate hope, He
. � -
had only a year indivi of a'loug seat
� . . .1 :. .
He� � �
gUid6d.her hand boldly When it
I '
tile, French Quartet. This time it was
I . I . .
.1
my � ... I
' .
.:"Very well, Mrs. Baxter. Please pre-
. I
,
. o'clock in this �pornipg I
. YQQ' tale-
,
-hour. lj��Iug.o;t earth got �Ased to
.once to serve. . , .
. I
came hot turn to out a silos from the
.In broad daylight, and thia time, by
. . . .
sent Oluer-,a
my compliments to the to
. .1
Vraph to New York, &ad, the Message
I '
- bUr I isti . au work, you wilt not - quit
.
*]Ion the Little Mother. had ceased
great brown, shiningi hollow ring
I . . of
reason of atany journeyings about the
I
lady I I . thought po-and tell .bar
.
gets heire at six o'clock the same
I
� . �
. I �
WHEN DRAM11 STRIKES YOU.
spo . . .
_aking, she sang "Nearer, My, Godi
I I take
a - King on the, dining-table4
I .
world and much.prying into, strange
lease h � is inteitest in the I dim corri-
that the bird's noise,is extremely an.
Marnigg, ,In pt4er -words, it seems to.
. I .
. arrive here $its bon . .
. �
before start-
1. . - I . . .
You will only take, an more velocity.
'
to Theo." The prisoners joined in
I . I .
'-by two, by threes, then to
"Here ?I?. she. ilipation6di with asid ..
long glance at him from hor'lumin'
ous
P , . � I
i
dows with their glimpses of Edenlike
. . , .
noying to. me. I Shall be infinitely
.
abliged- if she will remove bird and
gre .it I
� . There is wilyiug child in T*ndon,
ad. Like that is prayer. God silys, . I.
. . and its sp�rlt must n* taken up to
1. I " Before they: pall. I 'Will bd4i.'� . To . I .
.
'
I. A MIGHTY CHQRUS. .
. . I . . I
. .
.
eyes. , ' .
O'N" here,.# he replied, moving beg
I
.
gardens beyond, the myqterious jeal-
*
ousted galleriesi and the many -colored
ca a to another part of the hoaae.!, :
.9
Mrs, July 4Ann BaxterL Opened her
I
I '
I overtake a 19yed 614a on the road, you
God; you aTs. tftere,.Jn�A4 inst4lit to
. I
Tom sang before he know it. Thoa
white and supple wrist ever so slight.
peaked rooki, was somewhat abated.
.
lips to speak, but Xayb,n , 5 Already
I wa, .
� .
. may spur I up , % 14t4ored steed . an I &.it he
, . . .
do it. There is & yquing'Wan in New
York to 136 Rrr`65�04 (fr-qW, going i.ntA
be found himself upon, bis feet.' ' The
lady had called for volunteers to start
ly with his brown fingers, Truth
.
to tell, his keen had
A,easual inquiry had put him in pea-
session of the information that big
;recrossing the street. She looked after
him, shaking bar head indignantly
. 151611 ou#ae,70 the age that brought the
.
� ., I .
news to Gheat; but a prayer shall
,
that gate, c9 sta; 'yaw are there in, An
.
a I
,a prison: league. . _
eyes. detected
- -
a auspicious bulge ilf the porous ring.
sometime friend, Gaston Lorio, had
, .
.
"Humpl'! she a culated, Ildatoa
ja a
.
. . . . . . 11 . .
catch it atone galIpp. A boy running
Instant to arreat Wra. Wbet1ger with
.
"Pli be ollo," said Tom. I
� . . .
.
His heart ,was boating painfully, he
.
been living fair aeouplo of Years in
I
might : bigb-jinted p son. X�k .
� Y us tak
. .
" ,
qwqy from hon,4a may take.. the mid-
4 .
,pring �6f.topt, or stroke of wilugi by
. Fifteen other convicts, rose.. . .
.
could not have told why, as she press.
his beitwed Pa.ria; and-Ahat the Le
.
he do marster. But he ain't marster.
. .1
. J. igiglit train froul the. ootiqtry villa
Wel
tiho gores OP,130141k 111AW 44, thIsm-4 shall
. .
Soon after- this Tom had An inter-
*
Ith
I .
ed.the knife downward, catching her
Breton family had suffered financial -
In! July Ann Baxter. An' I ain't gwine
I . . �
.
. . i
and ireach the sea-partin time to gain
.hurt you to, the, apqt wWera yaq would.
. I .
v wl Mrs. Booth, confessed to bell
low .
a
under lip betweenhor white teeth .nd
ly, team the failare of . a, local bank .
.
ter tell her nothin' I Buiap Ill .
I . .
, the ship -that sails oft. the morrow;
� I .
.
.
go, I know. not; Ibmt my text auff-
* . I all *fQre
gesta velocity. 411 spa-ce up
his life and his'aspiratiow, far the fu-
ture. He told her all but one thingi
frowning portauton8ly. .
I �
Conceiraing his somatime sweetheart
. .
lie needed no inifurniation. A newspa-
And so .it bdfelt that -the mocking-
bird sang on uninAested tin his get -
. but a mother's prays, r will be on the
you, with nothfing to, hinder You In
.
When she. went away, believing in
.
SUre eno ugh . . as the beant.
I
per received within six months after
anium bowero While his baffled foe
, deck ter meet him, and in the, ham-
in juladon oA lfghto and. lQvo, a . nd, joys
'
his conversion, Tom's torture began.
She held it in the rosy palm of her
that absurd parting in the dusky Le
ram�ad and roareid in vain for a day
� mock before he swings into it, and
. n before he winds the
you shall shine in awittneiqq of mo-
.
Should he ronfedLI this one secret or
.
hand, letting her gaze travel slowly
around the laughing, circle whick
.
Breton courtyard had. contained the
I
or two longer; then the lawyer ,seat
I
.
. rope around It, and on the sea, against
tion as the stars tor ever 4nd. over.
.
4ga!� in, Christian workers, like the
not I He had co& mttteA.a crime for
.
whioll an innocent parson 6s serving
. .
Pressed About liar. Kenneth' did not
announcement of Mademoiselle Le
,
Bre -t n's marriage to Monsieur Henri
.over to the Invisible roomer a' note
couebed in the politest language, but
the sky, an the vessel ploaslis On to-
stars, q4all o4lue in iffiagnituAe, The
tan years, and a confession would 'Add
.
understand the pretty game, but he
Daurlereau; And the notice of theds-
Setting forth plainly the grievance of
. wa,rd it. There is a mightiness in
most illiterate man knows that 04006
so Mach .tjlaiB�'it' seemed all alt�rnity
trembled visi I
Ibly.: feeling that all his
paxturo of Monsieur, and Madame
. I ,
.
the writer, * He
I prayer. The breath of.Blijah'a prayer
blew all the clouds off the sky, and
things in the sky., looking like gilt
-to hi sown imprisonment, just When
'
future depended upon some decision
w-biall a girl, barely known to him by
. .
H . eur . 1 Dan . sereau for their new home
I . .
eager hand this to Kra. Baxter herself,
.
. .. . I
it was.dwy Weather, The 'breath of Ell�-
buttons, are great, me'sqes of ;nqat-
.
ter. To welth tber4k one wouild .think
.
he was on the verge of freedom.
'
The Poor follow Was faalidg. the fiere-
I
hame,. Was about td Make.
in' France. . : .
. I
The wound initiated by. ibis an-
saw the portly forra of - that lit
and . gh.
turbaned dame disappear, with stride
jah's prayer blow all the clouds to-
� . .
guite soales With
that it would to a
His
eat tisniptatlon of his life. relig-
"Come, little cousin, choose'inell!
.
I
nannebla ent, he asnardil Iiiniseff. had
majestic, down the corridor, as if can-
�
gather, and it was wet weather. Pray-
. I
pillar hua,drsiils (4 t4ousu,nds pf Mileo
IOU was undergoing its test. ,p&,Uld
shouted Gaston. darting around the
glued healed. Nevertheless he felt
4OiOus Of thO importance of, her er-
at, in Dani ails timia,_ walked the cavo
high# and Chains hundreds of
he choose hypoprisy and Ireedom, or
I
table to Joggle her -elbow.
,long
a distinct pang, when, passing the fine
rand.
as a lion-tax4ew. It reached up, qhd
.
ihou"Bluds 9f � Tlliles liplig, an4
.
panlahmeat and. honor I 11 11 I
"Look at me, Odette. I am the
old -Le Breton mansion, he sawbwi�g_
.
Absolute inaction on tM part of
I � took the sun by its gol&4 4ito aT14
� .
. .0 the chiiihis.
sit tile Jbqtt0j4
At last he knew and felt what
. .
an," laughed an -other tenth or t*6n-
in 0 1
,
lug from the, wrought -iron railinj�r,j
the roomer, with increased volubility
sto��ped it. We have all -yet to try
I ,
�bgtsfas on ie4t4ar Ikun4reds of
, . . Side
Christian sincerity costs. . Spent,
tieth cousin. .
"Non I Non I Mot I Mot I"
the veranda a square barboard bear-
on the part of the bird4 .
the full . .
t1ho . Milim wfda,' and t4at
"ands q4 .
after days of conflict, such as only
I
'III I Ill A chorus of voices,
Ing legend, I .
A second note, frigid, stiff, peremp�
I POWER, 09. PRAYER.
0 a,lone ippaid put the
.lantpotence
tbe'*Maater Himself could Understand,
gay
Young and old, caught up the cry with
.the
" Chambres garntes a loudr.11
tory, threatening. Result, the same;
I Ths, time will eome.whisda the Amarl-
.
mountains, intp t%ib majeo, qnd tlle�
I
Togn Went to the warden and told his
clapping of*hands and, &tan *Ing of
(Furnished Roams to Rent.)
I
which in to say, no result at all. I
can C#qro4 will pray with. Its face to-
. .pan
hills into the bounee. Bot puny i
whole story., .
.
Ile hurried lve
an with one f urt'
Maybin by this time had worked
.
ward the went; and all the prairie&
,.
'has be011 ,
equal to t4a undortqking.
little
� .
"Warden," said be, "what I have
foot,
Mennoth grew absolutely Pat,., ]Its
,
glance down the famillaT corridor, for
.
himself Into a frenzy Aich. amounted
ilmost
and inland cities will aurrandeir to
God -, &lid will pray with face toward
add has set 4 .balquee on his
.
geometry, and weilg%e& wgrl* against
.
said Is true. I'll take, my time like A
man. They can Imprisoxf my budy.
Dostrils dilated; his blue eyes flashed
the atched door Stood wide open. The
to madness, sA fellow-lilwyer,
listening to the recital of bid wro.ngs,
.
tho act, and all the Islands and ships
,world., Irew, to has pWIe4 gat'his
'
but nOw my soAl is forever free."
.
a defiant look around and fixed them-
I face before
selves upon the flower-lika
greenery in the court was dusty and
forlora .
. ; a slatternly looking woman
laughed. -
I
"Have *am
will becolne Christlam Parent� who
. - I
Messuring-line, and 4nnoulgeed that
. I
'10
He had paid the price of his tell-
. In 11choosis i4e, Odatte," he heard
with a pan of vegetables on liar Wass
arrested, man I Bring
.
-gersellet tbirty-six tooliqland Miles
I I liavd wayWVd.soqa will got down.on. . ,
gion, and Wit It graAaly.--iYouth's
.
b1i ' Uss
himself murmur with
was sitting on, the stone bench whore
the Whole kit and caboodle into
I
I .
7 their kifteas and noty, " Lord, send jMy
in 44ar4exer, Sa.t4ru . seventy
. " �nine-
thousatad Rables in Oiameterl. E!nd
Companion. I
- e'
- Inconsto
lips. . . I �
he had sat that fifat night With Od-
- a6ur t It$ .
The lAugh' was provoklur, it
.. boy 49me," at,
%d the boy, in Canton
1 shall get rig�t a
I it" the gain
- , I
upiteT eighty-nine th safad(m4les� in
4 L I . ..on
.,
*
Odette flushed to the r�qts of her
ette. The Paths Where he had walked
that last night with his Quee it were
proved
6
t ,be the last straw, the Surcharging
, .P _Ing-
. table, aqd p-dipwn to the wl4arf to,
diamiater, and th4t tUd sj*allest pearl
.1 . , I
I A MUSICAL FAMILY.
.
hair. She,, too, glanced � defiantly
from one to anotheg in the'shirtAing.
allaWU with unaight1sr debris.
feather, the turning hair. For the see.
. .
.
find oat w41c4 ship starts. first for
,
On t ha beeal; of beaven is immensa
beyond all �pagtnstipa. $o, Ali they
I
A. gentleman of dedded and highly
* :
teasing circle; then she, took the tro-
" What an idiotic Youngster I woal'�
I and time in his life -Mr. Kenneth May -
bin text his head.
AWTIM -
Willa, haive toiled fQr Christ on eard.4
cultivated musical tastes, wishing to
Phy--ia heart -shaped, wiAevdark sea-
he Muttered Smilingly, yet strangely
'hope
"Madam, you are charged',h6ris with
.
. As stars, t4;6 rede�nqed have abor- shovil tim up to &magnitude f I)rtvl-
,
04'ange his residenco, 44ver-tised for
beatiHbeit,wean a dainty thumb and
I-sflwred. "Dear little Odette, 1
Violating An ordinance �rohibiting
I rowed light., What makes Mars, and logo, and a saaggait-a4e, Of stre*111#4
0
rooms in "a private family iqnd of
forefinger and dropped it lightly Ill
she Is happy,. And I sincerely ,trust
the keeping of a, mocking-birdt" said
. . Venda, &lid SqPtEor - so IdminoUst and a m4guittide at holiness, and a
.
music." The next Wall brought him
*
:iCaline,th's outstretched palm,
that Monalear Henri Dannueau has
It000rder Nolan a day Or two later.
I .
Whop the sun t4rowal down his torch M040itude a ' . �
. Joy; and the we4kest
the following reply* I
.
.
111 make you my Ring, Konsjeur,a
prope r respect for Chicat.11
go looked irom the Affidavit In, his
Jul the heavens, t4ef start pick up the sAult in glory - biome lKirco,leir than
Dear Sir - I think we could aeoop�-
she said with a, Sweeping curtsy.
He was in search of lodgings himself
hand to the colored lady dressed in'
I
scattered brands, . And hold them all that wA c4a noW ita4oin4 oft an
modate, you with rooms, agd as for
When their boisterous subj6otelis
having come South to study the ins
,gulne-blua calico, withs, white waist,
.
$a probpdon as the queen ofi the night archaago-1. .
a plays the
Musdo, one at my daughter'
litenthl6es with Mock bomplimentaud
and outS of v, complex will ones which
.
apron, and a plaid, abignon-3trit. yaly
ulvaueews., so all Christian workers, Lastly$ and coming to this point my
parlor organ and kittar; another one
circling daneo, finally Aeft them In
had ItA rootA in Now Orleans. But he
Ann )MIterl in Short$ who oat on a
I staadilig around the throne, will mind almost breaks down under the
.
plays the accordeon and banjo; Iplay
pea", tho newly Made Xing-felloW-
bad no mind to lodge with the main-
benchl in the orowd6d eourt-toom,
ahluo In the light borrowed f rom the eantemplation-lika the stars, till
a cornet and fiddle 1, my Wife plays the
ad big Qf1con-ltreading on air I-da,wil
owy of A lost IoV6-vagat and shadowy
bilanding a large bird eago, on 'her
46�1_ Sun of Righteousness, JoKUS In their Christian workers shall shine
harmonica, and my son the flute, W6
the eentUry-old stair and Into the Per-
thoagh it bad become; not with same
knot. "Whist, have you to plead to
I fikees, Sienna In their songs, Jesus In . IN DURATION.
all sing, and it you Are good at ten.
'Aor
fumed courtyard, They Sat at it
denuded, shabby gantml Lo Preton-
the ohatg6 #l# �
, thoir triumph. Christ loft heaven .
singing you would fii right In
Stains bench there listefilng) 60telaill-
perhaps, he shuddered, Orando, Cou-
Mrs' ImZtor stood up, tenting the
once for a tour of redemption on The ,same stars that look down upon
when we get to singing gospel hymns
bly to Chicot, Odettela mookIng-bird,
slab herself I .
eAgo upoa her hip ; the wooking-lilrd
. catth, yet the, glorified ones know he us looked down upon the 0haldadan
evenings, for none of 138 sing tea.
sibalng In his cage Upon one of the
Ito found precisely the plado he
within, that haled to the bar of jUs-
woU10- t6me b4ok Again. nut lot him shepher.44, ,
gu.'Or if you play the base vial we rose-wreathba baloonles.
Wanted; the tolpfloor Of A, tall 1101186,
ties, maintained a digeroot ,silence,
alidloato his throne, and go away to Thoi mqbteow - that I Saw , flashing
. . . . . , ,
have one right herb in ther house, It "And I am really your Xing fl, wh6.
la Royal Street, A stoue'A throw from
'I "' IF61 dei Lawd, Sedge, I airil gulltr 11
� ..
I Atal for, oTori, tAt Mmo wotlld stop, aipro" t46 sky the, other Alobit, I won-
You. want muele as well as board we 1%red Xeonoth, longing let not daring
the Cathedrat and the Ancient building
Said Urn, Baxter, -visibly flustered, 0I
, ,
t4o 0009regat�m diop,,eto% the t6mA do 'the AtMa one tbA,t
� � V it it WAS i%ot
cogid, neommoditto You, and thud to tako into his own the little white
betide It Wh6ra the eourt records of a
teen rates, ln%oapialt oouhty, Mis.lppl,
I .
. rkiAO; the rivers Wi#,e4 dowA to Whore J6410 14r 14
I pod of God b6 4& .
would be no oxtr4 0096 for It.
I%a,Ad an hu kineo.
oeututy ,And a halt are stored. There
mougs do quality; aift, 11 ol&rl ter I
h
. I
0 &
900440" I'll drup In my track* of" I
, .
batter go to jail I You 4114, gwIus ter
I
GE14 BULLER'S 01REIR, I
Yor mocklul-blird Alai my prapittyp no.
.."",
HE HAS FOUQHT FOR THE IMPIRE'
haw. 'Sidex, at any blegatyp high.
ALL OVER THE WORLD. .
I
jinted, ma4torlial pussoull-sho east a
-
withering glance at Mayblu - 1149aut
�
lie jq#*40114�41 rlr,, pjr,q a� tile V,poure 0 �
Ink manic, whyn,t be change blo bo,d.
Me Takla varoft-11.11i F.Vilertellee ill 4ho I
IW-bOUBe f Why, Yodge, honey," Mrs,
44.,41 044vor leek"!1114111.
B;Axter's rich voice became tenderly
General Buller ought to be able to I
,
persuasive, "4ish yet wookIW-bIr4 kin
Light, lie has fought in China, in
sing Litton ter lit, -
up yo, soul who
.on
.
0414111lao and in Africa, awtu. seuth,
YOU 104 low In do V41lew a$ sorter an,
east, And West. Oblaese, Indiana,
tribullatium.11
.
hulf-breedo, Ashautts, 9affira, Zulus,
"The bird 14 not years V11 Interrupted
A44 Boexs have alllha4 their share in
.
Recorder Nolan. .
Making Buller a soldier, t mys the Lan. I
"No, sub, Hit bliongs ter one 0, my
� ,
don Daily Mail. . I
room.ero. I rippresent her i t
the 14
He oomeo from ; Ad of whipped
caps, I'm lot garisou. she Ain,
, beein
, .
oreom, and has spent most of his time 1
able ter come ter colte--if I
in whipping those who were black, Ile �
"Why 1111 4amauded the Judga griyo.
.
�
begaa. torty-two years ago, when he
ly. . .
I .
joined the King's Rayal Rifles as ,an. I .
"Beeaze, In do fust place, she's a ole
.
sign In India, when tile Indian' I
pusson. An, sho's lame in b0fe )let
,Just
,
MUUAY was at an end. But, Unlike, .
I
talks an' sh0a blial in bets her
Lord Roberta, Buller has never seen
Byes. 'Sides, she's a lady'liawn, datts
. �
fighting in India, Fair afew'months
what she is, an' she still gwine ter be
at ter he becamo a soldier, his regiment
drug ter oo'te by no. camnion, low.
dawn ly'ariq-,fleusin, 61
was ordered to- China to pull I the Ce- I I
.
,van, Jedge,
honey I" .
.
lestial's pigtails.
, Buller first smelt fire in Chia wall .
,
The onlookers roared, Maybin him-
when the 'Taku fort4 were captured. . . .
self joined 1 I
n the laugh at Ilia Own M
This secured -him th
� a Chinese, medal
plows, His fit ry was fast melting in
with two clasps. . I
the, humar of the situation. as step.
�
pod forward to withdraw the charge,
..
Being in.0
'anada on garrison duty,
but theJudge wavedr him back and
Bnller's regiment came ill, for tile Red
'
proceeded solemnly in' the exposition of
River exipedition, ,,which was under - .
.
the ordinance, This, he declared, said
,
Colonel Garnet Wolseley's control, .
, . .
'The
nothing about mocking -birds, except
North -west Prorvirices, had been .
�
.
-added to Canada, but the French half- I
i's might or might not be construotIv8-
ly construed.
Weeds, under Louis !list, became un- �
To Be Continued.
ruty, took one of the Hudson Bay Cola-� .. I
I .
. .. .
PanY'A forts, and made some English . .
-----*-
I .
prisoners. . .. . .
I
. . THE SIZE OF GENERALS.
. I . I
In this bloodless expedition Buller . .... . � I
I
.1--f I � .
got a great deal, of experience, which I . :
11014d Famous 4,101111111ftllderA Are . Al . Way%
sarved him to good purpose in our . I .
310deralle Slzrd lien. .
.
. . 11
Soudan troubles. One thousand two . 1
" Little and wisa.111
hundred men had to be conveyed 1,200 . . I � �
The above - three words convey a f act
. ..
miles, and'boata were necessary for . . 11 I
,
that requires evi4ently some explana-
*
.
the j�tiwpose. * Thj� * occupied four . . .
tion. For it cannot be dented by -any,
.
, .
weeks. Bat on arriving at their desti" .
D116 well acquainted with history that
.
. . � .
nation it Was'found that the -rebellion .. .
11
by - far .the greater proportion of the.
. . I
. . I . .
had collaipsed. In this campaign.13iil- . . I . I.,
.
moist rendwneod .leaders of armles,
.
i- .
. I , . I
ler was a captaift, and .. I .
did splendid
both ancient and Madeira, have been 'service
I .
. I
. . .
in directing thd tran' - . :, �� i
. sport. . �. I , I
men whosis statuire was below ra ther ,
_ ,.
. ' . . . .
than above the average. It.might
I .
A ,V.ISIT TO KING COF BE E. I � . . I
.. . . I I
well be ba ppoised. that, in fighting, the
. I I � . .:
. . .
Having about service in the land -of �
man who hA,,l a gigantic and most
.. . .
tea,. it . . � I I . . ..
seeined.pbetib justice that Bul : . �
striking persdiawauld, othe things
I . . r
.
Lew a' . . � . . I
hould pity a. Visit to King Coffee. . I
bqing. equal, be. the one -most likely to
. . .� 1i
' 1. I
This monarch. Of Ashanti had also . I
Leavathe'gireatest impressionas a Sol-
� . .
.
. . . � I
made.Eng,11shmen Prisoners, and again, . I . .
d1ex .of note ill his own day. .But this.
. I
I � , .
Genexal WGIseley. . was . sent 'out to .. . 1. ..;
,
has ever been, far from the, truth and
.
. . I �� I
. I
point -out -the error, of so dbing,' and, . .
.
Just as' Mach so in olden times, When
. . � . . ,
with him Captain Redvairs Bu. . Her, - .
the struggW wer6more hand to hand '1873,
. . . .. '.
.
. I I . . . . .
n,-qaa.rlarmas� I I
as deputy-assista t I . .
I.
as now when waw .has become a sol-
I , . . . .
ter. In addition, he. was made . head .. . I -
.
I
I
ence of, tactics .all(! five-milS,-guns, .
. I . � I . . �
' . 111
of the..Intelligenq8, Depaxtment,'and . .
'All thTDugh the ages downWard,the
.1 �
�
I . . � . . .
upon.,his infowmitti , - .. I. I
I on the campaign .1 . ..
meb.who.have left their names to the
,
was ' planned, - . . . I . .- ..� 11 . . . -
:
.
world as the greatest Generals of var-
.
� . .
, . . .
In this campaign . Buller got two ., .
long .generations, have been; alMoid
. I I
,. . I 1.
. . . 1�
. , � .
tblujs�i bullet in his 6ompassw-caaB , ..
. I . I �
.
uniformly, little men, To -:day Our chief
. . :
. I I - � .- . �,
, and the fever. The first �he iept, the'. '� . .. . ,...A
16ad,krs in this country are - ,�
. � . . . . .
.
second he -Overcame and. was .able . to , , - . � . 1:
I J - .. I I I I .: ,4
I . ROBE, RTS AND WOLSELEy.. I I .
.
1 , . I . I . . . _
proceed to Kui�ktsl and to the oaot'ura . , . . . . �.. . I
I. .. . . ,:1 .,.��
. . I .
Both these celebrated Generals. . are
I � . .
of King Coffee, and got a C.B. as the. - . ,. . I
. ,. . .
.
men4hpise height, reckoned: in inches,
. 11 �
- . ., �
result, to, say nothing' of -a share �of' � .. , ..., :_ ,
. . �.
. . .1
18 WlBll.beloiw thw . ordinary mail, a I ad
.
the loot.. , � L ' .. I _... .. I 1. ,
. . I ': m
. . . . I
much below what.is considered a . f . ins
.
In'.1873 Mdjor Buller went to'Niatill, .:' : I . I �. . ;.
.
I
SoMiewly height. . But this, which some.
� . . . , .
whexe.noW, tw.enty-t , wo years af L.br,'hb . ... : 1.
..
. . I � I I -
a ieil�ly height. . But this, ..
old ,w4ich
.1
. ' Ou�*hisfirst visit -he took -' 11 . . I
is -so busy. . . I -%-
� ' 1. . .
some PeoPle.-would c6naider a - . great.
. I
command Gftbe F'ron.tier Light Horse ': . . .. . . � . 1.
- I I . :
.
disadvantage, has noit,.proved so., ill
.
with the object of inta�oducing them to . .d :4 1�
I
.. . . I ;
. � . .
th,dr edges. It -is diffidult, on look! . ng,
.
. . .
tha-itafft�s, who -Were giving trouble. , � - I . 1 4 ,
. ., .
I
. I
at the wiry frame of Lord Rober . ta, to
.
. .
;ia tirse months Buller's .Horse, had �, I . 41
. . �
believe that that q�ilet-loqking, thin,
g�eat of feet, and the Kaffir rising, was . . . . : .�111
. I I
. . . I . I .
.
littia gentleman. 'in inowning dress is
. I
put_dOW.n;., Than - Buller was 'ordered I . 1. . ,. �
� . . .
the same man who has done such fine
of 94tal to . . 1.
.to the, north end . , pacify .-L -
...
.
work u . I - I .
.. .poll field,s of battle In so many
.
che galus, and,from this dam aignt ' . . � . I
* . I .p .0 .. � .. I
,
. . .
countxie6. And when: one stands . by
I . _...
emerged with-.tho-Viotaria Cross upon '. I 1. I 1- �
I , . . .
. . ..
Lord Woliseley, and'notIcas*.that be,
. I
� I I . , . ,
his .breast, -the sign to - all that. -its,'' . .1 .. .. . .1. �
� .
. .1 I
too, Is far from being of.the regula-;
I
. .
, I �
wearqp was, a brave mam - , : . I .- � .
� . . I . .1. . �. 1. .
. . I . . �
.
tic6'axpey h-eighti-one again:8eeA that
. I .
. � .
hULLErA'S.106 HOURS INASADDLE.- -. I �,
I .
lit:: is 'hoC " greatness, " measured by
inches that makes th . a GeneraL French
. � .. .. �
I .
.1 . . . I . . I
The unrest of.the Zalu king, Ceto-. I .. I �
.. . I I
I � � . I �
too� *ho has bea,ia the most consist-
wayo, led to the invasion of his coun- � . I .
. - . I . � ' .. .� . .
. . � . . . I ...
ently gu6cessful all lenders, in the
tty'by Lord Chelmsford, wha had - � . 11
... . 1 . . I . I �
.of
Preeeat'N)rai, below the t . �-
we chiefs, is
.
Balle)z -with- htm.'To one., of the. eat-. - . �. . I I �
. I . . I .
only 5 nc height. I
. I
Ulan's , terrible disaster occurred At Is. . I ' ' '
� * .
,� . . I . I ... . ,
I Harking farther back iii'the history.
4ndhlwana, � and, inspired -by this,. Bill. . � .
- � I �. �
. . .
of our land, we'eannot forget, though
.. 7
a g one attack upon' the . I . . ..
ter made �vi or . I . , . .. I
' . . .
it is - a fact not so, well. kng*n,-. that
Zulus witil'106 of big own horse - ark 0 "' � .1 . . . �
� � . I . , . � . I
- ' � . .
the -finest soldiar this country,..," dndl�
I . �. I
. .
tMity-three, Boars. This. Zulu cam- ,- 1 1 . .. i
. I . . I . I
i c
p4ign was a long sevics of biqisk ski.ri! . .
probably any other, has ever seenj the
. .1 I I � I . 1-4
julahes and hot contestsi and in. till .
.
Duke of ,Nyellington"the Great Duke
.
of them Buller showed himselz a told ' I . .
lwai a: man whose height, considered
I
.
. I I , . I .
leader of men, I .11 1. .. I . I I .
by Ordinary measurement, wag almost
. I
..
� At . . . . . .
last, after.one conseoti-� ..
insignificant. Arthar, Duke of Wel-
l '
.hundred . � I
Uve hoaxa'in the saddle, in which his .
lington, ivas-a man who, as far as
. I
Men had � skirmished once, fought .
talluess.weiat, wadld'never have been
I .
I I
twice,, and maxelied 170 miles,' Buller . . .
noticed. in any everyday assembly. And
�. ; .
.. � . I ,,� I
did that which gained him. the V.C,, 1. �
had he. been thus norticed, it is car-
and ., occasl6ned tbe*following to appear' I
..
tain that one -regarding him would
. . .
in the London Gazette:- . . .
have.'set him down as of little account
'
i, , . .
. Fair his gullant,conduct at there- I -
viewed fr the
. am .point of view of what
at at Millobane, on March 28, 1879,
its'
a soldier should be. But, the " mind's
in having Assisted wbUe,,hotly par- . . I
the standard of the Man.', and big
. . .
.
sued by. Zulus In rescuing Captain, 0. � . I
small stature"did ,not interfere. with
.
D'Arey,� of the Froutler,Light. Horse, I .
I
the womderful' military qua lities of
who was retiring on Loot, Colonel Bill-
�
the . . . . . I
VICTOR OF WATERLOO.*,
.
ter, carrying him on his horse until. he , .
, .1 .
overtook the r6arguard; also for hay. I
1,
Here we may 'notice also thiLt his
. I . __,_
Ing on the same day, and in thsaame.
great rival, Napoleon himself, was a
I
I
circumstances, conveyed to aplaca of . .
man vary far below the average
I
safety' LleutenaM C. Everitt, at the
I
height,. and was,'indsed, universally
.
F,routier Light Horse, Whose- horse
knowh among his officers for many
�
was completely. exhausted, and who . .
�
� I
years an " Le Petit Caporal," being
.. I
. h
otherwise would have -been killed by .
thus nicknamed owing to'his luck of
.
I . .
the Zulus, who were within eighty
inches, Napoleon may justly claim to.
. .
.
.
yards of him." . .
.
,own a place among the six greatest
.1 . � .
soldiers this . world has ever seen; at
HOW BULLER REARD OF AfAJUBA,
.
I I
i
leastsuch is the verdict of authorities.
- It was in this wait that the Rrinoa ..
Yet this great leader of fighting men
Imperial. was killed. Iluller was one
Could not lay claim to any greater
of. the first to hear: the bad newa, from , .
height than, some 5 feet 5 Inoban at
.
- one of the officers who was with the
606 . . 1.
PxInce. The -battle of Ulundi ended
.
. Kt has long been a disputed point
the Zulu %'va.r, and both Lord Chelms-.
Whether the of Wallington or
Laird and Sir Garnet Wolseley In war . .
-Duke
the 11 great " Duke of Marlborough of
I
despatches gave high praise to' But-
Blenbelta fame, should stand at the
ler,s share in it.
head of English Generals of all time.
.
Then Buller returned home, and was '
Some have thought that the Military
made Colonel and AiD.C. to the Queen,
genius of Marlborough was superior
but two years mare , saw him back in I I
to -that of his rival in fame. But in
South Africa again. 'The Transvaal
any case it is worth noting for. the
trouble was browing. Majuba, Hill - .
purposes of this Article that Maribor'
was in sight, and all the long series at
ough was also a man whOse height
events of which we have Lately heard
was somewhat under that of the Aver.
so much. Buller was it 04pe Town I
Ago soldier of his time, The conqueror
.
I
when the news of Majuba Hill and
of Blenheim, of MAI.plaquat, of ou4don-
.
I
Colley's death came to hand, and he
ardo, of Ramillies was a soldier of
was,for instant action. But peace was
most engaging, presence, of a fine ex-
'little
signed and Baller was made Chief of
teirlor, but he was. just a want-
the staff to Sir Evelyn wood in Natai,
Ing, in atatelineas that comes from the
. .
poisseaSiOu of & tAllneSS Tatber over
. ------ 01-
wbA,t is usually found.
The trembling Boxer .knelt before �
. I
L1 Hung Chaug anck au.ove to explain . 1,
I ., 0 , I .
matters. I must have lost my hand.
� REGRET.
I oft no'other roasola why'l engaged , I
I A country paper has this personal
in the uprising, Oh. Son of the Blue �,
item.- Those who know old Mr. Wilson
Sky, he walled. Yo%A are a trifle off
"I
of this place personally will regret to
,_
L" your grammar, interposed Lt. You 11
boar that he was assaulted In a brutal
should may; I will have lost my head,
mauwr last weak, but was ,not killed,
And th6 oxemitionar atopped forward,
at the Proper, alglial.
.
COULD NOT, HrMP IT,
-A.W."
..
WHAT tin, GOT. .
JkaevOlent Vernon, to old tramp,
�P4rdon me, said thb suitor as he
You ought to be ashamed of yoUrself
picked himself up at the bottom of the
to be begging at your age.
front steps, but there seehis to have
L VaMN indigon,litly. How an tarth
been a misunderstanding somewhere. . .
.can 1 beg at any Other 496 now, lyd
I asked for your daught6rls band, and
Iik4 to know. Give me A penny,
I have reeelved your foot.