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T L N AT W et aa0 — . R ——— : THE OMAHA DAILY BEF: SUNDAY, APRIL 9, ISOR—TWFNTY l'mr,s e~ 1 N ITIQ | titles of otton o confederate agents | of my argument, Ttill romatnod vaguoly | 100k, there {5 the old woman sitting | Cosenok, who had bosn lo »king out for A TRIBLTE T0 T“HR DEH)\ | abron elving in return machinery | suspleious, down in the eabin." his share of the toa. | | trom rope with which he established ‘I |h- mistress of the eabin your } 1 went In. Algowd five was shining in He then lay down on his beneh: and A Y — | factorfos and furnacos, opened mines, | mother?" I said to the boy. | the stove,” and wi breakfast was being | gradually my wgitation subsided i L | made powder and castings for guns, and No prepared which, for such poor people, | “Listen! I said to him. “1f you hear | ( An Impoting Testimonial to Indiana's | 1y these means had made the district “Who are you, then®" | scemed to me either a luxurious one. | a pistol shot, hurry down s fast as you Roldier Bons, | self-supporting when the war came to an | A poor orphan,” he replicd | When T spoke to the woman, she told me | can to the shore,” end fo ng the last to sur ‘Has the mistross any childron?" that she was stone deaf He rubbed his oyes, and veplied mo st render, In 18G4 defented General “She has one daughter, who has gone It was impossible, then, to talk with | chanically, “Yes, sir." DESCRIPTION OF THE STATE MONUMENT Banks on the d river, foreing him to |t a with a Tartar.” 1 I turned to t blind boy, and tak 1 Hum:l my pistol in my belt, and went | muke the disastrons defeat that has bes What Tartar N . it d ; r o | him by the eav, saia out. The siren was waitir me at | y . come hist [0 1860-08 Generad Smith | “How do I know? A Tartar of the [ “Isay, you little wizard, where were | the top of the path leading down to the n eneral—A | was president of the Atlantic & Pacific | Crime n from Korteh.' [ you going last night with that parcel | sca. lightly elad in a stuff which clur Telegraph and chaneellor of | Tw 1e hut, Two benehes,a table | und m to her waist like a scarf N | the Univer ville from 1870 to | and a large wardrobe placed near the Ho o began to moan and ery, ollow me," she said, taking me by The Passing of n Confeder Btory of Sherman - Mulver Fleld - Parking Battietields, | 1875 and after time became and then sot 1out: the hand. | » | stove. composed the whole of the furni | fossor of mathematics in the Umversity | ture. No holy image against the wall— [~ “Wh was 1 going last night? 1| We walked down the rugged path in et A i, He | bad sign! | went nowher And with a pareel? | such a manner that T eannot understand P sl ! of the ablest and nost distin The sea breeze came in through the [ What pareel? how I failed to break my neck. Then wo | t The colossal bronze figure of ‘‘Indi- 1 of the southern generals during | broken panes of the window, [ took a | The old woman now proved that her | turned sharply to the right, as the blind i ana,” which is to surmount the magnifi- | the war | wax candle from my portmuntéay, and, | ears, when she so desired it, were by no boy had. done the night bofore. 'Tho | to install [ me my saber [ “It is not tru | after lighting it myself. I pl it soldiers monument now being Wivry ns closed. moon w. not yet up. ‘I'wo little star " sho cried. “Why do | like the fires”of lighthouse cral Sherman Men’s Department. | ’ S of the South, at Suwance, T | ekt il R O U UL LB G and my earbine, laid my pistols on the | you tease an unfortunate boy? What do | the darkness, The 1 waves week. The bronzo casting i an ideal | Pearl viver on his vetreat to the &St | tublo, strotehed myself out onw bench, | you take him for? What harm has he | lifted and let fall jn v dence o | s female figure whose dignity of bearing | 850 '8 Was LAOWE HA et bim as | 8nd, wrapping myself up in o furlined | done you?" solitary bout close to the shore and beauty of I" e iy T | Ao Ay Disiole, whys ‘tho. Btinny Sonthi, | S0t 18y down, I could stand the noise no \u..-l r. So| “Getin," she said. I artist, George 'l wster, hirty fec ? ‘s | My Cossack took possession of the went out, determined somehow or | eonfess that [ h » not Tl L e R | the federal authoritie } | otir beneh, Ten minutes afterwards | other to find a solution to this riddlo. | for sentimental exeursions' on the sca Light Overcoats one of the larg 1d_heaviest statue R e | he was fast asleep: I, however, was rapped up in my overcoat, I sat | But it was impossible to refuse. She | ! ever cast in America— it will stand in its | that mycotton fuctory would not be | 11" g vake ~ and eould not drive | down ona hench before the door. Be- | leupt info the bark, L followed her, and | Price $10. golitude 300 fee in ||‘.I‘ air, holding a | b rned, i n\\vlunm \I nigh from my mind the °impression | fore m‘-]l;,-.vk.-lnn- waves of the sea, ~(|\H off \{\ went. | In tans, grays and brown Me tons, silk or cloth faced reh in its col Lanc as o ade upor o by the boy, wi is two | agitated the tempest of the night “What does « is moean? said, | y % )i lossal hand, o Lotk made upon’ me by the boy, with his two | agitated by the temy o nigh it does all this mean? 1 said, | on Monday at... white eyes. heir monotonous noise seemed to re- | getting angry. An hour passed. Through the window | semble the confused murmurs of a |~ “It means,” she re fell upon the floor the fantastic light of | town. As I listened I thought of by- | sitdownon a ber -§10.00 ¥ which was laid August le in the orders and that a torch in Cirele park, near the capitol build- | was likely to be applied to the property ing. The ground s, including the | at any moment 1880, stands wied, making mo e g 18 Light Overcoats, ; b, i | at any mmr At R oo, | gone years—of the years I nad spent in | arms vound my waist, “it means th [ is three feet e | T resolved to seck o ediate O Suddenly a shadow was cast where be- | the north, of our bright, fresh capital: | love you.” | i 5 grade of the adjucent strect ter- | view with General Shevman himsells ¢ | g thoro had been bright light, I | and little by little T became absorbed in [ Her biening cheek was elose to mine, | Price §5 { race, 110 feet in diameter, is twelve feet | terta P At e ntimely hour, for | &prang up and went to the window, A | my recollections. and [ felt her hot breath on my face, | high and is reached by twenty-four steps | ex v th The | it was past midnight—of reaching humay n figure passed onee move, and then About an_hour verhaps more. | Sudden heard something fall | We will se A PR AKE T goventy-five feet in leng j v Ftld i L disappeared—heaven knows whe Suddenly the caden of a sing- [ into the water. Instinetively my hand We will sell on Monday ,” overcoats, same as we 3 diwmeter of the buse of the pedestal at the | presence of the fede.al chi 18 could scarcely believe that it had " struck my ear red, and | went to my belt. The pistol was no | sold last week, in three handsome shades of torrace floor is fifty-two feet, Sixty tle trouble in ascertuaining tha caped by the slope into the sea: yet there ainge melod ow and | longer there! ! [ I 1M | above it recedes to thirty-six feet ;” .l-\l{,‘\:\'rhlrt':\\..;:‘m.VH‘\I- i ”(;. ny.; \‘,l.l.\- Wh HO UL g pid and live + sounds A horrible suspicion seized me. The | all wool Me'tons, that are worth gro, at. .... .. 3500 inc |I‘.-~_} | }u-““” |.;m’\\v 1 -‘ un iR I“; I*‘ Kson, an b the r‘.‘ e Throwing on my overcoat and taking | seemed to fall from th ! |[1mk.-.| blood rushed to my brain, [ looked at Cl D. 1 S t with the shaft, twenty-fi et hdtiiinlodi 4 e my saber, [ went out of the cabin and | up, and on the roof cabin [ saw a | her. We were far from the shore and [ X iagon. i | ameter. Ascending, the t dimin- | gate of the place, wheve, to my great | G "iha " plind boy before me. 1 con- | young girl, in a st , with dis- | eould ne y gona. ults, fshes to twelve feet six inches at the line , 1 found no g ds to check my wim. [ tried t wpe from I 0 found no_guards to cheek Y | ealed myself behind the wall, and he | heveled With one | her embrace, but she elung to me like a | Price $15. | benat ._u‘), e ‘n‘.«ll_ \\lm. |;me vi\ v““i_\ [.”‘, i ‘l“' ”‘i “l“ ‘I‘“ S i passed on” confidently, but with a certain | hand placed before her eyes to keep off and almost suc ed by a sudden | cautionsn He was the r; rk in throwing n ported by cagles seven feet high carved at puzzled, [ paused for o minute ov il Lol i) ed qu toward the shore. Her body and mine were now bending expeditions; so, at least, 1 concluded | But her mancuvers e i . uvers were not yet at | over the side of the fr and her DY 15om tho aghilly with which he now | anend. All ‘the restof theday T saw | Halr wae in the water, The momest sprang from rock to rock, while the sea | her at short intorvals, always singing | was a critical one. I ot up on my knees, pourcd in beneath his feet, Suddenly | and dancing. Strange ¢ took her with one hand by the hair, with AN [ he stopped as. though he heard some | was nothi phys the other by the \hmn and when 1 had noise, sat down upon rock, | note insanity. On the contra at last compelled her to uncluteh my I o ; O ot ik Tvaalti. 6 velyr thite da || PLinE suridet Eid s avim, wand | the distant horizon and still continued | Which was already on one side. | ¢on- Men's 3-button cutaway frock suits, '“‘!'Y RrpRlte R O B | the headquarters of o great United | Blowly down the slope toward the her song. ¥ trived, however, to restove tie equilib- made and trimmed, worth $22. Our price rcjects four fect whove the plat- | hot the headguarters of u great United | Lipyiy iy the hour,” Teald to myself, It scemed to me that this was the | rium, and then began, botween my per Monday will be 15.0 oSl by SR e Sl e o A Bt ¢ 1 | whieh speceh is ‘vestored to the dumb [ woman whose voice T had heard the | fidiouscompanion and s elf, a desperate = 9y Lo cp G cieciieiiieiene.... . 815,00 s e [ e et oLt o (6 e houss | ML iph titouthe bilnar night before on the sea shore. 1 looked | steu in which I empl | an_clevator and staivway from the in- | opencd the f“ e I followed him at some distance, anx- | again toward the singer, but she had | strength, while feeling th | torior of the &1 n[ and from it tho sur- | and on to tho porel, Eor some miites | ouq ot to loso sight of him. appeared. = A moment uftor able creature was overcoming me - — rounding landscape is see [ RSt ol e ! L 9| During this time the moon became | passed rapidly before me, singing un- | her agility. stands the turret, an iron frame cov- | ;HH';"‘“”’M" L W there any gurd | overed “with clouds, and a black fog | other song, and snapping her fingers, do you me I said to her, | | ered with copy eight feet square | to challenge my intrusion. Through @ o5 over the sea. It was just possible | She went to the ‘old woman “and | sque her little hands so tightly 3\ [) v and nineteen feet high, = Upon thi shuded transom | eauzhit the xelletlon | 0 distinguish in the darknéss a luntern | said something to her. ~ The old woman | that T hoard Hepntiger ki but what- v bronze globe cight feet in diumeter | of a light ] ”w G b ship @ hor, close to | seemed annoye The young girl burst | ever pain I may have « Bt HHe hY ) k will . Dlaced and on_ this the | it i o e e Vi \e waves were rolling in, | into a laugh. Then, with a bound she | did not utter a word. e reptile nature { statue, “Indianu,” thirty fect high, ‘~m.‘- Wit gallissd) W) LG “I‘“ and throatenad, if he continiad to ads | came close to' me; suddenly stopped and | could not thus be overcome, | {/ will stund. The pose of this figure will § nothing to indicate occupuncy by the | vance, to swallow up my blind ad- | looked at me fixedly, as though sur- [ *You saw u s evied at last. **You B L O | om0 e, Wrong ) [ | venturer. He was sonear ihe sea, that | prised at seeing me. Then turning | want to denounce us.” Then, by a rapid the sky and its expression from every | 1 have come to the wrong house” Il with another step he would be lost. But | away with an air of indifference she | und violent effort, she thr dowii | point view is th tion of vietor said. But observing that a dim light | {05000 t16 fiest of his nocturnal | walk } Tn it is combined all that is representéd | was veflacted through the half-open door beneath. It isthe pem of the monu- | of u room opening into the hall, I ad- ment. The sword, held in the right | vanced and entered the apartment. [t hand with the point turned down, | had but a single occupant. typifies the power of the army, to which | He was slecping upon a lounge and my the vietory is due: the young cagle upon | steps aroused him. He turned over and the head is emblematic of the freedom | looked at me, | | Too g SRR e BRI T ; | and 1 his burden by his | eyes we 'nt and penetr lothe threw | to the | resulting from that victory: and the [ “What do you want?" he demanded. | S0 vas. tiow %y & | They exer A T O R [ rlhv :”m“.m“u.l.l;;,., ot oo e oft '“.‘."“ left b “;1(- is [ want to'see General W. T, Sher- | \fo figure. walking g the shore. | netic influence, and scemed to expect | foaming waves. Then [ saw her no | 9 { the g piine il 1 Shepmian, - Wiat d | wed myself behind one of | a question. But whenever [ was on | more. | O S e aI’ men . from that victory and that m. | Sherman. 1t do you nd overheard the following | the point of speaking she took flight, | In the bottom of the hoat [ found an i (lm‘v \; |'h )“l m:; it 5. (ul “'v;lj N sy o poaeint " with a sly smile on her lips. old fter much ry represcnts cn th four sidos of the shaft | said shortly in substance that his orders id & womanisy T s s s e que T LI o Janko will not come. plied the blind boy, is not afraid of the wine “But the clouds get thicker and thicke “In the «].nlun ss it is easier to escape the coasty And what xfl She eould searecly called beautiful; | [ walke to the hut by the path anko | but L have my own ideas on the subject | Jeading to the sci Thero was & thoro L U Monday Bavgain, hor, and with womon, us | boy had been awalting tho artival of | Boys’' Short Pant Suits, $1.75. s nothing like bri the sailor. The moon at this moment Ttcan be v ch was shining in the sk I fancied I e TS lic and in the shape of the i could discern on th hore o white % ’ 5 . The nose is also an important | fgure, Filled with euviosity 1 con- | Absolutely all wool cheviot suits, new spring shades, In Russia regular noses are | 1 myself behind a sort of promon- | L , 4 ) re than little My siven | tory: from which I could remack what worth $3.00, at.....ooeve.in ve been about I8 years of ‘age. was going on avound me. What was ‘med me in her was the ex- | my surp nd I almost say my joy s of the M wnd civil wars, | w being the heroic pe of the The sccond is seventy-nine feet below | wanted to go to sle the first, and represents the navy at the | himself and shut his d of the civil war. Thé third | out and returned upt is twelve feet he id, | later the factory sents the army by illustrations “And you 'ms of the service re to spare the factory—that they te. | would be obeyed. He said that he He stretched and I walked A few hours that General Sherman and other | had no body giar @R e i “Lsay that | entered his room and | uiphons to wed ve plat- | left it without being challenged; in As I Peace.™ | fact, without meeting a soul except the = gets drowned?” ve no more bright r on Sunday.” listened to thi $1.75 | s for groups of he conception of * colloquy T re- marked that the biind boy, w! 1 w general himself,” % i . 4 $ 5 3 50 boys' double-breasted two picce suits, in me- ; \ ked e .| spoken to me in the Little Russian dia- | traordinary suppleness of her figure, | when [ saw that the white 5 boys ! 5 I b : tect, as shown in the sketches upon the | - This remarkable incident was told in | | boy oy to mefn U et SR D raD Yo Bt b W 4 # e et el e O his | Greons e e et g | lect, talked quite correetly the true Rus- | the sing ular movements of her head and | my na She was wringing the water dium shade fancy cheviots, on Monday at. ... $2.50 sian language, her long faiv h You see,” he continued, clapping his | waves of gold on he hands, *‘[ was right. Janko fears neither | which was p the sea, nor the wind, nor the fog, nor In her sidelon hanging down in | out of her long, fair locks, and her wet | neck, and her nose, | dress clung to her body. A boat, which ; 3 tly formed. i could just sce in the dist was | Boys' reefer suits, over twenty styles to select from, glance there was some- | coming toward us. Out of it the Sl ! Y 2 the coastguard. Liston! It is uot the | thing dark and wild; as there was some- | same boatman whom [ had scen | . 1';#[\({t ‘:(-‘l;»‘l‘;:“lll;“' epring H“‘;j_ ’I:{‘||(lv:ll|‘|l~lr’- S diLs S breaking of the waves I hear. No, it is | thing [u'm-nmlinl,r]mlhvpnv‘\- ””N“(Ilil | the night before, with the same | Junior Suits, Ages 4 to 8—j30 styles of popular-priced > another. § - Michael Lormontofl in the Strand Mag zine. | ihio noise of his oars. nose. The light hearted singer recalied | Tartar ap. L now saw s O : X a mounted cavalryman, only the head of Taman is the most wretched of all our | The woman got up, and, with an anx- | to me the Mignon of G , that fun- | that his huir S el B S junior suits on Monday at $3 50t0.....covuuns $5.00 ]':'_';“L}';;""','“;;'"""_I'}j';;,‘*;.';;;‘;;{ the soldier | yvitime towns. T almost died of hun- | jous 1ok, tried to pie model of the monument, ins with | Joshua Green, its founder and presi- b low and high reliefs upon the former, | dent. culminating in full projections, one being a winged figure, the tof War, the darkness. | tastic creaturo of tho German mind. | fashion, and that from his giedle hung a ; toward the front. Below, and in advance | & l"”""“- "l""'"‘ “';““*' “":”"-","l"““!“"l' e TR e M S e “all is 1ostre | Boys' Long Pant Suits—Special sale of nobby double- > 8 edesta re e e arrived very late at night in a b S0 - e ot o5t i e ot oo e ot oib | Ly retohoa talogs IRe vaathiin e topen Talso' tried 10 see whether there was | sume ransition from esticss agitation | Then (. but in 5o low breasted suits on Monday at. . . ......$10.00 the group, i1 vavious poses, charging [ his tired horses close to o stone building, | mut sonldditinguish nothing. A tomest | word h s g 8 volc m. k over ‘tho Tallon. enomy. that is being | oo # | but could distinguish nothing. A moment | words and the same songs. ik 2aid Janko, 3 trampled under their feot, while in the | Which stands by If at the entrance to | lator, however, a black speck showed Toward evening [ stopped my Undine ..:,N..g],,\ voi 5 Boys' Hats, 25¢.—Cloth hats for the boys, same as 4 front center stands Columbis, with right | the town. A Black Sea Cossack, who | ituclf among the waves, now rising, now | at the door of the hut and said to hor: “He will be here soon,” was the TRet Mondy At Uatinale price i o e 25¢ hand raised aloft, as the inspiration of | was on guard, heard the bells of my car- falling. At last T could make out the ell me, my pretty one, what you | answer. 3 battle, i viage, and cried out, with the sharp | [orm Of a boat dancing on the waters | were doing today on the roof?” At that v moment the blind boy "The group of “Peace” begins in a sim- ) o SR ang rapidly approaching the shore. L was seeing in what direction the | appea apacket, pis . s S e, alEl! . Ui ||t ntget v CREBLRING SR o man who was guiding it must | wind blew which he placed in the bark e === REagoytipon tBooRtetn Banel, on Y18 i Who goes th have been a bold sailor to cross on such | *“How did that concern you?” Tiston(Eald Janko; 'lceap. & good R e alttance. In low relief | Outcume the sergeant and corporal. | a night an arm of the sea some fourteen | “Whence blows the ‘wind, thence oh heve; the things you know are the victorious army is seen marching off | I told them I was an offi traveling by | miles across, and must have had good | comes happiness.” valuable. Tell"—(here ‘a name was the field, while above, projecting from | order of the crown, and that I wanted a | Feasons for braving so much danger ] 2 I ger. “*And your singing was to bring you [ uttered which [ could n cateh) | \ N P % 3 watched the frail little craft wh was | good fortune? “that 1 am no longer in low into high relief, with arm extended | pillet somewh ; now diving and plunging like & duck | _ “Where singing is heard there is | his service. Things havo tuken a bad ( into the town. | through the breakers. 1t seemed as i turn. He will see me no mor The | & i into full pr ion" and partly over the roup bolow, s, the winged Spitdt of | 41) the nouses we tried were alveady | though she must the next moment be | * *“But what should you say if your sing- | situation is so dungerous that I must et e ) » v was cold: T had | dashed to pi on the shore, when | ing caused unhappiness?” * something to do elsewhere, Ho will not suddenly the skillful rower turned into f unhappiness arrvives it must be | find such another very i i for the victors. In the right reav of the | occupied. The weatl \ e a little t and there, in comparatively | borne. And from grief to joy the dis- | add that, if he had rewarded more liber tance is not great.” ally the dangerous servi rendered to t, and | “Wh ht you these songs?" him, Janko would not have left him in 4 sheep- v I dream and Ising: those | the lureh. If he wants to know wher N L Je gelebrating theie ‘triumply’ by ciecting: | ended by irvitati n'their front a union and rebel soldier [ 7T OV WO SERE e L lokman wardGmlddie: fie are fraternizing, tho latter ina recum- | i\u fir ‘nl. I .Anll to ||;. & ;,.‘1“1‘_ wore on his head a cap of bla bent position as though wounded or “take me to some place where I can a 1 0 anyto e g hausted, and the former offering him | least he down, no matter where it is, ;“"l"‘l’l'w‘_ly'l' Rttt SR B pioime cannonun ;““y‘ml’ 4 aan e vebl fons lv}l‘ll‘!“.lfix\:ill:é:‘l‘: “Iknow a hut in the neighborhood,” [ mpen the three uvited theiv forees | *What is 5 ‘After a moment's silence, Janko went l[at De a«rtment | he has returned \l\m. a ,||. af of wheat where you might | to drag from the boat a burden which “Ask those ulmhu]:!m 1 me. d ¢ she accompanies me. She ° | 1ying in front, While another returned pibut Tam afeaid it would scaveely | scemed to be so heavy that I cannot | And who baptized you?” o Sma 11 the old woman i g group of round figures, upon the sub- [ been three nights without sleep, I was podestal projecting below, are soldi very tired, and our useless inquiries | &, hitle tay, and theve, in com The man was of middle he @n with his hand, | who understand me listen to me, and | to find me, where the wind howls, where fous pevsans who | those who do not lis skin. He made a te foams—that is where I am at rephed the corporal sle ! for is e ding his wife farther | suit your b even now understand how so slighta | “I do not knc ; her time, and that she .):x‘nl.‘lkm |];I 1:::!”.1‘:“.::; 3»::'13‘.-‘(\ (fif.f.'?:.i. “Go on,” 1 said, paying no attention to | ¢raft could have supported such a w “Ah! you are ver us; but [ satisfied. We shall not see i again appears, with cxtended arm and | his observation. 110 | Phey at last hoisted the cargo on their | know something about y here was v q wand, proclaiming pes g naipiReryablon, | shoulders, then walked away and soon | no sign of emotion on het : her lius %» murmured the blind boy. The shaft is 270 feot The bronze |, oiier much walking through dirty |ldisappeared, did not mov annot be troubled about you. figure “'Indiana’ Y0 feot, streets, we at last reached a sort | The best thing for me todo now was to | *Last night,” I continued, “you were The young girl yed into the boat bin on the edge of the sca. return to my resting plac But the | on the sea shore full moon cast its light on the | strange scene 1 had witne ed had so | scene I ha Bruno Schmitz did the are stural work and brought the plaster medel with Then [ told her the | ynd with her hand made a sign to her d witnessed. 1 thought this i - Nim from Cornsany. This did not inclade | thatehed roof and the white walls of my | struck me that I waited impatiently for | would have caused her to evince some | = Here," he said to the blind hoy, “that IR awatan figure at tho top. The cost | Propose d habitation. In the court, sur- | daybreak. symptoms of anxiety, but it had no such \werbr i3 compicte will reach $200,000. rounded by a sort of palisade, I saw a | My Cossack was much surprised when, | effeet. plied the child. hut, older and more bro a@ the principal oue. “You assisted at a curions interview,” Ehe i et e e lala i Dubey0u | (ral10 aaacthe Banda: n down than | on waking up, he found me fully dressed and a picce of money m this hut the | I said nothing to him about my noctur- Kirby Smith D ho lust of the full genorals of tho | ground sloped rupidly through the court | val exeursion. 1" remained Tor some | donot know e, and what yoi do | = blind boy did not pick it up. S e civil war has passed away in the death | down toward the s nd [ saw at my | little time looking through the window | know you had better keep under lock Jnkn took his place in the boat. The R n & is 3 TR(0) JIRIS , In black, nut of General Kirby Smith at Suwanee, | feet the fosm of the troubled waters ! Qur great succe THE T ) with awdmiration at the blue sky, studded | and key, as you would keep some procious remained sitting down on the Tenn. This imposing relie of the lc st | The moon seemed to be e ntemplating | with little clouds. and the d treasure, W he secemed 10 be ¢ brown, nutria and java. ....e.eeeees ceee.. 82,50 cause was not yet 70 years old, but for | the restless element, which was subject | of t tehed al It if,” I continued, with a grave his grief aflicted me, ‘W |.\ st ol e e and 33,00 nearly thirty years he had lived in re- | to her influence. By the rays of the | zon like a st of violot, eading in @ | and almost meaning air, “I were to re- | had fate thrown me in the midst of this Al e aTs it s ks slataiees tirement, eciipsed by the eloua which | ruler of the night I'could make out, at | rcck, above which could be seen | late when I saw to the commandant?” peaceful ¢ of smuggl As the overspread the confederacy. a considerable distance from the shore, | the lighthouse. Then I went At these words she darted awa, - | stone troubles the water I h ught val Edmund Kirby Smith was | two ships, whose k stood | out. and walked to the fort of Chanagora | ing, and disappeured like a fr disorder into these lives, and like the born at St. Augustine, Fla., May 16, | out like spiders’ webs inst_the | to ask the commandant when eould go | bird. T was wrong in addvessing this | stone, moreover, 1 had very nearly sunk. 1824, He graduated from the mulitary | dull _tints of the “This | to Ghelendehik. threat to her. At the moment I did not | ¢ Wien I got back to the cabin, my Cos- academy at W Point in 1845. and in | will do,” T said to my " morrow Unfortunately, the commandant could | understand all its gravity sack was so fast asleep that it would | the war with Mexico for gallant col 15 twice bre luct at Cerro Gordo and he | morning I shall s f ndehik.” | give me no positive answer: the only The night came [ told my Cossack to | have been eruel to disturb him, I Cossack of the line was acting as | vessels in port were stationary on | prepare the tea urn, lighted a wax hted the candle, and saw that my lit- Contreras. From 1849 to 1852 he was | my servant. [ told him to take out trading ships which had not yet | dic. and sat down at the table, smoking | tle box eontaining my valuables, my assistant professor of mathematics at n-unk and send away the postilion: a | in their cargo. “Perhaps,” he said, | my long pipe. 1 was drinking my tea | gaber with silver mountin my Cireas- | West Point: in 18 1 to | called the m “in three or four days a mail packet will | when the door opened, and I heard the | sjun dg given to me by a friend ' captain in the Seceon and | Le wldp 2t N0 Answ | eome in, and then something can be ar- | rustling of a dress. I rose hastily and | had all been carried off. I now under- served on the frontier several | there was still no re | vanged.’ e A0 Tyistnen: stood what the packet placed in the boat years. In May, 1459, he was wound- I knocked ag a| lwentback in a very bad humor to | Shesat down silently before me, and | by the blind boy must have contained ed in an engagement with the | boy of about 14 showed Biselr. my lodging. At the’ door stood the | fixed me with a look which made me | [ 'woke up my Cossack with w blow, ve- | -y CARLSBAD, in black, Iinglish brown and 4 Cemanche Indians in Texas, and in 1861 *'s the master of the house?” | Cossack, who, coming | i and ‘ $ lahilanil] Whe toward me with | tremble: one of those g ne rical looks | proached him” for hh neg received the thanks of the Texas logis- here is none,” returned the child, | rather a seared look, said inguiringly: | which yubled my life in earlicr | fairly lost my temper. But 1 e 0 e MR lature for his services. In s dialect of Little Russia. “Bad news? °7 | days, | YRt Tt ettt SN IR 1)L 1861, he was promoted 1o major, waster! Then where is the mis- es," 1 answered. “*Heaven knows | speak to her, but some undefinable emo- | ““And_how eould [ complain to the A AAON AT ind $2.78 ::.fn‘n‘d lmxll Snlerad the tanfiiorate :n we shall get away from her | tion deprived me of the faculty of | guthorities? Should not [ have been e s e i a s s ialalh alaisiatalain W nig et Dialeialnia 0’ . srvice s lieu nant colonsl of a corps e into the villuge."” At these words the anxiety of the | speech, Her of cavalry. InJune, 181, he became sountenance was as pale | Janghed at if [ had told them that I had Who will open th door then?" | | soldier scomed to inere " 'y ase, . He came ! as death, In this paleness [ thought wen robbed by a blind boy, and almost brigadier” geneval; in Octobe | eried, at the same time kicking at it. close to me,and murmured inalow voice: | T eould see the agitation of her heart. | drowned by a young giil? lieutenant g . and in Fe The door opened of itself, and out “This 18 not a place to stop at. | met | Her fing, struck mechanically on the | R -— 1864, general He was s came a wave of damp steam just now a I Sea Cossack of my ae- | tables her body seems1 to shuaders her | gusy pésplo have no tume, ana sensible peo wounded at the first battle of Bull | | I'struck a mateh, and saw by its light | quaintance—we were se viiig in" the | bosom rose violently and the moment | ple have no inclination to use pil's that make In 1862 he had command of the Depart- | a blind ooy standing motionless before | same detachment last year. When I | afterwards seemed compressed. 2 day for every dose they take ment of East Tenne Kentucky, | me. told him wl we had put up. ‘bad | Thisspecies of comedy tired me at | 1od that the f D3 Witt's North Georgla and Western North Cavo- | T examined the child's face, but what | place,” he said, ‘bad people.’” And what | last, and I was about to bring it to an | Itisers does i E l‘l‘nu. He led “"'x:“‘"'l"l“ lur Biaxton | cun gne my ake of a lin_\»..[.,-n my without | do you think of that blind boy? Did | end in the most prosaic manner by offer- ; e huls: 4 vugg's wrmy in the Kentucky cam ? 1looked at him for some time, | anyone ever before see a blind person | ing my fair visitor a cup of when i ; e Y “re . aign and defeatod Goneral Nlson ab | With o feeling of compassion, when sude | raaning about from ous place to another: | suddenty she vose, and taking my head | | BOYS TOURISTS, for \Iumh_ Ciriasee taeanasts B Giehaond, Ky., in August, 1862, In | denly |raw on hisl a cunning smile, | going th the buzaar,bringing in bread and | in her b zed at me with all Inssttude’ 6v0 onted. Th ARG e e anACGAAR ¥ebruary, 1864, he was assigned to the | which produced upen me a very dis- | water? Here they seem to think noth- assionate tenderness. blood, clear the complexion & wommand of the Transmississippi de- | ageeeuble impression 1ld this blind | ing of it.” Y sred my eyes and 1 wished | 1 wrtiment, which included Louisiana, | boy be not so blind as he appearved?” | Tas the mistress of the place come | In my turn to kiss hers but she ed TAL LuT“ING OUSE Yuums, Arkunsas and - Indian | I "said to myself. Answering my ake, murmu Sha glatan. [0 S ST vy and organized a govern- | own question | said that the boy [ *This morning, while you were out, ‘ when eve s quiet, | can transact all the mant for that section. '“'~ only | was m:«l. utly suffering from cata- | an old woman came with her daught | meet me on the she , Then she dis- | but with a vocabulary of 10000 words 15 t t of communication was by running | ract, and that the appearance of cataract “What daughter? Her daughter is | appeaved, upsetting as she did so my tea | would be at a loss for lan C D d h S Vlockudo ut Gulveston, and [ cangot bo simulatad, . Why, moreoyer, | away. o A nd my nolitary lights March wind blows his new sili orner ouglas an t reets. 3 He sent large quan- l-huuid be affect blindness? Yet in spite “1 don't know who it is then, But 1" cried my | down the wuddy avenue, TR