1 —~ reo | Bellefonte, Pa., April I3, 1894, mam sma sss BURY THE PAST. Bury the past with all that is dreary, Cover the errors of yesterday o'er; Do not revive it sad heart, thou art weary Of days that are never to visit us more. Bury the past ! forget all the sorrow, Tears of regret and passionate pain ; Here is he present witn thoughts of to-morrow, It is enough for the world-weary brain. Bury it with the hasty words spoken, The anger, for whch we cannot atone, The shadows, the crosses, the bond that are . broken, Cover them over and leave them alone. Come with new hopes, faith courage, endur- ance, And ao thy work nobly while this day shall ast ; @od keepeth the record, we've this blest as- surance, His Infinite wisd-m shall deal with the past. — Maggie Crim, in the Housekeeper. THE STORY OF THE BONES, An Army Tragedy. 8Y JOSEPH SMITH. Where the New Mexican Sierras look down upon a narrow trail that winds out a grayish-green plain into the scarred and torn loot hills that form the outer barriers of the Tulerosa range, a spur of the hills pushes for- ward like an earth-work to dominate the desolate valley. Crowning this spur was a tall pine-tree,a grim ana solitary sentinel standing in the midst of orambling bowlders. Frem the shadow of the pine the full sweep of the gray desolation of the valley filled the eye, from the base of the mcuntain below to the point afar off where the sage-green thirsty earth commingled with the blue haze that wrapped the cliffs and mesas in the enchantment. ot distence. From the vantage and shelter of pive and bewlder ‘the strug- gling trail could be seen -ereeping inde- cisively round the base of ‘the hill into the tough open pass, to-stophesitating 1y-at the edge of a peol ‘in the shadow ofthe cliff. i pool was the tem- ry resting-place of a thin stream of any 0.4) which dripped trom a crevice in the cliff, wheret took heart to-contivue its journey down between the blistered rocks and thirsty eands, where it struggled feebly before it sur rendered and died. Thie tiny etream was the raison etre of the feeble trail, the oasis in| that scorched and blistered desolation that drew to the spot théfeet of the men | and beasts that had worn the path ; for in New Mexice, a8 ind udes, the cup of eold water has a walue inconceivable to those who dwell in ‘lauds blessed with green pastures and murmuriug brooks. From the pool, where the tracks of shy deer and prowling wolt were im: evidence, a rough path led up the hill: the base of the .pine, among the moulding needles, lay .a skuil, white from the washing ot rains and bleact- ing of the sum, cracked as if with a hatchet, and pierced with.e hole made | by a rifie-ball, brough which the! slanting sun eent.asbeam ol.gold to light | ap the ghastly interior. Beside the] skull lay a pile of boues, white and | discolored and partially buried iv dead | needles and cones, “Closer scrutiny re-! vealed fragments of taded 4lue cioth, afew taraished ‘braes buttons, and a) couple of musty iron asrow heads. Farther apant were the bones of a man’s thighs and ribs, halt buried in debris, bearing the evidences of desecration by wolves amd ceyotes. I'he carpet of pine droppings euirred with the hoot revealed the coppershells of rifle car- tridges black alwostwith.verdigris. These were the mute records of an unrecorded tragedy, the relics of some untombed hero; ithe evidences of a crime the lonely watcher on the bill bhad«witnessed, and for evhose «consum- | mation the keen-aosed buzzards bad waited, floating in the hot heavens aboveithe Sierras. Poor untenemented bones! Bleach: ing in solitude and neglect, crumbling slowly to the obliwion of dust, they were the only mementos .of the brave whitefzced trooper who died in the de- sert for duty ; died and had beer for- gotten. They.were the menument that the dead soldier had raised to ‘himself in mute protest againat ¢he cruelty of si- lence anid bitterness of negleeat thathad buried the valor of hie deed and