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JUN THF OWAHA I)AILY BEE, SU 20, 1890-TWELVE PAGES. DAY, 9 . MORSE'’S. MORSE'S. MORSE'’S. e o T (3050 | 2o Hosp 966 MORSE’S Corset Covers, 48¢. Assorted lot of fine Corset Covers, high and low neck, embroidery trimmed, usual price 69¢ and 78¢, Monday 98c each. Night Gowns, 98c. Full lcnmh Mother Hubbard Night Gowns, extra good muslin, and yoke of embroidery, and tucked, regu- Inl'$l 28 and $1.80 qualities. Monday 98c each. Drawers, S0c. Ladies’ Drawers, made of standard muslins, several styles to select from, rejular 78¢ qualities, Monday choice B0c a pair, cut to reduce stock for the next i , 5 r ix sizes—81/ 0 » 0 inc in stylish colors suit- are a mixed lot of sizes—814 inch one style, 9 inch of 60 DA S ST 136 aais and another, &—so we offer )nul choice of 50¢, 65¢ and & able € ._-—— I sc Hose, blazers. 28 Cents a pair Monday. LACE CURTAINS, rv’”'af — $10 and $12. | |2eNACUNGS) Iparagyls, §3.60; worth $8. Black iron frame, : We ]1_:1\'(: some very fin(.: Brussels, Swiss and Two- NaS oAt ant other I'oned Oriental Lace Curtains that are sold down to i e one, two and three pair lots They are worth $15 to n(,\'v‘gl enadines just paragflls $]|5“ W[]Fth $4. $25 a pair; never sold for | We offer them at two received. ) ! prices, 10 and g12. Curtain loops free. Calico Wrappers, $1.30. Monday we show new styles in Calico Wrappers, light ground with neat colored figures, in black, blue jor —— Monday---- Odd Lots. $1.50 Bargain Table Children’s White Dresses, worth $38; for $1.50. Children’s Gingham Dresse, worth $2.50; for $1.50. Ladies’ Blazer Jackets, worth $£8.50; for $1.50. L,n(ll(‘*- Blouse \Nzn\u- worth $< )() for $1.50. Boys’ Blouse Waists, worth $2.28; (h|‘$l,.“\<l Misses’ Blouse Waists; worth $2.28; for $1.50. Ladies’ Dressing Sacques, worth §3; for $1 Ladies’ Suits, $2.50. Ladies’ Gingham, Cambric n'i Sateen Suits ready made, usually sold at $5, $7.50 and $9 each. Monday choiee $2.50. — | sooren Parasnl& 1: wurth 2.5[]. New plaid and $1.90 and $3.20 sien et 1Sk Umbrellas Two special lots. The $1.50 ones worth $2.50, o and the $3.25 quality reduced from $5. We give cur- regular 88c grade, tain loops free, I\/Iondely 28c. $8 50 : B e s ° L] Dado Sh cldCS L H }\I I IS Another lot of Eaglish Silk Umbrella =/ quality, down for next week to $3.50. 25¢. S L . ~ | 11e Real good patterns, 7 l\hght Shddt’s’ ! elegant quality, that ¥ FANS' l’ A 5 25 sold early in the sea- co son for 8c¢ to 10c¢ Special Fan sale for next weck, beginning Mon- MOUNTED ON BEST SPRING ROLL WORTH 50C TO $ SPECIAL BARGAINS--25 CENT WINDOW .SHADES. s .Llc. 5, regular ¢5 | R ST S adies” White Suits. ready made W hite Suits. See them at $2.50, $3.75 and $8.00 each. MORSE DRY GOODS CO. now 8ec. day, d]l our stock will be included. 1st, It is our intention to open so far as possible with All the latest pat- an entire new_stock, and not in any one or two de- terns in wash silks, We advertised these for Saturday, and sold dozens partments, but all over our store, and prices will be cool and nice quality of them, They sold for 5oc, 65¢c and 75c a pair, but MORSE DRY GOODS CO. Morse Dry Goods Co. MORSE DRY GOODS CO. VOT MU ru[ \Lv ‘}‘\I R ‘[ \\'CE‘ circle around the v Austin told me | NDURR RIINCHED TNARD TIDG | o 4 i’ i e, o rocks and began an_ advance whi ) : I arout Aus T ‘\l R 1\““ i) L‘ I l‘R “1 L the northern zoue of our sister republic, an d | rocks and began an advance which the small | Qp P SDLTANCL T N court room that cither brir 1 Indian or his horse. Watfarowagedifor gonorations; hud atty be able to resist. Pinding that they had Miller and Deputy 5..\:3 "u,p\n‘n;:”\'l‘:t m\‘v n)‘llh\lr 1;! lwn;wll"('\: s and destroyed wagon ins, ranches stir }-l npl:n !tl v ‘l’”.\‘). the Apaches made rift Lou G s, cach of whom held one of g p ode, yipping and ye ound that cluster whole pents of the incoming | off through the woods, the wisest thing they vietim's arms. Behind marched County They Detail the Hairbreadth Escapes of of willows, each time coming closer. "My | Ty an Apache Ambuscade With Gen- | tide of Amcvican civilization, driven off | couli o undor the circnmstances, And in That Sleep of Peace What Dreams | Juiler Joe Mill i AR an bt Omalions It nlu\\ in my mouth, I guarded one side 1 Crook berds of cattle and horses and made human | On ourside there were two or three “hits,” i - 281 : “Ballard had scaveely entered the placo 3 and Austin the other. Diveetly 1 heard a eral Crook. life i ) none to amount to anything, and a couple of May Come. when his eyes fastened upon me with a look TER :Ihll,.‘,,llluxl‘lw.«]l“l around aud saw s g ;( big Th ovs in the val mules tnt. of reproach so intense and horrible that it < plunze heac weels off his pony. {0 paichesuElcoraandeon The loss of the cnemy, if any, was never burncd into my very soul. e was deathly ON THE ROAD UNDER A LOADED SLED, | Austiuhad plugged him through the head W HE CONQUE S, | and loaded rifles strapped to'the plow-han- | learned % L sale, aud - his neck, arms and legs scomed The other Indians, greatly excited, picked | HO QUEREDISSTHESINDIANS 4/ B : Thore were two of the Apaches separated | THE BLIND HAVE NO BRIGHT VISIONS. | b0 (v b, ™ Aber proin Al :ll,il[.:w( ,\J;',"\'l‘,""d\'f”;:"" \{_v‘r\v‘tl T:ll,‘:u'\“f —_— All travel was done by night, and by night 1 from l\uIH companions who lay down on the = the distance his eyes turned away from mo g : ‘ sight o o valle © dared not move, ; : only. Tho st arryivg the States | edee of the precipice appavently making ready with a scorn that scemed fairly demoniao hl.rrq..untlwl by l_mlians in a Clump !m\l er. Inabout two hours they returned | An Exciting Episode on the Hot, | mail often ventured on the highway during | to scll theirl arly. Thoy were armned | The Experience of Omahans After | dud fastoned themelyes upou the catold, of Willows—Chased by Red- and "'"“!“"‘l the attack. Then it came my Dry Plains of Arizona — A of sunshine, but, al: ¢ didn’t | with bow and lance and rifie, and would, so They Had Resigned Themselves to “As he looked ¢ from me I remember h =5 ik turn. I blazed away at an ugly-looking brute 3 ‘h the “stations,”” aud the position | we thought, make good use of them. b A 3 that a might o oyer me to lei skins and Getting Stuc: h | 4 TG LI 3 b I e oyer ap on a white horse. My bullet causht the Reminiscence of the Dead ver graduslly assumed in llm ey Our men closed in on ail sides expecting to the Influence of the Drowsy forward and r him from his captors, in the Marshes. borse at the root of his tail, and Major General, of the people the appearance of covert ut- shot every moment. Tn this thoy were Deity. 1 pushed forward ! you ought o hu\'np seon l:llm tempt at suicido mlstaken because the Indian I awoke! E ndiun up - inte ie —_ It was in « condition of affairs that i until our prople could sec th e “I found myself standing far in the conter When John C. Cowin was a small boy, | &%) ,l\lm\fl n:u“ rodo away to the ton of Written forThe Ber, neral U. S Grant, then president, detor- | bead-like oyos shining with the fiere D 0 Pree of our bedroom, and in a tragic, beseeching s the hill and held another pow-wow. Dircetly " mined, upon the petition of the settlers of bold spring down the reams! Mysterios! attitude. My hands were clinched so tight probably twelve or thirteen years old, he had | \vo siw them ook th Fates Many of my younger readers may perhaps Thi s . y hands w I an oxperienco that doubtless brought out | tion a adadiing i tue opposite dive i Y i y perhaps | ooy Yhat something must be done und | wall of the precipice, jumping from What synonyms of cach other are those | that my finger nails were driven so deop into perie 3 il EHROl ti n| and bmu‘;l'nvt, preatl tated. Austin | be surprised to have me tell them of a genu- | done at once. rock and from tree to tree with the agility of | two words! the flésh as to cause the blood to flow in al- some of lufl‘pn"mn(\m\l_\ gray hair. At that 8 : 'mu_nl: In Lll‘h were coming, You can | jne frontier hero who was neither a bully nor He picked out General Crook for the duty | mountain sheep, e o4 Apply them as you will—to life or death, [ most a stream from each hand, time, Mr. Cowin lived on a farm, went to | bt \»'lylvlllln”fl\{ln"\vinxlln‘;lil.nlrrll\\:: frightened. BUb | 4 gart, who never cavried a rovolver on | 0f wl ']vsun"l\w Apaches into submission and | Thoy they were, with dmmwumlllmwk ohildbioodfor oldtage | bappiness oK sorrow. fe almost into insanity ! ~s. s fEiE el 'y v disappeared, W min- DGR & e the wist f his choice was soor made man- | hair streaniing behim them,darting under the o hihs e 80 ) reeking W 'ws piration @ vei :‘,‘,“":,t,.‘vl\’:,‘:f,l, 1!::]\:[(::1 "I":‘f‘m_]“,’A'L‘i\:'l'."l‘:;‘ utes the bogs from camp rescued us. As soon | his bip, whisky flask in his pocket or tobacco | {Rl V! ootk IZ cholosiys ook Imad g s s ledgos, following a | the past, present or future—they both tell of ,i..':'(",.],}‘\“,f" Dorsiiationant Wit g g as Austin’s team reached tho camp they | in his mouth. Although he had fought every | Cloole did whip tho Apaches into submis- | course whieh threatoncd to dash them to cor- | that same indeseribable something which | * “And now comes s more singular part of the work of hauling this sort of wood from [ knew something had happened and started | tribe of hostile Iudi distant clearings tothe house, 1t was during | Ut to hunt us up, “That "was what L call @ | o Brittanie maje one of these work days that he narrowly es- [ thrilling adventur A caned being crushed to death, A recollection |~ Mr. Teahon, however, is not the only man ent will never be effaced from Mr, | it Omalia who has been frichtened within an om the dominions of | sion, that ty on the north to the | which he was cspe southern slopes of the rugged Sierra Madre | touch, and he did it in ma all excepting one small band | tain death every moment; the rocky bluffs | makes the strong. ally enjoined not to | re-cehoed the crackof rifies and bullets which nificent styl whistled from every direction; but fortune t man powerless, tl the experience £ weakest, mighty; of that but for which » sooner had T been helped back into bed f S e e e oiAtate after much fussing had gone to sleep o e e pblic of Moxico. Tio didurt | . But'ho did more than whip the Savages, | favors tho brive, and ' theso ~two Plato reasoned the soul itself would die, and { 4y ™ than I dreamed the swme dream ¥ % " | After they had surrendered unnconditionall, reck ons Anak, thanks to | the Creator could ne’er have heen, all over again,: Although I had 1 AN inch of his life. D, W. VanCott ct find it n to cut aniche in the butt of | 44 Camp Verde, in 1573, he promised them | their porfect knowledze of the coun- | Itisa long-cstablished fact that the sleep | quired the assistance of my wife to b el ’r SR 1 eniq | QUite an intevesting story in which he i ) gement he had scen or | that he would be their best, friend and teach hs thonan absolute blank to us, | of those who cqme iuto this world beveft of | get buck into bed yet again I sprang, like a “The ground was covered with snow,” said | 00 0 e piiucipal actors, Fousteen | every Tndian he had killed. them to live just the smne as white mon id to the setting of the sun which hid them | o5 G00ER SR TR S flush, from lying prone upon my back to N in relating the story. *I was hauling cord- stablished upon farms, encour- effoctod their escape and un- ohe carned bis daily bread as a | He didn't wear long hair and he did not ) t Jf trecs, of flowers, of hill or standing bolt “upright in the middle of tho wood'on an old sled and sat driving the team salesman. During an’ intermission | vest auy of his money in buckskin cloth aged t rops of cerenls s well'as ierds med too, excepting t u which | of t ~‘I‘ flow _" ot n, which was cight or ten feet from tho 50 that my feot rested ngainst the cross.bar | between trips ho and two fellow drum- il R of ponies, and f pound of corn gath led helpless and bie by the side of | occan. — Let such an ono I ; s ¢ doubletree of the tongue. Going dow mors concluded to enjoy field sports, | With porcupineand boad decorations, wred, e burtlle of hay cut or cord of wood | the hindermost, struck bullet from the | scribed ever so vividly, and yet After a long time of reviving me, doubt- ORQOULIDIERIC A0 tougue. Golng down 8 |io;q accordin went over to Anoath ora foul w never crossed his-| stacked up for deliv General Crook found | ritie of our commandin ieral T A AT P less, wondering whether 1 had gone stavk b of the ws fired at General Crook them a cash market in the adjacent military (d the satisfaction of hill, oneorunner of the sled struck a low | 1304 Oal, 1, my wife finally b , on u quail hunt. ery fine | lips, aud yot today there is no name m TThe sigh i fss % 1ess b ough from the ver : stump in such manner as to spread the sled | morning they were out about six or seven | highly revered, more since mournod posts. ! »imbedded so deeply in pine trees that ol h B seeing me doze off into appurently a restful apart so that the tongue roller dropped out. | miles novth of town, when suddenly a flock of I"\‘H, S PR T T Phis 15 more of a digression than [ intended ould not be dug oty one had penctrated | dawn of comprehension,up through childhood | gleep, Phat caused me to lose my foot brace | Pivds avuse froma bluff thicket nea Van WARLIVASISO, LOIPUIY ' i to mal The story of how the truculd wood up tothe feathers, the other | days, and into manhood may have been the But sieep had scarcely closed my ¢ nd I began to slip off in front of | ™4 his companions iustan 5 of this modest, unostentatious soldier f Apaches were tane 1 taught to be men is 100p: £ s hourly, coustant companion of its parent and [ when for a third time the “ghastly dream re- o i o slip o O [ S S R LML a thus persistently set at defiance the | one of unflagging i t, but it must be re attacking party did not number | o Thood the dear, true face of mother | tirned, and at tho identical momient in it, us the sled. We soing at a as the Apaches wed tobe | served for another time, more than a dozen,and trustec gmeny o ng ¢ the surrounding country, Befo en a gr before, T spr stop- | canons of the border drama and se and had its minutest tures described a rapid rate of speed. The horses took fright | ping to ascertain the vesult of their efforts, 1o AT At It was in the At rosulted so | always did, to daring and the lack of wa ! off the bed, alighting in the swme posturo as and startsd for tho tail thmbor, . How o save | [oss than cight or ton chargos had been fired, | ucnced at all Lnes 1o e buo part of 41 | nappily tnt | first m A Crook, and | fug on our Side, 1o gsiin their object, or, fail- | thousand of times, and yet e i myself from being mangled beneath thut v rise n they notived | UnAssuming, Christiun ge an;; as momory draws aside the curtains of the [ ingin that, to theiv intimate gequaintanc In dreams that loved f “Well, there was no more sleep in our all, among others without number, | with ever ht swmmer aftoruoon | OF pursuit. A ; ogother at the head of | In their theory of war it was the cons foot of ground, to evade capture o light the gloom of lon houso that night ning, to the blind, means the | “Days afterward, when 1 had fully recoy- Of voices, . jurgon of the fawiliar | ercd from the effects of that awful nignt, T ad of wood was & matter that had to ¢ or four strapping big, war-painted, cop- But then, the subject of my sketch, M jed almost instantly. A thoaght oc yred ruffians dash through the bush | General George Crook, of the Unite curred to me that if I couid” slide off 50 as to [ and start toward th Then there was a | army, was no ordinary man, He was one of | When we were past 1 the perils of one bri vidin lie flat on the snow and let the sled pass over | wild and exciting chase, > hunters leapec 43 ey a column of the Thi valry along the sum- | drvipping of the fountain which was to wear | sounds of a day. trica—what do you think! Jumping from a o that on tho stiow il ot tho sled pass v | Wil i Chentin clise | The Ianters Jeabed | thoso raro exumplos which every bright, hou | 5itof the lofty mountains kuown us tho Mo- | oubthe rock: constunt attacl, trivial, por- | Within the pist fow days thoro s come | 1yig posturo on that, bed to tloor it without being injured, but it | and let it run. The Indians followed. est boy should exert himself to ¢ gollon. s neps, in many individual cases,” but kept up | prominently to public notice as frightful u [ “It was utterly and totally impossible for was o haiv-breadth escape. Six inches one y plunged into A close association of fifteen and | ¥Pho deftost of fairy fingers had woven the | without intcrmission, that was to wear out | drcam mystery as perhaps ever occurred any- | me to perform the feat. ay-or tho othor, and it would bave boen all | and stnck,” sald Van Cot more which gave me tbe honorof being along- | rainbow-hued carpet” of flowers which man- | the white soldier. wh A guest at one of the leading hotels | “As for poor Tom Ballord, you will remem- Lhis campaigus | tled the ground for miles on all sides of us. No one on our side knew when attack was | was hurled from a third story | be Mt me to | Thoe rofreshing shadows of graceful pines | to come, no one kmew when he was safe. The | window to tho pavement below. A | ti side of General Crook in and battles, during that period tau; that the ry for lifc N across y with me.” took to the woods, upremoe court gave him penitens But Mr. Cowin's experionce was tame i s when compared with that of Joe Teahon, city Indiuns captured our riganc derstand bim as perfectly as one man can | sercened us from the rays of tho evening sun, | first piece of advice given to young oficers | moment later the room-mate of thoe fearfully vorge M. O'Brien, esq., told of a brief cx- passenger agent of the Wabash roud. There's with it. We turned the matter | understand another—and that the lessons of | and ever and anon the lugubrious caw-caw of | upon arrival in Avizonw used to be: “When | f man rushed into the hotel oftice and, | perience he had not long ago. T L T AT R A R T e B Al t i e ettt | Bis dife may not be entirely Lost,T wish to nar- | sable erows broke upon the stillness you sce signs of the Apaches, look out; and | with the wildest horror depicted upon his [ © ©© veside at-home, and as is my custom al- dozen times, Billy Mitchell, the once no- | afterward he succeeded in recoveriug rate a fow in ppening un my own Po the loft of the landscape and far to the | when you dow't see , look out more than | face, told that he had de s terrible act in | w lance through the house when 1 goet torious guerilla, sliot at him 'and tho butlet porty notice and which may bring to light the char- | wost, stretehed the chuotic masses of hills, | eve adream. His statement afterwards cor- | home a little late to suro that all tho says on oneoceasion he suddenly | scteristies of the man by describiug some of | which formed what, i the irony of froutier I'he history of our frontier is well deserv- | roborated to somcthing of an oxtent by the | folks hay ired or who 15 out 5o that tho plowed a furrow along the top of his head. —— t was in 1802, down near Jeffersonville, ix fuches after ho had attained his | the countless dangers to which fhe was ex- | nomenclature, was termod w0 Tonto | ing of study by our intelligent young peopl now at the pomt of death opening of door will or will not startle me. When connected with the Chicago height, kept thus elongated about | posed. B * which In truth was a basin, so furas | and the history and charvacter of the nobl affuir sug Pmber “On th it in quest I came in about fire department, Jo fell thirty feet from th utes ! Charley Goodrieh's black, | 1t would take many columns to make even | the lofty position we occupied was concerned, | brave soldiers like cral Crook, who r taff the iden of scolking for ex- | 10 o'clock and found all the family woro in top of @& burning building and la W0l was the cause of the enlargement neise biographical sketeh, and within the [ 4s we were not less thaw-two or three thou- | decmed it from savagery and made it a g and incidents in the experience | be fecling particulurly sleepy, as [ vifo of lumbe Ho was lad up f One rduy aftornoon w Mi Wis t space of pticle of this kind butlittle | sand feet above the waters of the east fork { rious hevitage for civilization, cannot be too | of well-kn pec 1 Omitha, thought the time, I preked up a book and Baiaho: “Tho blood spurted out of my | coron mon we 1to death in a | more can be I than & reference to | of the Verde and of Tonto creck, but separ- | attentively examined g One of the nost ting was obtained | commenced reading. 1t was a new noveland is oyes, no 1 mouth. I thought my head | sundbank, a short distance down the river, | O ) eV the knowledge of which | ated from them by dizzy precipices and bat- 5 oLy Q. Bouiks, n Leo Estello, ¢ Ldipped into it 1 became disappoiuted und would burst into & thousand picces and I | belo pack | I the ut day, been confined to a ts of crags, to_surmount which would Captain Third Cavalry, U A. It wis un experience,” said Mr. Bstelle, | tossed it asido, knew nothing more until the next day. But Ho 1 their s to town and laid | very | civel m Lo defy the light of the hawic and the - fwhich seems to grow more vivid with ever I knew it T had fallen nsleep and ) talk about thrilling events, experiences that | them in tho rear roowm of his un Uhe territory of Arizona, some eighteen or | buzzard Dr. Birney,practice limitod to eatarche | passing ye: 1t occurred s ( wning thei vo burglues in the i make men turn gray vost is where you | taking hmeut, rustled hard until | twenty years ), wis a8 closi | wh I 1y's march Was over; our camping sos of nose and throat, Beo bldg, | 0f March 15, 1855, district attorney her Omaha had been having somo that sovt of thing. T y time I was | abo < that night completing ar- t ws could be found on | ground for the night was ouly a fow yards il & Lwas engaged in prosecuting Tom Bullavd y h expericnce h houschreakers really very badly f 0 rteen Iudian | rangements to bury th 0 of the eavth is there a | ahead of us; and we weve indulging in ex = ST for the murder of Henry Vaupoorten at th 150 be that night 1 vesolved in my dream warriors got after an old fellow by the name RS A R o pheaval of disconnet- | pressions of delight and wonder at this St s Festival, St. James hotel ol to lay for ti I was dreaming were then in of Austin and myself up the mountains. | he started up stairs, separated by broad | curious blending of the pic sque and the val under the auspices of St. Peter's | down to mak for th the house This occurred on” April 8, 1570, not far from | had to pass through t s of desert land, baked to dust’ by the | sublime—General Crook, Tom Moore, Cap- | church was given on the spacious lawn of | Viaduct Nevil beneh, “All of o sudden in my dream T saw & burs South Pass, Wyo. S al of us wore out | the dead men lay. “When 1 I vs of a torrid sun tain Brent, Licutenant Ross and I-when | n Rubl, 824 Georgia avenue, on | #ud on the day I have cit enced Bal- | glar enter my room. : thero i the prospecting busine About ten | he sald, *T could hear Lo vegetation, beasts and birds of tho | whiz! whiza! whizzz! whizzzz! from front | woigid s evening. About one thousand | 18T te be hu & leap and caught um by tho days previously, we had enga; in anen- | long and loud arally,tho thought struck | desert porti Ml are sub-tropical, while | and flank, swept the ‘drrows of an Apuche G 20, . ALORY. 00’ Yhousang Slecling grostly exhausted by my work v counter with a squad of tho red devils and | me that one of tho dead men had come to life, | those of the clevated ranges ave identical | uny i, visitors were vresent duving the evening. | that day I retived ecarly accompanicd by my S, killed fourteen ack Bear, their chief was [ I could feel my hat go right up i with the flora and fauua of mc mperate | We were not by any means L in that | The Seventh ward band furnished tne music | wife. Suddenly I found mysclf dreamini I awoke among the slain, On the Sth Austin and I | the air. It frightened me so ereatly that I | climes, kind of business, and in less time than it [ uud @ very enjoyable evening was passed, | that Ballard's cxecution wasat hand, Twas | 1 had my mother by the throat ! had been off some distance from the camp | apparen an age finding a match The deserts can, in most cases, be re- | takes to tell the story had thrown ourselye Festoons of Chin lanterns lighted and | 0 an old slaughter house and secmed to be “You may talk ab \ big g m rain- with his team und wa Ho was o old | Wi Tt fisvovien ona’y eaing & Mtk | clatmed by irrigatio, and it is certinly no | from onr by and calling to the mew what | | "8 SR B CEE v i S tho first rrive, High upon the | ing tears of repentunce upon his mother's tiy in that e y and know | commenced an investigation. What do you s wouderful than entrancing to regard the | was the matter, were advancing from pine | besutified the grounds and a well served col- | yeufrold ass such as s used to | neck, My mother had to faivly swimout of the all about the Indiaus. We wero | suppose it was! There was Goodrich's dog | transformation wrought by man’s genius and | trees to pine trees upon the enemy lat of ice cream, cake and fruits refreshed | draw w From the windlass | tours thist started aflowing upon her the in- Teturniug home and bad gotten within threo | Tayinge under tho bodies panting liko a liz | 1abor in tho cases like Tucson, Florence and — But tho Apaches had ouly intended their | those presont. Whe music of the Seventh | there du anoose in theend | stant that Iawoke from that dream that miles of the camp when 1 happened to look | zard Pheenix, where flelds grecuer than the em- | attack to stampede our horses, or to kil or | ward band, heard by many for the first time, | of it at the earthen | night. I haven't got done buying her sili back and saw o band of warrlors sweepiug Mr. Maul had some lively adventures dur- | erald betray the budding shoots of bar or | maim a few of theanimals or men at tae head | was well selectod 1 hig appreciated, | floor 1 di falut light of the | dresses yet to squaro myself, down upon us. 1 could foel my hair stand on | ing his stay from 1570 to 1851 in Monta vippling waters, babbling in broad ditelies, | of the column, Within doors the church choir, under the o5 As 1 looked it sent SYou see she badn't hear me in and end. At Austin’s command wo jumped out | with mountain lions and black bears. He et the fc Y eful cottonwoods. such purposes, arrows or lances were | leadership of Prof. Provost, rendered several | forth a gurgling ind 1 as I wate t | with the usual mother had of the wagon and unhitched theé horses. tells some broezy stories about sittir he mountains buttresses of granito | proferable to bullets, since they mu sclections’ in the style f b they ure 1 tly 1 v | pecped into m ther supposed we would each mount and anix tr all night with one or more of these | and L0 —0 i table lands, capped | noise to give to those'in the rear'of the col d trea bloc i been * and leave that country, but Austin tu fer us boasts walting at the base for him with black ly 1 basalt—are in numerous | umn attacked a clue to what was going ou in ~ o cover 1t it had L 1rean them loose and away they went toward ¢ | to come down and furnish them with a good | places covered with dense pine forests on | front. AR Absalulv Qupe, feet ted my position A iWhat did you do that forl! sald 1 to Au | me . their its, while scrub oak and r Our column had ashort time boefore the 10ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINTME the st L ‘Never mind, you cowand,’ he repl ——— ——— Erow in jung eir flank been ordered to ¢ 5, prepara P arge two-ounce tin b | found get your gun’ and come with w By s | Tbe Pennsyly ) company has [ * In these a essibl s 1 ng into camp this reason, the an absoluto ¢ for a v f ) timo the Indians were quite near. We van | voluntarily ady s of all its em- | the fierce n whi i in places of findix ly the ad i 3 { down & hill intoa willow swamp, hid our: o8 th yuthwestern Pennsylvania | write wilder than their le brothers, | vance-guard, were promptly confronted by tively all kinds of pil selves and awaited developments he lu- ach 10 to 15 per cent. This equalizes the | the yelping coy ol hole force of five companies, all of old the ORIGINAL ABIETINE OIN f ren ans calle up to our wagon aud took every- oad on all the TO the number of th these Indians | and experienced soldier, who moved without | MENT, S G an 1D om pany ossion itive bourd they could carry, They then made ® brauches. wfested Arizons aud New 0 as wel g for orders, to places bebind trees aad | ¥ ceuts pe ceuts,