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THE SEATTLE STAR : AATURDAY, JULY 19, 19%. Boost Yakima Woman _ WINS $18,000 wets ee let Feeds ay Coal for Vice Presidential | FOR INJURIES 2° a eee ton Saige jon all was sumKe by Reeves Ayir president of |Prof. J. N, Cobb, of the University N . t b 48 p Mrs. Westerholm Gets Ver- |‘ King cou can club, in| af Washington, trom the National eS omm on ; " Res * Jan address ¥ y night before mem. |Canners’ association of Ne : " = atl y rs dict Against Rainier Line | tern of the Green Lake Republican | If thene fieh are ned Washingwend 3 YAKIMA, July 10—Ina Phillips KiB, vs lyri - co a oe panda % te cethuntel wielt a6 18 Williama, of Yakitna, candidate for For injuries sustained in being| means should be taken to force ; ated or neighbors are boosting hei Valiey Railway company’s car at earty 70,090, rae coal COPYRIGHT 1919 BY EMERSON HOUG we eminence A pain D vreligew’ Norfolk station in November, 1918,| Columbia Colo in hetter—Adv converted annually into Oke. 48 convention, meeting in Chicago. Axel W. Westerholm and his wife.| -—— (Continued From Yesterday) hung up a certain rod on certain) fored her some of the fresh whortle| Mra, Williams was formerly a mem Helen Sear Weaterholin were award [malls under the eaves of the cabin. | berries. “And these litte cakes ber of the house of representatives ed $18,000 by a jury in Judge Cush He saluted sharpty tn return, and) pier jictie dom, Tim, soberly mareh-| you made them?” of thin state, man's court | Mrs, Westerholm alleged that she! ¥# § Burned again to those under his per | easin front of her, still guiling her, “Oh, yes—-I do most of nry cook Signed by A. W. Swigert, county sustained permanent paralysia of onal charge jas be supposed; but she no longer ing, when I can keep Annie away./ chairman of the nonpartiean league; “Get into the car,” he sald. Mary / pad a cord upon his neck, a staff in| You know about Annie, of courne.|C, A. Rhinard, secretary of the coun Gage felt his band steadying her! her hand. A hundred chickens, well | And Minna, Mra, Jengen’s little girl,|ty triple alliance; Dr, Richard Rob Erm. He took his place at the steer | grown now, followed her abeut.|who ix my companion here most of | erts, irman of the committee of tng wheel, Wid Gardner alongside, vocal of their desire for attention.| the time—as I said, she's a dear,| 48, and 1, Gallant, president of fone wide and arm ay a result of the motorm rting the car be fore she ft the steps. The company admitted the injury but Annie and herself being left to the she turned tw them, taking down the/ I've been teaching her to read all|the Central Labor counct!, the fol | lelaimed th $5,000 wan rufficient Fear seat of the tonneau. It Was tittle sack which contained the leav-|summer--spolling your.work, Mrs. | lowing telegram wag sent to the Chi-| damages, The cage lasted two days | feckless driving that Doctor Allen ings of the wheat that had been | Davidson!" cago convention and went to the jury late Thursday Barnes did once more. They outran- threshed not so long ago here. | “I wieh more and more that I the approaching valley storm, and) “Chick, chick, chick! she called) might have aid in that undertaking | ‘48ers’ greet similar forces of the ne | So presently came into the gate of gently-—"chickee, chickee!™ So she in this valley,” said Sarah Davidson,|ton tn convention at Chicago and] ‘that place where once bad lived Sim | stood, Lady Bountiful for them as | herself a great soul in her way, and| Urge formation aggressive, militant Gage. They dismounted from the they swarmed about her feet in the|/Covenanter when it came to duty.| Party of Ameriean progress, Com ar and stood, a forlorn group, lok. dooryard | “It is perhaps primitive here, more | mon folks, disgusted and disheart dng at the scene before them as fu-| She heard the clang of the new ww than elsewhere, but the people—| ened wUh republican and democratic} Weral mourners returning, not liking | gate, and turned, her hand shading | the people—they need vo much, and| twits of plutocracy, demand medium the thought of going into a deserted her eyes to see who was coming. | thy: they——" for political expreasio: economic Tome from which a man is gone) As she stood she made a aplendid | “They are so much,” aaid Mary | 4nd social needs of earnest and patrt ever to return. picture of young womanhood, ruddy| Gage gently. “They are so much, |e political descendants of Jeffer All at once Annie Squires, usually /and brown, clear of skin and eye.|1 never knew before what real peo |f0" and Lincoin, We nomihate La stolid, now overstrained, © Way very fair indeed to look upon. Her! pie were I'm so glad.” Follette, of Wisconsin, and Ina Phil oO A wild sobbing. “I can't co Thi gaze was direct and fre. She) ates Davidson's face worked|!ips Williams, of Washington, for there,” she said. “I'm seared. 1| walked easily, strong and straight. | strangely very strangely, Mary | Preident and vice president. Latter Want to go home! I want my/and deep of bosom, erect of head.| tought, so that she believed her to|'# xPeriegeed and successful tight Mother, that’s what I want.” t of back, as fit for love as ANY | ne arriicted with some nervous dis. |° for Woman suffrage, prohibition, “Where is your mother?” asked! woman of ancient Greece. Such bad] wise of the facial mustles. Hut in| #2 Courageous champion of farmer DWid Gardner. He had come over/peen the miniatrations of the sage|truth sarah Davidson was only en-| “04 labor interests, being direct de ot “pear to her when Doctor Barnes brush land for Mary Gage, that 0000 | aeavoring to get under dontrol her scendant of great abolitionist, Wen ~ sl Se ki ee Delping Mary into the house, jwas the weakling, Mary Warren. | own emotions, which, lke all eise| 4" Phillips, and true to type, Would Mrs, Ina P, Williams 39 Men eking “Dead—dead long aco.” wept An) “She saw two figures coming about her, were ponderous and slow. jbe inapiraci to 20,000,000 women) ri is Mile, “When I was 4 little girl. Like | siowly along the well-worn track “Thea, my édear—you will let me add great strength to par ae Army Commissions ther, Mary, there—we didn’t neither | from the gata She could not bh bs ° oe ty in Pacific Northweet, Give us we " id gees in < may ‘my dear,’ won't you? It's be-| nue progressive platfor nd treet Thirty-nine applicants for perma Feat ve ever have a mother. We done the comment the one made to the| Coming auch a habit with me at my | ‘Itt: Pro beats plattoran eind.tewet- urgeon ses nent comenienions tm the cand would Bust the best we could, both of us jother as they both advanced slowly, | {is or life—you will permit me to| Worthy candidates, and we'll w examinations Gaturday before 6 We've tried and tried to find some | leaning together as gossiping women Yakima valley farmers, labor and| Funeral Services for Judge Brown A profusion of flowers, including |many large designs from local and |state organizetions, filled the Bon ney-Watson chapel yesterday after noon at the funeral services for Judge ¥. V. Brown, Western oun sel of the Great Northern ratfroad who died suddenly at Victoria, B.C. last Tuorday. ‘The services were conducted by Rev n C. Perkina of the Unitarian chureh. The body |was placed inavault pending burial £4 arfangementa, 4 | | voters an: | IN | Washington. t Nd of rd c © ‘ort Law- | F : , inquire if that is an actual expres. | Wrenner | Sk |board of army officers at Fér s . . ne ~~ | ple here You = ou are glad? |envelope—it had been se thor | * = — a | * ~ P i. & ; ge La tiga reap ” ow ee fea i Ei oa td bo Do you mean that, or is {t mere con.|oly. Still, she tore it but very little v 'e i earth ¥ ho | newoomers, snide rt 6 . oe “af agar dl P vv. “And it's something a woman| woman, whose feet turned out alarm. | “*nuonality with you Pweg SF aeet dian tila te 0 ave ue ax | wants sometimes,” she added after a ingty as she walked Mary turned toward her with that : . eo hry ou in ee hy CHICAGO, July 1 rh a ‘ i h ~ hic comunonly | single sheet of paper, it bore no ad CAG ° ¢ nerve 4 : Riadher wet - henther ‘ |eravity which quite minonly a Mi coal wget bt ; wy sg gpl ecard aeeure it's her.” said Karen Jensen. marked her fuce when all her fea-|dress and no signature. It showed |@f Doc Scott” earned a place in C2 These returns must be filed fi . h.* x | Who's it going to be if it ain't her?) oe were at rest, & handwriting evidently that of a|cago's phrase book today. It grew ring the month of July. Regu- a cee trou jAln't she nice looking, sort of, after! 41 Guite mean it all, Mra. David-| lady of culture, of education. There| from the fact that Dr. Orlando F.|] jations 60 applying to this tax s 9 | ) Wid approached more closely the ali? And to think she can see now | “paid she. “I'm thankful with|Was nothing to show that it was an | Scott, operating n himself, with ined and approved, effective ameuens irl, touching ber arm with jap good as anybody! Yes, that’s ber.|/0r™. Se S00 tm tena wie lanswer—an anewer long deferred | NO thetic what © 21, 1920. ars airs } ‘ = @ brown hand now gentle as a| “flow do you do, Mis’ Gage?” jo2 my heart that f came cut here co hes from hh r further tnformation, phone ; P place to teh out |but not now to be changed, a we ehild’s. She spoke now aloud as Mary | it'® ® Breat place to fight things out “Now lookehere,” said he “I/came toward them amiling. The|!@ Bever have been happy in all my |an's answer to the great question. | S)@an't stand to hear you go on that|dimpies in her cheek, resurrected of | f@ if I had not come here. I'm] Mrs. Davidson waa standing in a 1 transplanted them to write Roberts’ Federal lad da yor eve | sort of consternation, the two parts | ta are recuperating in ad way. Do you reckon you was ever | jat " jenn and tender.|eally sind, and you may Believe) sort a | jointr ac ; any ee toe tas inan washes tp Red wigg mer Page tender | that, because I do—now.” of the letter in her.two hands, when | Joining wards, Income Tax Service Adapted From ‘ " Bd dense a r “Y¥ o 01 . ta | ly # into the wire fenc ra, Boott w ured wai reer Zam, living out here al! my life?" | lacked in her ilineas. Kou weld fergive-seu Would che neasty sprang Sate the wire fence iis accident, her leg belt broken || S54 Witte Sullding, Gentile Phone Elliott 4853 Henry Sidney Harrison’s sagen apamremen Famous Novel “And now I'm worse off than I ‘m well, thank you, Mra. Jensen.|°h*rish no malice againat any who/at the sudden voice she heard, the @ver was before.” he went on frown-| It's a glorious day. fan’t it? I've | ¢ted as the ah—instigatore—of your| voice of a man speaking close at ‘ingly. “I didn't know nothing be) got some fish for you. I was going |°%S!nal journey here?” hand. places. Gangre yt decided on © of flesh ax the only cure | fore you come out here. But now Ito tell Minna to take them down to] A sudden question arose tn Mrw. jood Lord, Mr. Gardner™ 4 | ? > Tecan think of your going/you when she went homa She's a| Davidson's mind as» to whether or!#he, “you gave me a turn. Tw ANCOUVER, 8 C.—Thirty autor Seatt es —ALSO— Back, Annie.” dear, your Minna : jot any of Mary S sevectates | thinking of gon atroyed in fire ‘ jet : She did not answer him, but went] “Well, it's right fine you should} ®"4 neighbors ever had told her all) “What was you thinking of, Min’! - Tota ¢ ated Leading TOPICS—NEWS—COMEDY catch fish for us now,” sald Mra.| Ue story of that original endeavor, | Davidson asked Wid, smiling | : more, I ain't agoing to] Jensen. “I'll be obliged for some—| hove object was matrimony. Where |“You was all in a trance. Some. | = Dentist he added savagely. “I/my man don't seem to get time to| YPOM she concluded now to let sleep | thing on your mind, huh? I bet I] Columbia Colo, the new American eal 0 e | kno’ fou're sending ot on | beer —Adv | evotini ‘Bint agoing to let you go back! go fishing.” ing dogs le, and not to urge the| know. You're # ng out @ ad on |t Ad | I am now . @tall. Talk about home!—there’s a) “Make you acquainted with Mis’; ™atter. Nor was Mary herself the| your own account—object, i |my entire time to my Real Estate and - c ke Dome right acrosst the fence. We! Davidson, Mis’ Gage,” she continued.{™ore disposed at the moment to| mony | dental practice. I mal “gan make it any way we like It'll|“Phis ts the .school teacher. She |"Pegk of the past. She only looked) “Sirrr™ said Sarah Davidson, ! all examinations and Here's comes every fall to teach up abo Jout across the valley, as was her cus-/fushing red for the first time Wid | diagnose each case as | @> to start with, anyhow. THE NEW Where you belong—you don't belong | when she's done living on her Idaho | tom See Eas evel eee. See Acreage 1 Soe soense tha Sanaa COLONIAL 4 there in them dirty cities. You | homestead, summera” They passed on to some talk of the|“such converrreation ts not wel | hus increased tn eile ts ced ine between ing’ houre, _ Belong right out nere—with me” “How do you do, Mise-—-Mrs. Da-/prace news, and demobilization|come on your part, not im the least! | pound Seattle a tae aing jot 8a m an pm CONCERT My offices have beer Jestablished for morr |than @ quarter of » Jeentury, and under m; j | persona) management since July 16, | | 1901. I do not compete with cheap, | transient, advertising cenitets. 4 “I couldn’t—I can't,” said Annie.|vidson” began Mary, offering her|plans for the men still abroad, for|I preferrr that you shall not again (I couldn't let her go back alona I|/hand. “If you know Mra. Jensen I|the visitors bad brought the iatest|mention that act which I have #0 ‘Wet to take care of that kia* ought to know you—she's been very | paper with them long regretted. The past ls past. A “She aint blind no more,” said|good to me. Come in, won't yout| “Our men! exclaimed Mary Gage| woman's real love is for today and Wid. “But she don't have to go/sit down on the gallery.” as she read the headlines. “They're| tomorrow, when with her own eyes we) “Yeu, this new porch is about as|fine. ,They are always fine, every-jand her own hearrrt she baa cho What more|good an anywheres right now,” com-| where, all of them. ['4 have liked|sen honorably, sirr—honor-rably! I cise in & growing city of this size. However, there are always some very good bargains to be found. People want to move, or aickness comes to a family, or a thousand and one things may happen that Aue some people to sell at a ORCHESTRA Every Man a Soloist " VAL HUBER Conductor % ] And we'd be right/mented Mra. Jensen. “It's @ little|to see them in the great parades, in|bid you good evening, Mr. Gartrd |b cicriticn or at the old ome my Veneee | See: She temelty |Se 1 " ice or at the ob ¢, oF at ‘ the time, to help her|hot, ain't it? They found seats of|the cities.” ner, I request you never to speak of || most any price for a wupck mate ent with first-class work. Overture, Hungarian Lutspiel. .........Kela Bela J wouldn't we, now?"| boxes and ends of logs. ” "Two be a grrrand asight,"|that incident agai And on Cinssif ee | EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 8, “You don't know her,” said Annie! Mrs. Davidson cast a glance into| said Mrs, Davidson, “for women who| Nor did he, so far as known h barg | Seattle's Leading Demtiss be: Bauires. “1 do.” the open door. It included the spec-| have had no oppor rr-tunity Hat when Wid himself, uckling | 06 Cob st “But, Annie.” he 1 jolumble ent on, “you'd tacie of a neat, white covered bed.| “Ah? Wemen who haven't bad|innocently, had passed on down to here in the val-|a table with a clean white ollcloth! what women wish?’ aid Mary Gage,| ward the gate with the loaf of bread | the spring comes! It's|cover, a series of covered andja strange f ° her own|which Annie was sending over to . all green! The sage has got|screened receptacies such as the|tones. “Don't you supposes God| Mary Gage for her evening*m a @ different colors of green in it | place might best afford out of its re-| knows the way? Why be trying to|rah Davidson was passing up the you wouldn't think that, would|sources. She saw a floor imma The word did not come|road toward the school house—«n ou? And some biue. And you ain't| lately clean. She spoke after a time tirely forgetting to turn to the left Been the mountains yet when they're | ending a silence which was unusual! “The plan?” suggested Mra. Da-|toward Nels Jensen's, where she White with enow on them—that’s| with her Rai, caaasa VE Gumething you got to see fer to| “The latter title that ydu gave me.| “The plant said Mary fhe was wiping away large, pon-| now what s mountain is. And look | Mrs. Gage, is correct.” sald she. “I| “1 must be going before tong,"|derous tearb—teare of joy that the Gt that little creek—it's plumb gen-|am a widow, having never encoun-| said Karen : it love of men and Ge up here, ain't it? It's pretty.|tered the oppore-r-tunity but once.”|, Jensen, having fin ahed | world had ee.” You . er saucer of berries, and caring lit-|women—that God, after all, did tent rom — to ave the moon-\It was worth going miles qut of itis for philosophizing. “I've got to|know—that the world still was as it on the meadows when the r ne's way to hear her say “opportu-| mix seven cows yet.” was in the beginning, incapable of ing you about that, | nity"— de-mouthed | “or to see her wi uth A “T will come often, if I may, Mra| destruction even by war, inc age, now that I am again located|°f diversion from the plan of peace and hope, She guensed much and guessed the future o Gage's life — from data mos enough, but which may have served What she saw on the single, un able | smite. “I aint never been married in my| “As a widow,” she resumed with - Mife,” he went on, arguing now. “I)a rotundity not lessened by her ab-|'” this valley,” said her companion, Gin't never seen a woman that I sence from her own accustomed dais, |"#ing also, foved or looked at twicet but you.|“as a widow yourself, you are ar-| “Oh, won't you, please said 2 was too damn lazy to care anyway |ranged here with a fair degree of | Mary Gage. “And—won't you do me @bout anything till I seen you. I comfort, as I am disposed to believe, |a little favor now? I have a letter NEW SHOW TODAY Just beend rift ing & ites, Gnas { was Just going up to the corner to|™EPrd page, and what opened all But now | ain't y 1 snot complain,” sald Mary | put it in the box. If you're going| “” es standin The ramance of ao eee Bed A great trait in life, my dear ma. |™¢ her in a world of darkness. The pe prea air Pou was te tt withe me, 1 une unless | dam; resignation! 1 endeavor to in-| Karen Jensen hesttated, looking! woras new were wrivtem ter herve who wouldn’t Oe ae a ow aleate in my pupils the virtue of |across at the short-cut acrona the|in a world of light 4 Se you to run it fer me. Hut I 40"! stoiciam. I tel them of the Spartan but Mrs, Davidson, not being | = play the game as e had promised him when he | went away that, if |w Tt was the ancient « @irect tr b Mre. Gage. Perhaps you have card of the Spartan boy? organized for barbed wire en |tanglements, offered for the errand, the other girls did. rything pees oe : ; 7 Yes,” said Mary. “I know som would take her around by the| wnat meas os pilyes Fab fs el 4 DID SHE WIN? . ce. She 4 ¢ enewer ot of Yes,” said now some buld take her around what was past, she might write to Stan) ee her ad a, had ceased. He ‘Mine about stolciam, I hope. But him one day. So now she had writ OR DID SHE LOSE? ieee etit! frowning king at her, 20* I'm going to get you nome ber Surely, I shall be most happy,” | ton | his hat pushed back from his for tiee—1 picked some, up beyond, on | said she. “I will walk around by the “Only thoughts of you remain | head the meadows.” She rose now and) tox and drop your letter very gladly.|_ In my heart where they have lain Sibert way no more'n I have.” hé ed Into the part of her cabin) No, no, don't mind coming. It's|. Perfumed thoughts of you, remain. @oncluded Years and years, An- hich constitu the kitchen. nothing—I always go home that ing, | mie. Wouldn't it settle a heap of An extre-raordinary young wom-| way,” A hid sweetness, in my brain. | things ant said Mrs. Davidson to Karen| But Sarah Davidson after all was} Others leave me; all things leave | IE got to have some sort of time (Jensen. “Afi extraordinary person|the school teacher when she bad me: | fo think things over, haven't 1, t© be here, Why, she is a person of passed beyond the gate in the wil You remain.” . then?’ She spoke with apparent Culture, Mike myself. And once mar-|low lane. She felt that in her were (THE END) venom, as tho this was an affront | tied—married to that man Mrs. represented all the privileges of what os - - Phat had been offered her | Davidson's lips were tight pursed | priesthood might be claimed in this| School Board Goes IN “Al you want.” aid Wid Gardner |now valley. She felt that her judgment ‘i gently. “I've done my own think I don't reckon she ever was, real,”|was large enough to be infallible, on Warrant Basis fing. I know.” said Karen Jensen, simply. “I don't| since ng had been arbiter! Recause of a jack of funds, the | I've got to go in and get them hardly believe they waa. here jn ali mooted matters. It was,| geattie school board has been forced | folks something to eat, haven't I Mrs. Davidson showed herself dis-| therefore, surely her right to bave|to discontinue cash payments and | ald Annie, using her apron on her | posed to regard all the proprieties, | intelligence as to the plans, the emo will pay with interest-bearing war. | eyes. “It's going to be about the| hence he but coughed ponderously | tions, the mental process of all these| rants hereafter, The general fund ts | Mast time all of us'll ever eat to-/and Rey her head ponderously, | people, including all newcomers. always exhausted before the end of | iprthee any more i sorta - Srows ane Soap bi ad | Were they not indeed in her charge?| the school year, it is said, but the | 4 n invite them over imes in her chair ponderous) Her right? Indeed, was it not her| school district was forced to use war. | ysometimes, can't we, Annie? mid) ly also. duty to know what there was in this| rants earlier this year than usual. 4 Gardner calmly. And he kissed| “For what has happened here,”|letter from the woman whom she - —n brazenly and in the open. said she at last, “I thank God. If| herself had brought out here not #0 (PAID ADVERTISRMENE) ~ things had happened worse it would) long ago? It caused her vast per. CHAPTER XXX have been my fault. Never again|turbation,.for she had a conscience Mrs. Davidson's Conscience —| #ha!! I addrens myself to the task of| which dated b&ck to ages of Seottiah It was fall, and the flame of the|*™ tine advertisements for men in| blood, but sho not one to devi- a frost had fallen on the aspen and|"*8fch of wives. Great Providence! | ate from her duty once she had es E the cottonwoods, and shorn the wil-|AP extraordinary woman like this!| tablished it! ‘This letter—to Major of most of their leaves, a|ToMisht I shall pray on my two| Alien Barnes, in yonder city--what tell thousand wild fowl honkea |*Pees for forgivences for what I did,| was in it? Ap tig 24 AC ADR 2 hOB tat ~~ and what it their way across the meadows tow cht have meant.| it was a letter going to that outer ¢ ’, Brd the black flats where once haa) When I consider how near I came to| worid, trom the very person, whem From Octavus Roy Cohen’s humorous 4 Serene, sad where Bow was) she, Sarah Davidson, had brought Saturday Evening Post story, “Two CLEMMER 4 immeasurable food for them. Up in| “To raising hell?” inquired Karen | into this sagebrush world and had Cents Worth of Humaneness,® in which the mountains the elk were braying. | Jensen sympathetically, seeing that t down among these neighbors J 2 SS, MUSIC. The voice of the coyotes at the pink her companion lacked the proper | Just now she had confossed! herself Madge mixes chuckles and heart throbs — Of dawn seemed shriller now, aa| Word at the time to be happy here, Why? Could a 4 yer 18 G@peaking of the coming days of| ‘The other woman nodded in em-|be a violation of confidences at A with exquisite skill, eth Want. But the sun still was kind,|Phatic tho unconscious ax Al. | eavesdropping—opening this letter? Ps 7 LIBORIUS HAUPTMAN the midday hour still was one of | ways there was present before her in the least! It was only oppo: = 4 Measurably exalting, was in the air. ma of this p It was she who|know that for years every letter to : pena A F All nature was afoot, questioning of |had helped to bring this woman a soldier was opened and censored? BY EDWIN J. BROWN COMEDY *SCENIC Selection. What was to come here—who had helped to deceive her. | Obviously it was her duty Mary Gage came in from the|She thanked Provic if stream side that afternoon, the strap haps fate itself som ‘i as wocial| T have not had time to write thie | ‘orks also to open| week. Next Saturc 4 “Apple Blossoms” . . .Kreisler-Jacobi “Hello, Uncle” “The Lone Trapper” “To a Wild Rose”.......MacDowell mee that per-|censor of Two y I will write on Umes saves us| and read this letter, , F Of her trout creel cutting deep into|from the full fruit of our follies,| ‘Therefore, looking behind her cau dye h Baw po ge be oh ne * the shoulder of her sweater. She|after all | tlously to see she was not observed,| the Differance Is Between Senator v Placed the basket down under the! Just « little sugar, thank you,! she stepped behind the cover of the Harding ‘and Gov. Cox; and The Psy- : shadow of the willow treea, aud Mew Gage” said she as Mary of jwillows and ran the point of her chology of the Press, a