Sn es pe Sopa A Vl aN SAE bas an opportunity, while at Annapolis, to stady the methods by which Americans train their fight- np ‘Dewey’ '. advice to the Germans to keep out of the line of fire was a gen- ~ tlemanly but significant way of tell: ing them to mind their own business, PEAS 8 yen porate The axports from Hamlin ire, Ger. muny, to Bouth and Central America amounted in 1897 to about $43,000,- 00, 3 the imports to about 870. n Sfteen : years Ruesia has sent 634,000 persons to Siberia, fully 100,- | 000 relatives of prisoners having ac- the exiles of their own is sstimaied tbat Bolivia now ices 4,000,000 pounds of rubber and that the total annual pro- by the Ameriven people in y. right. In view of a reunited na- we ean afford it, says the Bt. Louis Harttord (Conn. ) ‘Courant pro- i against the elevation of the and Stripes over the Connecticut ter , The first duty to the it says, is to honor it; a State a is not an institution which con- ts honor either on its inmates or On : ee © day “that Spain sus. ® her entire official salary list in der to obtain money for war pur. e the subscriptions for the Ameri- | the bonds six times over-bid, a contrast that speaks elo. ly of the difference between the and their resources. ought to make surely ts and downpouring ns more us 10 8 youthful hero than the vedo or the flying shell. He need the fortitude of the Roman the stability of Roman cement to through it all withont injury, the New York Tribune. On | Barrett, He was vounyg, and had, as raging flood of glory Miltindes, all his trophies, wonld bob upand | like the autamn leaf. The best the heroic Hobson is that he I survive unscarred the violence of | Britain bas the most power- vy inthe world. Untold millions en spent in its building, and ‘brain of the island kingdom n devoted to its improvement, jased with the behavior of navy sod openly ac- the superiority of its the British admiralty has op looking to the o adoption of t our public Qfficers Liave at If the civilized travel. s not to be Seyprived of ac. od with 2378 in 1868. The itself spends $200,000,000 in ‘and nearly $100,000,000 on aty-two miles of canals, which her an uninterrupted inland water je of 2389 miles. and experis de- that a hundred miles of canal in hwest would give her another les of waterway there. Infact, s almost possible to connect the of the Rockies with the Bi. The ship we ride the world fa sniffs the LTE, And throws its head gpon the hurricane, Quivering like a war-borse when ranks form Wreh stream of bugles and the shout of Neighe to the chalienge of the thunder. holt, Apd charges in the squadrons of ihe sarge, rian me Ee eee iat Re ROIBAAEINL tiago in the forefront of battle of Captain Wi By 8. OFXeit, of Roosevelt's rough known as “‘Buskey” O'Netl fn Arizons where he lived, and some years ago he wrote a number of frontier stories for the Argo. nant. He was 8 typieal frontiersman, asd did much for the upbulldisg of the his death shows that he has iad down his life sheerfuily for the country that he in the Argonast is here paprintad 1 NY ITUATED in Sonth Eastern Arizona there in a tract of land large eno#gh to make ac Fast. known as the Reseservation, and veillance would oceceasionally relax, and then there would be an outbreak. wonld come in crowds, as if from all with snowy whiteness in the dazzhing tanned your face would be heavy with the smell of human carrion. the old days, the Indians obtained the silver out of which they wonld maid bullets when they conld not get lead. | Msoy a man has his lifes searching | for these mines, and many more will, doubtless do the ssme before they are discovered. This, thongh, will never their lives iu their hands and wager them against wealth. Of these four men, one was Harry men should have, a girl with whom he he was engaged to be married. It was . probably this more than asything else | that made him so desirous of growing | suddenly rich by flading the treasnre | mines of the Apusebes, for, when a young man is traly in love, bis great wealth of the ladies and possess the power of the Czar to augment his in portance in [the eyes of the woman in was so with Harry Barrett, aad when old Jeff Bramlett, who had prospected the conntry in which they were sup | growing enthusiastic, : what was told hit, for the prospect of | ~ | great wealth is siways intosiesting the day came for the party to start out hearted of all, especially when he girl for whose sake®™e desired weet, 1 sad who stuod at the door of her father's | honse watching him, while she saw 3u 0 ti 1 ; vision the besatifal things that the’ ered the direction in which they were future had in store for them both. The! wealth that Harry might discover war | the fatare bright. If she only conld have Harry, that was sufficient, and, tarned away, humming the song he most liked, whale thinking of the pleas ures that awaited his return. had been peace on the reservation =o day unthinking of the honr that will { the undertaker, nothing is so common. place as death, while the headsmau in | time sees nothing notable in au execn- tion, save whether or not the ax finds ° | its way through oue neck easier thas | | through another. And so it is with | danger, for when it is ever present | { men grow callous to it, no matter how great it may be. 80 it was with Har. ry Barrett and his comrades. While | I'the girl who was awaiting his return might have occasionally thought of | the risks that the little party ran. the men never felt any anxiety, or, if | they did, subdued it without openly expressing it. the country thoroughly. seen no Indians, and expected none One day, though, as they sal at din. | ner, a shot came from out of the pines, and belore the ecko had died others, Old Joell Bramleti, who waa riders. Capiain (Nei! pretorrad th be community in which he dtved, and faved. One of his stories which appearad «rn Stats. It ma and open shirt were smoking from the Apache Judian. The hump it is there that the Indians of that itibe are kept un | dar thie cover of a bowlder, lie glanced der close mihitary : : or : ? in the direction from which the shots surveillance. Years ago the sar. A trail of blood wonld bas marked out toward Mexico, and the vultures over the West, to enj.y the hanqguet for them in the dead. whose bodies would glisten when first killed It is not so now, for better watch and ward is kept by the soldiers. Bat | when it was so, there were four men who went into this Apache country to prospect {or the mines from whieh, in | deter men from makiag the effort, so | long as men have the right to take | many young tien have, and as all young | |" i direction. To these, at first, | tirey replied; but when they had got sme distance from the catp where tise dead isan lay, they rose to their of the canon. The men who stood was very much in love, and to whom whom be is 50 deeplyinterected This | for these same mines for twenty years or more, caine to hit with his map of | posed to exist, Harry was not long in | and believing : The map war old, ‘asd frayed, and, faded, for many snotber man had fingered it, to his sorrow. That counted for naught, though, with Harry, When | on their search, Lie was the most light : Higa swith still greater exertion, for now | they knew that the puramit was close afraid that the open eyes were wateh- the greatest effort they coald escape, 182 them, Then one plac od Lis hand | over the beart of the outstretehed lagged behind to kiss his band to the not necessary to make hier pictures of | when he passed from her sight, she For months there had been no amors of Indian disturbances. There long that men had ceased to give its dangers a thought, as men who live 1s | the shadows of volcanoes live day after find them buried benesth its lava. To | For the first few days they found | indications of rich silver deposits —in- dications that were so rich that they | made a permanent camp, intending to examine the ledges that criss-crossed » T hey had away it was followed by n score of! TWO AND FATE. sabrings its way with fury of revolt, one, taking the (disabled limb in his { hand, moved it gently back and forth, And lashed with exuitation as & scourge, | and in an instant moved bis Land far Who wopld not rather fouoder in the Co Rght Than to have known the glory of tray? Av. ta po dowa In armor and In might, With snr last breath to dominate MAY. To sing amid the mad seas cimshing spear And with the sry of buples in our #4 a Piekard Hovey in Cont Toliet SANS EA BARI APNE Ft bY . SOasTE BBD BWI 8S feel the ends of ‘ap on the thigh, AY an “Yes, it's broken there the bones 5 said A BR ST 3 A VENTURE WITH DEATH. eile leis lie iet et le tie {The dupatetn teil of the death at San. © A ER i ol wit i oh CHALE AT ATs ta have led them toe nntold wealth, dropped the tin piste from which he was eating-—on the groand. Not | abraptiy. Lat so gently that it hardly made a soand. and, ss it fed], be ap- : parently made an effort to rise to his feet, only to fall face forward iffto the fires. wheres still simmerad the oneaten | | portion of the noonday meal their feet nnharmed, snd rashed to seek cover behind trees and bowlders, picking up the arms that casie nearest | As Barrett passed the to their hands. fire, he drew from it the body of the old man. ashes and blood, while the long bar eontact with the coals body and relaxed mw told how sad. denly death had come. 4a one side from the fre, and sank an had come, bint conld see nothing. As he watehed, there wonld cecanionally rise puffs of white smoke, followed by the report of a rifle, and be wonld fire Lin retarn. Through the whole after. nown pever ones did he see an Indian's face or form After the first surprise, the direction of affairs. “Hold your szemnanition, and wait the settlements. There are too many of them for ns to stand off,” he said, . man beside it grew cold and rigd | The blood no | flowed from the | ? longer a the man who had made the remsrk, ashamed that the true feelings which | ronypted it had been perceived by the | prop p- than the best street on the south mde.” : woand, { arertaken the outstrefehed form be side him {ment gradanlly crept back keeping as . efosely together as possible in the direction of the canon behind them. i opts a flash of light from » rifle fired feet, and as rapidly and noiselesily as possible retreated to the canon. No | one spoke, but each koew thal the fap, he sud: : facer of iscomrads were hike his own, behind again: but, after ali, he was wail, with them fife was sweeter and dearer than it conld possibhiy have heen to him. {The three men kept clomely together, i as if relying on one another for assist ance. As they climbed down through the canon they remained on its duk pert side, In order to avoid any pos aarrow footway still more dengerons Far behind them they conld see on the mountain side a blaze of light and | they knew that it was & signal of thew .ercape. It made them pask forwsed . behund and that it wonld be only with as the Iadisns had probably discov. going, and would endeavor to inter. i with renewed haste, the nian in the rear suddenly shipped and feil, carry. ing with him bis two comrades. The { apnve and said, 10 amswer to i fall was bat a slight one The little i pebbles 32 had started had bardly ceased rolling before two of the men wera a7 n on their foot, pueking up| Harry tried to join them, | and rose to his feet, but only to fall) LAheir arms. san. “What's the matter?” asked one of bis comrades. “I think © bave sprained my leg somve way,’ he replied. | bat when he was on his fest, his left { leg seemed to be without life, so far as | i may control of the runscles of it was ! concerned, | paralyzed. A oold sweat broke ont { all over him, and when one of the men | who supported him said, “This is The three remaining men sprang to The fare was coversd with | As the young man threw the body the three had called to ses one an. other, and were rejoiced to know that | sunlight, so that you could see them none was hit. The oldest had taken ! dotting the plains from afar off, while | the hot winds from the south that | until to night, and then we will break | : back for the canon aad try to reach and so through the long afternoon they | waited. The fire they had kindled burned ont, and the body of the depd | When the wind wonid blow | the ashes from the coals left by the { fire, they wonid still glow, as if in { mockery of the quick death that had | Je . quik dou a: We will stay > ith yOu, aad we may L yo! pull through.” When darkness had come, the three | | glowing with that feeling of gratitade | eat regret is that he does not own the din ly that comes ouly when 8 man has es. eaped almost oertain death. They | would never see the man they hind joft 1d and alone in the world, while they | sible discovery, althongh it inade their | 3 ae i posed it in the shadow, looked as if copt them. As they pashed forward | shonld be so #ith The two men asstatad him to arise, | He tried to step for-| (ward, but it drigged as if it were thers by his wide in th thelr PUrERErs werd offer a poorer targs! Pmt yon Bong with oar & “Na, He nes ste he f get throng the ranon. Youwill bare Lito legva me. HT tried. they would attack ans before davhreas Ax he contd never {erannd hig waist with its gleaming row of esriridges, and handed i 10 one of the men, after taking the re. | volver from its hoister “Well, we ain't going to leave you,” said one of Hix comrades, | “Boys, that is nonsense,” said the | dizgabled man, | and clear now tiiat it surprised ham, i to die. By to-morrow morning, yon and safe, but my time bas come.” in silence. that nothing wonld be gained by their | staying. new hope. the mention of the girl's name, there gaia came nto the voice lhe unsteady ‘strangeness that was there when he | (first told them that Le was hurt, whije, 1a the moonlight, they conid ser thers were tears in kis eyes. For an instant the wounded man wax | silent, and then be added: “You had better take my arms with you, you may need them ' As he finished speaking, he cocked fhe revolver and placed it to his head; bat before he sould press the trigger, “Don't do that” “Yes, you are right The report “1 didn’t mean it that way,” said wounded man. “Don’t kill yourself. The wonnded man shook his head : quiet] y. The tone of the speaker told He took request, his heavy hunting knife, and watohing him saw his eyes close and Isis lips moving in prayer, but enly for an instant, and then, “Good-by, bs. 1 hops you will Eg through. There was not a quaver in his vows. As ho finished the men turned away so ax not to ses Bite, easly ssaviog softly, as if speaking to himself. “rood bye, Barry As they stead looking down the moonlit canon, they could hear behind them. where the wonuded man lay, ‘soands as if he were choking and gasping for bresth longer hivard them, they looked toward (where he ay When they no The white breast, where the open bosom of the abirt ex- stained with ink whers the blood had ‘ponehed it. anid across it lay the nerveless hand that bad beld the knife For ait instas? the two men ivoked down on the body with awe, as if farvn shnblerinie as he folt how warm it was It sseaed anuaturad that i a dead man, Fora moment he Geld it there, and then, ' wiping from ton the shirt of the dead that stained il, he his com rade’s look, ia almost a whisper, as { fearing to be heard by the spirit that had just departed: “Yes he iz dead” And then the two survivors took he desd man's arose and pushed for. f ward into the night toward the settie- man the bis wil | ments, leaving behigd them in the | stillaess of the moonlit enon, a white, upturned face to await the early dawn, {when the Indians wonld slash it so {that even the girl in the settiement, {who had so often kissed 1, would not i know it. aH EA ANS PAA Crystailiziag Flavwers. Charming souvenirs of pleasant sum- . mer outings are ferns and Sowers pre- } served by ecrystalliziog them. The | best method is to arrange some haskes | i tough!" it sounded like a sentence of | forea of any desired pattern with plia : death. “Can't you move it at ali?’ asked | one of his comrades, his voice betray- ing his desire to be once more on his way toward the settlements. They were still standing where they had | i fallen in the moonlight, aad owe of them noticing it, led the way back in- to the shadow, “No. I am afraad itis broken.” an swered the disabled man sould hardly resommize it. The dead ‘man whom they bad left lying baes : by the « camp- fire seemed very near to him, and in his fear and pain he won. {dered if the Indians had mutilated him mueh, i The two men laid Lim down. aud ‘ ble copper wire and wrap them with fery jsaves, violets, iu fwet any ans of a delicate character —do nes attempt full-blown roses—and sini pound to a alice of 2311 the solute has cogs His voirs sonndal strange and changed He In Wil Hasan : 3 " Aormed 1109 have a ecomupiately enveiog y te move carefaliv and allow 11 to dnp or . twelve Bones. These basketsare vary | heantiinl asd wil lous preserva d fre-Lness, 1£7G0OD ROADS NOTES, © His voice was so calm “Yon ean do me no good by staying, and there will bo threes instead of one | “Boys, tell Mattie how it was, and rive her what | have got in town.” AS him, as plsin asx words could have | done, that there was but one chance | . Oocasionlly. ont of the darkness, wonld | of escape { for sor of them : . from the belt the man mechanically | handed him, in compliance with his | ( town, and on a stroet traveled neces leased back full length in the shadow | | a shame and a disgrace to suy city or | community that claims to be civilized | We pay out thousands of dollurs a year in charities to people who arp able to without looking | work, and who should be made to them ia a sointion of alam of cae water Wait un a. | Ro 2 ” I Fd CICA FIER ERA DECI) Better Pahbiv Bonds Needind, Some well informed sathapity | the sablect of publis roads states hat | i there are 1.500.000 mites of public ver whieh | in the United States ¢ ate atpomnt of BF OEE O00 yrlit is banisd annnalis : ihistanoe haaled at eight {miles 31 ie fioarsd that the total ost | of Baaling fre t annually over the ' pahlie r rele in the United States 1» | 81.000, 0 NEY, or 2: per ton With naiforealy send Pu * roi 1% 1s cloimed that the soxt of hanling freight from the farm to the depot Lomght not to be more than FE 600, |, or 3600 00, 000 Tess thay what it is at present This difference is! anid this he nobuckied the belt from strongly emphasized by the amthonity from whom we quate when he states that it ia eqmivaient to the yiarly in teraat on B20 O00 AGO 000 of three por | sent Croversment bonds, spd adds that with only one half of this almost meoneceivably vast amount eviry pub he road in the United States pould be redwaiit Thera (x food for serene thought in the fSenres which are thas given. Pab jie road are the arteries of the sation | jact ax much as are the railway sys ean be within resch of the settlements | temx, and the prosperity of the nation must necessarily depend, in a large! The two men looked at each other | After all, it was hut troe measure, upon the masner in whieh it cares for its pubite roads One of the greatest sonress of strength which the! They had both risen to their | feet like men who had been given 8 old Roman empire possessed wan de! rived from ita magnificent pain roads, many of which are as sell preserved to-day ainiat as they were in the time of the Cevars. Earopean travelers at he present tise state that Germany indebted to her pable roads move a to anything els for musk of the | imperial stability whish to-day belongs | to her, Whale the penalty of bad pulibie roads | is visited primarily spon the farmer, | it affects altimately every industrial, | commercial and agrionitural interest - of the nation. . the public roads are 1a fairly rood con- | | dition, bat in the South and West they | "are in extremely bad condition, and one of the men grasped his hand and | exelaimed In the North and East’ steps must speedily be taken to over. | come this evil if either section expects | to make the most of its possibilities — | Atlanta Constitation, wonld betray ng said the wounded | man, as he lowered the weapon. “(ve mae that knife, instead ” A Field Por As hte tion, | Mighway agitation sesms to be sadly | | needed in Lawrence, Kan. The Jour | . nal of that city, in a recent ivsue, says that “there is 30 conntry rom| leading to the city but is in better condition The worst street of all is Mawsachn. . setts, ard on it the city has done po | work ‘‘through the park in years, save to drag the scraper through it scoasion- ally. Through that park road the mud | has been from one to three feet deep, | (and 8 leadsd wagon could sot go) through it. This on as street within | Mock of the business portion of the sarily by a large namber of people, | work, and if they were put on the roads | the amannt given {hem each your wonid ¢ keep soma of the stroets, at least, in good condition Almost hail a renee was settled and to-day the roads and dreets ara in far worse pondition | than when the fest settler came.” Steass Wagons For Wesvy Loads. Londen Engineering describes the | recent trial of steam wagons to carry beavy loads on ordinary thorough. ‘ fares «x encouraging, though the - matter still requires much study and At one of the triaiy the loads carried by the diferent wagous varied from two to Sve tons, and the sxperiment conditions of the test were that tae vehicles sheanld be able to zo any- whera that similar ones drawn by horses sonld go The test was moderately well sustained. and if was demonstrated that there ‘were una B® ohstacies to the nilimate practien: = success of the smploviment of stesm wagons on eommon roads, bat tht general improvement of the latter waald have a good deal to do with The Movement in Califorain. The good roads movement ting a strong hold In old Sous Conaty, whieh is becoming ane of the mast paogre snive connties in ihe Biate, The live people there are oppossd to balding any wore wooden bridges and are in favor of ron stone enlverts wid fils where possible, and iron or stone | bridges where there must be bridges Tt vey favor patting the roads in charge the county surveyor, spr nkiing the oo thoroughly and eulorciog the wide-tize law. The ey are divided in Spiuien about issuing honds, bat seem | to be agreed thatthe cities should help buald the conuntry roads on seconut of the benefit of the trade which they brisy. Fan Francisco Chronicle. Ttemns. The sprinkl ling cart is a daily ne cessity if maesdata roads are to baer | wa.ntained at their best, ganze. Into these tie to the bottom | | the Zgveas vou wish to preserve— | Cw equail vy good farms, not far suart, tu Pent naylvania, werd raowitlt is The pas 68 a macadam ror uinely deliars an acre and the R i eomid RFE SAXLY of Willa a HH. Rhawn, of cae of ti ve eariy ami ae 3 xd udiie CRO Rab, piped, He was the mavemen? was lnrgely in. fering the prides log rail. dosed states tha deal i ie bram-workers, AA : It i» time something | | practical was dose comtary has come and gone since Law. | A PHILPPINE v VOLCANO, | Paring Exploration of fh of the Cryter of Taek By Dr. Keane, the Arctic Herve. Professor Charles W_ Rhields writes cof “The Arctic Monnment Named for | Tennyson by Dr. Keve, sod ine dentally gives a slketéh of the latter in the Contary: Professor Saields says. It was at Lazon, the largest of the ~ Pialippine Tdlands, that hus sdventar- Lom apivit, thoagh wader a scientifie impulse, passed the lets of pru- dence iy lus far-famed exploration of Tasl, a voleano on the Pacific const of the island, in a region inhabited only by savages. Crossing over to the cap ital sity of the island, daring one of tae long delays of Chiness diplomacy, he prosured an escort of natives from the Archbishop of Manila (by means of letters from American pre- lates wipich he had secured before leaving home, snd, in company with his friend, Baron Loe, a relative of Metternich, penetrated the conutry to the asphaltic lake in which the island voleans is sitasted. Both gentlemen st first descended together uatil they reached a ‘precipice overhanging the cavernous galf of the crater, when the baron saw further pr to be im possible. But the doctor, in spite of the remonstrances of the whole party, insist] upon being lowered over the ledge by means of & rope made of ‘bamboos, and held in the hands of ‘thie natives, under the haron's diree- tions, until be reached the bottosr, two hundred fest below. Loosing Bumsell from the cond, he foreed him way downward through the salphar- ous vapors, over the hot ashes, to the | green, boiling lake, dipped his speci. ‘men betile into its walsrs, retu to the rope, several times sinmbling, almost stifled, and with ous of hie | bets charred to a coal, bat mcoseded in snails fastening himself, and was bhanled op by his as sistant, and received into their bands exbansted and almost insennble, ‘ Remedies brought from the neighbor. {ing hermitage were applied, and he was wo far restored that they coud proces on their journey. Bat ramors | spread before them among the pygmy | savages on the isiand of the profane in- vasion which hed been made into the mysteries of the Tael, and an songry { mob gathersd about them, which was ouly dispersed by one or two pistol- shots and the timely arrival of the padme. The trophies of the expedi- | tion were some valnable mineral spee- imens, a bottle of suiphar waters, » series of graphic views, from recoliee- tion, in his sketeh-bock, and s written | deseription of the voleans by one of the friurs, which, after msny wander. ings, was pat in his hands as be sat at the home dinper-table, twelve years | afterward. Are Summ— Now Colder? The opinion which one has often | hearid sxpressed by old people that m {the days of their “youth the winters | were colder and the summers warmer | doa they are now is subjected to the test sf carefully examined statistios of | temperature by Dr. Buchan in a paper, ‘which is published mn the Soottish | Meteorological Joursal forthe present year. : : ! Comparison is made betwesn the | averyupe temperatures of each month for the last forty years, snd the aver- | age for a longer period for which «ta tistios ares available, ranging from 134 | years st Greenwich and 133 years at | Fdinburgh to sevanty years at Oxford, mixty-flve at Guernsey, and sixty at | Aberdeen, The result of the comparison of the longer period of observations with the shorter seams to show that ang ago the Aaetnations of temiveralire were mors marked than they are sow, but (though in some places the sumniers | are colder now than they wers st the “oud of the last contary, in otiers it is past the opposite, This somparing ‘fae oksarvations at Greenwich with thous at Edinbargh, and they extend zenrly over the same time, Jaunary is 1.4 depress warmer on the short aver age of forty years than an ie wong average of 133 years at Edinburgh, bat it is only 0.2 of a degree warmer at Gircsnwich over the average of 154 yeurs. June is eoider by 0.4 of a de- ares on tho long average st Eduuburgh, bat it is warmer by (03 at Greenwich, nd. while November in warmer by (4 of a degree at Edinburgh, aud De ceinber warmer by 0.8 cu the long average, November is colder by v8 [ amd December colder by 0.8 on the lang averaze at Gresuwieh Thera sre, therslure, messarable changes in the course of years, bat they do not sem fo pO & general Csooiinie down of our summers and a geitigg warmer in the winter. They are wore likely to be explained by toond peculiarities — London Graphite. aA i RA RI A Batis Miner's Cat Sarr. An interesting story is told by » miner of Batte, Mont, who owas a vepturessms pet eat. This eat it is (emid, olimbs ap and down the shaft, throagh drifts, cross-outs, slopes snd leicels, sand lives with the mn Cthe mune, who feed it from their dinner pails. One day the owner took the eat into the orebonse amd thoreaghiy washed its hair, thea be pusned the wash water and declares he assayed it for 8 an. P 4 oF Rex i v Widaws. At the time of last year's report by tle Pension Department there were wiz widows of Revolutionary soldiers dn the roll (OM these six, J0MF were the widows of Virginia soldiers, and three of the six were named Xaney, a femaly designation Bot BOW IN 20 gen eral nee as it was a cenlury age OF the {lres others abe war asmed Father, one Rebeces aod the other Mary Military Yorvioe in Yopeie. ¢ Apan.ard over the aye of Dine teen ta Habie to be called into malle tary service for threes years, By the payment of 3300 Le can escape mili tary daty.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers