Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 13, 1887, Page 9

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1887.~TWEL WISE & PARMELE’S ADDITION | == SAFE AND SURE == & Because it is Strictly Inside Property! All in Corporate limits of City and within less than 2 Miles of Postoffice. Every lot a beautiful residence site. Overlooks the entire city and surrounded on all sides by well improved property. You need only to know where this addition is located to be convinced that it is the cheapest inside property on the market; It lies between 34th and 386th sts., and adjoins Lowe’s addition on the north, Omaha View on the south, and corners with Orchard Hill. Only 100 lots, all choice, in this addition will be sold at from $500 to $1,000 for TWo DAYS ONLY, after which prices will be advanced 25 per cent. Terms, Y4 cash, balance in 4 semi-annual payments. Will be placed on the market on Monday morning, February 14th, exclusively by - HARTMAN & GIBSON and WISE & PARMELE, 1412 Farnam street. 1509 Farnam street. [ DON'T GIVE HIS NAME. men had been killed by | of the vigilance committee in that por- | experience, if yvou were free again, that | and that man is one of the most prom f. While I walked boldly out of town, | Burcharc own knife, what inference ( ] — icans some time before. While | tion of the state, and more hangings of | you would 'leadl a decéntlife and become | nent, respected, and influential citizens | having no reason to fear anybody, 1 | you drav Written for the Omaha Sunday Bee. endeavoring to get a good idea of the [ lawless characters were going on there | a decent citizen?” *Yes,” said Bill, *I | in the northwest to-day.’” couldn’t afterward remember sceing any- | © **He had the knife open and in his owx ‘Good heavens! don’t give his nawe in the sition occupied by our troops, 1 accl- | per hour than any other village or town | would: but there's no show for me now.” ———— ody astir. hands?” e e dently stirred up the earth withmy shoe, | or city on earth, “Tne little community | ~ “Well, Bill, 1f you will promise me BILL NYE'S FIRST WILL. 1 a happy-go-lucky chap, having | “Exactly.” } As I noted the {}Mm youny “Blood” and ‘looking down I saw something | had long suffered from horse and mule | faithfully that you 11 never steal again, 3 = no f: y or relatives to worry about me ¢ murderer took it away from Just fined because of & spree. glisten like gold in the sun. I picked it | thic but the scoundrels were so | that you will yS rr_?‘ to do right, I [ After Death He Wishes All His Debts | or depend on my earnings, and, though A The boastfulness of the fellow up and found it to be a human finger | adroit and knew the country so well that | will let you go, in nembrance of the Paid Off, I was hard up and without ambition, 1 ‘Certainly.” Tempted 16 to give him an ad. bone, and still on it the West Point class | they were seldom captured. Once in a | time when you licked that bully to save My dear Henry: This is a dictated let- | VAS not a eriminal. I had never been ar- ““There was a struggle for the weapon free one—but about as thorough ring of my dead friend, marked with his | while fecling sccure, one would become | me, tor I think a bo who would do that | 0y o thoughts are mine, but the pen- rested in my hife and 1 had no reason | and Burchard’s fingers were cu * A8 ever o person had. 1 the dateof his luation. I | indiscreet or unwary and would be cap. | would ‘grow to be a man too good to hip 15 that of & wan named Be whatever to fear the law. At 10 o'clock “You have it.”” oA lian e NimkiEltifor s boln6es L his family in New England | tured and then tried before court of ln:x_gf_v, = e = B hiotisldoin oo nbTea oL ket ik that forenoon, while I sat on a log by the | ““And vou naturally conclude that the e b hem, melosing the boy's ring ntes. The leader of this gang of But Frank,” said Bill, “‘ean you do it | fii¢ IO B8 LIC AIGHR TOF U8 Lo M. | rondside taking a bit of luncheon, I was | murdercr did not escape scot free?” The spoiled and pampered rich worldling and expiaining how it had come into my | thi had never been caught, and ve yoarself ¢ for they might hang | o SHEE OF ,l,m,_‘{-,wx M en by a gang of six persons, on “That's the very thing, and if I don’( A R S A T e possession. In the course of time I re- | things got so baa that finally a deter- place, and T would rather stay | patid, 15 it 0ok o roual o | ©f whom was u “constable and the others | have him in custoily inside of a week L1l WFor the sake of his heartbroken mother, | C¢ived & very grateful answer, request- | mined effort was made, and he was cap- my medicine than do that.” holc in the i, and i trying to reseus | farmers. “They were In a wagon and as | ask them to hang me m your stead.” Wihose haughty, yet comely face 2 ing me, if I could identify the young Lurmg while riding away on another ever mind about that, Bill, talk |} from a w:n‘turv grave I fell and broke | the vehicle came opposite me they al He put a chattel mortgage on a horse, 1s worn and aged with grieving, mun’s remains, to have them disinterred | man’s mule. He was brought to camp, w and we will arrange the plan. 1| S0 e00 S 0 just nbove the fetlock, aped out, and I was seized and hand- [ telegraphed to fifty different places, made ve him from such a disgrace. and sent hom 1 found the remains | pleaded not guilty, but was sentenced to | will cat your ropes and give you my Wh sread out hore with nothing to fled with much ado, while the gang | two or three shorttrips and on the after: “For his father, the honest old banker, and shipped them, nicely boxed, to the | be hanged on the following morning, D., | knife. In the morning I will be found | 4 my mind has buun"“me active, and I | congratulated themsclves on noon of the fourth day returned from WS A F o T ald 2 depot quartermaster, then in San who was a member of the vigilance com: p, my knife taken, and you gone ad drawn off for me the following | Specdily secured me. When I aske Franklin with a prisoner who had been Nor from the worry of business, cisco, requesting him to hold them, mittee, was detailed to guard the fellow 1 you go down the eanyon take my ines of a will: E | they were and the cause of my nabbed on one of telegrams. The If the story be rightly told. would come along in a month myself and | during the night, » . Be sure about it, for my life may l‘h«'ruby appoint my beloved overwhelmed — with curs man, a tough looking customer, with hig “For the sake of their anguish, Reporter, re-ship them. In due time Ireceiy - One by one the tired miners went to :pend on that. Heis the dun colored wite Henriette to bo P G ts, and flung into the wagon left hand wrapped ir very dirty cloth e A A X2 other kind letter announcing the arrival | sleep. Night settled down and D. was | one near the stream; he wears a horse- znce and receiver of my entire s | headed to the south from which dir and a fresh cut about two mches long on | And because of theirsuperior station of the remains, and the family seemed | left sitting on a box, his rifle across his | hair halter. You can’t miss him, Bill, | y /o [ had come, but after going two miles | his chin. When the rng was take hom Do not give it publicity.” not able to thank me enough for what | kne while the outlaw was bound se- | seil the mule, and deposit the money to “Secgnd—I hereby request that the | turned into an t and west road, and [ his hand two pretty bad cuts were ,( had been no trouble to me at all, Later | curely with ropes and tied with _his back | my credit in San Francisco.” The ropes | o4 oo Napoleon be. sald wnd the pen going oust threo miles wa stopped’ atn | found, and, though he strenuously de- “Agreed. But what of this other fellow, on, having been granted a leave of ab- | to u tree only a faw feet away. The over- | were cut and Bill was free, and, while ceeds thereof used toward def \.m‘u‘m., armhouse, where about a score of peo- | nied ever having been in the locality be. is title, shall I surpress that?” sence, which I was speading in the ecast, | land mail had arriyed that day and | thanking 1., and nearly crushing his | ¢ 00 ) expenses, provided that'the sum | P1¢ had assembled. Threats and curses | fore, Baker was'in high feather. He had CITIZEN. 1 found myself in New York City | aong toward midnight D. lighted a can- !mlyl ng g‘uml»b_\.‘e. D. said to hi of §25 tharafroin be aele “", the pur- greeted my appearance, and se! il peo- | moved quietly but vigorously, and hig WAt U8 10 DEIR Ry S aoTkInR mant and I reccived an invitation to | dle and beganreading a Cineinnati news- | “Bill, I want to ask you one Question | o T8 maintaining a large, ageressi le cried out that I ought to be lynched. | prisoner entered the jall withouteven With hands calloused bard at that.” visit the family again. So one Satur- }mpur in g avor to make the long | more--did you steal that mule? Yes, L““d()g whose duty it shall be 'l(;-’fim fere is what had happened, although 1t [ sherift suspecting what he was charged . * » day wornng’ 1 started and -~ reached | hours pass quickly. The camp was ina | Idid, Frank. Good-bye, God bless you | g1y G FIRN MERIRT P00 MO was several days before I secured the | with. ser confided the case to thg Hells onoof the army of tollers, the lovely old homestead, which was | tall pine forest—the tree tops so close | for this.” He made s way stealthily | D o6 Y lowly grave untlf my dust s particulars: prosceuting attorney, and it was arranged 1is only glimpses of wealth beautifully situated in a New England | together that they shutout any light from | down the canyon and was off! Hian oot RO i 8 JMTAARE The owner of a farm was a man | that Mrs. Burchard should visit the juil, Are gained on a Saturday evenine, town. 1 was hospitably received. On the | the stars. Here and there could be seen | As morning dawned on the camp and | CORFE,HIL IO POSE 00 Ty anatomy named Buchard, He was in his barn- | She had twice identificd me as the tramp Wiien he drinks a companion’s health, following morning, Sunday, I was taken | miners, rolled up in their blankets, the miners began stirring, they naturally | fEITTNUC B 4By oy to selence ox Lo | o it o brenkiast when a tramp came | and murderer, and they told her I had a Then for a brief moment of riches to the little cemetery and shown my | asleep on the ground. A few smolder looked to see their prisoner. There was goslings, who cannot get near cnouglh to | 2long and stopped at the house and asked | confession to make. She eame to tha \ He forzets his work’s daily rounds friend’s grave over which had been [ fires still gave u httlo hizht; now and then | D. fast asleep on the ground, his knife | BGCMEE WA SORROUESE 1O L for breakfast. The wife sent him to the | jail with the prosecutor, coroner, and a Forgets all the worry of poverty, aDeautiful monument, inscribed | a momentary flame would shoot up from 1, the ropes cut, and lying ‘at the [ & 07C IR0 OPerite on im0 ] barn, and half an hour later her husband | brother, and the man arrested by Buker Thie horror to which he is bound. with his name, military history and the | oue of thom, .,.~,F|,|4;,.;,.4_-||.‘. dark might wnd the prisoner gone. | ¢ FRANCEL A0 MIAL BE My TAnerat tho | aggered up to the kitchen door, said the | was alone in one of the corridors as they His short hours of hilarity vanish, date and manner of his death. After a | but little, and then through the gloom at_excitement. Two or [ (T4 L0 b6 KRSPERdCt, S that oS | eamp had knifed him, nd fell down and | were ushered m. The woman looked at Ere long comes the throbbing head ; delightful_visit I left, and, my leave | could be'scen DD, guarding the prisoner. | three ran to D., rougnly shook him, and, | IR who Hve (& mersontl wnterest | Gog il o " given, and in an | him for a moment, threw up her hands Comes remorse and fierce repentance, being up, 1 received orders to proceed to | All was quict. D, was reading home news, | with much profunity “asked him 'if ‘ha | B the proceedings be permitted to take | Je0: At S0 in search. The | with a scream, and the next instant had And the struggle renewed for bread, San Francisco toreport for duty as depot | when the prisoner, who had scen the | knew the prisoner” had eseaped. Do | PR 00 0oy g | ife was positive that she could identify | fainted dead away. It is only a laborer's history, In those duys quarter- | name of the paper, printed in favee type | rubbed his eyes in a sleepy sort of way, | ) o ©SEE FERTOC FOT CANTY EACHRSERL | 0% v “and no sooner did she set eyes | **Aye! — her!but the jig is up!” ex- broke the silence | jumped to his feet excitedly and told the 1co: miners that the prisoner must @ seen ay afew | him fall to sieep, then had carefully w8 hours | taken his knife without waking him, cut Inat is beinz so coarsely told; A man who has many temptations ‘T'o drown heavy care in the bowl. Yot at home are his wite and babies, e ) the | claimed the man, and he at once con- pjurder and gave all the de- uid that he entered the barn. and oflered to work for his break- , when relieving each'other, were | at the top of the pag reful to see that all public prop- | b, ing inalow v reipted for, even to the last bolt, “Stranger, will you let me there in the storehou I words to you? I've got only a old lawn-tennis and nolo clothes while he | on me than she cried out that I wa was attending college, using his boating | man, and but for the determined front of | fessed to th and ba bull suits for under elothing | tWo or three oflicers of the law I should | t H i ) ing o cave my | have been lynched. Who love him fully as wel, oROhing & non Lol tho Taot tng | and.T Waot to sRenk Lo you a little ! his ropes and gone. The men were very | 4uring the winter, and now 1 leave my £ ) 3 but Burchard roughly ordered him As the old folks up it the mansion 8 5 D1 PUTOLOY NG Aipra o s Pldeh Bediod . ‘henraged. 1. was made s prisoner, | ©Wn clothing to him as a shght testimon- What did 1 do? Nothing. If 1T opened | (655, DU AUECE Yo . Lo R A A ARNOR., the other from responsibility. The Yes,” answered . in a surly tone, | much enraged. D, wa "“‘“.:n‘:‘l’ff‘&'&‘rfit inl of my appreciation of his kindness to | my mouth I was cursed and threatencd. | off the premises, replied hotly, and was great, and it | “go on.' . Some we to verify it according “Do you hail from Cincinnati, my | to swing in th aw's place, and from On the 1nvoices were | friend. "I see you are reading a Cinein- | being the best liked man in eamp he be- some original boxes of stovepipes, that is | nati newspay and that was my home, | came an object of contempt. He amount of prope n“, l':mlt nlmlhl-n it the household submissive, | took me four da ith its burden of shame and tears, Y ) Be exvosed to o skeptieal publios 19.thg dniyol Be an obieet of laughter and jeers, inds | the farmer drew his knife and menaced r minds 1 him. He then beeame aroused, and, se- ng the wuulmn fter a struggle he committed the deed. He was concealed me when I'had no polo suit of my own, I | There was no more doubt in th also direct that an obituary, consisting of | that I wus guilty than that it was forty lines, relative to be printed” in | light. After the inquest I was taken fo my son's paper, eodot ten cents per | the county juil. At this inquest I was to say, some which had never been | and I would like to ask you, if you ever | scemed to feel very badly; he looked J h g | in a barn a mile away-ull the day, and B8 Eoun v il o L Lo paseres opencd, Wiile joing around With the | go baok that wav. (o tell & liitlo lie for | mortified, and heartoroken “over'his | hite, o follow puro roading mutter, for | skod my‘nume, uge, recidence, oveub- | (05 G o eonrse all the Searels “The man with care wrinkled face— quartermaster sergeant, on the afternoon | me, und say that I had been killod fight- | trouble. A pursuing party bad been | 0 750 P 00 REE T ARG 1 oo™ pur®unfortunately it was not in | IDg, parties were called in, Show the warm hearted busband and father | ©f the fourth day we came to the | ing Indians, for it would break my poor | sent out, but Bill had ‘three ‘hours’ start, | G 896 0/ for the obituary, but desire | my favor. If I could prove that I had That's my case, While 1 was dis- As the one so deeply disgraced, boxes of stoyepipes. Being original pack- old father’s heart if 4o heard the trath,” | and it soon came buck unsuccessiul, but to a1d & panti trowell A orked here and there, that we lot | eharged, he was tried, convieted and sen- PP T AT ages I did not order them to be | “Ulldoit’ answered D., “but don't | With the agrecable nows that the outlaw | 1o a bunting, struggling entorprise, | worked hovo and thove, that wus ot | o) 04400 fife) and 'the green farmer’s jihinittio casce the sliven. = opened, but satistied myself by moving | call me your friend."” B stoled D.'s mule, and they all snid: | oo o8 UYLt haia i Aiver | T was o wandorer, ponniiass and friend: | boy who worked tho ‘case up is to-day u\ul,ufl...numug parental affections ; |I|§ w }ll‘l,"“)‘ in urvd‘._'u:‘ ‘lu ls;n 'll lh(:,\l §x:nulhl|.lg famuliar i the prisoner’s of bis ow:: h:]‘]‘m‘ ‘"fll e" | g"_")m‘:;; my death. My object in dying is not mn | less, and just the man to do murder, and | on¢ of the keencst and sharpest of de And careless, welghits hearts as with lead; | were of the proper weight. T'had moved | voice struck D, however, and as the man 1 mule allayed 5§ ; . ovads. th ; ¢ | Who could doubt my guilt after the wife | wetives. Ho \hio ias srhiab Riakes lifa worthliving sixteen or seventeen of them, when one | talked D). wondered where he had heard | 8gainst D., if any bad: existed, and ho AUV IATEAG GYARE R0 PAYIERI OLARY, (MG 000 B QAU IDY RURIAURE o, g —— With a proud nae and love fully shared, seemed to be unusually light, and 1 di- | that voice before, and finally settied on | W48 soon released with a severe repri- 0 1d R . 11 th i} WP EDUCATIONAL, i iLe Broy H h haka e 4 {ig g | Sk X ol ; T3 A ). | I may add to this will, from time to | all these chan and realized that fat o 2 iy depraved agent of humiliation; rected lllu.h({ eant to open it. He didso: | the man as Bill S., who had been a big "‘}‘l“' '“"‘““f‘ oure 1‘““}{”’ l.‘.‘ a8 ! time, as anything good suggests itself. In | was against me. They could not under- | One hundred and fifty of the 505 colleges This soclal assassin is svared, ]r.u: the 111 of the box shghtly, and | boy and in a higher class at St. Francis | 0 ‘""N after -!ld.luml-_,‘ur !tvim he Ynfl the meantime let me hear from you ever | stand how the murder had come about. | in this country publish paners, S WERD LAVERNE, ooked in. I noticed him quickly drop | Xavier's cotlege when he himself was a | Pretty anxious, for he did not know what e v VBT Gn.Jo8 4 The farmer hi ; bbed, al- | The first publie library in America w Douglas, Wyoming. tho lid and sturt bucke with & frihtenod | littlo boy there. Aud in tho tall, brond- | his snraged comrados would RS snileanon. gl ,,',',],‘,l:“::',,“‘\’\3;“.‘{1‘.’.";\3x:: e fasmen s nai kean pbodiatst ARy Rt R LY ) - 00k on his face, and I said: “What's the | shonidercd, brawny-looking outlaw, his month ago I saw 1. in New York, | rU0 YOIT BER HAPOK N are ovidenoes of & struggle. He ha The late ol W rovidonoe TWO CALIFORNIA YARNS. matter, sergeant, isn't it all right*” “No, | face hardened by ‘.,“\ |m.~ur~-hund dissipa- w‘h--ru he now nl--l.lu, m’ul u“ the course :ll‘:n:n‘:.\,; u'l(l]u 1‘!::::‘1“:\:;& jul,:u;)r;.k :l r\,mllr L‘J.-u € \!I‘I‘llfl‘llfd‘ ::l;“;l IT:-; u'.;.\fl: ; wl):‘knli"lfll .Ll'm lnh“lln};:l'tnl"\l\ iull'n)\:'usi'(y“l I rovidence, — = i N 5 epipes i ere,” he | ti 0 sull Yoy of our conversat said tohim: “Asa A b 288 O 10! Slabix e ] There 3,508 % [From the New York Times.) haif 3"!"1!.1']15(1 R T :\{!;I‘lll: :thu!l::' | i n).;:;]i:ml‘!l}\\}:’o *haa ':'fi".'.'fw'f,'.‘;-‘}?u‘.fi matter of curiosily, lD-l.lth you ever got | Kespeetfully, your father, | ,|aud Hio “knlte bod ‘bogn left n. tha i iiirelas Lean $EiER Mbastilid tonad N;uv n.;.:l.l.m,.' Mess at Fort Bowie, Ariz, | In the boxy" said: ““There’s bones, | home o California, your mun-iy for “your 'xmlllu"’ )"\'m," S BiLL Nye fi:::lu:ll“ x'!\[";‘lll::ll:l ‘b';“l“ .]\‘l‘l'\.::.li\ulu“lt!lui‘:fllu tho S y y 8 il Time—s inter Night, The General, a | human bones, sir. 1 saw a skuli,”” The Do me," said the isoner, “for , “‘about six months later the sum s o 7 T “After oy ‘I'here has been established in Cineinnati a + Vateran of the Civil War, and an Old | truth then flashed across my mind. 1 had kizouse me,” said the prisouer, *for ) was depos t‘flll my credit in San A DETECTIVE'S FIRST UASE tingers were also cut up. After being | | 7006 A4S 00N | Ve ; : i ) z ! across ad | oalling you my friend,but you were read- us depositod to 1 SE. 0 C o tof a8 | eollege for the exclusive education of wom n wroug stovepive box to the old homestead | o= t me I hed seen you befor ‘:fl"k;“‘““ ‘l')“‘ years hfl-'l"» "j""l‘!"':""“’y It is less than twenty years, said Philip guilt T was dénounced us # hardoned | A freshinan elass of Cornellls so tarie Yos, there are many, a_ great many, | HAow Eaeland, Tpuid the government | you & 20 the Josuita” school in Cincin- | KR0E 1 LCSHD WA \00r "nicly § | Nourse, that I entered Lebanon, N. H., | wretth, The prefiminary examination 00 divided juto 160 sels &ood stories told by pionvers, some more | gave the old quartermaster a full reecipt | fuoe cerinte me of o )‘“‘,"‘“li‘s’“‘ have always kept as proof that Bill was | one sutumn afternoon, with a dollar and ’f’,",' ! waa rorrned to.ail to W. 1, Buckus,of Georgotown, P , excollent than true. Now, Licutenant | and had the remains mcely buried in San | (o d o Y e g 100 good o man to hang " 4 half in my pocket, and with two blist- “,'.“,h.','l',‘, hnd toased down wikh aitiod $00.000 for ‘s froo lluesry 1l ), down there at the or e o | Francisco, and until_this moment 1 have ; T e A 16 MAvOR's OFFick, ——Jan. 4, 185, | cred foet, having walke Newbury, IR SUAL | el university, . D, down there ut the other end of the o § mowe \ave | think him very well, be- | My Dran Friexn F o 3 ng walked from Nowbury, day a slouchy young fellow, not |~ Piiere is to be fotinded in London an’-ims 1 made my | \r - as'you know and 1 'sold vl Wuje | Vt. Iwhsn'ta tramp, and yet 1 had no 2 Wit wasthie best ! l:-uul‘ll do, Frank. trade. Ihad been working around a D ! ¢ was lllm Jon of a | Jublice. “IUis o bo bulltby popular subscrip: pthod | e niAeh ol s hor ot erarani f i 1, vas i ited and could not wal ,“" livery stable in Newbury for a few weeks | farmer living about seven miles from tio | tions. inning to bolieve them | & T s g the ]fl'l]) out t:;hcllllzvirr ;;Fx,'n‘l. L‘““hl‘“')l"l,“rl’ ull;‘ld;lci‘?._x_lx;! and had reached that place from Mont- | Scene of the murder. It appéared that he A futid of not less than $100,000 and. prol T3 Some of his hearers being auw e genera “Yes, Bill,” said D , *“[ was the boy and 14 10Fe, And 1é ’ Ly had been investigating - the on his [ ably 5200.000 must be collected to establish L er told this story be- continues, I remember'it all. But I am sorry to sce :l‘l:‘l‘l‘fllll‘t:rf-‘]:t’:“ The was for the use of | pelier. 1 h. d been own hook, having a great ambition (o be- | ¥ond doubt the usetulness: of the cla never breathed it. But a lovely white | sause one uy he w: marble wonument in that pretty little | pigger boy; e w New England town marks the lust rest- | defend himself, y being bullied by a s delicate and couldn’t nd L turned in and lad table, has a father who tells very many excellent stories, and he tells them so often at the Pioneer society's dinne 1 imagine he is b himself. 1 have ne s old; named Baker,p perfal iustitute to commenorate the quee ommended to a one, then e i hQ! P v M sehod fore. It will explain why & common 1L you where you are. 1 didn't think you | heve and bave staiao®] oo’ woll ‘o g | botel-keop 8 good man | come u detective. Ho oponed the conver- | S BURNENS, LS G0 ] stoyepipe, like the one coming out of that | L have not, so far, given Licutenant | hud gone so low, And now, Bill, you | am respected 8sa good eitizen, as shown by | for porter, but when I arrived he had | sation by saying to me Atitutions 1n . thie L nited States dge (ita D.’s father a reputation for ve his stories he mention of lunee committee a few mom bavegot to dio fu tho morning, and 'if | myelection as maye Just vear. Yousaved | just engagod a wan, and my cuke was | "Nourse, thoy Live m you have any messages that you want to | my live, m ear friend, when 1 deserved to o z he o ree | themselves. in this case Zand home you had "better give them to | die. 80 don't be offended, Frank, when I teil | dough. 1 hung avout the place for three stove in the corner, munder, in my eye le idiots: of | collewe, s [ have found is always o _grim re- of early California 000,000; Columbia, . $5,000.00 John Hopkins, $4,000,0008 Harvard, §:,000, 000; Prineeton, $5,500,0003 Lehigh, $1,500,000; 1 lays. A few years after our o2rupation | minds me of one on him w me, for your time is short. 1 will tell the | ¥OU if you or yours are in want of a home or | or four days, sawing a couple of cords of }\\ ""|'7("’14"‘.4' hanon who -saw . you o hrugaton, S 2 , ) y e is sl . 1 & 1€ | heed & dollar, you can always have mine, vood for a merch: 1 the arted ave that place at the hour you name. 1 rocll, ,000, - I was stationed in sowzern | lustrate his cha sncther 2aspect. | Lie you asked me to tell, and if. necessary | and aiways count on every cont Ihave in the | Y004 for a merchant, and then started | oy fyriher show thut you could pot hay Following swiff on a reeent bequest to o near Los Angeles, wnd oue | In 1830 he was in Uait=redz 3¢ 2 mining | I will cover it up with a thousand more.” | World," Sour gratetu; fyiend. for Hanover. I left L ebanon just | turned aside, committed the “crime, Harvard university by 8- wulserly Now Eu. Mt e Lstrolled out to thescene of the | cacap, then ealled Henglown, but now | After remaining m silence for some P WiLLIAM S, at daybreak, haying slept in a barn with- | got to the point where you were arrs J‘..Ql.l‘..‘ll“;.:.:..;l: A Ao s i T from, e 08 Angzelos massaore in which a friend | known as Placerville. Hungtown was | time, and evidently in deep thought, D. I finished the letter and looked a out the knowledge of anyone, and having | even had you -been on horseback. i5-40 be applicd to - aiding indigent students wine, @ young officer, and some well named, for it was the headquarters | continued: *‘Bill, do you think after this | whose eyes were moist ps ke said; * had some crackers and cheese for break- |then, if the stabbing: was ‘done .With | Who sre o accepl thie bebp s debts of Lonon

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