f W .Sj? WPFrWjYfW EVENING LEDGER-PHIIiAJDEIiPHIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1917 t , V-rtV., THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY o A PENNSYLVANIA 1 mm V 4 r - - - - ' i x ,S$9(llsfl .J&J&49U nyj?ZU(;lW.pennypackGr SwSfcrov23S ' W"-V" ru'"uo 47w teaiouj "'w fmrfietiv uuvui iiui' m. tSjiS (CuiHrUlil, 1U17 l tho lMiblU Irfdai r C'nmt.i, i CHAPTER IV-Continucd A COMPANY of Irishmen from Tunnel Hill enlisted in the Seventy "first Pennsylvania Volunteers and were with Webb at tho bloody angle nt Gettysburg A company from the south side of tho town became Company G of tho First Pennsylvania Kcserves. : Anioni,' the first to enlist was Josiah White, a bright, lively and muscu lar young fellow, cngaKcd to be married to Kate Vanderslicc, and ho become orderly sergeant of Company (. When his body was brought to Phocnixvlllc, from the Wilderness battlefield, where he was killed, In accordance with a custom which still lingered, Lloyd, Ashenfelter and I watched over it all night, nnd we carried him to his grave in the Dunkard graveyard, at the Green Tree. Kate Vanderslicc, his fiancee, soon died, and in a gloomy and somber poem, which I wrote in early life, I endeavored to tell the tale of their misfortunes. The pretty young woman who later became my wife, along with' Ithcr girls of her age, made in the hall of tho Young Men's Literary Union the uniforms which Company G wore to the front. My mother made rusk and sent it in boxes to tho army and the hospitals, and my Aunt Mnry A. Pennypacker, n proud and good woman', after the battle of Gettysburg, went to the field to nurse the wounded and spent weeks amid the miseries there. The spirit of willingness to sacrifice self, which was everywhere developed, was ono of tho 1 compensations for the struggle. The flag floated over almost every household. If a man dared to give utterance to hostility to the Government he did it at tho risk of physical violence then nnd there. Currency beenmo scarce. As a means of overcoming this difficulty postage stamps were put up in small envelopes, labeled on the outside with tho amount, and this led to the gradual evolution of the fractional postal currency, which for years was the only kind seen. Coin entirely disappeared. Prices of all commodities soon began to advance. At home we occasionally used rye as a substi tute for coffee, without much success. The Phoenix Iron Company pdaptcd its mill to the manufacture of a cannon, invented by John Uriffen, its manager, made of layers of twisted metal. Those guns, before being sent to tho Government, were tested by firing shells across the Schuylkill into tho hillside north of Mont Clare, on the top of which now quietly stands a graveyard. From this source of supply, gathering balls and slugs, with an old fowling piece of large boro I practiced marksmanship. The military impulse had arisen and I wanted to enlist, but I was my mother's dependence, and she persuaded mo to wait. She consented to my going to West Point. The vacancy controlled by our Congressman, William Morris Davis, had been filled, but he offered mo the appointment to Annapolis, which I declined. To that vacancy ho then appointed a young fiicnd of mine, who is now Hear Admiral Stockton, of the navy, who litis been president of the Naval War College and of the George Washington University. Mr. Davis suggested that I might obtain a West Point cadctship by securing one of the appointments-at-large in the control of Mr. Lincoln. Tho Congressman from Harford County, Maryland (I think his name was Howard), came to his help, und Kichard Yates, the Governor of Illinois, who was under obligations to my grandfather, used his influence. On the v day of the battle of Bull Run I was again at Mount Pleasant, to go, with my Uncle Joseph, grandfather and Uncle Gcorue P. r.t('Whitakcr, to Washington to meet the President. The time was l i'. srzssssaxmisi i& 1 j ,' J' wZsmSMm? m . HJ&&V I ' 5 s i Knapsack and shoes used by Governor Pennypacker in the Gettysburg campaign, June and July, 1863. Host inopportune for the purpose wo had in view, but rich in opportunities it gave for reminiscence In Hnvrc do Grace I saw a soldier shot and killed. A regiment of Maine lumbermen on their way to tho South halted in the town and threw out their guards. Ono of tho men tried to force his way across the line, nnd the guard, on tho point of being overcome, fired his musket. The ball did not touch the offender, but passed through the lungs of another member of the regiment, through two sides of a car and buried itself in a stone wall. The stricken man bled to death. Hardly had this occurrence ended when great excitement arose through tho efforts of tho soldiers to hang n German baker in the town accused of having sold them cakes filled with ground glnss. With difficulty he escaped, getting over a fence in the' rear of his garden nnd being hidden by some of the townsmen. The charge was probably entirely unfounded. Washington at the Start of the War In Washing, i wo stopped at Willard's Hotel and found the city in a state of the utmost excitement and confusion, expecting the approach of tho nbels. The army was scattered about tho streets of the city, tho men of different Tcgimcnts mingling together just aa they happened to meet. Aids and messengers in uniform were galloping hither and yon, and indicating by their acts nnd manner the tense state of their nerves. I saw one who. in his haste and excitement, ran his horse directly upon the tongue of an artillery carriage coming the other way, and the horse, with penetrated breast, fell dead. Around the floors of Willard's lay a number of the New York I'irc Zouaves, who told us rather highly colored narratives of their encounter with the Black Horse Cavnlry. Around each narrator gathered a knot of eager listener., whose interest was heightened by the consciousness each possessed of the surrounding uncer tainties. General Winfield Scott, whom wo saw upon horseback, seemed both too old and too corpulent for responsibility in such a crisis. My grandfather and his brother were both concerned for the fortunes of General McDowell, for the personal reason that he had married a daughter of Burden, of Troy, N. Y., of whom they were the business representatives in Philadelphia. Wc had influence enough to get from Drako Do Kay, whose autograph was apparently made with a pair of tongs, a pass to enter tho various fortifications which were being rapidly constructed for the defence of tho city. We likewise drove across tho Long Bridge nnd to Arlington, which was then not a cemetery, and to Alexandria, where wc saw the house in which the rebel tavcrnkecper, Jackson, had shot Colonel Ellsworth nnd had himself fallen a few minutes later. It is difficult for those of the present day to understand what a wave of intense emotion spread over the land when Ellsworth was killed, but they can secure some idea of it by observing what a number of living men bear the name Elmer E. Ho was young, courageous and attractive, and became one of the earliest sacrifices offered up to the moloch of slavery. At the Capitol I was introduced to Emerson Etheridge, ono of the Congressmen from Tennessee, who remained loyally at his post, notwithstanding the action of his State. Dark eyed, slight in build ami voluble, he spat tobacco juice, right and left, over the beautiful marble which adorned the fireplace of the committee room. I also met Potter, of Wisconsin short, chunky and muscular who was then in great repute because, when Koger A. Pryor, of Virginia, a cadaverous lirc-catcr, challenged him to a duel, he accepted and selected bowie knives as the weapons. There upon Pryor withdrew, upon the theory that they were not the weapons of a gentleman. It was tho general opinion that Potter would have cut Pryor, who hud more assertivcne.ss than strength, into pieces. In the Senate, John C. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, who maintained tho ethically indefensible attitude of participating in the legislation of the Government while making his arrangements for command in the rebel army to fight against it, attracted much attention. Tall and of good proportions, handsome, dark as an Indian, with straight hair, ho walked up and down the chamber with slow step and with his hands clasped behind him, giving to all a good view of his imposing person. Later ho became a major general in the rebel service, and in a number of defeats was still conspicuous, and, I believe, a brave soldier. I also met John C. Crittenden, of Kentucky, then old, thin nnd a little withered and wrinkled, who had made an earnest effort to avert tho inevitable struggle. Much of the conversation about the Capitol concerned those Congicssmen who had gone in a barouche to view the battle and had fallen into the hands of the enemy. Ail "Emergency" Recruit We returned home, having failed in tho object of our visit, but I had been in the midst of the most trying and critical situation of tho entire war. If the rebels had advanced upon Washington after their success at Bull Run, the whole history of the world might have been changed. The prevalent feeling in Washington at the time was that we were in immediate danger and that the final outcome was in grave doubt. In 1863 I was a private in Company !', of the Twenty-sixth Pennsylvania Emergency Regiment, which met Early's division of Lee's army as it advanced upon Gettysburg before the coming of the Army of the Potomac under Meade. I do not intend to give hero the details and incidents of that campaign, for the reason that I wrote at the time a full description of it, afterward published in my "Historical and Biographical Sketches," and for tho further t.TK? Dedication of tho monument at Gottjsburg of the Twenty-sixth Pennsylvania Emergency Infantry. Governor Pennypacker, standing in back of the chair at the left, miggcstcd to the sculptor that the trousers of the figure be inside of the boots to indicate the sudden charge from civil to military life. reason that in my addiess at the dedication of the monument erected on tho field I mnde a thorough study of the contemporary orders relating to it showing its unique importance. The address may be found in tho two volumes of "Pennsylvania at Gettysburg," published by tho State. It is my purpose here only to fill in a few additional features and to make some comments rather philosophical than historical. I went as a sergeant with a company from Phoenixvillc to Harrisburg in June. I had never been in that city before, and that night I slept on the stone steps of tho Capitol wrnpped in a red horse blanket. In view of my election to the governorship of tho State, this incident has certain dramatic features, of which the Hon. Hampton L. Carson made good use in the nominating conven tion. When it was discovered that the men were required to be sworn into tho service of the United States the company with which I had come, composed of my friends, declined to be so sworn, and returned to their homes. I went as a private into the Pottstown company, among strangers. It is certainly lemarkablc that a boy should leave his quiet country home and within it few days march, as it were, direct to Gettysburg, not only the pivotal point of that tremendous conflict, but the scene of the most important events in all American history. The Gettysburg Campaign It si'ins almost as though there were n fatality which deter mined that n tl'aii's should so be shaped, If my own company had not gone home I should not have been in the regiment which went to Gettysburg, and I would have experienced nothing of consequence. Tho Pottstown company had decided to connect itself with another regiment in the camp, and only after much persuasion and considerable delay was prevailed upon by Colonel Jennings to chnnge .its association and unite with him. Had it not made this change 1 should not have gone to Gettysburg. The delny was likewise essential. The regiments were sent forward as organized, each going further to the southward than its predecessor. If Colonel Jennings had succeeded with the Pottstown company at the outset his regiment would have been filled and ho would have taken the place part way up the valley to which Colonel Thomas's regiment was sent. Wc constituted the first and one of eight regiments sworn into the service of tho United States for the existing emergency. We were the only body of troops during the entire war which entered the military service of the Government for a period of uncertain duration, and, with Leo invading tho State, that period might well have extended into the indefinite future. When we arrived at Gettysburg wo found Major Granville O. Hnller, of the United States army, in command there, and the only force at his disposal was our regiment. On the other side of the mountain, in the Cumberland Valley, not ten miles away, was Lee, with the Army of Northern Virginia. Rodes, being in the advance, marched toward Harrisburg to carry the war into the heart of the State, and possibly to Philadelphia. Early, with a division artillery, cavnlry and infantry was sent over tho mountain by the Chambcrsburg pike to Gettysburg. On the twenty-sixth of June, in the early morning, in obedience to the order of Mujor Hnller, we marched out the Chambcrsburg pike to confront the approaching host. To this regiment of 732 men, who hud left their homes only a few days before, unacquainted with their officers and comrades and unfamiliar with the ways of warfare, was assigned the task of stopping tho progress of the army of Lee. The order has often been criticized, but it was absolutely correct. The occasion required that what they were capable of doing, whether much or little, should bo done. Tho reports of Early show that they held back his division an entire day. On the Hunterstown rond we had an engagement with the rebels lasting over half an hour, in which wc lost some wounded nnd 17G men captured. Tho rebel general, John B. Gordon, in his reminiscences of the Civil War, calls it a "diminutive battle," and claims that because of it he gained knowledge of great value .to him and his cause in the coming contest. After encountering tho enemy on the Chambcrsburg pike nnd again at Dillsburg, and after escaping threatened capture, the regiment, by hard marches across a country filled with foes, found its wny to Harrisburg. Tho men had lost all of their baggage and equipments. From Friday morning until Saturday night they had been without food, and until Sunday afternoon almost without rest. They had fired the first shots and drawn the first blood upon the battlefield of Gettysburg. Students of the history of the war have been attracted by the unique relation of the regiment to that decisive battle, and some of them have regarded it as an essential factor. Circular No. 8, series of 1894, of the Loyal Legion of the United States says: "It was the only emergency regiment which participated in that decisive battle of the war, and it is an historical fact that, owing to tho advance movement of Colonel Jennings's regiment, Gettysburg became the battleground." Spear, in his "The North and the South," after pointing out that tho coming of a scout with news of the approach of Meade did not lead to the concentration of Lee's army, ns Lee wrote, for tho reason that tho oi'der was given at 7:30 a. m. on June 28, nnd tho scout did not arrive until tho night of that day, declares that the con centration was the result of our combat on the twenty-sixth of June. He says, page 07: "It was the beginning of a scries of events which colored and determined all the issues of this campaign in a military sense. This regiment was as unconscious of the resultant conse quences of its action us was Lee himself. It was one of those insignificant events that so often arc the important factors in great lesults." On the wall at Pennypacker's Mills there hang together tho knapsack I carried, the shoes I wore, a broken carbine mndc in Richmond in 1862 and picked up at the scene of our conflict and a rnmrod I found in a rebel camp a few days later at Chambcrsburg on our wny to join Meade. The bronze figure of a young man clutching a musket, who has just run up upon the top of a native boulder, stands at the point where the Chambcrsburg pike leaves the town of Gettysburg to commemorate the service of the regiment. It was Governor Pennypacker who suggested that the statue should show the trousers tucked into the bootlegs to indicate the sudden change from peaceful life to the battlefield. Editor's note. The names of those enrolled on it, cut in the bronze tablet, will be placed in tho Pennsylvania memorial on the battlefield before tho close of the present year. When I returned home I was at once drafted. I had no idea of returning to the service in this way and my grandfather, who was much pleased with tho outcome of my military experience, paid $300 for a substitute at Norristown only too willing to go to the front In my stead. I do not know of his name or his fate. (CONTINUKIl TOMOItUOW) J RAINBOW'S END By REX BEACH Author of "Thf Spoilers." "The nrrlrr." "Heart of tho KuniM.' A novel of love, hidden treasure and rebellion in beautiful, mys terious Cuba during the exciting days of the revolt against Spain. Copyrieht. 1017. Hurper & liroi. CHAPTER XIX (Continued) (K1I, 0011110?." Tho two mc.i rodo on J In silence for a time, then Leslie ild: "Queer thlnu happened luclc there Jfhlle those Hotr.eea ueru popping at me. u heard a batiy crying," "A baby?" "Sure. I supposo It win tho washer womun's Ild. When wo Hushed lu-r she probably "-vamped out and left It In tho Krasu. Anyhow, It let up an awful hol ler." Jacket and tho other loot-laden Boldlers bad been sent on ahead, together with tliobo troopers who were sharing mounts with tho rescued prlsoncra; they wero now W'Itlug perhaps two mlleo from town for t-'olr companions to ovcrtaUo them. As Ho column camo up ami halted, O'lieilly ad Irtsscd h rcniurk to Lcsllo Branch, but In tho middle of It tho faint, unniMukablo complaint of a child camo to his pars. The Mysterious Sound "Listen!" ho exclaimed. "What on earth " "I've, been hearing It right "long." Ilninch said, "l I thought I hud tho willies.' Tho nearest riders abruptly eeahed their chatter ; tfley nuetloned one another mute ly, doubting their own ears. Again camo that thin, muffle' wall, whereupon O'rtellly crltd In iiBtonL'unent: "Leslit." Why. It It's In your bund o Me polntca to tho formless roll of beddlnflr Wch hung tom bis friend's saddle-horn. "G'wun! YouVo crazy I" Ur.mcli slipped t tho ground, nelzed tho bundle. In his ms, nnd boro It to the roadside. With Bhaklng hands ho tugged at tho Knotted corners of the comforter. "I'uro Imagina tion!" o muttered, testily. "There's noth ing In here but bedclothes. I just grabbed an armful " Tho last word ended In a yell. Lwile uprang Into tho air as If his exploring fingers had encountered a rolled erpent. "Oh, my Cod!" He poised as If upon tS uolnt of flight. "Johnnlol Look! It alive!" What'!, nttve? Wluit la It?" , . With a BUdden denperate courage Branch bent forward and spread out tho bedding. There, exposed to tho bulging eyes of the onlookers, was n very tiny. ery brown haby. it -was a young baby : It was ciulte naked. Its eyes, exposed o the sudden Blare of the morning sun, closed tightly; one small hand nil but lost Itself In tho wide, i toothless cavity that served as a mouth. Its ten ridiculous toes curled and Uncurled la tt most umazlng fashion. "Oh. my God ' Branch repeated, aghast. "It's Juki b-born! Its eyes aren't open." Tho Cubans, who had momentarily been trlcken dumb with amazement, suddenly broke Intn vnlnhln nneech. The .clamor IfjTed'to attract Colonel Lojlez, who waa "What's tho matter here?" ho demanded, forcing his horso through the ring which had formed nbout IC1 Demonio und his bundle. Ono btartled look nnd tho colonel Hung himself out of his saddle. "Whose baby Is that?" ho demanded. "I I Why, it's mine. I mean, 7 " Branch's eyes wero glued upon tho child In horrified fascination. Ho choked and btammered and waved his hands Impotent!)'. "Dranth's Haby" "Come, come ! Speak up ! What does this mean','" Lopez's voke grew stern. "She must have bo-bten asleep. I lust giabbid ou know. I " lltaneliH face hti.tnie suddenly stricken. "Look out'" bo hhouied hoarsely. ".She's going to ciy, or something." ... Ho was right; tho baby showed ecry Flgn of tlrm determination to olco her Indigna tion at the outrage she had suffered. Iler hand Htolo out of her mouth, her lists closed, her faro puckered omlnouslv Lopez stooped, wrapped her In u sheet, then look her awkwardly In his uims. Ho belli a blazing glance upon tho kidnapper, but ho had no chance to speak before tho storm of walllngs broke. ' News of Leslie's exploit was spreading. Men wero shouting und gesticulating to their comradeH to come nnd teo LI Lcmonlo s spoils. There was a great chattering and crowding und no llttlo smothered laughter. Meanwhile, Colonel Lopez was Uflng every desperate devlco to bootho tho Infant, but without success. At last be strodo up to Leslie and extended Ills burden. "Hero," ho said, harshly, "she's yours. I buriender her." , Leslie dtew back. ".No, you don 1 1 I wouldn't touch her for u thousand dollars I' '"b'ui'lopcz was firm. He spoko In a tone of coniinund! "Do us I tell you. Take her. A lino outrage, to steal a haby! What iiro wo going to do with her? We can't send her back tho town Is crazy. I've no doubt I shall hear from this." la spite of Lesllo's choking protests. In spite of his feeble resistance, Lopez pressed the noisy stranger Into his arms, then turned to his men and directed them to bo off. Tho Quandary Branch remained motionless. Ho was stupelled; he held the baby gingerly, not daring to put It down, dreading to keep t: his eyes were rolling, he began to perspire freelyi Htretchlng a timid, detaining band toward iSpcz. he inquired, huskily, "What bhall I do with her?" "God knows. I don't" snapped the ofn cer "I Bhall have to think, but meanwhile I hold you responsible for her. Cpme now, we must be going." .... , Leslie swallowed bard: his face became overspread with a sicklier pallor "What'll I do when she gets hungry?" Lopez could not restrain a smile. "Tou ehou J have thqught about thftt, compadre.. WeU..Xuiow ihtsra.tnero Is ,a milk cow not threo leagues from here. I'll send a man to hot row It fiom the owner und Mr he It tn our camp. Or perhaps" his handsome face hardened again "perhaps you would prefer tr, take this child buck where )ou found It?" "No I Oh, they'd tear mo limb from limb !" "Hactly " Branch turned his head from side to side In desperation. Ho wet his lips. "It's the youngest ono I ecr had anything to do Willi. .I.i)bo it Isn't used to cow's milk," ho entured "I'nfortunalelv that Is tho cmlv kind I can offer It T.iUo cam of It until I find some wny of notifying its people." (I'lielllv had looked on at his friend's enibairassnient with malicious enjoyment, but. realizing that Branch would undoubt edly try to foist upon him thu tcsponslblllty of caring for the baby, lie slipped away and rode ocr to where Captain Judson was engaged III making a litter upon which to carry the sick prisoner thev had rescued from the Jail. When ho had upprlscd tho artilleryman of what Branch had found In Ills roll of purloined bedding tho latter nulled broadly. The Sick Man "Series him right," Judson chuckled. "We'll make him sit up nights with It. M y bo It'll Improve his disposition." More se. riously ho explained' "This chap hero Is nil In. I'm afraid wo aren't Eoing to get him through." I'o'lowlng Judson's glance, O'Jlellly be held an emaciated tlguro Ivlng In tho shade of a nearby guava-bush. The man was clad In filthy rags, his fai e was dirty and over grown with a month's beard; a pair of icstless eyes stared unbllnklngly at tho brazen sky. Ills llns wero moving: from them Issued a steady patter of words, but otherwise he showed no sign of life. 'you said ho was starving." .lohnnlo dis mounted and lent Judson a hand with his "That's what I thought nt first, but bo's sick. I supposo It's that damned dungeon fever." "Then wo'd better look after him our selves. These Cubans aro mighty careless, you know. We can swing him between our horses, and-" .,-.,., Judson looked up to dlscoier that Johnnlo was poised rigidly, Ills mouth open. Ills hands ha ted In midair. The sick man's voice had risen, and O'Hellly, with a peculiar expression of amazement upon his face, was straining his ears to hear what "Lb?" What's the matter?" Judson In- For 'a moment O'ltellly remained frozen In his attitude, then without a word he strode to the sufferer. Ho bent forward, staring Into the vacant, upturned face. A cry buret from his throat, a cry that was like a sob. and. kneeling, he gathered the .nlk filthy figure Into his arms. "L'stcban '" ho cried. "Kstch.ni ! This Is O'ltellly, O'llull-yc! Don't you know mo? o'ltellly, )oiir filend, your brother! Kor God's sake, let' me what they'wi done to )ou! Look nt me. Ilstelun ! Look at mo! Look at me! Oh, Lstcban!" Esteban Among- Friends .Such eagerness, such thankfulness, such passlonntu pltv were In his friend's hoursn loieo that Judson drow closer. Ho noticed that tho fiilntfht tlanio of ica'-on dickered for an instant in the sick man's hollow eves; then thev began to ioo again, und the same tustling whisper recommenced. Judson had heard something of O'ltellly's story; hit had heard mention of l.-teban inn! Ilosa Varona; he stood, therefore, in silent wondi rinerit. listening to tho In coherent words that poured trorri his friend's lips. O'ltoilly held the boy tenderly In his arms: tears ro led down his checks as ho Implored Hsteban to hear und to heed him. "Try to hear mo! Try'" Thero wbh floreo agony In the cry. "Where is Ilosa? Ihixa? ou'ro safo now; you can tell me Vou'ro safo with O'ltellly 1 came back I camo back for you und Ilosa Where Is blio? Is she dead?" Other men wero assembling now. Tho column was ready to move, but Judson signaled to Colonel Lopez und made known tho Identity of tho sick stranger. Tho colonul camo forward swiftly and 'aid u hand upon O'Hcllly's shoulder, saying: "So! Voir wero right, after all. Ksteban Varona didn't die. God must bale bent us to San Antonio to deliver him." "He's sick, sick!" O'ltellly said, huskily, "Those Hpanlards! Look what thev'vo done to him." Ills volco ( hanged. He cried, (lorcely: "Well, I'm 'ate again. I'm al ways just a llttlo bit too lato. He'll dlo be fore he can tell me" "Walt! Take hold of yourself. We'll do al' that tan bo dono to save him. Now come, wo must bo going, or all Sun Antonio will bo upon us." When the troop resumed IIh retreat Ms tcbati Varona lay suspended upon a swing ing bed between O'Hellly's nnd Judson's horses. Although they carried him us care fully us they could throughout that long hot Journey, he never ceased bis babbling and never awoke to his surroundings. CHAPTER XX EL DESIONIO'S CHILD DURING the next few days O'ltellly had reason to bless tho happy chance which had brought Nortne Lyons to Cuba. During the return Journey from San An tonio de los Bunos he had discovered how really III Kstaban Varona was, how weak his hold on life. Tho young man showed the marks of wasting Illness and of cruel abuso; starvation, neglect, and disease had Jl but done Xoc him. After listening to iila " ' ravings, O'ltellly began to fear that the poor fellow's mind was permanently affect ed H was un nppalllng possibility, ono to which lie ould not reconcllo himself. To think that somewhero In that feverish brain was perhaps locked the truth about Itosa's fate, if not the r-fcret of her where ubotilH, ami yet to bo unahlo to wring un Intelligent utiswer to a single question win Intolerable. Tho bonis of that ride wero am' the longest o'ltellly had uvr passed, .t Norlne ISvans gave him new heart Sli took complete ihargo of tho sick man upon his arrival In rump: therr In her brisk, matter-of-lact way she directed O'ltellly to go and get some much-needed rest. Hste. ban was ill. very ill, she admitted: there was no competent doctor near und her own facilities for nursing wero primitive Indeed: nevertheless, she -oxpri's.srd coulldeiico that she could cure him und reminded O'ltellly that nature has u blestcd way of building up u resistance to environment. As u resulv of her good cheer O'ltellly managed to en joy a night's sleep. Leslio and the Haby Leslio Branch was later than tho others In arriving, for tho baby proved to bo a trial and u handicap His comrades had refused him any assistance on tho home ward Journey. They expressed u deep, liMirso condemnation of his conduct, und protended to consider that he hud sacrificed all claims to their, friendship and regard, Branch took this seriously, and ho was In n state bordering upon dcsperullon when ho reached camp. In tho hope of unloading his unwelcome burden uiwi Norlne Hvans ho hurried directly to her tent, But Norlne had heard tho story; Lopez had warned her; therefore she waved him uway. "Don't ask mo to mother your stolen child," she said; "Oh, but you'vo got to." be declared In u panic. "You'vo Just got to." "Well, I won't. In tho llrst place. I have a sick man In my tent." "But leck! Listen! This baby dislikes trie. I've nearly dropped It a dozen limes. I I'm going to Itavo It, anyhow." Hut Norlne remained tlrm In her refusal, "You shan't leavo your foundling at my door, If you Intend to steal buhles you should make up your mind to .take caro of them " She was Itching to seize tho hungry little mite, but she restrained the Impulse, "Go uhead and keep it amused until the cow arrives," she told him, "Keep It amused! Amuse a starling brat!" tragically cried the man. "In Heaven's name, how?" "Why, Play with It, cuddlo It, give It your watch anything! But don't-allow it to cry It may injure Itself." Branch glared resentfully; then he changod his tactics und began to plead. "Oh, Norlne!" he Implored. "I Just can't do it I'm all fagged out now, and. be sides,' IT VC. got. the only watch In camp that keeps time. I didn't sleep any last night, and It'll keep mo nwnko all tonight. It's n nice baby, rcallv. It needs u woman " N'orlrio parted the Haps of her tent nnd pointed Inside, where ICstelnirr Varona lay upon her cot. His eves were stnrlng; his looking on with rapt attention, npplauded this show of spirit, Branch was unwontedly meek. Ho Hiknowiedged his tota Inexper ience, and begged his friends, almost politely, to call for a substitute. juusori explained, gravely, "These Cubans lips were moving ".Mrs Hulz und I will don't know any more about cows than yon hands full with that poor Lliup. do. have our Kor nil we know, ho may have sumo con- IIIKIOUS uiscusc. An body Want a Haby? Brunch was utterly shameless, utterly self ish and imcompassloriatf. "I'm sick, too sicker than he Is llnvn a heart: Iti'iiiem ber, I risked my life to get you something nice tc tat -" "Yes! The most ildieulous procedure I ever heard of What ever made )ou do such u cruzy tiling?" .Norlne wns honestly IIIUIKJtillll IIUW. II lIPlllv niTAeil iTI)av'rB n-orwl tl fighters, but they can't milk," , Ia'h le eyed tho speakers, white with rage; lie was trembling. "You think you're damned funny, don't ou? You're having a Jubilee with me Well, I'm game I'll go through v i"'. mi, .,f Yin'"". hoJ',1 ,nerv. r" """ her 111 milk her till she hollers." Obligingly. O'Hellly took the nnlmal br tho horns und Judson laid bold of her tall. "Slielch her tight," Leslio commanded. nun i give Her an Inch of slack, or I'll quit ' When Ills friends had braced them se es he moved toward the cow once morl but this time from the opposite quartet'. "I did It for you. It seems to mo that Noting tlre'dlrectTn of Ids'' m,Snn!.harVi2 ' the least von can do In return " '"," T ,lle u'eciion or ins approach, U ' 4ho,U.n!lnln.So.t.ril can d Is to prctuucyThey'drow closT '"UrmU' " try to save this poor man's life." she cxI,luall:- They drow closer. Leslie Milks a Cow firmly reasserted take tho baby if "It'll dlo i.n me," Branch protested. . Strangely enough, the animal stood qulst ff "Nonsense! It's tho healthiest llttlo ",r, '! ' ,osl ' amazement, perhaps . s . tiling i ever saw Wat until It has its 'r,,,1 '":.. ",.,'. "" """ ! ummffr V'll ..' ui, .1 1'!.. .'."'' ,i.... his bg tin cuu with in Ik. But III In. I ,1,-V.If.!. her tent and Brunch reluctantly turned ffj"!8 VIZ? V f mucn.rr her; h ,ow'r,(,T8 .Next no iinro ll e inrant lo .niMRon niwl ",c r""ltM " vuutMucr mu next inova roFj O'ltellly In turn; but both grulllv refused a moment; then sho kicked forward and "Now run sinner I'd 1 could, but I simply Branch protested. tt. nun...... .1... , . ,. ,,,. . m ,. '" ...lunit, inu it-urn. renpniiFiuiiiry ror II. In tho matter of advice concerning Its w?! fare, however, thev were more obliging. They were willing to discuss tho theory of child-rearing with htm as long as he would listen, but their advice merely cruised him to glare hatefully und to curse them Nor did he regard It as u mark of friendship on their part when (hey collected nn audi ence that evening to watch him milk the 'yv " procedure, by the way. not dvold or excitement and hazard, Inasmuch as Lrunch s knowledge r,f cows was een more theoretical than his knowledgo of babies. The Conspiracy lr"J:W 7 "!"! ' rtkhlmanLbynk;ourrno0co0v.r'? a moment; then sho kicked forward and - sent Branch flying. i ;i "Can you beat that?" OTtnl ly exclaim "HW? in inirri,i womiermem, "vv ny, she wal kty? loned you with the bnelr of hee ku.,ji V afr?j Judion. too, affected great amazement, Tti$l "Most cows are left-handed," he declared. "tSv-V,! 'Try her on the ntber lil." ,! Branch dried the milk from his fare. th 'y'-sij In a shaking voice cried! "Have a good 97Y . It seemed for a while that the entefMlM,'f' was doomed to failure; hut at last a bSiH, j or more nf mlllr wnu uuii,aH .nrf 41.1.. t -flar ri'TJ proceeded to dilute with Warm "water1 fr2 a nearby campflre. liven then, homnrMV" 1la ,llrtli, lis. tun-.. ..Aft .H.a II. .. .. f .., u..,.bu ..... nv.u ..u, Wl 11D JI1TO that thero existed u general conspiracy against 1dm; ho met tt with sullen resent merit. He deeply regretted his Ignorance of the Spanish language, however, for a thousand epithets and Insults clamored for transla tion. Now thero are cows which an amkteur can milk, and there are other kinds. This particular cow was shy. apprehensive, pcevisu, DiuuunB uuprucuceu mmo ing rr Having long since given up .hi mistake, hoDe of any active ustlstAtiCA tmm fc dlence. he doKeedly set tn work tn a nursing bottle. He succeeded in due t after making use of a flask, the item 01 unused cigarette holder and a hand: cuiei. i wnen he finally took seat, and ttwjtwaruiy coaxing ,ine, rreuiu C! uriniv. ma iuuuri ruiceu rtneir app !Ktr & 'aS fm'B -' M '1m i" -- : , . :rr "i ritated hn n..h5i .,3 'A? .VI ""'".??! 'jrI'WTMA vnnn,.. .h i noVnu L-r" ";"" 'u. ' ?. ' ""?? "I""".. savannas, she was accustomed to firm, innsicnui men. inereiore wnen leslle at tempted courteously, apologetically, to sepa rate her from her milk, she turned and hooked him. El DeroonlQ.' .audience, who their eccentric,1 Irascltoe. uemonro mmoiynurw lignl miaa iam)M XriBKi MWriMllil l l.fr9ru V -w . f . y . ., . UAf, ,. 1' , .'.A .. ik ..t $ ,-.. 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