A Pair ofillitAlmir 04Pflir our rambli , t; Up th'eiprewn," in Nln o rtherallYisoo " nsin a few Ch days ago, chanced upon a husky, hrown•faced girl plowing out a twenty acre corn She was riggetrin a snuff color ed "bloomer,"' Witica derrtw tint and 'good, honest minitrer,saven hoots. l4he was evidently all 01,,and workjiig with a will. She lied been, in the fl e d Rine() early morning, taking long strides be hind a spirited hdree, With Chic Hiles t henwn across her shoulder,' and both hands firmly at the plow. It was just "good fun," she said, to take care of , twenty acres, and away she strode through the long rohi—turning cm , 1 nets, kicking over sods, mod never a t rest o r "whoa," till the dinner horn I sounded arrosforirtield, o n i nqu i ry, we learned that Our cornfield heroine Wftrl 0110 of tarn Tilitiplihire who migrated ,wit,ll their parentalo.lllati (;faire some dozen y,aartl.lll4ot 1/ 1 0 1 /5 bargained for It quarter section of itild and set alma unaking,a, farm. Th e ra were po, boyaiti thpfatuily. Tlig girls were young, brigltt, Itealtdiy.utud full of pluck and vigor. Their mother dressed ; loon in bloomers a,iiijgattoltilacia. their choice, iinloop or, out. „From am start they took the place of boys; they were not afraid of dust or s unshine ; they neyer complained i they aver tired out: they eulikno missed x t i ny from the fields throughout tha seasons, from earliest atom to latent. autumn. As they grew older, they grew tougli and it, try, and were alike reniiv at handling teains, breaking colts, build tig bridges, opening roads, fording creaks, clearing in eattows, loading -hay, binding gran; or iniiiititing n -bay stack 1u good reasons they cot eighty tons of boty and and eighty nom .of grain, In rainy. .V:lmrll3 they had to bri g out their grain ht hand, carry it on po)es, knee deep through sloughs and marshes. In win to they attended school and took care of sixty hetet of cattle, drawing hay front the swam la in dm coldest weather. They hiruel no help except at, harvest, ing. They did their own trading Hitt, marketing, and could never be outwit ted by Any of the store chaps at Eau Claire. The girls. are now 18 and 2(1 years of age, sod /lace 41111 Q more farm work than any two burs in the county. Their father, hegtuning atilt tiotlking.io now rich, utile ' , Nod fields and thous ands of reiuly stumpy, mostly anhieved through the grit, mud euergy of his datightera. PtiriugLllF , prpsentsea.on die girls liave , 0. little 911 the out door accomplish i ateu (a, ambers may cultivating twenty acres, of corn for their on stuesament, They hate built thew, a spaumoa rtisidease: They atteud tip troutina, drive thew own teano, ztod ly gin e Alto hays a 40,101 e IN their spot k and gallaotry, Ur Gpitnit,suril girls ale ol o ieet,i el oe,, , itenicat lye' ilk-- tyre-4 in o ttietreviii,l4,fltootb J Tlqy,are lts 'Led ptos t4sjeapilod and r4ilown are rel E idy to real; their necm fitr thew "Jcliu , ure I n t l)' 1 - 1 ,;1q, in their rreihust ith of Ipt.e . ' 1114 Topiikpcv, ii ha! Wipe seritt,Witme, list' itri: neither eoliNt; tioy mull -tamp ;it appearance 1 lie‘ fire . t -b' ditto resolution p; iludr eye alt? tliniv ot Food senseitt4 Tic Hit ere.3t i tug to femitle t to vit., thou C4ipirrvh Villit•y e . gi . rdevyr ttl oft 4,r declaim Itrl l t thew "riglifq" or "position." They dint werrtt to Pet elvne 'fithSt in nor Western vtoiAteF n'slltn odds of ol'.(dly, flue!, wild 141'141'01y 't RPW troit , c o 4 J not (lid it 'ttnitt• nn alias unapt it''they nen rack led tit cloteentions. '1 tit; Tthdc tilt ~a t with . NlTtel , ill trot, y. fit hie Black The'y' f.yll) ha ft Seatinong_ , the ?MN?* of Ante:wail. Industrt - . Irk Colt.:ttn. ' • rf 1,01411 . 101 t %IA 111 , 41 V OMr go k. 1.0 tie; 11 fill nd 10,, anti 11:114 VOt itid rest Ala Harr? It 1.4 441 (frit tv nllAvirt' titirdigi 41111 Id .t IWO* Vcnn nail on itior,tli.deon yo ur .Colicat, nil itu 11101i11 1 litit i, (11111112; IMM:3 Itiwrow You flllit our Irldwiti. Y I (tool Ito cl 'Hunt-It y in Ptputiill nip ililll nt Earn , firm ty