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o P AT WROAUTS THE SUNDAY Sthl.‘fluflflNGTOI.ll €, NOVEMBER ¥, 1900 A 3 e bRt i.m-.mu-mauu— self. “That oM Drute of & medicine man best us, . a trip through Central Australia pair of extarordinary slip- were made of silky-soft emu of inches thick, ghted together blood, while the uppers were neatly and he showed me a One day T was visiting a friend who had just from _dwx f1z ,m“mMmmm in their blood-feuds and vendettas. The wearer w,»m & id mmanw is able to walk without the slightest sound and leaves no footprints. Thus the assassin is able to enter a sleeping camp and either spear i i i, % f his victim through the heart or infect him with gangrene poisoning, and then get away with. out danger of being tracked and mur@lered in | wmuwmm continued to spread until the unfortunate Jimmy pain, i were all greatly upset by his death. But the most badly shaken member of the party was Joe. There was no question now to him but that he, t00, was doomed. Squatting on his haunches, he refused to eat, making no effor “Pull yourself ' together,” McGuire growled to stir himself even when Bull, his patience ex- “There’s nothing the matter with you.” hausted, picked him up and shook him. wv= i days after: the first sign of swelling Two days later we performed the same service 4t behind, well knowing What its effect would be upon the susceptible na- on Jimmy's armpit, we buried him, “Zurdaitcha got them all right,” seid my bréiher gravely. Sut Bull remained unconvinced. “Kurdaitcha “Jimmy died of blood- Se for Joe. _w mwwm-m it ummmn umwu 1.5 £ i g i | a ragor until the aole of McGuire’s foot was h ribbons, and then poumclng uu W ashington’s .Earlz'est Railway!Station ,and Fi irst Traz')z to Emer 'Cit}/. W from Ninth Pc_ mmm T mmm“ 3 m mmha w Mu m mmmmum mm Mm ,m ummm i35z 8 _.m_ m.mmmwmummum ¢ ‘When oflmth!nu mmm m mmmmmetmlmm-wwun service during the war. Later he opened an suction store at Second and P streets nerth nmu me i E m., mmm mMmme m.umu mmw mmm~wm m m 235 um mwmmmmw ; m -} mumm L]t mwwa i H i sl mum Dairy Feed Is Vital, - Tnlchhnuhmpwmngm-ym that he hauls a load of milk to the milk a- ._m saloon; James Guild; 107, Fred , Long & Ken- non’s saloon; 103, William H. Ryan’ 105, her father-inadaw, erick W. Bergman 's death he was the Willlam Lewis’ res- 109, 's cigar store and 111, where Mrs. Guild and her Mrs, Grupe, lived; 113, John T. Power’s cigar store; 115 was a dwelling, where xulded The writer asked Mrs. Guild to tell him who restaurant; At the time of Mr. Guild her old neighbors were at the time she moved there, in 1881, and she recalled the oldest Freemason in the District of Columbia. At 101 Pennsylvania avenue, T, taurant; mother, “Never away. He kept chnnced .change ll»" flmwmmwm had the sonmmmvmucm moved to Pennsylvania avenue near Capitol ' with Grandma Grupe and after she ander Guild, son of another early resident of had grown into womanhood she married Alex- Washington and of this neighborhood, kmown * %o the many bookworms of years ago as Old © Jim Guild, who kept his book store at 108 it - mm g WWM 1 15h m_mm “Jim, if you don't mma-uméun;na of that m, mmmmmmmm 8 A iy mAn.. k3 wmmw from your executor for $5." it mmm mmmmmmm Mu