Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1891, Page 7

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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. AUGUST 22, 1891-SIXTEEN PAGES. 7 had better get some more sleep, and Bradley| ‘And I can be consul?” ‘aid Stedman, cheer- | without any incident, and in the morning Gor- | once at the flag and knocked it down and then FEMININE FASHIONS. k h and a3 NOT MOURNING FOR THE BUFFALO. MRS. MAY ENDS A MUTINY. ‘ou keep wate! tell us as soon as e don’s impatience great that he | steamed away and has not been seen since. Two ——— newyears cone o ote (deuzas: Tell them what I propose to | walked ont to where the villagers were in the huts were upset, That is all the damage done. | Features of Dress That Will Be Retained by | A Retired Army Omicer Who Sees No Call to | She Comes on Deck, Revolver in Hand, and a Ne sir,” said the sailor. do.” comp ond pemoden half way up the mountain, | The battery consisted of the one brass cannon Redfern for the Fall. Lament Him. Takes Command of the Vessel. ‘a the could see no of man-of-war. | before mentioned. No either native or treaty with Messenwah and Messenwah turns | ki le guttured closer to bear. "” | He came back more tefdees then before sad | foreiguer beg Yeon cases Tie Heese | For the majority of summer travelers the tomorrow it looks as if our day would be al Kings looked st one another in | Keonly disappointed. “If something Gon't hap- | recidenta‘are two sailors, "Tie Americas tert | 88800 is about at an end in these last days of Pretty well filed up,” said ‘Albert, aa they felt silence for a moment, and then both began to| pen before 8 o'clock, Stedman,” he said, “our | dents are the man who is sending you | August and playtime must soon give way tothe ir way back in the darkness, speak af once, their’ counseliors interrupting | second will have to consistof glitter- | this cable and myself. ‘was | ordinary working routine, but the favored few ‘What do you intend to do?” asked the secre- and mumbling their guttural comments | ing and a lengthy interview with | quite true in su but perhape misleading | to whom life 1s one long holiday and duties are tary, with a voice of some concern. with anxious earnestness. It did not take | King by himself. aid detail. I made it 90 I fally expected | tar fewer than fleasures will take good care to “Idon't know,” Albert answered, gravely, | them very long to see that they wereall of one Pay, CUTPTbuS anf, Messen wah much more to immediately. Not ec ents show iy from the blackness of the night. “It looks as if mind, and reathe more freely. They believed the new | has ee or corer Anas oe paway city unt mellow we were getting ahead just alittle too fast, and dropped on one knee and his hands | king had succeeded in itening the German | that is the exact situation up to date. dian summer has drawn to ¢ close and the first preg wt Welt "he Suoon' tin cise’ cometea bon ——- oy telling them thet the Germans asked after : opener ouse, “let's try to ing ,” he pause, “what doeshe Newport, Taxedo, BPreceaion event we can't be dram ma aad | Phar agree," he explained, for it was but | bed andoubtedly already landed and had prob | ay Yo Thu * beat vor walk in front of it.” Ai tomime to ‘Albert. “They salute you as «| bly killed the three messen; “He doesn’t say anything, itedman. tone of confidence in their ears the two diplo- | Faler; they ‘are calling you ‘Tullawax, which Noe then,” be said, with pleased = ha hae fae ging,” said Stedman: °T| to sojourn the modistes are now preparing mats went soundly asleep again. meang, pescomaker. "Fg Peacemaker, that is tion as Stedman and he seated themeolves the |in the same breath. He bent toward his in- | #0me pretty light-weight wool eostames which The light of the rising sun filled the room | your title. Ihope you will deserve it, but I | cable office at $ o'clock, ,“open it up and let's | strament and Gordon raised himself from his | will appropriately fill in the interval before the and the parrots were chattering outside when | think they might have got a more appropriate | find out what sortof's hit we have made.” | chair and stood beside him ashe read it off. | first fall novelties are due. These gowns are Bradley woke him again. one.” Stedman's face as the answer came in to his | The two oung men hardly breathed in the in-| but little different ex: in material from “Thay are sending « boat ashore, sir.” he| ‘Then I'm really king.” demanded Albert | first message of greeting was one of marked | tensity of thes imvereot Mies “which ace Moor te Sever! eines mame said, excitedly and filled with the imporiance | decidedly, “and I can aotwhat Tplease? They | disapproval { “Dear Stedman,” he slowly read aloud. “You | The plain bell skirt, without of the occasion. ‘She's a German man-of-war | give m power? Quick, do they?” “What's he say 2” demanded Gordon. +» | 8nd your young friendare a couple of fools. If | be too firmly established in pt and one of the new model. A beautiful boat, “Yes, but don’t do it,” begged Stedman, ‘He hasn't done anything but swear yet, you bed allowed me to send you the messages | abandoned yet awhile, and lo Jo. man-of-war that made the | Stedman turned and spoke rapidly to the two | but From the Kanees City Timon. From the Chicago Beraid. ee The of the buffalo has been| Mrs. Capt. May planted ber shapely feet on fore the fruitful occasion of much unreasonable | the monkey rail of the barge Senator Blood yesterday afternoon, and, while sbe clung to the shrouds of the main rigging with one hand, lamentation. An eastern papor recently gave | she leveled « revolver at a crew of mutin- Up scolumn or more to one of the mourners, | ous sailors with the other. The men, beaded Probably « woman, who sorrowed with much | by the mate, were going ashore in obedience Satisfaction because of the disappearance of | to the dictates of two delegates from the large game from the face of the earth. The | Seamen's Union. They had gone into the cabin ead fate of the hippopotamus, the rhinoceros | and forecastle, packed their bags, collected and other useful quadrnpeds is often be- | their sou'westers, oilskine and boots and were preparing to throw them over the rail on the ho ocfored tae nee cee srmpathy- Those | Geck when pretty Mra. Capt May came out of one mapeenee pw pe the galley with «loaded six-shooter and reso lutely commanded them to stay aboard. The little woman eprang upon the rail with the agility of cat, and from that position, where she readily commanded a full eweep of the ‘I am tolerably i barge’s main deck, she issued her orders to the sir.for her lines were laid in Glasgow, and {| “and just remember I am American consul answered Stedman grimly. ‘awaiting transmission here you would not have | fect ues with skirt attachment and neqerebyen yiveley tag the cowering sailors” can tell that, no matter what fiag she flies. | now, and that is a much superior being to # ‘What's he swearing about?” sent me such a confession of guilt as you have | sleeves full. at the armhole bid fair to pearance of the bobtail car. When I first The mate, who bad bis bundle on the rail, ¥ 2 the | crowned monarch; you said so yourself. ‘He wants to know why I left the cable yee- | just done. You had better leave Opeki at once, | retain’ their Yogue until the new year at | the plains those animals bounded and abounded | Permitted it to drop to the deck while he bim- Albert took a cold bath and dressed leisurely. | y,A!beFt did not reply to this, but ram scross | torday._, He sare he has been trying to call me | or take to the hills. Tam afraid Phave placed | east. In this’ gown of Redfern’ ‘dosiga | in countiose oan ye ee er eluuk encod eked te eee be him: a é iL foll by the two Bradle: ‘The | Up for the last t enty-four hours; ever since I | you in a somewhat compromisi osition with Then ‘he, made. Bradley jr. who Wad. lepi ee eee sent my message at $ o'clock. ‘The home office | the company, which ie’ unfertusace, especially 5 when down the Republican valley for | be found ‘tion from Mra. Capt. May's re- reakfast, and the two] «-Hoist that flag beside the brass cannon,” he | i jumping mad and want me discharged. | as, if 1 am not mistaken, they owe you some itand miles we s herd of the enormous bo: volver. Another sailor, who evidently thought mi a t, ‘8 u the same valley. ‘the plucky little woman intended to shoot, joung men ate it and drank their coffee com- | cried, “‘and ready to salute it when I| They wont do that, though,” he said in &| back pay. You should have been wiser in your about thee milesan bowr af ce ‘about four, | dived precipitately over the opposite rail into fortably and with an air of confidence that " ~, grasped the hal- | Cheerfal aside, “because they ‘haven't paid me | day and bought Yokobumes Cann eee ee 2 + | the aitky river, which ‘be towey «d CATCHING THE DEPARTING CERWANG. —— their servants if it did not deceive eee "had sella to | my salary for the last eight months. He says— | when it was clown to five omits, as youre truly teongh, going in opposite directions, "Bull ws wuped ta vy mselves. ——— ise and tl all the great Scott—this will please you Gordon—he | did. You are not, Stedman, as bright # boy as " But when they came down the path emoking | citemont of the mareof one ancivel, “Dred. | saye there has been over 200 queries for matter | Sitso, *u.are BOF, Stedm inst eereenion Me and swinging their sticks and turned into the | ley, sr., stood by the brass oannon blowing | from Ee all over the United States and | respondent, he has queered himself for life. plaza the ir composursleft them like « mask and | gently'on his lighted, fuso. The Peacemaker | rom Enrope. Your paper best them on the | You see, my dear Stedman, after I bad sent off = y st where they stood. The plaza was | took his a ‘our first met ds for further HIMSELF KIN 6 bone oar tee mativen, gubtend ba wheseie the halyards of the German flag in Pig te ye sage and demands for two hands, gave % tug, and down Francisco reporters aud the telegrams are | details came pouring in and I could not get groups and depressed by fear and wonder. On | came the red, white sal bine pigss of bunt. | coming in every minute and. thoy fave been | sores soa wire to sup & one side were crowded all thé Messonwah war- | ing, and the next moment young Bradley sent | siving him fits for not answering them, and he | arty of sending some ca myself.” my, tora and as silent and disturbed as | the stars and stripes up in their place. As it | Says that I'ma fool. He wants as much as you| “Great heavens!" gasped Gordon. Stedman WRITTEN FOR THE EVENING STAR BY | the Opekians. In the middle of the plazasome | rose Bradiey'sbrasa cannon barked merrily like | Can send and all the details. He says all the | grew very white under his tan and the perspi- twenty sailors were busily rearing and bracing | 9 little bulldog and the Peacemaker cheered. Peto will have to put ‘By Yokohama Cable | ration rolled down his cheeks. “Your message RICHARD HARDING DAVIS. a tall flagstaff that they had shaped from a ou cheer, Stedman?” shouted | Company’ on the top of each message they | was so general in its nature that it allowed m: royal palm, and they did this as unconcernedly | Gordon. “Teli those people to cheer for all | Print, and that that is advertising the —— 'Y | imagination full play, and I sent on what and as contemptuously and with as much indif-| they are worth. What sort of an American |4nd is sending the stock up. It rose fifteen | thought would please the papers, and, what Continued. ference to the strange groups on either side. of | consul are you?” Stedman raised hi oints on ‘Change in San Francisco today, and, h more important to me, would adver- rpear vorsst 7 Sect san sling’ oe ed egal viSic dont wont to haat about tae old | awe bees dene le oe’ feta ret Tr NT TELL ANYTHING.” | coast with no a seagul . I de ave been doing while waiting for materi bo ‘said ee Sin ie shin on about them. As Albert and Stedman came | mouth ‘open, while his eyes stared at the re-| Company,” snapped out Gordon, pacing up| from you. Not ving a clear {des of the di- —— wil ‘ough | upon the scene the fiagpole was in place treating boat of the German man-of-war. In | nd down in despair. ““Whatam I to do, that's | mensions of the population of Opeki it is ‘pos. Some foreign ship of war has settled on| the halyards hung from it with a little budle of the stern sheets of this boat the stout German | What I want to know? Here I have the | sible that I have done you and your newspaper ; 5 a & dost ashore and they're made « treaty | dom He was terribly excited andangry. “It | the great man-of-war, as though giving an or-|™yself and the only man ‘on the spot and | not like Euglish, aid. 100 with this old chap and forced him to sell | # ¢#7,enough to see what they mean. Theyare | der. The natives looked from Stedman to the | nothing to say. I'd just like to know how long | old Ollypybus and his palace going through the form of annexing this island in hie cheering | that German idiot inten his birthright form mess of porridge. Now, | to the other lands of the German government. | Cost nd even Gordon stopped ess bak nee the herd, | could. ‘Still another one jumped into the bold which almost filled the valley. Any one who| through the main hatch and the rest were feels that he is a born mathematiciancen figure | *kulking forward when Delegate Burns of out how long that herd was. Compute it for | the union caught Mre. Capt. Mays right hand Tica, Saint: | Sto deren than botad te, bus Mise Gaoe Ba more force than he vat Mire. > — whose left hand was free, brought it into yer sport; a| Play with terrific effect on Burns’ face and Pisinsman never did it except for food and | neck. She slso screamed eo loudly that she ides. Occasionally some English tourist or | tracted a large crowd of men and boys to the all-around Nimrod would come out west,armed | Yesel, which lay at the Keith elevator in the byte complete arsenal of riffes and shot guns ovo —. and Ct Ty the 0 dock an assault on @ woman, most cumbersome make and elaborate comebor a iat te on on 0 women, stupid bulls, have the hides carefally dreamed, | Fell strect police station. ra A presume, exhibit them with appropriate | When oihicers reached the Senator Blood blood-cardling yarna in the balie of his an- | they promptly placed Delegate Burns and bis cestors. ner, James Jones, under arrest, and were “I think that, with the exception of a few | taking them away, when Mrs. Capt. May went sentimentalists and naturalists, few sce any ited — She told the reason to t that the buff longer n= cumbers the earth. He Tequired about three ary oe od ing = os — ti Ameri © mstal aL 10" or echelons A een ae eae Ene | enki bon ctamn estar inaaig tee Pome Jess, his robe not half as asa Minnesota | *tation cell. < blanket and five times as heavy, and his habits | __“That it would, captain, ma'am,” seid Burns, ppls them I took the ib- p and begging for | friend some injustice. I killed off about 100 knees for it, anda cable all to | American tesidents, 200 Lg re , ith dynamite an to wait before he | shelled the city, destroying some hundred thou- helling this town and killing people. | sand dollars’ worth of property, and then I were inconsistes . No, | With alow bow to his courageous adversary that's just like those monarchical pirates—im- | They are robbing old Oliypybus of what is his. | very lone to wat, was’ puff of white it me in a most absurd position.” | waited anziously for pr Aiea to faebauen: wo mighl ascomity beaees the tan at an | sents baie ep histones eee een posing upon a poor old black.” Old Bradley bave not even given him a silver watch | smoke and a flash and @ loud report, and message for you, Gordon,” said | tiate what I had said. This he has most un- looked up at him impudently. for it. This is the sort of thing that sends my | across the water cam: it black ball, ski trees that once stood where now are fields of | While the barge’s crew stood on deck and ~ c iP “Not at all,” said Gordon, “it's quite ait- | "Porting blood to fever hest. ping lightly through end. over the waves ae cornand wheat. The buffalo served his pur-| Watched the queer scene insilence. pose, fulfilled his destiny and has simply, like eee — wi a Ls we a y . ts a a ae bo Samy digas be gr eugy own ges La , with business-like calm. It reads: kindly failed todo. Iam very sorry, but much fever hen ens aghtanr Goanox, ,Correepondent: Try more so for him then for myvelf, for 1, my dear ‘The was in low facing the 7 merican consul. First message O. at | friend, in 3 : ferent with us; we don't want to rob him ot | pi Meee Seeks ties eden las and on equal easily as a flat stone thrown by a boy. Itseemed 8 nd, have cabled on to a man in San Fran- lowly. Atleast it e slowly | the country; can take all you send. ' Give | cisco,who is one of the directors of the Yokoha- Ollypybus or to avnex their land. All we want { number of each of their consuls. The common | f0,Come Nery slowly. Atleast it came slowly h h fe to see that it was coming | Names of foreign residents massacred and | ma Cable Company, to sell all my stock, which a peace and Mrs. Capt. May reigned supreme to do is to improve it and have the fun of | danger had made them lie down with one an- directly toward the brass cannon. ‘The Brade | fuller account blowing up palace. » | be has done at ‘Toa, and be is keeping the a aboard the Senator Blood. Harry May, the running it for them and meddling in their af- | other in peace, S s Gasp of relief | jeys saw this certainly, for they ran as fast as ‘“Doper.” | money until Icome. And I leave Octavia this cu: THAN HIS UNCLE fairs of sta’ Well, Stedman,” he said, “what | as Gordon strode into room with no cere- ve "1 —_— husband of the plucky defender of the tiene tor Blood, in whose name the commander's Out im Virginia City = Pawnbroker Meets | pipers were issued, was a silent though per. More Than His Match. turbed spectator ‘of the remarkable scene Agood story. told in the Jewelers’ Weekly, | of which his wife was the heroine. M comes from Virginia City, Nev. A miner whose | May resumed command after the police wext a ‘the ald and kept on running. The ball| The expression on Gordo face as this| afternoon to reap my just reward. I am in shall we do?” Stedman said that the best and | mony and greeted them with a curt wave of the | cacyit the cunnon ender its mouth and tossed | 2 lowly read off to him had changed | about $20,000 on vour iitile war and Ifeel grate- ouly thing to do was to threaten to take the | han: it in the air, knocking the flag pole into a dozen | from one of gratilied pride to one of puzzled | ful. So much so that I will inform you that the watch away from Messenwab, but togive him ‘Now. then, Stedman, be quick,” he said. i through two of the palm- | consternation. ship-of-war Kaiser has arrived at San Francisco, & revolver besides, which would make a friend | “Explain to them what this means; tell them | Pieces and passing on through two of the pal “What's Le mean by foreign residents mas-| for which port sho sailed directly from Opeki of him for life, and to keep him supplied with | that I will them; that Iam anxious to | “vered huts. ee Gordon,” an, | sacred and blowing up of palace?” asked Sted-| Her captain has explained the real situation away. The union delegates wanted the Sena- cartridges only as long as he behaved himself, | see that Olfypybus is not cheated; that we will aerate Se) at bem I ream Asoking over hia seotlaes) ausioamty: Ione spo anake every amen’ Sor the accl: name was Grey and who was a generous, inno- | 1"*J;, The union delegates wanted the Sena- and then to make him understand that as| do all we can for them.” Outside on the shore | ‘But Gordon's face was radiant and wild. “Who is Dodge?” dental indignity shown to our flag. He says he cent fellow, singularly careless about personal | ing for #25 per month, while the regular union Ollypybus had not given hisconsent to the loss | second boat's crew had landed = group of} “Piring on us,” he cried. “On us. Don’t| ‘Dodge is the night editor,” said Gordon | aimed at the cannon which was trained on his adornment, was captured one day by @ pawn-| wagesare £2 per day. The sailors were will- of the island Messenwah’s agreement or treaty | officers and a file of marines. They walked in o Dest ‘tend? Wi nervously. “They must have read my message | vessel and which was first fired on him, But r oT Qf Whatever it was did not stand, and that he | all the dignity of full dress across the plaza to | [7 sunt to? They have red a the a csene | wrong. You sent just what I pave you dideee | vowel and know, my dear Stedman, that before | *!! these details are noticeable, It is made for better come down the next day early in | the tlagpole and formed in line on the three | fag Don't you sce what that meant? It means | You?” he asked. Sestesd our one belonging to the several | ong ‘informal luncheons, ‘Creat serie ane Tri mcuning and have s general consultation. | sides of it with the marines facing the sea. The | war. A great international war. And 1 ama| “Of course I did,” said Stedman indignantly. | powers mentioned im my Termes. bulletin ed material and the skirt, which just ress upon — Fay og and ——— agreed — — —— captain with @ prayer a war correspondent at last.” He ran upto Sted- ae, & Ce the L roses ha revive — Moa at full speed to prin} the the ground, has a foot border com; of ng! eir proposition, and was given is han younger marine, were as indif- i ahybody, @ jordon. “I hope ther | butchery o| rei dents. A wo! “ rerolver and shown how to shoot it, while the | ferent to the frightewed natives’ about thems as | m2 82d seized him by the arm so tightly that y - baritrinad, $0 the pete broker and taken into his store. The man of ing enough to go for the difference and they pledges showed him & “genuine” diamond | will probably have to wait until Mrs: Capt. May Ting, and finally persuaded him to buy it for | returns to her household duties and bebies be- 150. Grey was rather proud of his ring and | fore they will again essay to desert the Senator was showing it off. The pawnbroker, who | Blood. y : > ign . diagonal rows of white and gold mixed braid, | loved a joke and knew Grey would take one "ake eee r t burt. are not improving on my account, What am I | dear friend, to the wise is sufficient. 4 i it good naturedly, called him to his store and FRAU BISMARCK. crime hangers Rome bp eng orem here] Coenen pactperre hed bac! : “By 8 o'clock,” he said, “they will know | to do? | This is getting awful. “I'll have to go | debted to you to the extent of $20, artnet “ihe wake Tre fhe and sia ETAT OS Geter arene we RnPPY over them ase Elan piepelereany Sem a back | in the office what has happened. ‘The country | out and kill a few people myself. Oh, why | return I give you this kindly adv Bnea by « braided girdle, and the somewhat ‘M; ee ks oe Oe ‘The Ruler of the Man of Blood and Iron. mond.” Grey laughed and replied: “Well, noone will be the wher, eh?” ‘Then | , Prince Bismarck has been made much of during his visit to Kissingen, the students of the he walked over toa jeweler and had a $250 ing . diamond set in the same ring, paying $20 for | town taking especial delight in honoring the its use. He then visited the pawnbroker and | “man of blood and iron.” Outwardly there is no indication that the German “statesman out “Look here, I'll bet you $200 that stone is a > ; genuine diamond.” The pawnbroker examined | ©! * Job” i pining; indeed, there is little time the stone and took the wager. Then they both | for him to do so, for he is @ very busy man, went to the jeweler, who pronounced it a dia- | With his large brewery and pottery, of mond, and the pawnbroker was out €200. He | which are profitable enterprises. In his travels was sur |. Grey then had the puste stone | Prince Birmarck is accompanied by his wife, tthe Pawnbroker accosted Grey «| Those practical nature was a sore irritation to few days afterward and said be would give him the old Emperor William, who would have been a rd. b will know it tomorrow morning when the paper | don't that Dutch captain begin to do some-| Opeki. If there is no other way, 6 ‘And now tomorrow,” said Stedman, “‘un-| kept their eyes front and the German captain | J\'on the street, people will read it all over the | thing. _ What sort of a fighter does he call him- leave Opeki.” high straight collar, braided to match, rises from derstand you are all to come down unarmed | opened his prayer book. The debate in the | Won; per emperor will hear of it at break- | self? He would shoot at a school of porpoises. Me a le tasted tee a rolled shawl collar, which is trimmed like the and sign a treaty with great Ollypybus,in which | bungalow was over. aed fast, the President will eable for further par. | He’s not—” ‘The sun that night, as it, sank below the line | skirt. A soft silk tio of light canary yellow ts be will agree to keep to one-balf of the island if | | “If you only had your uniform, sir,” said | tieuisrs, “He will get them. It isthe chance of | , “Here comes # message to Leonard T. Travis, | where the clouds seemed to touch the sea, carelessly knotted beneath this lower collar. you keep to yours, and there must be no more iy, Sr., miserably. a lifetime and we are on the spot.” | Stedman | American consul, Opeki,” read Stedman. It's| merged them both into a blazing, blood red | This other model ie 4 new walking howe, chick ‘wars or goat stealing of this gentleman on my ‘This is a little bit too serious for uniforms | did not hear this; he was watching the broad | Taining m sel curtain and colored the most wonderfulspectacle | may be used for calling. It iso very light- Fen fast ns the eens uP and put holes in | and bicycle medals,” said Gordon. “And these | sido of the ship to sce another pad of wiite| Send full dotails ‘massacre of American | that te noseo ct Opeki had ever seen. Six | weight cloth, a grayish green in color. ‘The The gat” “yegentleman on the left did with | men are used to gold lace.” He pushed his | Smoke, but there came no such sign. ‘The reo | citizens by German sailors. great ships-of-war, stretching out over a league | hack of the ckirt hes Bie Font.” _Messenwah and his warriors prom-| way through the natives and stepped confi- | tow ‘tonts were seiecd. sheng Gand of z SzcneTany or —. of sen, stood blackly out against the red back-| ground, while the front has an add box-pleated tocome carly and saluted reverently as | dently across the plaza The youngest middy | back smoke from tho funnel’ a creaking of |. “Great Scott,” gasped Stedman, interrupting round, rolli ising and leaping forward, | founce’ of bengaline overlapping, tawiykes chains sounding faintly across the water and | bimself and gazing at his instrument with hor- | flinging black smoke end burning sparks up into | braided in dark green and silver and caught the ship started at ees sua moved out a Soagore err % pesehaee gwen Cesena = oS ae peice tone ae panting | with large, silver-rimmed buttons at the top. of the harbor. The Opekians and the Hillmen ||. se 7 e living creatures in their race for revonge. | ‘The basque is cut with sharpot vei fell on their knees, or to dancing as best suited | his hair and burying hisface in his hands.” “I| From the south came a threc-dceked vosect a | Zhe basque is cut with sharper points over a fall sleeves have narrow braided cuffs. The rdly more than touches the ° & ilk ruffle wh e $100 for the ring. Grey demanded and re- | Pleased had the wife of bis prime minister pos- their sense of relief, but Gordon shook his | bave got to kill some of them now. great island of floating steel with a flag as red me Fen eee en eter on | celveA Gia. tx tio comes cf oem benina | eaead © Seek. Show poms end and head. “They are only going to land the ma-| _ Again Stedman read impressively like the|as the angry sky behind it snapping in the | jaPend V plastrom thelateor oct ween draped | om the purchaser and said he would bet €200 | cheeses, ‘The | princess, | ee a rines,” be said; “‘perbaps they are going to the | Voice of fate. wind. To the south of it plunged two long, lows | folds of the silk which meet below the tng | the diamond was paste. The pawnbroker ac- | ber husban treats him os were a spot they stopped at before or to take up an- |_| ALPERT Gonpox, Correspondent: Is Col. Thos. | lying torpedo boats flying the French tri-color, and conceal the fastenings. The hat is a | Ceptedthe challenge and the same jeweler pro- | demi-god. , ee. —— it —_ other position further out at sea. They will | Bradley commanding native forces at Opeki | and still further to the north towered three mag-| Tuscan siraw of the enn’ color ‘as the gown | nounced it paste. notwithstanding the fame of ~e . land men and then shell the town, and the land | Col. Sir Thomas Kent-Bradley, of Crimean war | nificent hulls of the white squadron, Vengeance | and it is trimmed with ribbes “Good God!” the pawnbroker “when | little has been written, has, in spite of—possi- forces will march here and co-operate with the | fame? was written on every curve and line, on each | velvet and a largo silver — butterfly {ou have the ring it's « dia and when I | bly itshould be said because of—her domes- ‘vessel and everybody will be taken pri: oe any London Times, San Fran- | straining engine rod and on each polished gun = = ite ae J ¥ ee a. always « me pee =. killed. We have the center of the sta, 0 Press Club. muzzle. “Oh,” said Grey, coolly, “God is kind luence over the great man, are making history. .Go on! go on!” said Gerdon, desperately. | And in front of these a clumsy fishing boat looks sfter the devout in ¥ City.” most a the EE Sa “Ed rather read it than make it,” said Stod- | “I’m getting used to it now. Go on!” rose and fell on each passing wave. Two sail- tcsasinipeiiallibiaaoaananial mon eel unable forgive = man. “You've got us in # senseless. silly posi- | | AMeRICAN Conscr, Opeki: Home ors sat in thé wtern, holding the ope and tiller, ‘The Clink of the Ice. derstand either his want a 4 tion, Gordon, and « mighty-unpleasant one. }désites you furnish fist of names of English | and fa the bow;with their backs turned forever Notably fond of music, I dote on asweeter tone _ | $x chancellor's services or} And for no reason that I can see except to make | Tesidents killed during shelling of toward Opekt, stood two young boys, their ‘Than ever the harp has uttered or ever the late has po ae hey man who ly Germany copy for your paper.” ship-of-war Kaiser, and estimate of amonnt of | faces lit by the glow of the setting sun and known. what it is today. sae dae Ze B= ell those people to get their things to- | Property destroyed. < stirred by the sight of the great engines of When I wake at five in the morning with a feeling a _ oggemnne be die on west side BEF Zz | ther,” said Gordon, “‘and march back out of | _ StovoHTox, office of English consul, San | war plunging past them om their errand of in my head a : of sixty, any o hate. 0 quant Sgure, = EZ nger into the woods. Tell Ollypybus I am | Francisco. vengcance. Suggestive excesses before I retired to cheek bones, and is almost as tall a yoman r grins to fx things all right; I don't know just |, “Stedman,” cried Gordon, Jumping to his} ‘stedman,” said the elder boy, in an awe- 0" When a small but fterce voicano vexes my sore | S230 Bi ncn ep de nd ey yw yet, but I will, and then come after me as | feet,"“there's a mistake here somewhere. Those | struck whisper, and with a wave of bis band, inside a pte By en ghee SS — ~— quickly as you can to the cable office. I’ve got | people cannot all have made my message read | “we have not lived in vain.” And my throat and mouth are furred with a fur | O50 4 ‘energetic in her tastes, as well as her to tell the paper all about it.” It was 8 o'clock | like that. Some one has altero: nd now I (The End.] eg eaten ion, she resembles hor husband in refusing before the “chap at Octavia” answered Sted- | have got to make these people here live up to Serpette Sree ee nn arn i man’s signalling. Then Stedman delivered | that message, whether they like being massacred Lowell's Last Poem. Gqdon's message and immediately shut of all |and blown up or not. Don't answer any of | From the New York Tribane. rene es ee eee eal | ies Gtac eet bcigne Tae things| The last poem of Mr. Lowell's which was ion bi “ai have quieted down a bit and that I'll send i is his “ question him. Gordon dictated his message in | bave quieted down ight of the astives 204 | published in an American journal is his “My " i és Brook.” It appeared in the New York Ledger's op asi Opeki, June 22. the village and their encampment at the foot = PI : “Athy oclock mae pot pent aoa and | of the mountains and of ms party we have | Christmas issue, December 18, 1890, in a four- officers of the German man-of-war Kaiser went | ent out to look for the German vessel,and now | page souvenir appendix, and was illustrated senses fall iy At the ciink of the foe in the pitcher the boy is pitched in aeomewhat high and loud key up the hall! meas | conversation is of @ mous poensteee acl On, isit the gaudy ballet with features I cannot | #™using kind and sho bas a vast fund of stories ‘bain e ‘That Kindles in virlle bosoms that slow but de- | lating. vouring flame? ‘On certain subjects, nevertheless, the old Oris it the midnigat supper eaten before we retire | princess bas the most peculiar notions—notions A a bh say, That 1 DI tteth all atire? i ‘ EX through the ceremouy of annexing this inland | Y4m going out to make something happen. | with four eS Oris tue cheery magnuus—nay, Tit not chide the non tine Rabeon ae meer paar in i the G ror, = le Meza. Mr. Low << A MAN STOOD BY HIS BED their right to do so on an agreement rade wise | Gordon said he would be gone for two hours | as ia England te. the summer of 18a6 an ‘That makes the meekest mortal anxious to whoop | the sublect of draughts and the moment she - a leader of a wandering tribe known as Hill- | at least, and as Stedman did not feel capable of | subsequently rovised it on seeing the proofs. ‘things up! sets her foot in a house, no matter if it is on ‘Yet, what the cause soever, relief comes when we | warmest day in summer, she insists that every I door and window shall at once be hermetically closed. Gorden and bis three companions marched ; saw him coming and nudged the one noxt him | men. King Ollypybus, the present. monarch | receiving any more nerve-stirring messages, he | Tho a: Larval an for it was $1,000. The poem wall away together very prondly and stiffly. with his elbow. and he nudged the next, but | of Opeki, delegated his authority, as also did | cut off all connection with Octavia by saying, | excited varying opinions among critics, but all Relief with that rapturous clinkety-clink that “Do you know how I feel,” said Gordon. ane of the officers moved, because the captain | the leader of the Hillmen, to King Tallaman or | ‘“Good-by for two hours,” and running away | praised it for its music, clinketh alike for all! to read. T've dreamt of the ery farnace that was one vast vulk of dame, Andthatl was Abed-nego swallowing in that ‘same; And I've dreamt I was a crater possessed of s mad re To vomit molten lava and to snort big gobs of fire; te polish and ggaceful assed Stedman. the Peacemaker, who tore down the German | from the office. He sat down on a rock on the | diction. Oliver Dyer of Mount Vernon read as I used to im the city when the} “One minute, please,” called Gordon. flag and raised that of the United States in its| beach and mopped his face with his handker- | it before the Lotos Club last December. The boys in the street were throwing snow ballsand | He stepped out into the hollow squareformed | place. At the same moment the flag was| Chief. “After a man has taken nothing more | poem is given in part below: I had to go by with a high hat on my head and | by the marines and raised his helmet to the | saluted by thebattery. This salute being mis- ing than weather reports from Octavia for MY BROOK. pretend not to know they were behind me. I | captain. taken for an attack on the Kaiser,wasanswered | year,” he soliloquized, “it's a bit disturbing | It was far up the va! eet yoga chill down my spinal column | “Do you speak English or French?” Gordon | by that vessel. Her first shot took immediate | to have all the crowned heads of Europe and | , When the vours wei y faults, rice. and I could feel that snow ball, whether it came i “ ” t, pletely destroying the entire bat their secretaries howling at vou for details of u | Earth’ burden weizhs wearily now on us both— or not. right in the small of may back. And I| “The captain lowered the book ia is hans | of tus Opetians, cutting: dew the, Aocesiers | massacre that never cumwe od At the ena of | Dut Powel toroten thot deur dap aave Fat can feel one of those men pulling his bow and T've dreamt I was Roman candies and rockets that it destroying the houses of two hours Gordon came back from the con- | Each was first-born of Eden. a morn without mate, and screamed— iy pl the arrow sticking out of my risht shoulder.” | sneefacies a ee poral cine aC the | jalate with a mass of manuscript in hie hood And cues snd the birds and the vutterdiee | v,ich stands up like an aigrette infront. Apro- | Ishort, thave dreamt the cussedest dream that | vate apartments, ge fo ee pay bee es aaah ee ce en Teey | <0 I emderstend thin” ead the yo “there was only one brass cannon and two] | “Here's 3,000 words,” ho said, desperately. | ‘Taste one perfect day ever fashioned by fate, Pos of the white gowns mentioned above, can | pat ail the tele fone wre scattered ~Syregy typed See fon na ob hneme Titles, Bat I do feel | man, trying to be very calm and patiie ten | bute,” expostulated Stedman. : “I never wrote more and said loss in my life. | No*,dreanied the sweet wonder tor us two was | women who have passed their first score and than wink — — > any be ania an a are laying claim to this land on oo of or in| “Well, that was the whole battery, wasn’t it?” | It will make them weep at the cttice. Thad to PRE neces nee " ten years continue aon white gowns coy When the spirit within that pitcher went tapping au. erkett eens to practice on goats.” | ‘8 name of the German government.” asked Gordon, ‘‘and two buts is plural. I said ago fed neck bomcaslere _— oS tere ye aie oe Geena: pear suitably apparel is question its clinkety-clink. . furniture which would be more in keeping with A e i i yuses of the people—I couldn't GLUsTe Tas reat Tejoicing when Stedman and | u cuduefahy ana Gresteah “Teas a ee a | Ae cae ote at ya ye you ger | and L bave illed it tull of prophes Tiatened and looted till muy pulses ran Wine when the answer is apparent on every side, in don told their story #0 the King and the | (houghtfully and then it. You are not an Americar: consul at themo- | trouble aliend and with interviews with myuelf | ster er, Teould eee, tegord hear, | Heir Seneral adoption. by a vast number who [nse organi Gra Sate geet: empee | Age eet be yy-|ment. Youarean underpaid agent of a cable | and the two ox-kings. The only news element | "Nigy'yoa danced theres, my aautehe gin wea deg: | are nO longer in the teens or twenties and who rd ee ee ee eo ad er i ee = have divined the art of dressing becomingly “ois often mooted—unnecessarily, one would think, f more I an Boy, why eo slow in coming with that gracious, saving cup? Oh, haste thee to the succor of the man who is See how the fce bobs up and down, asif at wildly root and fern, ¢ 7 é i ‘dash led i arraignment | bent eg Une Sin orermment tha | Hoe enn aca ty an rei | pee ht, Gorman ove coe tp mg | Bea tapers ce, |e Wie no fmge cnoray rg | neues =v ne Gorm nae cheers and shouts, and the women ran at their | does not tolerate a foreign power near her | the consulate (1 Rag 2 jpn pg cara ood. 8 the has, Stedman,” hi ae tudy ber individual coloring and affect the hen stove. ee eee eee Tar eee ee a en aea | cea uaede (nee a TRALGy ee en tenet: ening ne eon belplanis eee A, that was noone aol Aces it seems, ‘fone of white she has discovered es ‘most be- | TBe pitcous links it clinks methinks should thrill - fore. ou have made 4 A . rar 7 o A Said Gordon, “ctl would tall easter rans, | oouwahs fs an abeadlty. There ia ty ean | man (Chat's me) declares his intention st nee Going tO dor ane,” said Stedman, “T'm afraid | “ger dow us weAF prowucn, toe light-ooted | Coming, whether ivory, cream, bine, fhe new | an erring soul fa wasting “drink, and be wanta it man you are. You are too modest to do it | king with whom to treat, and he—" Sea lncet eta: ater Cele eae nc | bore ainae took cabaret hie alain Se | Abd Wine ike ht mes ucla a aks cL pare vilia TamEaeA: Neer aoa ‘and, £, the honest pitcher, t00, falls ineo aires | 2% be yourself oven if I dictated, something for you | | The captain turned to one of his oficers and | Opekians are under, the command of Capt. | to go ncar that cable. It's liko playing with « A . : 5 = give ber posticents 40 auamne atau meee” tre — ze ‘One SSaueNS Autor mec be, eid pln of | md someting, and then ater eng snuier iana gumnayoe Oar vive Weiaio er Ga, ae | mins ae maarineeea ee eee tar eee Tye Mte that I drcamed of was neverto be, ‘ellings and similer soft fabrics, a white | That fs pala form ia presently edewed with a | it A niform, “Lam thoroughly divgusted’ and | curious ‘Gordon raised i , sola, lke, sobairs sweat. Gaappuiatel. fe mover etcurend Ur tas unt | ountinaes soning tro deep, unrafed mono- bop 1 yy “aojectedly in a} “** pe unica and moungleains, “your ete | en eing a wostlar aad Sone not very long ago, who was Se ae a ee Tee ane ©] Suse. Zhe ollenr_ whtapenes am ener aed el Temes Beer aT esses cha | cbs ih tes Glee eal Dnata ore eee na Tan toe laments ack's Say ell material, such as crepe de chine or chiffon. | MAY bjeeings.be showered upon the man who first a ‘ond fortnd- ict iam, Sot then youd hve ben he | ne the mre ter monte posed Go| Oopdon” Andey something goo ndtrong|inwtrument gery an tough 1 might d-| what rou mint then ila mt ema aE jeter agar, (ie my of mak ee en Te eat sad Gat evunte Sex 0 | Sém hack out of tho indlesase abi lott bien | See ant ie SF ere See aeenaed Send | Se sa ccertng aguin.” bo explained nadiy, | PEGE a ee toca ‘To Prevent or Relieve Sunstroke. Inever have felt the cooling flood go sizsling down | ™Y aoe <4 rout deal. and L went and made pence. Still, | there with his ipe white and trembling all over eee er ake et | a rete Cetreion a bee Tug ee cued of the Stand the mosiese mat |+ Sunstroke is caused by excossire heat, and | 0 my a EC ja EE my time may coma. with indignation. He would have to hay a espec weather is “muggy.” ‘what I vowed to hymn: ey “We have « great deal on hand for tomor-| rushed back into the lines and broken the eap-| ‘“Consul, of course. Say something patriotic Se ‘Of moe | Break locse from your thraldom! “Tis only a leap: saper pine ee Popes thy = sere snshent,3 ptm On lie te ee OT, Xa fo carly. Red bo the pce na | checks oat ae eer ete sum tanned nose and | and about your determination to protect the | S02 to cond. he says, but I guem he'd better | Toei we bee euurting, june baiding four | MOTE, y of heated term than on the frst. | °°" iyrie gem et mon ae og rene cheen ow og ache : * And so the cheeks, but he was quite sure this would onl; reste of your government and al | wat ‘take Loss itement, close sleeping 004 fellows thirsty (ated ‘Rothschild, the com- still singing and rejoicing down pig aey result in his getting shot or in his being mate | Gordon bit the end of ‘his pen impatiently and ree ae ORS Tent eek Beek, Wont you sak Maecos poses in tao pad ss CHATS aout. Sie aie tee ie sa pee | with eo oe ae joan ben, the two conspirators for the peace of the | Fidiculous before the natives, and that wasal- | Waited. . “Yes, I do,” said Gordon. “I don’t want an; . 3 : : toit. ‘Itis more apt to attack those = + wpeetbeedimceeieneer) | ot ye yA of thet SSUIIE] wat to snep for the night. It seemed | Mout as bed, so he stood still for wmoment| ‘I won't be anything of the sort, Gordon,” | mot, yte ald Gordon. “T don't want any in the oun, and especially between the hours Soseenteants ouamtoanincas Be ‘of ordon ue though he had bardiy turned his | with his blood choking him end then turned | said Stedman. “You aro gotting ‘me into an | More messages than I've got, That's the est IL o'clock ‘in the imorning and 1 o'clock in the | Of the clink of the ice 1m the pitcher the boy brings = = —s earch Sige te Gooleat Side when some | and walked back to where the king and Sted- | awful lot of trouble and yourself, too. won't | Ace" Gouda gute carey gis manuscrip arorife mn On eee which the eed keer one touched him, and he saw by the light of | man were whispering together. Just ss he | say « word. cabling until the wire burns red’ hot and they Have as cool elesping rooms possible. A: ee Ses dozen, glow Sorme in the tumbler by his | turned one of the men pulled the halyards, the | --The American consul," gead Gordon, as hie | *DUDg until the wire ane S&T | Leapt bravely! Now down through the meadows | H87 #8 coo! munpeonery teligus, I? Aclicate Bedside a tall figure at its foot. ball of bunting ran up into the air, bobbed, | pencil wriggled across thé paper, “refuses to | "Those was silence in the office f tim Sy a von ts \d where there is artificial Lyd “R's me—Bradley,” wid the figure. tyitched and turned and broke into’ the folds | fay anything for publication util he has com- | while Dtodummeinceen oor eed eee time | Tathe Lind of Lost Days, whither all the binds Beat, laundrien, Sc., eve tint, the rooms is well ie owe tant Ieee tsa ith fhe Baste of « man | of the German flag. At the same moment the | manicated with the authorities at Washington, | Gordon stared dejecealysurce ton cca, | Where tie dials move backward and sephodels blow: | Ventilated, if wesking in tho tun weer alight aon cummmnensd to give atten ts Seale. wat ia s'? wt 0 Bold om him, “ex: | aritios reed thes muskets and frode volley | but from all I can learn he aympathizes en: | "This ts pretty poor tuil, Gordon,” aaia | Come Sesh your tamaansGgatn, dance agsio. ene! | Tot tee Sinck: us it abuarbe hest), stam, oe follow bis numer “There is ship of war, in the harbor.” said | “Do you see that?” eried Stedman, catching | Just rerurmet ieomy an cide ae King Ahoy want brandy.©” ne Pople AK when | TG Aemh Poaetne wo Bresalss 8" Dacgitr of | tMd,Put elds of ton the Reade wet sloth oo (att Bradley. ina whisper. “I heard her anchor | Gordon's humor, to Ollypybua “That | Tallaman, who aske him to inform the Amer “Don’t you suppose I know that?” tea | Teer, thetsedand sor thes Geetsth inwet. Domes ‘well-iced which abe sbeclenly sae. f coula” bene that foe a that oke | means that you ‘are no longer king: that | can people that the Monro doctrine will be | Gordon, “It's the vest cn "ace nectar es | TaeES Facing eeain all that wo wasted or it, check perspiration, but drink what water Sa pT - me. I could hear that if I were dead. And | strange people are coming here to take your | snsthined ns longas he rules this islaud. I| not my fault that we are not all’ dead now. I need to keep it up, as tion prevents the ae even orders on the sub- then I made sure by her ligh y t | land,tarn your people into servants and to ‘that stains,” anil Goelen: | eet ce esl Fore na | Abie Moors tn thelr exile the keys treasured stilt Being’ Se tor’s and on boot, sir. ani Tean know th “Tr | Grizg 7am Baek nto the mountaine Aro ou | Xow, eead that of quick and et avay trom | foreign resident, Git cog soceag oad | Bo Seto inketaas epesccresagier | body from being Grecheated, Have, whenever b; to submit—are to let that . ey | he Past’ ‘sweet of . - a ae Tate F toughe youd like ym of Safer ebere at eae :, = Tument before that led fu Octavia be- though, and I'l da it if something doen't hap- | 0 the prime of the the year, ome when So ep ee board Queen Victoria in Love A@nize. rdon sat up and clute! an- ” s' . when working sun. hen | Herald. see gnt oak Psy mtn Tot Sa terete Beem re aya | alan” Sees Saat ote | pert along pam, tn shiek te aive| | xu take Hows tow Goat | Bch fatigued’ do "et Sposa” tae it any of aber end ny ay Sat oak Fee Tea a don tee That there is to | afraid.” Ollypybus eried. “We do not know | grimly upon the disorder of the @. from | the waves beating on the coral reefs outeide, otal gis ; o'clock in the morning on very hot days, if the ot Ge mien ay "He did not wish to show too much youtb- | what we do.” Which the people were taking their leavo es | Stedmen raised iit bond vecome, veers om “My pillow is so hot!” is the frequent com- | York is in the oun. Ifa fealing of fatigue, dis- fa all aglow over the ful interest, but though fresh from civilization | “What do they say?” asked Gordon. auiickly as they could get their few belongings-| “He's swearing "he said. “He plaint of the tired individual who vainly secks headache or exhaustion occurs cease ‘of the crown prince of Italy to England. ‘be hed learned how far from it he was, and he | “They aay they do not know what todo.” | Hed tiontae? Could get thelr few belongings) | “He's, aw noussuse. He sea | come cool spot on which to rest ‘her fevered | work tammedsetey, ls dewm imo ehnty’ ens Which one of her granddaughters is the possi- Spach zs ky ancien | ere not gu Amen cone 4 pal aa | esther marry ta Meet en | oct tbe V0. Bae. gone app 8 Sad | end goal pare ppv cal. jote sad pour cal | We be beige ent coon os ier tas “Wake, Mr. ‘Stedman, will you?” said. be, had | fortunce end "that, this Son greasing hele | “Chango the pillows frequently,” wo are told iy tor | Sisce" a gt st) we will go and take « look at her.” writing is not what the company want’ Pn waiting for | " “I don't know where it is, ma’am.’” Iube or trinkst and give the brides “You can ‘wee nothing but the lights,” said cW net's be think Iva bert tee? ested Gor- drinks of | -\sDon't know whore Palllipe Brooks vet | sith ahes ends tear ns well we know, tor teak Deniley. c0 be left the room: “its 6 black | fore you do either of those things, don. “Does he think I pulled down the Ger. ee Ngo yn ed she gasped. ‘No'm. Never beard of him,’ was appr past of here abe bea never forgotton and Ste: from _ Ae. therefore, may | swallow. akin sponge cesponse. I’ really ‘these tokens form a part’ It would pect a of war, and came in and ‘myself pect vif rontesebces wa baer Pie peaked pn Nigh ag ag Se the body = je ln RE Se aioe foknow bow she Keope them, these * “Do you suppose it's the big cance Messen- ba m2 gt Cealoena ‘o,f be ‘Tse—and cat in slips of two inches | repped tau bevel erothereloth. PE kere See ees an Taee Go tecent [nee Bee ees ee wah spoke of "he said. Tianhe t lent eee Laan head foe bin. You ‘end about halfan inch "wide, curl these | no ise at hand, keep a eold cloth on the Ce mgt on ‘of lavender “I thought of that,” said Gordon. The three | vs yar him just what ‘Brooks?’ he. 1 where he | wonder. A ‘* perfume ee eel ied rare | Seamaemsestas comes Pm apeyacan ie et car my ean steers | Seam 2 no a plage tor Secon nah orn ite he | Jour bens oes tat wo Let eosin eee. ery comfortable pillow Belo feble, Kim tebe emoaia foro Tow Getty, Remend Reticty fn puna op She msene if that ight, At great rillian fred ‘which there ‘& constant cirou- | Seconds, or give him aromatic ‘trunk, with faded pense toma ill ore immenes inthe dak bene Some tes bonk eo Gen nea me ae ‘airand which will remain perfectly tite oC ammonta ta two feuspooafle ef we Stone whic we son's ‘diminutive ey oo ness wing ‘ange monster send to Octavia.” Gordon wrote ter, with a little sugar. man in an overwhelming farmer's bat and blue Guutas of quntalices eoulaeceges sea with just a suzgestion here and there,where read ‘what be wrote as reptiiy asf toe F overalls, raking toes anside. “And m4 fhe lights spread, of her cabin and bridges. As Seon. » sé aiebeos something in the paper about a! Mra. Tittle—“Yoo, the Climers are- looking | "There sentsney olds a hight wind they boned the tal ati one, coch satveal ty Sal inten Tee Ly i enitaeeteteed bs he's gia 1 veaitivated, | Seach = “It's 2 o'clock,” said Bradley, count- gior are ee, A Gorman nooner raised 2 ene genes te a it a cost a - “ ¢ It was pulled down andthe in “3 it won't cost @ ‘Well, we can do nothing and cannot iecican 8 ‘taised in ite place and saluted for eight PO | goal “ts cnn do ts Tusow" | bes mesa todo mueh tonight,’ Albert onda “We opel eee The German toas-of-werired SScaom Trensoriee wen necked 1

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