The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, May 17, 1894, Image 6

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Whe Hose In Which the Martyr | President
e i His Last—Wow the Limeoln
B. Vere Secured =A Publis Spirited
| Emterprise— Whittier's Sentiment. ;
oh [Spee fal Corres pode tio
WasirvaTox, May 8. —No totrist vis-
ity Washington should fail to see the
house where Linooin died Ever since
the terrible assussination of the presi-
"dent in Ford's thoater the house has
been need as a residence. There was
nothing to indicate that in that house
Abe Lincoln breathed his ast except a
mall tablet cu the front wall bearing
ed in this bouse
A writ 15, 1965,
saa RES LR pES
At onan time he locality was Jooked
upon as a very desirable place of resi
uwenon, bot today it is the very heart of
the business center, It is directly across
the sfroet from the old theater where
Wilkes Booth fired the fatal shot that
made a nation nour
The Memorial Aseoeisiion,
The theater ster to have been fated
ever gine the terrible tragedy. For
many years no ¢ne woald use it. Final-
Iy the government took it, and of late -
years it has been need for clerks of the
war department. The dreadfal calamify |
of Ford's theater, where many clerks lost
their lives, is 21°] fresh in the minds
of every one. Frior to that it was need
as the Medics) mnsenm.
Congress has boen urged from the
to time by patriotic citizens to bay the
~ house where Lincoln died: but, as psaal
with our national Izwmakers, they did
‘mothing about the matter. Finally eon-
winced that congress would mot act, a
- nmmber of patristic citizens mot and or-
ganized the Meracrial Associztion of the
District of Columbia Their purpose
was to raise the moncy to purchase the
Bouse where Lincoln died and to place
therein the many relies then scattered | oo
all over the country. They finally sno
ceeded not only in raising the money to
purchase the house, but have paid heav-
ily for every relic of the martyred pres-
Ҥdent they oonld find, no matter where.
“The purpose of the founders of this so-
(AIR IN WHICH LINCOLY DIED.
eiety cannot be too highly commended.
have joined themselves together
¥ the clijoct of cultivating historical
dnterest und ftrengilening that rever-
emoo for the man vi ho made oor historic
past upon which a lasting reverence
They do not intend to stop 7 the
work of giving to thé public the house
Lincoln died, but will endeavor
to have tablets placed on the outer walls
of all hones throughout the city of his-
toric interest to writers. It is ill wind
which blows no cue any good, for the Mo
pessoal association have reason to be
aan Tilton, who occupied it all during
the war. Tilion permitted strangers to go
; taking
with lm all his relics. This is how the
Meniorial association has been able to
accomplish their praispworthy labor in
the zhort space of one year. They
Interesting to the Curious. :
- Lovers of the antique and the curious
“ean be satisfied to their hearts’ content.
There are meventos in the old house
on Tonth street from the very day of
Lincoln's birth to the unhappy night of
‘his taking off. A series of old magazine
cuts beginning with Lincoln's birth-
place in Hardin (county, Ky., goes on
‘through the family removal six years
Jater and the final settlement of the Lin-
‘eolns in Decatur, Ills. One picture shows
the raft on which lis father was carry-
ing two barrels of whisky to their new
home, This, together with $20, was the
pricy. received for their old farm. In
1881 Lincoln struck out for himself, go-
ing 0 New Salem. There it was that
and inswtistic
oult #6 doseyihe Whittier wrote this § r
seription for it: :
Lat man tos fond! The mighty word
Be epaic was net Lien,
The spirit of the Tires sfirred
His morisi fips alone.
Eolas Laven,
in New Salers, becoming nigger y
Arn Eatlcdge, who'died in 1835. & ¥
en vogvs later 7 wesed avd deed ed
Elizabet th Todd When the Lincolos
wire at to eave for Washingt: a
they Asc sped fo re i atl their for ik Eis 9
Same of it was given to Mr. Linocin's
only too wi ol the valoey of a dolar.
inatsd, the chair Ive sat in and in
coable other relics of bis eventfel
seer it i= one of the rast in-
places in the nation's capital to
: J. HL Bay.
CSoWT MOUNTAIN pe MEN
iminzrt ef » Great Trine er Dweltins Iu
Veal: and Commbort.
{Segeiad Corroapindence. |
1g BESERTE, NC, May 5.
a fe bode or toro of idle. drgnk.
o's lediaps left in southern
z raannnt of a ston amd
izive which was Leaten and
: 3 the Mississippi move
cen Thoosly other Indians
fro rtnto shetyrden the Atle
Miselcdppl are the 500
wes wha, since thoy rest of
5 1gibe was sent west by Gener-
¢ wo he ay 0 aeapiod this reserva
2s 50.000 arres in a series of
¢ Pountiful valleys in all the
Tor me es,
eres this rolendid poservation
vive dow the Oconwn and Ion, tvo
« puvardisnia dfreams, the tributaries
w sich ard filed with tromt. The £0
regain Charvdoes in wealth, onltore,
“diemen Lo law and everything that
paises etvibization are abreast if
wt in advinoe of their ‘weights, the
ie amutaineers of the Black, the
ri and Great Smoky ranges. Thos
= have ‘good farms, churehon,
» , Izir roads and goch roo
rical B ustrics as are cseential to
ir ova ants
“H rs, walled im from ‘the Pest of th
wor 1+ &and Fising mountains, as is
pr : A: nt republic, with its own lave,
was and its regularly elected eliief,
an na distinct and separate from the
wut state and nation about them as
wlenra is independent of Franoe aul
wai, The ew chief is olacted for four
like our president, with a salary
#3 year and traveling expenses
‘1 he ventures on state business ont-
the domain of Qualla
in this reonblic there are politica!
iartios without political impurity. The
Baptist end Methodist churches claim
{ yearly 2]l the adnlts as communicants.
Is no part of the country is the marriace
little known Cherokees, and druapken-
noEN snd divorce are practieally an
kp
1 he tledr brethren. of the Indian Ter.
ritcry, the Cherokees of Qualls have
iF own written langnage and their
3 alphabet, invented by that wonder
31 maz, the Indian Cadmus, Sequoia
While the white mountaineers of this
part of North Caroling are an animag-
native and legendicns race, the Chero-
kere are a most poetic and roman-
tic people, and with every stream; vail-
ded, precipice or mountain peak there is
sore legend or myth connected that
Jil it out of the stupid and often gross
ly vakrer namenclatare of the whites
and givesit an added charm by associa
ing it with some stirring event
‘heroic character of the past.
"An Englishman whom I met down
mantic place he Las ever seen, and that
the Cherokecs are by all odds the most
outsitle this neighborhood there is not
one American in ten thousand who
ws anything about the place or the
people.
Although good Christians, the Chere
kees at Qualls, like their kinsmen Le-
yond the Mississippi, stil. retain muy
of their old tribal rites, which once Lad
and still retain some religions sigris-
cance. They have just finished a sericea
of dampers and festivities, intended to
tropitiate the powers that control frui-
tice, which always precide their plat
ing of cropa. After the harvest is in.
am told, they have what is known as
their “corn ddnees,’’ which 1 am as
sired ody is worth crossing the continent
J #0 gee,’
While tours are being made to the
V Howstone and to even as far away a
iluska, bere is a place, within enor.
reach of all eastern cities, which for
the beauty of its surroundings and 1:
"interest of its red inhabitants is 1:
equaled by any part of the great oa
‘lie, snd yet even ifs name and its where-
doouts are practically unknown to eur
people. Arrned R. Carnovx
Stripes and the ¥ igure.
Striped materinls bave been generzlly
regarded as (spec dally suited to very
their apparent size, bat here as else-
both ways,”
and round will reverse the tendency of
stripes that run up and down:
will give an appearance of increased
slenderness and height, the other will
give an appearance of increased girih
Probably this fact is what made striped
stockings so popular when they were in
material made to flare slightly at the
bottom will modify a lanky woman's
possible without seeing her variously
| sowned
Lineal £01] in Jove for the dnt fame |
Laters, of whom he Bad thee After 2
card Mr. Oldrord porchased them, but |
pay & hig price for them, #g
sisters, who were spincters |
re, were thrifty and knew d
Mt. =o is the hat worn by Lincoln when |
tones of scfiness and swostpess,
#tiomn of Andorra, we have an |
Yow more respected than among these
here, and whe, being at Asheville, near.
1, was inddbed to como over, declares
that Qualla is the most beautifully ro’
interesting people he has ever met, yet
stout wamen as to nding to diminish |
‘where “‘it is a poor rule that won't work |
* and stripes that yan roond | 1% Inaty
if one.
vogue a few years ago. A skirt of such
appearance more than one wi »1d believe |
4 canis wz tue ¥pe § cos oil Ties genie
3 2 Bi pd cn Ld af 10%
3 Bat ba hm the pr os srt waltiog.
My tresosrey agin wii § see.
Fopiant 1 bavw beard strains of mine
het foste 1 amrny mg go, ;
Pot soca mtie ppin ss cangil lem
To chant t ove now, soft und jor
Eheari on oid story tamigha, tue,
Ths: memory His Wited 36 5+:
7 Of poet that bats destiny
Tust cr ander Tonprs pan diy
Pre soe an 007 slot of 4 BC
JA vous] that sank fu tw wg
Bot saTe iz The perbor of Lenin
A adr suitor boy valle for tw,
1 stem in dreams ior Lis footers
1 abmnoat ony see Bid wile amd
As ix its from my brart
"An pointe rae {0 Lis apie
‘0 Time, | am weary of travel
ite’ pariiway be ously for one
And broods thet whisper ab ioe
Seem 0d with a yoioe roo the ma
And nove 1 am thred—e0 tired —
And some night I'l liz dowa to fee
And rears vill | wakes in the morning
Im penne in the home of the blest.
- Ligne te Babey Farugworia.
The fercsming Habit
- No two persons hear exactly alike. | ©
The bhouman internal ear is best de- |
scribed by likening it to a grasd piano. |
That inetrument bas a key for every |
pote; the human enr has a porve fila- |
‘ment for every tone and its variations. | rv
Taut isa
Some glace LIVE Seva 00. |
taves, some have eight; some have bet- |
ter tome in ome portion of the keyboard |
Exactiy oo with the | ~~
Same poreons beir aceite |
iy; they catch sounds that to others are |
Did I say for every toe
mistake.
than in another.
haman ear.
but silence. Some (nes strike the ear
drum, but dre not conveyed to the
brain becucss their corresponding
perve filament is missing. We know
of defective bezring, but we do not ap
pi» cur knowledge to cur reascuing
when we are stating our opinions or im-
pressions. To sane a high note is a
positive pain, avd to suchears a soai-
ing soprano will do nothing but shriek
Others will detest the lower tones, An-
imals are moved out of their wonted
caly be tho sound of coridin noles,
It should La cor endeavor to cultivate
A low
tone is the voion of comfort and conse
lation, of despest, most eacred emotion.
Our society women should do all they
ean to connteract the screaming babiz
of Americans. — Di Vernon in San
Francisco News. Letter. :
THE RESU jn RRECTION.
Cardinal Gibbons Suyy Nature Suggests [is
Reality.
Nature itself sagwests the réaiity of a res
grrection. The winter and the spring are s
lively figure of our dents ard restirraction
We have observed daring the past winter
bow the rivers were foszens and motion les:
the branches of 1h» trees became sapliss and
Jenfless; the flowers of the field were with
ered: the Lirds of the air had ceased tocheet
Bs with their song All nature was silent
beneath Ler pail of snow. But now in the
spring. the sun's beat yuickens sil things—
the river glides once niore free in its chan
pel, fresh buds and leaves elothe the life
Jess branches, the faded grass puts on a
fresher, tenderer green: Sowers bloom zgrin,
and Vtirds come forth from their winter hid
ing places to chant aguin their Matis and
evening song to their Crestor.
Im adl this what a striking gare we have
of death and resurrection’ Christ Jesus
whois called the Sun of Justice will exer
cise upon our bodies the same infinence
- which the material sun exerts on visible
sod crested objects When he shall come
in dread majesty to judge the world, be will
raine to Jife all that were ded The blood
frozen within us by the icy baad of death
will again flow in eur veins by the vivify
ing inflgence of the Son of Cod Those
bones upon which the rains and snows of
centuries shail have fallen will sand eres
and be-clothed with flesh, even as the trees
of the forest with lenves and that voice
‘which was hushed in siience will agiic find
utterance and be ever afterward engaged in
singing the praises of the Almighty nt
matters nol whether our bodies were buried
in consecrated gronad or east into the ocean
to become the foud of fickes or whether Gur
bones are ielt to siesch in the desert, or
whether our Sesh was reduced to ashes and |
cast to the four winds of heaven: these scat
Served parts will again be gathered togethes
by the Omizipotent, for be who ereated as
out of nothing can form ws again. “It is
easter,” says Tertullidn, “to remade from}
oid malerial than to create anew.
© It Signifies a New Bonnet.
Tofiveeighths of the feminine wold Eas
tertime means bonnets. Outof the storxy
days of March, back of the ashen pallor of
Lent, between the garlands of flora! profa
sion that ede k the brightness of 1 he day.
starts into ilfe the peeriess conception of a
pew bonnet, to “‘dazzie when the sun is
down and rob the world of rest.” A wom
an may forget to pray. but she wil! sot for
ng pisa for a new bonnet all ‘hrough
t. And when Easter morning dawns
is Is not by the devoutness of her mood nor
the sametity of her mind that yu: may
mark ber from afar, but by the newness
and the freshness of ber bonnet As she
sits in her pew on the glorified and biessed
day it is not her gentle air of piety nor the
downcast glance of her pensive eye that at
tracts your attention wo much as the sump
tous satisfaction that rewards the glanee
that scknowiedges the peerless perfection |
of ber hone. =
Easter Weddings
A gunn * £0F OTA 81 iagin ia AD epi
thalas ins walkins ap the aisle before the
bride i» nn pew avd very besutiful Easter
riainmient for Fas
Caristeaing parties
ming very important funetions ip
+f ertertaining. - Roman Cuthoiics
of them »o anxious for the salva
tion of the little new soul that they have
their children baptized as soon as posible,
but others pur off this important és~emony
until mamma can go to
little master is J weeks old. Then friends
‘are invited to the. ceremony very mich in
this fashion:
“Mr. apd Mrs. Hamilton request ‘the
of your company at the baptism
hn christening
pleasure
‘of gheir Infant daughter at the catnedral
Monday, March 30, at 12 ¢'clock. At home
aftertheceremaony, 14 West Ellicott square ”
church, when |
fof years, and who, anil
A poder Cd, ron eve oA me
: po ar, snd
oii nh fai
a3 pase
1 3 £ gen rad,
2% pared rod i
“hon pews of Yh du
wl etininy
12% mon pnd would |
easily sn prin
Cus or two of ihe wen
” od awry ar vie old
up gh be Sled dary
eo 4
bras vowinos
i Tse wyiud
WASH i
gh iratiwir
og owes TF omeis
Does any om
wil + F Lin ehow
ia ne alaonh zt
of raiser in Ake Puce of
he rrding provioited ms nit #
pore 1 ihe jnride of f the |
BL
4 nay pions of soe], arch |
=n Yun cer the sping, nod ©
cd the jesiber linivg of the
ve of steel. Tie other |
Le Knee way znd then |
There, Sotng mal, wee
tas grant thiogs of tbe |
sige rd
gsr]
ihe waline om pled
yar ito om Be Or sryrisngs
ral Loom air, tes |
week a triad trip
be things of the ge.’
‘Anybody else want §
y Lo waw Oofre a
am De wrrled he
the toiegw of {he i
8
#14 han axl et
weinoes |r
any 28 or th itig
ore will be ie ins 42."
) argmered to have grest
w of his iden, and be
u's shoes Then :
his beg
nines he bad
een wie Bad thelr shoss fis od all
bo old man’s ides, thongh they
tx 10 Lhe suocess of his stock
y wey the spring lemons (5
$s over the roagh
‘re om Title extra clastic
Now York Sun
Irs nt Table, .
Siok that a oh. 3 shaded he
those It is oid roough 10
wanupany of its elders, and
im sont ode of tabk: manners that
BG re nod can change in any way
Int 'o hard F™ averonme the habits of child
bod, even tua gh the asmocinticns of Youth
are entinety differents from those that left
thelr mark on the first yours of existenon.
T hese og to instill correct demeanor one
must begin when the Sutiy mu cain is unfold
ing and ro weptive
No one enn estimate Low vor mech a
person Is + Julged by the sort of oondoot
Daih, ehniarreeinng the prosaic eating and
drinking thet Is part of the daily routine.
The gresrfult handling of a fork, the dainty
way of sipping one’s soup, the knowledge
of wizat thie, St and the other table or
Bament is for, Flan) & ME OF Woman at
one tw being Hom 4 to good society and is
the greatest ely to the awkward and the
A
Xo matter how lovely 8 woman may bee,
If she eats with her knife the illusion is
dispelled. and, no matter bow great ar bon:
orabls the man, if be will persist in drink.
ing out of hix ssuorr bis fame counts for
Baugh. §
It in the little things of life that cither
songdomn or clevate os in the opinion of
Othe ri. £0 iabic: manners are as essential
{he ol seation of a gentleman or
TAR aa thodeenes Humaf thonght
nang
x 350 ott r cannot bet x carotid with her
eid in this particular. Teachers of danc:
nr and deportment may come in jater
ars Lol the Gre rudinenis of table efi
ovald te eRgnis
sits in Lieh ehalr and does not
’ a fork fo Tt & Spoon + — Philadelphin
Times
Frapee Wins Her First Foathail Gane.
Foetal bis suddenly bechane excending-
ar poplar ia Pracec, and there is no un-
Ge sax ty shown with regard to the
reanh woys which are somewhat necessary.
There are many capital clubs, and » gune
siways draws a very inrge number of spec-
tators, who take adeep interest in the prog-
ress of the doings. On Monday last there
wes an ihternational garse played at Becon
les Bruyeres between tho English Roslyn
Park Aud 1nd the Stade Francais The
play was ail through very spirited on both
siden, “ot the lisue, certainly due to the
great smartiess of the French, was in their
favor, the soure of the Stade Francais he-
ing three tries (nine points) to three tries
{eight points) This is the first game of
football wan by a Fresch team, and the
victory was welcomed by great and
lonzed cheering, in which ish
French voices equally joined. — London
Canrs Journal. nh
Servival — own Superstition.
The old theory that lighted fires in the
streets had power to drive away a pesti-
lence has long been exploded, but the mayor
of Bordeanx evidently believes there ame
‘occasions when public fires of this Lind
may be used with advantage. It nppears | oc
that there is much poverty just now in
Bordeaux. as, alas, elsewhere, and the
mayor, being seized with pity for the con
ition of the unemployed, has had huge
coal fires placed in certain ‘parts of the
city during the moent severe weather. The
fires, which were piaced, of course, only
in the poor r quarters, gave much satisfac:
tion, and thousands availed they wscives of
them to warn themselves: while sme peo-
ple even Ai their cooling by thew — Loy
don Now's :
It Makes the Hair Grow,
Thirteen miles southeast of San Piepan,
Cal. is the locasica of a spring whose wa |
ters have the wendsr{ al power of restoring
the hair to badd soudps. We quote a state
ment made dondirning it by the California
board of benith “We pmst acknowlsdge
that this water, from the evidence that has
been Lroaught before us has made hair
grow oi scalps that wore éatirely bald. Of
this we have bad sevoral examples on per-
sons whom we have known for a namber
- after they had
used the waters of this spring, had givin
up all hope of ever agsin having a full §
head of hair "—=2 Lands Republic
pifmey COND, |
ring a joint stock compuoy te |
Ci wl It i fod soy where 2 more royire
«1 while yet the |
pro- |
and
Templars.
Pat she gave nae tn sawwer.
gee
Bo bas — ws ed iat,
Hehe I take bios or eave hind
AY ey Teed Be in oa.
Be: haw erdirn sl ands :
i bt % hopes be wines 4 Ams.
114d by oes hey?
hors
Is bs vob, sa
Hr mn pores
At he Xiee Daew . Mooting:
A rave meeting is sauch the same all]
“the world over, snd the Nice gathering)
{ can hoard! ¥ oe called the SXaEpiion.
There is the same noisy crowd and
{ exish at the ruleray stotinn— he races
! are bela it 20 Vir antes few milled onl
of Niew groper—and the tawiliar Yim) |
| of beggars. bind, bait, ad and or
iso, as realy w ith curses ax Llessdings-—all |
| te way [roam the stating to the conmes
Toe three curd tri ver, the fortom |
! teller and the whole Loutherhood of the
| ring. cach with bag and board, the lad
tor bearing an English name, as a rojy.
{ave tv be seem, each in his appro] {
| pri inte pice.
§ greater tezularity and brillisnce and ;
- The san susy shine -
i the landscape with ite: slim rows o
encaiy pis trees Jook wore delicate am
fragile th an 3 wa are scciistomed to, bo
od wera ian 251 bas the aptearancs of th
EE ; :
it a charmiog lida: conrse at Ly
: Var, avd in fue weathie it would b
sina ive
Sem Peis & 15
8 ig ay
afer oF
rn
Le BA
ol |
4 broth in the preg rene be
aenetimes dio Ho So subtelznt ial lopaeieh
ding them for their noxtof Kin | Vietop
¢ Bayes, aged 44, was suppoasd to be one of
| the mest destitate sod almoworthy —
| @ats of Joinville Pont, where he dred
na bowel by night and begppsl on thy
i rons by day. For the post wiek he ha
disappear from sight, and tho
having bern communicated with, went ¢
Fie But, burst opens the door, as there wa
nt answer to thelr knocks. and found He
yet dond on the foor inside. His bod
showed no marks of foul play, and it wa
clear that the man had did suddenly fron
boart discise. In a dirty cupboard of hi
misershie roor: was {0 snd a parcel of ban
notes amounting in valge to £720 Th
mendicant’s dog was hieprd howling In th
hanger, and it chokod ital! enting a Jam)
of broad thrown to ft hy ae picutaen;
London Telegraph. 2
She DA Her Part.
Edith I hate that Mr. Wilson. ,
Sadin—Why, what has happened? :
thought yu liked hisn over v5 much
Edith— He said I coukiy t whistle, and)
Just to show him [ couli 1 puckered ug
my mouth, just as sweet and round, and
what ad you think by did?
Sadie (1d y—How should I know
Edith Well, 7ae little fool Jom het im
whistle — Boston Home Journal
A few men were discussing the prog}
rss of edveation in this country.
“Tone doing a good deal of talking
bare.” said one, “hat ['il bet any mm
f1n this crowd a pew hat that bers i
London there are at least 50,000 per}
suns who cunt speak a word of English. *
The crowd wis staggered at first, bay
recovered in a moment, and hat bet
were made. Then it wus sagyested tha
supe one should go after the statistics
“Before yeu do that.” ssid the mm
very coolly, “1 want fo bet £1 apiec
all round that there are twice that num
ber that an’t read and write.”
- Again the crowd feit the pressure o
a bloat, Lat it rallied soon, and ever
man whe had a sovereign put it up
The newpaper man stood to win eight
Bits and £8. The man to get the sta
tistics was abot to start.
“Hold on,’ said the man with
iron nerve.
“Tell ms.’ "was the unnanimoos com
®and,
"Babies nodercne year, n athe re
Py
140.000.
Hext May Wed “Mie 1 Miske!.
New Yomk, Jan. 13.--It is ander
stood that Charles Hoyt will marry
Carcline Miskei, the. beautiful Jeading
ady of the "A Temperance Town’
SNpay Samana
A Key That Wetgha Seven | Pounds.
An old and curious key and lock are at
Fleet strvet. London. The key
seven pounds, is 18 inches long, and, an
like other keys, it wasi not made for the
Tock. On the contrary, the lock wad
made for it. Both key and lock have
been in nie since the crusades, the chureb
itwelf having been built by the Knights |
English as She Is Written.
The following interesting communi
| cation wis received by a prominent sil
vir house a few days ago:
Dear Sir { rite this Day of lord 386i wish b
act as an spencers for Your in 19s country 4p
sel Silver "Weard for you Please send med ont
long and | will Sen ia wrared ai once Ocal
Fla — — ——— riter.
It is to besaid that no jeweler of thal
town bears the name of the “miter. Vet
Jewelers’ Circular.
i
i.
+ Bivnse. with a Joop there sipnnd a Hine
ordlar . The animal wae half mad wit)
tached to the door of "Pemple church, it]
: ! nites near the houses of S30. They Ba
‘told ‘us at the office that the vans woul 1
8
ga
3
hd
9
Hi
Hi
Riv
|
| ud had 12 miles to come and 38 he
| rasmed the night before 7:10 didn’t ser
like 1 Balt bad Moff st it £5
1s “A men came down sd jocated €
| bons, Gnd then the tors head vans ear
| and barked 5p to the walk in front.
asiis de of the Bouse thers was 1 dei
| way which ran back past he roar of ©
: oval gras plat There was nove §
morh rod in this driveway, which w
nid designed for four bores teams, b
. when the roar Tan came down the dedve
| ewan his leaders and came in «wi &
{the large confidencé of aman whole 8
good team and knows Bow to handle it
i Be rounded the oval and salted wi th
his temm beled toward the street & of
the warend of thavan on a line wi th
i the rear of {he hones When the ve 28
were all in position, the horses Ww»
| Wiamkeoted, and then the men were vend v
“There were six men altogithes, 8 3d
| they were all povaful adults od
{men The hoose war a 31, story Qor on
| Anne The men stripped it in oti od os
aid withoot any foss or osmsooti on
| whatever. At 930 the last posilock sar p-
pied. om the Tast an door, and the driv
pers awanted to their coats aud hagl od
‘ont into the road oes more in
‘tine ‘Them all bands settled down in
their seats awd everything was ready Sor
the start The great arks wore vegy
| barry now, and it was po light work $0
ee then. There was 3 little
cune plavging st the ett, bot they
were good teams every one and they
soon had the vans is wwtion and afte:
that they walks” “Ah them as
thongh they wer wor om whoels
A few morents ln. or we ssw then ones
more ont on the main road, sveing now
toward the city.
“Four hours later we caught sight of
them again We were aen on the train’
bound for the city spd approaching pear
it. We saw the vias on a road at sone
little distance from the railroad They
were a8 well closed up as 8 wagon train
woubl be vaeder escort in an enemy's
country and moving forward
“Net very long afterward we ood
on thr steps in the land of brick and
mora and saw the procession, «ill well
closed np appear uronnd the corner. They
cine op ot a trot It eck a little more
time to unload thas to Joad bot not
- moch Soon we beard the last padiock
empty vans. Once more the procession
lined uy moved off and disappeared.
“And left us to settle It 5 some
thing of a jr to settle, as those who
have tried it kmow, but if anything
could make that work seems lighter it
would be the exhilaration of moving in
the modern way. * "New York Sen.
joking:
ly remarked ro the generul who a
tachelor:
“My dear general, ou want So Bosome.
less excited, and,’ pointing to the Ia
dies, he added, ‘yea ought to mary.
“I beg your muijesty’s pardon,’ re
torted the general, “bat I beg fo be ex-
: A yieng witetuds roung em-
copying the best minds of a nation as
conservative as the German. The writes.
Alay, sftempts to show that woman is
aot created for man, but for her enlling. -
and to work ont ber own desiny os
equal terms with man, Hence all eduaes-
A statoe of the angel ‘Moroni sar
mounts the capstone of the tower of the
: Mormon temple at Salt Lake City.
, tigam is of giymntic proporticns, he
ing 12 fect 31 inches in height It re
minds one of a pictore of Gabtiel blow
ing the trunpet on the last day and is
suppised to represent the Mormon angel
| bringing the gospel to the children of -
‘men. The incandescent lamp alvive the
angel's head is 322 feet froin the pave
nent belcw. —S . Louis Regmblic. |
ia An Anthem :
This definition of an anthem: is ac
crindited to u British workmen. Under
taking to expinin the meaning of the
word to an inquiring friend he began.
“Well, if I said ‘Bring mw a pickax, "
that won!d mot be an anthem, but if 1
said Bripg—bring—bring--bring me
the pick—-pick—pivkax—bring me the
pick-—pickas’ that woald be an an-
Shans” en New York Tinien %]
BakssErtany Ha
snap again, this time on the last of the
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