THE srXDAV OltnCJONI VX. POKTI.ANI). MAY ilUNTINE TME ELCPilRNTl THE WHITE RtllND FIND Tit! niPPDPDTnMUS FLDNG THE WHITE NILE. WONDERFUL BIG JIOOSEVCLT IS HAVING A5 EXCITING VDNTURLS AS THESL DESCRIBED mfj. CMURcniLL. QAHZ FIELD IN WHICH COL AD- W fin 'hi article Mr. hur-hUI ttl of th wonlrf nl big ga m bunt'nir tmr far to th. travir in th intihxd Ml mun trv btmn fh Murehiron Falla and N'mule. 170 mile awa- prov,dd. -f -nj h ;n fort una fe noUh to sain the frr of thn ho know thr fa -tor"! haunt of th Vphtm. rht iuppo rntmu. t h" mhit rhino and of bar large rrimmalf. Mr. Ronv!t will urtqu 'l"nibh ca in thee good frr. and per ra p XTrinr hunrlnc a 'I vnt qr vrv bn An es'-it'nj; aa thoM which fell the lot o Mr, Churchill and ha companion. -Editor. BT THE RT HON WIVPTON HI'R'H IT,U FOKMRK IM'F.H PKiTRTARV F STATE FOR THE ( OI.ONIEj OK (RFHT PfltTMN. ,VCv PRESIDENT Op THE HOAK1I OF TRADE HKN it ram lime for tia lo leave Fajao and the Murh-non Fall be hind, it took no Utile time to row all our haxxaxe. food, ami tent upon the stee launch and It three steel sailing boats of different size hU h were to carry u down the Victoria Nile tnto the Albert N'yanxa. across the top of this lake, and then down the J7 miles reach -of the White Nile till navigation la barred at N'imule by more cataracts. Thou eh our camp wan astir at 3:3u. the dawn was lust breaking when we were .ible to embark. Aa we drifted out I Into midstream the most beautiful view of the fall broke uion us. It mas al ready almost daylight, hut the sun had not yet a-tia !ty topped the great es earpment over whlh fhe Nile descend. The hanks ot: hoUi ids of the rlwr, pA with ilnw and lofty forests and 'rising from the water's edit, were dark In shadow. The river ws a broad sheet of Fteel gray, veined with paler streaks of foam. The rock portal of the falls were jetty black, and between them. Il lumined by a single shaft of sunlight, gleamed the tremendous cataract a thin; of wonder and glory, well worth travel ing all the, way to see. We were soon, amnng the hippopotami. Fvery or 3 yards, and at every bend of the river, we -a me upon a hers! of from 5 to 3. To us In a steam launch they t hreatened no real stance or danger. Hut their Inveterate hostility to canoes leads to re nested loss of life a moos t he native fishermen, whow frail craft are -rtimrle'l like eggshell In the nnap of their enormous jaws. Indeed, all the way from here to Nlmule they are declared to be the scourge and terr.n of the Nile. Fancy mistaking a hippopotamus al most ; he ta egest surviving mammal In the worldfor a water 111. Yet nothing W more ea. The whole river Is dotteo wiln floating llllfs. detached from any rot rmd drifting a Ion a; contentedly with 1 he current. It Is 1 he habit of l he nkpo to loll in the water, showing only h'. eves a nd t he tips of his ear, and per haps now and then a glimue of hi nose, a t-d thus concealed. Iiis silhouette ' i. at : nr y ar is. almost indtst inguishable from P'atins vpffation. Poe-ping; Toms of lhe Nile. f ihotght they also looked like slant cits eepina. So soon. however, as they I raw us coming around a corner and j hard th throbbing of the propeller. they .vould raise their whole heads out j of the wa ter to have a look, and then I imnieHntely cove to the bottom In dl cut. Our practice w a then to shut off team ;.nd drift silently down upon them. In thi.- way one arrives In the middle of t he hrd. and whn curiosity or n a tit of alp comix-Is t Iikii to come up again there is a chpnre for a shot. One great fellow- cs me up to h; ea the wit h In five rds of the bfat. and the lrnk of aton lhmenf. of ,lnrni. of Indignation In his I'trg". ex presslve eyes, as wit h one vast anort be pb:nged below, was comical to Tltcse creatures are not easy to kltl. Tl'ey l.ob up in rhe most utiextcte; O'rart-TS. a nil are down a ga in in a sec ond. One docs not like to run the risk ; of merely woumling thm. and the tar j Et present e I t small and vaniMiine' 1 . hoi one. who sank with a harsh sort of j scream and fhud of striking bullet. We waited about a lon time for him to float up to t he surface, but In vain, for he must have been carried Into or under r bftl "of reeds and could not be re trieved. The Vurc'iHson Falls are about 'a miles dita:it from the Albert IHke. and as with, the current we made six or seven miles an hour, this part of our journey was short. Here the Nile offer a s-plen-did waterway. The main channel i at lr-4t ten fet deep, and navigation. In spite of shifting sand banks. Inlands and entanclements of reeds and other vegeta tion, not d'fflcult. The river It -elf Is of delicious, aweet w ier. and flows along in many placet Vtlf a mile broad. Its banks for the first 3 mfs were shaded by beautiful trees. ttid 'ifne and there contained by bold lrailUiiM'. rireply scarped by the cur rent. The se- rat?d outline of the high mountains on the far side of the Albert Nyjinxii could soon be seen painted in shad v-v on the western sky. Aa the take approached the riparian acenery de fnrat( j. "he sand hank become mor Intricate. t)o banks are low and flat and An go niHrshe encroach upon the .river on either hand- Yet even here the trav eler move througti an lmiotng wrld At Icijcth. after rive or six hours' earning, we cleared the mouth of the Victoria Nile and swam out on to t he broad ex nans- of the lake. Happll on this occasion It was quite calm. How I wished then that I had not allomed my. lf to be deterred bT time and croakers from a longer voyage, and that we could hare 'iimed to the south and. rlrcum navis.iting the Albert, ascended the Seen hkl River with all it mysterious attrac tions, have visited the forests on the s.iut'hwt stern shores, and caught. er-Itai-s. a gleam f the snoms of Kuwen xori: Serrft KMseeIl Will Uirn. Some of my party had won the con fidence of the engineer of the launch, who had revealed to them a valuable aei-rct- It appeared that "some a here between Ijtke Albert and Nlmule" not to be too precise there was a place known only to the elect, and not to more than one or two of them, where elephants abounded and rhinoceros sm armed. And t hese rhinoceros, be It observed, were none of your common black variety, with two stumpy horns a hnost euual in size and a prehensile tip to their noses. Not at all: they "ere what are called "white" rhino Fturrhell's white rhinoceros: that Is their full style with one long, thin, enormous horn, perhaps a yard long:, on their noses, and with broad. Sous re upper lipi. Naturally we were all very n. uclt excited, and In order to gain a day on our it Inerary to studv these erv rare and remarkable animals more closely we decided not to land and pitch a camp, but to steam on all e 1 1 f V Ml w : Vfr ' WimLzf -lm , " 1 . . .... ... (L.a, :, jyi ywMm . - a m.Z&&& - - - -" 'J - I '' Xi - - - I s ; I i .v II J ' I ' ' . 'I I --UAra-o.v COi. Awcri.irc -.v" V' . rT" I - 1 o-jr head a- he It s.h h m moment a r. to m.ii uniwMni f r-rt tr4 noH H nvgnt h a of gjr. Tre rMmt tMna m aa YtWA en. I t o j...,. Vw KiS K.ree's r4 n ml. t ee i-ti 1fi 1 w,a vnici-hi4 ea Sou- ' 4 iit'i'n - stve the ft ' Ve at ro-e tdtarcv. ihl mi4 n-est w S e fno-e T t m mm a .1 t w " Tmm rh lM ea. Sfsed ! a1 ar 4 a f.i tih running tm .rr eacxl te rie or eafiV-g e- e-ir a : wn toe. wt.o ke -r' i4t tl -op arwl ater a t 41 - I -O- S T aSe-M a g -wv4 s . f t Se wr th fi' s n wM rfflrwnl' pt-fM-. trt t ?r ef p-1 mn n-.tk !- da on whrH It harTns b'-ct mr wrmofv..e H tm ctwnrtar f;.t "i-'ir-.t r s'ore tr u vo fit 'at-. ta! a tr f-om ta roT w betw mm 3M-e. mi, roi - refresh The iwer " ' ai is-aas et t, I -: tr.t r g n t wa si nfv. n eftge t -e lith o f, trt iMfi fNi.t tno-e A imlt ant-ht 1 -. Bra. c re t a'k lm and aa fif'v r)i Sut te eea.Wr has a'.rl loeg e4vv.g ta lb s ur't 1 ftsat e. It is erin to s tst we k e t w e-f trte wonsiers. e ote erar-d th and futilt rbage4 wri oa uro us a-i4 gAeiseyl itowg! oit r'tf .it' out arpaesnfl be eg jo- sl b tr.elf eT tnjiietnc a n v- eoe. T-r warktrc p'ri whet the c mw . ee viT eed bone s rd t hrttc h th STTtp. too ttltioluint n t'ej t otr s bo.jt t t.o ni aed fut'it e Vjrkd In Its hcfi It n tftt late a e-n we far sal Vome. a -d our fnrna ? tJ arT e t ijt o' a gM -leftant fcc h cloe.ej 1 aon bad Hot. and -ts rnii tg a ti k I'.-h bad c-etiveniert!j r tln 4ir-4 our la-Ver. turh was our 0t at if snrp t o hfr ri t ardent attorian in t re -tnric4 to r-ra t wten tic can s-"e to oi h tn l.e w . r r at !. i, ir.iifT, 4,urv h-l' hi t risarn ie. through the night. Meanwhile our filend the engineer undertook to kcconipltsi the difficult feat f finding the CI. an- t eurs. net. a-nri all its windings. In the da 1 k. rn.h-ligt.i of mod-rntt aie Kf-ene as we ten ttie Aloert luake f ttewsoterM ..f m-i.i.L.f - n.a 1-- nu eoiereu me mine .-sue was or stir- , had burned on the lonelv bank of the. passing beaut v. The sun wa Junt set- J White Nile to encourage -nd heck on I ting behind the high, jagged peakx of I the pioneer and settler. None had fol- the Congo Mountain to the westward. lowed. Now It wa et inguUl.e.l ,,d One after another, and range behind et when I sorveved the spacious land- I range, t hese magnificent heKi,i ri. lug f 1 otn t'e brink of the otgi,t 1 na in self i for a moment to te lie ve tiiMi t-l llixa 1 Ion ; has done with the I .ado Knrlat or thai i t here la no f ut ure for regions which promise so niucli. All through the d-ty we paddied proa-l-roiilv win tie :irjiiii A' limes he N'l loi u-elf fn I l.vntit) e of papt rit. througtt which we ihieaded a lorlunua course, w it n manv btrxts and hrtih.n mM ie-n 1 Toiin.l ivtnv m , . . .. .. M.tt I., . t.i.- . . .... nir i4.ei tes ip lic t.eir oT It a W on " pot-1 w I riiup i or V , . . - . . . . . - I - . .... - i , i tw ii tut r laie. and minrinui ni to riiiing em per i - t ' frl an ort fur the ftat rme made r e I en apnat to n. i.-sii ent if ai'icg. ir- ' -. ! t!e. nfr In te forgotten. iVrllcau Trip Ihrnugb a Sttiuip. Al U earliest break of da we all atarted In the Same order and with the lrnst r e Sol v e Oorlng t je night the sal'ora tad n t t ur t ed int of long I - n.b a a sort of I'g 1-t tl IpoJ. I i U. eT'tg a a lir of observa tion, ertatdfd t. to " orf tt.e top of .e t s-d'- t i W H u i m .I- mn ' ti Iff tf a e-i t S S o- V ,e : t ht t . . 1 rt of at ; i t'lri'v. iIm t.reaa Moral Mow. I.e lll.ilh. ff-e II Jlidgrd ret ir t- to at p w n i-n..t a' xit WW to I ",,r noer (l,fni, a foreal pe- tle I 'h and feed. and th , tdrcl b loeao noh ittan. to wat. h I rfJ of the gt-strt innttnirnr and lng perhaps to aOMll or tmu feet un- l Inu )-tle rier I coold not brl itoneo ineiiiseies In waves of dark plum-colored rock, crested with gohh-ri fire. Tie lake stretched a wa v appar ently without limit like-the sea. toward the sour h ward In an ever-broadening swell of waters flushed outside t ha shallow of the mountains Into a de licious pink. Across its surface our tiny flotilla four on a st rlnir-uaUlliI 1 He . . nt-t pari y. cons sting .f -. rattlrtio. a irot g . on-? U i!on i.d h.s tMitpMtt.i.ii. anM n,"fr- aroticd on e e r ite. in " aftet ahool a ir.ll- ,,t m e Iteea nappe oft few feel It om I nlf Uflfk upkin a fttie el ir In. 11 ! n" ound. In enormous bfani-lteS Intq 'alkd h'.tn fir stt( It f a :t Thev (down for port. I ne Ktldrnco of tbelr tlote. 01,1 le mo ed ff. and .ta im t . ! attenglh And in a. hi' we tfti- watenei itiv-na roam down toward t ie Its way toward the narrowing northern 1 at the I U ti more oli the banks shores and the channel of the Nile. The White Nile leaes the Albert I-ake In mateaty. All the way to Nl mule It la often more like a lake inan a river. For the last 20 miles of its course it seemed to me to be al least two miles across. Tne current Is gen tle, and sometimes In the broad lagoons and bas Into which the placid waters spread themsel Tea It Is scarcely per ceptible. slept under an awning In the last and -mallest boat of the airing and except for the native steersman and. piles of baggage bad It all to mv self. It was. indeed, delightful to lie fanned by cool breexea and lulled by the soothing lappings of the ripples, and to watch, aa it were from dream land, the dark outlines of the ba nk gliding swiftly past and ttie long: moon lit levels of the water. At daybreak we were at Wadejal. In 24 hours from leaving Fajau we bad made nearly I0O miles f Ur votage Without I he sigh of a singte porter these small boats and launch had trans ported tne whole of our "safari" over a distance w htch would on land have required tne labors and sufferings or 3011 men during at least a week of un broken effort. tVlvllixatlon u -t real. Wadelal was deserted. I'pon a high bank of tha river stood a long row of tall, peaked. I hatched bouses. tl wails of a fort and buildings of K pean construction. All was ... . , neigians are evacuating all their posts tn the I at do Knclave except lado Itself. and these stations, ao laboriously constructed, so long maintained, wtir soon be swal lowed by the jungle. We disembarked and climbed the slopes through high, rank grass and scattered boulders till we ato4kd amid the rotting bungalows and shanties .f what had been a bold hid f.tr the ex - uro- newly gMj. firm earth, with here and fh-re teain ful hff of r-d ndtone. t:loweI hv ir.e water. a ltd rllrg abruptly from Urn brim, crow ned w ti h Itixuilant foliage. In places t l.eee . ff were pl-r-ed b r. f ro w rta.wa. almost tunneLs. wir.JInc up to the h:h ground an.t twtfe-tly smoth and r-gi:ar in t !-lr contruct:on. Ty bnord as If i bey were made on purp.e to give an esw to and from t lie river, and ao t bey bad been by ti e eep am lctoct of water-fowl In na K Ted the reeds, ar.d troona of era nee rose at tne pprAufi of t i.e flotilla. Hornet Jm-a w e saw great. b g pel.can kind of birds. almot as b.g mm a it. an. standing run. templatlte on a ngle leg. arwl nficn on the l reel o;is a flh-eg!e. glorious In btonxe and creairi. al Running lunwelf and wmtchtng for prey. It wa nearly 4 o clock n t he after noon w hen i he launch suddenly Jinked to t lie l"ft o-ii of ttie mam stream tnto a am a LI a-mlrlrniiar bav . v rd arrosa and we came to land at "Hippo amp." Charged by a null Klrphanl. We tho ight It waa much (mi late to attetrtpi any serious shooUr.g that dav. There were SHarvely three and a half hoir of daylight. Hut after JH hours cramped on inee little boats a walk through the Juncle was ery attractive, and. aecordingty. dividing ourselvea Into three part.e. we started in three dif ferent dtrectiocta like t be aapokeg of a wheel. 'a plain Oicklnson. w ho com manded the e--ort. went to the right wit h t he doctor. Colonel T'Wnn and another off.cer set out at right angles to the river bank: and I went to tne Wt undr the ituilan. of out friend the engineer. I shall relate very brtrny I'll happened1 to eat h of us. Tne rtg i - hand partv got. a'ter an hour a wa'kirg. tnto a great herd of elephant, nhtrfi thev numbered at over tl Tney a w rto v r fine bubs, to living l I -lt fol low d. stMlder 1 out t he aiixh :r i w ar :ng .n pat I r I I a f d a of t. a w i si. I n g sound st d no gtrat prov mal Ion on I t-etr , h j I mmnlU te behind uS and turning, tl.tew up h a trunk. linintM.i..i i "sw Hot 4a varda awav a apndld run. grown rhino ero. with the long. c r.at r I furloiialv down upon t hem . wtkeretiM.n tttev Jual I ad ttne to fire r rl.les lo t-is fare and frirg aut ba path. Ttrls eb-phanl was followed fr some n.il-. but tt was for t hrs monta afterward (hat we learned that he bad died of hts wuurd. and thai the bat Ives had rco ered h.s luke much for in v ft tends Our 1 hit d left party prow kd off. slanting grad ually away Inland from t le rivers bark It was a regular ltd acrub munirv. w;tn b:gh grass and boub:-ra and man mod. etate-aa-d trees and buati interered ev ery hundred yards or mi h m ' bigger one Near the Nike riirr.an w ampa. w ti h reacts li feet b g. ran inland In long ba s and Onset, and lha. we were told, were the r.aunt of the h'te rhino. We m u have walked along weaMiy and lto-touslv for cearl I hree. bar ters of ao boor, when I saw through a glade at aloot M9 at de' d ilation a great dark iti inal. Jug'ng from w iuai 1 bad n In t-oat Aft t a. I w ao iue sure i; wa a r htnoceroa We pa nee, and were examining U carefully with our gte when all of a sudden It seemed to t reble in and t he spread ing of two (gntir ea na - as log. t.ey seemed, as t he flaps of Fre r r h w Iridt a pro. claimed the presence of I le African ele phant. The next mucnenl a not i,or and a not her nd another rame tnto virw smlngtng letst.relv alocg sars ght toward Us and the wind was Imuat tad wrong We changed our position by a flank march of admirable celerity, and from tne lop of a neighboring snt bill w a t r h ed at the dtstam e of about am varda. the stately and a wa-Iniplrtn g procession of 11 elephants. on they rame. loafing along from foot to foot two or three tuskers of no great merit, several large tuakleea hraiUa and two or three calvs On the back of every elephant Sat al legal one beau Ofut white egret, and sometimes three or four, about two fet high, who P bed al the tough hide preaume for very small game r aurveved tne scene with the cons lounea of p(m p. These sights are not unuusl to the African hunter. Thns who dwell In thin !-0tn of bis rare tribe upon bm the famous white tMno. froa Hurt hell blmelf strolling plarlglv home af t-r hi evening drir.k and uttertv- uann scloua of tio presence of : ranger cr foe Mrl leva of a lilie It li no. A e bad carefully Judged our wind In trUtlun to tbe ek'pi.ants It was. In con se4 uence. s baolu lei y wtong In relation to the rhinoceros a ar lhat in another atd he woud wa.g fight irtoii, II. For my own part, pen bed upon the apex of a ten- foot nlbrar rone. need hava no mis glvlnga. I w a perfectly sate. iai m companions and tbe native orderlies and sailora no in with u n o ed no auch security. The runtaqtivncal of not killing tbe brite at tl at range and with lhat wind would have be a a mad r barge dlres-iiy h rough our par t A sense of respon ibt 1 1 1 . ao doubt, re strained m . but I must also confess to the Krit complete aslontahmenf at tbe unBperld apparition. While was trying to l.ull tbe olb era bv atgnala and wblper into safer plscea. tbe thlno moved aeadll. croeawd the Im of wind, slopped beblrd a Utile bush for a moment, and then warned of hi danger, rushed off Into the deepest receaae of lee jungle I had thrown away the ! t shot ever bad In Africa. MeaawhUe. the elephants had disappeared W returned with empty bands and beating beans to amp. aoi without chagrin at the opportunity whb. h bad anihd. out with the keenest appe tites and Ibe big beat hopes for the morrow. Thus. In three hours and wttbln four ml lea of our land ing - place, our three asperate partlea had seen as mans of Ibe greatest wild animals aa woulj reward the whole exertion of mm ordinary big-game hurt. as I dropped OA to sleep that bight tn the titOe satllng'tMiat moored in tbe Kay and beard the grueling be -k a of ib Mnpo IVwattng and plavlng all around. man gling With tbe rrlea of the t.lr.la and tbe soft sounds of wind and wster. tbe a(iatU, tt iHillttrn though It was to drag a l'ng W M-nt : w ho e ntotmi.g prowlirg aSo il hot the ung'e, nh'rh 1 7 r nut be-f.-re l-ail nwl . crowded W t Ti game of ' ' kmo sevrt-'V-d now uier; Oe r udd At t i lmfti s t leac-ope, f - vj t a ife;o w c aw. or tho-gbt sve n.a' of some kind grng about two mil aWa. Tle Wet tite other s0 of an enonou swamp and to arptoa, h Ihrtti teji.hod rot onlv trartsmg Ih't, but iirriiff t hrutf n it for i he aa ke of t he W rd We p. lege d aotd rg?t. Into tbls lilt i sa f tfe.la fo 'niu g Me tw..rg pe'be marfe (i. ;hm bv te game, and r-oi a(ting I al wa m'gi't come t pf- at e r-v rrp T ne gt our J under f .mi waa jte fim bet ween :t-e c t-aa-t - a at d pe.' of trifl and ws'er Tbe air was at Ring T!e I a. I reva and gtaiw seen eo itrol'.o one, a r d above (hn.jtn ihrir Inter lacemer-l aittuit tbe ful blaae of tJie noondiv s.n To wade and w)iv througt ;o rtmnirr St t .rg a dn!b'ePar rel"d Co r'Tle. rot on vour ihmidfrf. hut In our bands for irslant aerve. peetng round e rt e cot. n r. auri-e llnx ev er v tboew btiah for a leaat two bours. s ts-t so t-!rMBI as sound We en.eisred at last on t be f ar- Ibo! al1. un1er a g lorua tree, whose b gJ had made It our beocon In tbe Orp;.e of the swsmp sr.d w boee far. spreading br anr I ea fTerd a d ,r KC ttad It waa J o ct k We bad been to ,rg f o- r gie houta and bad ween nothing lit ;i v r.otbing H tt hm I bs mo trt'tii oirr tuck was hrt'Oant J r -a t we a t r bed two .Id boars p:vng si r.gt.ttrg :a a little glade a not d gbf'ul atterisrir. whuh t tn Jlov ed for two or mree mwuie before t hr v ! ecov e'e-d ws and fled Sea . o dntm sptniid at r-bur k were seen brow at ng on t be r rest of a t!: t le rt tlgw nhih ea abot. and w ou i) have for n.d tbe ouartv of any dav but this; but our i f M ' l o sarsH s hov-e t 'em a M we nuM not rsfc a aiurb.rg t e jng.e for all their besuttful horns Then Mdt . we cams i id t.p against tie rbtnoeeroa How many I am not rrt a in-fsvr a i ast ne had ariuiiiv aaked pas: t hem as t bey sf ood sbelerteg under t he trees Now bare thee were 4m vs ids awae to the left tar-dark. dim. antVr bvltw ) -t tinW through tbe waving grs liattle With llllrw-eroa llertl. w Ss ou Are a heavy rne in cld l o.wt if maaee our teera Matter ad Hs'f h lUt(rnftrt) In the AtiabtM-. No fount awraa '. mote rarryVv rhaperr-ned ttata Hie gir l of t be rltru A c It . us ttvv her Is often hvrteet urafdal. tyod at I he la If iide w barb tliot hers out side ibe r.ia al ow tl: daughlera. Tbe pHsrwtv merxenarv dc're to keep together tbe several per formers In a Iatr:l) at lends to extreme w W hfulnrat Ov er I Se mnbera test si aitrann should draw tbem Into lht r sfft t,r Tbe tnanage. meat llar.f la trlfu. lh'i;l. d.v;.W lis employes trt ma'e4 and unw.ariie!. S Od keeps ie rr arefoj T eej. Stated except where ma'.t ittiony ha Ja.md tbrm i(rt.t and man ot ttianaimtrt mav not put aeunoer. If u . ma;rmoov t fioiiH.a, it o.L-t at Vaet last Oi.t live s. and t:isl t.:a aort.ot wrtea bapjwtv mar Imf f ' ' Nnr rnV 4 to appeaae te tP J ar rotio i hat all c!tv ia pc-r-p e a- S .ereptabie Hut c- res itg ea. ait ho.. evew the post of tt-m have tbe r bia k op r abbot b totmded on f ir. li : tuatt aj and the atiiviay of tie -eua t s.rg 'iarlv fnre from either t '--e convrnlente of l untr or tbe rrespoet bi . .t v of r ate sow r, la ;d a v our tt s -Pse pr for-mer an a r-on t wjr r-tial mom em . lieai rv-tt (amt'if a'e I ke that Fnu i arxlrwd vou re-ad abojt. only it s'n t e-v eay to btewk IM one ef em ' W Mch meant ao a d - r d ompl mrrt tv the 1y-u. but JS mere an tinoeserv-ed tribute to tbe "Four H indeed la ao Uss Now for a ! god p.tshir.g t o I order tf the thlt.g reea oi'trg Of course It beats t He deme bow I m My barMts reitinially aoiong' Ab well tf fun enocgti to pay For all the grime and grease an4 worn I d 1 ke to mow ire lawn at; das . I I a -a t urda v - I needn t hurt y , fas v . bow I uwr.t I o lot g f,r thl ' levst Winter: Mid am W hat s tht mst- let? t used to tb r.k II wou'd be b fa To bsr th a oM Iswn mower ctatier Wow" What a poke g,. u,- now' fVguare to ibe ritas -n found tnat baa die 4X bo l hrew thai stone bete anv haw Id geariy love to retch the vandal. WM. let m ir that a t re around It seem a to tre thia lawn ta g-rowtrg In sise. I mran. I bv t found My arma so at iff smre learned row ng Whew but I m warm! It s snort, a; right. Th a cut t ng graaa Hf ! the-e. aorr y You get this gsS all rut bv ti jM And dad stll Vt nu have roev. hntt 4 A