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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1907)
Hi m m fa DOOMED. By WILLARD MacKENZIE Wt CIIAPTKR XX. (Continued.) "Come Inside- the cottage," he said, handing hrr In. "No one is here, I think. But how came you here?" "I had lost my way ; I knocked at the door, but no one answered ; then I walked in, with the hope of finding some one to make inquiries of: nnd just at that mo -roent I heard your footsteps, and then your rolce. Oh, whit a blessed sound that was in my ears!" "You hare been wandering about here In the hope of seeing me of meeting me Accidentally? Was It not so?" "Yes," she again answered, slowly, af ter another pause. "But where are you staying?" he asked suddenly. "Are you provided with lodg ing?" "Oh, yes, at Bodmin ; I have been there two days." "But that is some distance from here. How can you get there to-night? There Is no kind of conveyance to be procured." "Oh, I can walk. Your father Is 111, Is he not? she asked, suddenly. "He is that is why I am here." "'What would he say did he know of viui iuic ivuuiu lie smiuuuu lit n uuiu he receive me as his son's wife? lie would not, and you know it!" she said, bitterly, and drawing away from him. "He would think his house disgraced by such a mar riage. But were I a grand lady, and ugly as sin, and stupid as an owl, he would receive me with open arms !" ."You wrong my father, dearest indeed you do! No man has a higher respect for beauty and intellect than he has," an swered Arthur, mildly. "Yes, as adjuncts to birth !" she cried, bitterly. "Oh. why did I ver seek this meeting? Why did I not leave you in peace, and fly from you and your love? Oh, no, no ! it shall not be ! Help me to struggle against myself! Drive me from you let me fly from you ! Do any thing to save yourself from ruin !" Her wild, passionate voice told of the struggle that raged within. She prayed for the self-control she had never prac ticed, and it would not come. The self indulgence that from a child had warped her soul rendered her incapable of self denying. She loved Arthur Penrhyddyn according to her nature.. It was a selfish love, but it was too powerfuj for her to wrestle with to trample upon. "Why is this?" she went on. yet1 more wildly. "Until I met you, I knew noth ing of such struggles; I thought only of my own happiness: but now, apart from you. I have no happiness no life! I Jim like one under a spell. Ah, that is it ! that is it!" and she shuddered in every limb. "It is," he answered gloomily. "We are each other's fate'! Struggle as we will, we are in the tolls we must fulfill our destiny !" "And you will make me your wife, nnd I shall one day be Lady Penrhyddyn?" she murmured. "Anything to make you mine; for I cannot exist without you," he answered, in a low, passionate voice. "And if poverty comes," she said, "we will brave it together." "Then the die is cast." he cried, "and only death shall part us!" Again that long, low wail of the wind, as he had heard it in the gallery, and again he felt as though a supernatural presence were about him. And this time there mingled with the blast another sound a strange, hoarse, attling noise, and then a gasp, as from a human throat. "What is that?" she whispered, cling ing to him in mortal terror. It wan like the hoarse rattle in the throat of the dying. His hair bristled, and his flesh crept. Something was near them. What was it? Arthur was determined to investigate the cause of these sounds. He remem bered that he had a box of waxen matches in his pocket. He struck one, and by its light saw a lantern with a candle in it standing open upon a table. A puff of wind blew out his light; but he struck another, and succeeded this time in ignit ing the candle. Nothing was to be B?en In the room In which they were. But this opened into the sleeping room, into which Arthur had never pased but once before; and that was on the night that, as a boy, he had seen a mother and child lying cold and motionless upon the bed. Into this room he now passed she still clinging to him. A cry of horror burst from her lips, and she fell senseless upon the ground, while Arthur stood transfixed. Huddled upon the bed, his limbs drawn up as if with pain, his face distorted with the agonies of death, was the old fisherman, John Trevethlck. He had been seized with a fit, and died with no ono by to help him. Death had been the witness of their betrothal, and the death rattle had min gled with their vows of love their only ratification. CHAPTER XXI. Recovering from his first stupor of ter ror, Arthur extinguished the light, and, taking Mrs. Cautleton In his arms, bore" her out Into the open air. What was to be done? It was Impossible for her to reach Bodmin that night. If he went In to the village, there were a hundred chances to one against his procuring a conveyance. But one resource was left open to him a startling one, but inevit able he must take her to the Castle. He oould tell the servants that she was a lady to whom, finding It Impossible to procure lier any conveyance to Bodmin, ho had offered the hospitality of the Castle. That would be sufficient The cold air and the drlrxllng rain, which now began to fall, In a few mom ents revived her from the swoon. She raised her head and atared wildly around. "What Is this? Where am I?" she cried. "You are safe, dearest; Vome nway from this place It la ralnlnV, and you will et cold." And he began tV lead her away. "Oh, I hare had audi a terrlble dream I" she murmured. "I baft an uct a awful daad face I WaAJt a Iream? Oh, no, no! It was In that hut where you promised to mako me your wife. What a place for lovo, with that awful dead face close to us! Death and love love nnd death ! Let there be an end of it. Even from the grave we are warned against our union. Where nro you taking me to?' He told her that she must rest in the Castle that night, ns It was Impossible for her to reach Bodmin. "In the Castle?" sho exclaimed. "Yes, dearest ; one day you shall rest there as its mistress, I hope." There was nothing hopeful in his tone, however; his voice sounded hollow nnd dreary. The scene he had just witnessed had sunk deep Into his soul ; to him It was another link forged In the fatal chain that bound him. Doubtless the servant thought it a strnnge circumstance thnt Mr. Arthur should so suddely bring n strange lady into the Castle. He requested them to !rve her with refreshments, and all that she required, and ordered apartments to be prepared for her in the opposite wing of the building to that in which his own were situated. He would hnve taken leave of her for the night, with such courteous distance as he would have shown to a stranger; but she was not to be put off thus; and her manner, as she bade him "Good night" made the servants stare, and, doubtless, talk when they got below. This done. Arthur directed two of the servants to go down to John Trevethlck 's cottage. Mrs. Castleton sat before the fire that blazed cheerily upon the spacious hearth SB MM . I " 1,1 lie started back at the sound of her voice with n look of Intense surprise, which almost Immediately changed to ono of nngry sternness. "Is it you who hnve ent for me?" ho said, harshly. "What do you want with me? Are you not ashamed to look me In tho faco?" "I have sent for you to ask your for giveneFS," she answered, humhly, in n soft, pleading voice, and with a piteous, tearful look in her melting eyes. "My forgiveness can bo of no use to you,"" he answered. "Our ways of life are scpnrato wo can never again be any thing but strangers to each other." Ho was turnlnc on his heel to go when a Drtiuriitim Chute. she clutched him by tho arm and, drop- while there nro n great many cnttlo ping upon her knees, held him fast. Her .. . . .1,1 M0rI1a by dehorning eyes were filled with tears, nnd her voice - hda aml mnitloI1B of Uls kind In 8hof gTLutiring me," J? - cried, plteously. "I am not so bad as you come to maturity with an uglj pn r r Imagine. Truly, I hnve rorrelted nil norns mm crauu a gn-"v " claims, not only to your love, but even bio In the fml yard. Wo hnve received nulte a number of Inquiries or uuu - questing n plan for a good dehorning chute. Accordingly wo have hero re- BWttKff """" 1 "' .J1L M J to your forbearance, by tho ungrateful re turn I have made for nil your kindness to me." You have," he Interrupted, sternly. "If produced n moat convenient nnd satis you had been my own child I could not . facfo u,Ue nave Men fontier or you uiau 1 was irora - , , . chute Is the hinged doors on tho rear the day I found you upon the sands, and carried you home with me. I was a child less, wifeless man my home was a lone ly one and I thought a bright little prat tler, like you were then, would be a joy and a comfort to me. The people about here say that the drowning bring a curse upon those who save them. I havo found It true." "I havo been most ungrateful," she moaned. "I cannot find one word to excuse my conduct you were only too good to me." "Everybody could see your fallings but me," he went on in the same tone; "but I was blinded, infatuated by your syren face and ways, and always had an excuse upon my Hps and in my heart for your willful vanity. And' you so twisted your self about my heart that I bnd not even the courage to, set any Inquiries on foot about your friends, for fear I should low you. I placed you with my niece, who kept n grand school In my native place, In Surrey. She, too, wrcte me of your end- which inuko It possiuio 10 nuju tho chute to nny sized barn door. Where tho width of the renr end of the chute Is satisfactory nnd cannot bo ml Justed to the door ns shown In tho 11 A STBANQE BEUSIOS. of her great old-fashioned bedroom, call ing up visions of future grandeur. At times, the awful dead face thrust itself In among them, but, with a shiver, she wrenched her thoughts from dwelling upon its hideousness. Once In bed, wear iness overpowered her and she did not awaken until the sun was shining bright ly through the latticed windows. She sprang out of bed nnd looked out upon the glorious landscape of wood and field, hill and dale, and bright blue sea. That invigorating atmosphere, flooded with golden light, quickly dissipated the superstitious fancies of the night. "Shall I renounce the chance or Deing the mistress of this . for the sake of a mere superstitious fancy? Perhaps I shall not come to him a beggar!" she mused. "But I will say nothing of my hopes of fortune; and at all eventB he will be nroud of his wife's beauty!" and she smiled at her image in the glass. After brekfast, a servant brought her a mesage from Arthur, to ask If she could receive him. "At once," was the reply. And five minutes afterwards he was holding her in his arms, and anxiously inquiring how sho had rested. "Oh, excellently!" was her reply. "But I fear that you cannot say as much." He loked very worn and pale, as though he had not slept all night which, Indeed, he bad not ; but he did not tell her so. He would have shown her through the Castle, but discretion prqmpted her to refuse. She did not wish Sir Launce to know anything of her presence there; it might lead to explanations to a rupture. Better defer such until later. And fur ther to avoid attention, she expressed her resolution to walk to Bodmin; and Ar thur arranged to accompany her. They parted about half a mile mt of Bodmin. "Do not let us be seen together any more," she said. She had more reasons than one for this caution. "I shall re turn to London to-morrow. Write and let me know when you are coming up." "That will be as soon as my father is better," he answered. "Till then, adieu, my love my hus band," she murmured, falling upon his neck. And so they parted. Mrs. Castleton took her way to the principal hotel. "So late!" she muttered, looking up at the church clock as sho passed. "I have only half an hour to pare before the time of my appointment. I would not have been late for that on any considera tion." In her sitting room was Mrs. Freeman, looking very worried and anxious. "Good gracious, child, where have you been? I thought that something had hap pened to you !" she cried. "Something has happened to me. Some thing that you could never ipiess. I have passed the night within tne walls of Pennrbyddyn Castle. But I cannot ex plain matters now. I expect an arrival every moment." Ten minutes afterwards, a waiter an nounced that Mr, Jenkins, the postmas ter at Penrhyddyn, was below and desired to see Mrs, Castleton. She sat down In the darkest part of the room, and waited his coming, nervous and agitated. He was shown In, the door closed, and then she stepped Into the light. "Father," she said, "do you Dot know lustration, there Is often n foot or two of space to bo divided between the two Bides. As our readera who have had exicrlenco In dehorning know, an ani mal will nlways choose to pass through this Binall opening rather than Into the chute and thereby cause a constant ag gravation. The chute proper la mount ed on two heavy timbers which may be 4x4' or 4xti's. while the uprights are generally 4x4's. The stauchlon Is made to open and close and secured In nny way that suits. The convenient part of the chute Is the trough shaped part marked II. This Is made of two-Inch stuff and securely fastened to bottom crosKpleces. After tho anlmnl Is secur ed lu the stanchion a hiilter Is thrown over Its head and tho hnlter ropu Is parsed through the hole Just below tho letter II. Tho letter A shows a contin uation of this rope to tho pole which Is ufced ns a lever to brlue the animal's disobedience and Idleness, and of your ' head Into position on the trough. ne lemper; oin 1 sun weni on noping As 800n nB th,8 ,B accomplished' tho TOnrcroi I : : .jr.; jjnm A nEHOItNI.NO CHUTE. and believing tbat you would mend, and ' roiw B is thrown over the neck of tho dream was nearly at an en I now. One nnlmaI nu(1 Becure" tl,e hcad Urm,y lt morning I got n letter to say that you U' tro"". when the dehorning opera had run away from the school, and from t!on uy he performed. Ab soon as the that hour you never wrote rnc a line, but 'operation Is concluded the animal Is left the poor old doting fool to break bis nustnncliloned ami one of tho sides of heart, perhaps you thought." the chute Is hinged so thnt It may be "Ob, no. no!" she cried; "I am not aH'oed for the animal to escape from heartless. Many nnd many an hour I tho cnutef nfter whlch , c,0(ie(, ,, have sat and thought of you with an ach- . , . . . . , , . , i.,. f n 1 . 1 'another animal la driven In. Montreal ing heart, of all your love and tenderness ; anil u'honoriir a nrovop nauaAl m t 1 1 I, Ol. wns for your happiness. I would have given the world to have written to you, to have Implored your forgiveness, and I dared not I'otuta tu Spraylnjt. It. A. Emerson, of the Nebraska ex- Not lone after I left thn pcrlment station. In a recent bulletin, school I was married to a gentlema'n of BlveB the following recommendations fortune. I am his widow. More than for this year's spraying based on the that, I am, probably, on the eve of com ing into a fortune through my father's family: and when I have It, if there Is results secured last year. 1. Spruy with Bordeaux mixture after the cluster buds open, but before anything I can do to add comfort to ,uu in(1iVMUal .ic,.- ,)U1 OIK.n your "Silence!" he Interrupted sternly. "If1 8l)ray wltu Il0"leau "d some I wanted bread, I would not accept a lw,HO' a arsenate of lead, parls crust from you; but I want nothing I Krejn etc., ns soon as possible after have more than enough for my needs. Had(tne blossoms fall, and at any rate be you kept true to me, you would not have , fore , the calyx lobes of the apple close, found yourself a beggar at my death. Per- 3. Spruy with Bordeaux and iwlson haps yon might have been as well off as three or four weeks after the flowers yon are now. Have you anything more! to say before I gor' (To be continued.) Yankee TnlLc on Train. "Yon may travel 1,000 miles on a railway In Europe nnd never a man, whether English, French, German or what not, will open his mouth to Hpenk to you If you are a stranger," said J. W. Pike, of Philadelphia. "For a total freezeout I accord the palm to the English. Your true Briton regards any man who has nerve to speak to him without ever having been formally Introduced ns reeking with effrontery and therefore to be dlsdulned and fmubber. I want to except from these n class of Englishmen who havo been about the world a good bit Tvo met a few of this sort who had knock ed about the world nnd who wore not susplcloug of a stranger who address ed them that ho had designs on their pocket book. Maybe lu the co,urse of time and the process of evolution we may get tho same clum-llko reserve over hero In America, but I don't expect to see It In my llretlnio, and I am glad to think whenever I enter a parlor car for a rldo to Sun Francisco or Seattle that though I may not know a blessed man on that train when I enter ere 100 miles havo been traversed I shall bo talking with some good American whom I never saw before as though we had been friends and comrades from our earliest youth." Washington ner-aid. v Zero, Gunner Is there an exclusive circle In this town? Guyer I should baj no, The mem bers are as cold and distant as the north pole. Gunner Ah, It must be something oX aft arctic circle. fall. 4. Spray with arsenato of lead about July 20. 5. Spray with arsenato of load about August 10. Use purls green at the rate of one fourth to one-third pound per barrel of Bordeuux. Uso arsenato of lend at the rate of two pounds per barrel of Bordenux or water. Make Bordeaux as follows: Bluo stone, four pounda; quicklime, six poundH; wuter, fifty gallons. Slnke the JImo, dissolve the blue stone, dilute each with half tho re quired quantity of water, and mix thoroughly, Uso good nozzles and maintain a high pressure as uniformly ns jwsslble In order to distribute the liquid In a mlst-llko spray. Take caro to reach ull parts of tho trees and to avoid drenching any part Cnreless spraying should not bo tolerated. - The Limn Ileon. No vegetubio Is moro popular than tho Limn beau, and It Is suitable for all classes of iwrsons, an well as for all manner of dishes. Tho dlfllculty with Lima beans Is tho poles, which are sometimes expensive; hut If strings are used, as Is dono for 'tho climbing flowers, the vines will grow and thrive equally ns well. All that Is necessary Is to keep them off tho ground, nnd It Is not necessary to iole them If Inconven ient The lato crop should bo a largo one, not only for tho purjwse of imp plying the family with a sulllcleney of green ones for tho table, but also that they may bo dried nnd laid asldo for winter. If stored away they aro very serviceable at that season, as they may then be soaked and used for the same purposes as when they are green. The 'dwarf varieties do not require polea. mm Tim HiutHl (inrrien. The small garden Is tho ono thnt gives tho owner pleasure. Probably tho majority of those who cultivate stunll gardens innko no profit, hut nc tunlly Buffer a loss, when tho crops nro compared with tho prices received and the cost of seeds, fertilizers nnd labor. Hut thero In cousldcrablo pleanuro de rived, tlio value of which cannot bo estimated. No mutter how small the plot owned or rented tuny be, tho ono who can bestow a portion of bin tlt'no to the cultivation of crops the'comlug spring should do so. There nro soma things grown In n garden thnt cannot costly bo procured In markot, when tho riitu1innoa ntwt ilinlltv nm rvnutt1ikfcjf No ono enn buy tomatoes In miirkoti V , h . ,f ,)nvl1' 1., King 0f cqunl to those tnkon from tho vinos' ""' nt Urll,le' nnd p.'nced In fresh condition on tho J7ScoU "'nti'd at Nesblc. tank. If tho plot t very fertile, and 1 1C0 'wmhua on b . N not cqunl to moro than hnlf an acre. I ,.vm" t0 ,lle Npw World. tho amount of produce thnt may bo liM"w.in:iK defeated AuitnW grown thereon will supply n whole fam-BU,I('"' lly from early spring until lato In the , ;Yry Queen of Bcota dft4t, full. Beginning with onions and pens, " Ul """WW. beets, carrots, parsnips nnd early cab-l'"" coionistM began to bull bnge. followed with string bonus, Lima j 1(l,-f.n'town, btans.nomntocs, corn, turnips and lato . luJ,v-Montroie defeated Cortai cnbbnge, two crops can bo grown on1 v "l ,mm 01 Auhhuo. the name location during tho 'season, j ' V7Tlhl, !ntl,an c!,lef I'ontlac Potatoes need not be plnnted In a gar-' blckn'l, f IMrolt. den, ns this crop demands p from the beetle. In Anrll or desired, a small strawberry patch may ytn-mpt to html the Crown J be started, which will como Into bear-' . um 10W"' ''Jon. noiine Npanlnrtl captured Pi Ing tho following spring. coin, Florida, from tlx IlritliL i naV-Hoclety of the Clnclnmtl on imi. 1707Wnlter Colton, who madt the! public nnnounreuirnt of the dli fry of gold In California, boml Hutlnnd, Vt. Died Jan. 22, 1KJ Improving Dairy fltocU, A 2-year-old heifer, fresh In milk, will sell for moro than a fatted steer and sho will cost only half as much, to produce. These grade cowa are not) hnrd to produce. Purchnso a pure sire of one of the standard breeds, croos 1800-John Marshall ofVlrihla him upon thu mixed stock now on tho Secretary of State. farm nnd the young will. In all useful 1810 l'Irt agricultural exhibition characteristics, oo rar moro man liair the United 8tat opend at of that pure breed. When wo remem- town, I). C. her the years, oven centuries, of pure ISl'J Mr. Perceval, Hrltlib prtmler, breeding in tneso animnw, anu remem- sansinntiHi by Hclllnraam. ber nlso that tho purer tho blood in 1I3 Hugh K. Lcgare of South Carol any stock, the stronger will he tltnt became Secretary of 8utf. blood. $100 or $150 for a male of 1810 Itnttlu of Pala Alto, firm breeding age will not seem nn extrava-1 incut In the war with Muico, gnnt price. Every neighborhood where 1818 Daniel Webster rwlgntd u thero Is any co-operative spirit should' tnry. of State. prepare to supply iiiin demand for 1819 Antor Place riots made by frto fairly well bred cows. Every mnlo purchased should be of the same breed, so that new animals will not have to of Edwin Forrest to break up M ready acting at Ator nice 0 House. be purchased every two or three years. I8M Jacob Burnet, one of the By exchanging these animals about tho neighborhood, n fanner will then ho pnylng $100 or $1G0, not for two yenra. but for six or ten yenra of service. The cows thus produced will find a more ready market, because there nro a BUfllclcut uumher to attract purchns-. . , t i . . f , . i . . i i Whig lender In the Senate, Born 1770 First tramaU steamer arrived st Quebec 18S7 Outbreak of the Indian mutM Mei-rut.... Delhi captwed b; Sepoy. 18M Baltimore occupied by f troops. era. Higher priced males mny nlso , ' . nlflff v. ,.. n ...... wimiH, ui , (ui.i,i f.mnn. m ilromaeaeet the much, longer period of ufumtWJgfl5ptur(. of Jcffmoo button Hits Ilrrlce. wltivflle, Ua. There nro vnrloua ways of removing i87i.Trt.Bty of Washington jlrntd, a wngon box from tho trucks, and one vidlng for the aettlerotnt of the of tlKric Is described lu Iowa Homo-I bniiin claims. stead. The upright polo Is 4 by 4 by U 187(1 Opening of the Centennial ei feet and Is set several feet lu the tlon nt Philadelphia. ground, so that It will be firm enough lSSO Sir Alvsandrr Tllloch Call In Its position to stand tho strain which . pointed first High Coajtaiwios" Is required of It -The platform on' Canada in Undon. which the renr end of tho wniron box lfW Dominion eovernment created rests when It Is to be raised from thol four provisional districts w wamn mnv h inmtn nnv lu.!t?ht n n prising the western prorincei . i.ti.. - . i. - lirfn nnd .Saskatchewan, iu nun uiu ui-IKUl OI WIO iniCKJI. two- - it,, lr guy wires should be attached to tho 1880-I ntHer i n m 7 pole n foot or from Its top nnd be secured eight or ten feet In tho rear of the platform. The ropo which Is used ...ttlement In the Handwlch !! 1801 Cardinal Martlnelll JnTfitrt .. . 1 n 1 more...' Wie reu uvriru , . j n.u.,,i mourner Itata ecap "l the harbor of Sn Dlero, CaL REMOVING THE WAOOJ BOX. to do tho lifting Is attached at one end of tho upright iolo near Its upper end. Froui there It continues on to a pulley hooked In a rope which passes around tho front end of tho wagon box, then buck over a pulley In tho top of the polo and down to a windlass at tho rear end of the' platform. When tho wagon box Is lu Its final position on tho platform, It should stand upright nnd should bo left attached to tho ropo, so that It cannot bo blown down In case of winds. The Kunillr Cow. Families (lint keep only one cow should endeavor to have the best ani mal that can bo procured. More labor Is required to cure for a single cow, proportionately, than for n herd. A cow for tho family should give a large tlow of milk for at least ton mouths of tho year, and tho milk should contain not less than 4 per cent of butter fat, as cream la one of tho essentials. It Is better to have a cow that gives even lWi-Earl of Aberdeen became ipren F general of Canada, ...OrM Harris, the murderer of un executed at Hlng am. .. . ..m--. ilMtrored 1HUI rtevcrni t" !,;.,. 11...,. init br cartM"1' Venezuela. . 160R-Treaty of If'" nnd China ratified at Ch o ' executed at PulladelpbU. - .. . ....i,in Vile Nnzalre foundered off Cape 11 1 with loss of many ' Ww occupied Volo.v.f W wtoJ nreuie Court decided W J patent ease In favor i. 1... 1. ...... rvunnflnf. J80-Clilna paid Ibe Ut of . 1... ... Ii.tl10. .onn mlllslon on tho !" ". 1 low . . , jnju 1 road jSMWiieu fr,J :-Eruptlon of Mont U 1 i ...11. 1 '.' law n-- tm Ht. Yincm, '- .. i. nt m Thirty thousand iv rtlDJ eruption or aie m 100.V-Tornndo TO 07 Q 100 people. pJ r;DDI,l, 1000-Anthraclta mine . b; , nla accepted ier 1002- oporntora. ,....i W. II. Mood lJb .b' 0 !.t, f the United w" m is bower 10 nave a cow wiai givea even " ; . wntta. lV juA richer milk, hut the majority of fainl- 0m , weigh- 873 p "A Iv nnwa nrn ntcrtfA wlthniif minnl in 01 Ivellt, ! J merlU In that respect It la difficult J" J M. to rear the calves In well cases, hence ' oi Dublin 0 , , , ind I ' In purchasing tho family cow It wHl T. u n workln vL.. bo profltahlo to pay a high price for nt the Freeman a ,.h actor suiwrlor animal. ac0rgo Trollope, veD ,w 11 " 1 i.i....i,i noie, "- . .11. nr e" LooUlaif A.r the .ha.. comnu - r , rrlm 1 n , mill mnilon u mi u BIIU V" i n "1M sheep shipments of the nortbweat ar ' ,, .. j,oI irlvlnir tho railroad offlelala soma eon. . L,r. .' . i.h of He Hiv. M t eern to provide means for taking care ' ,M1,ionr reupp e"Ifn coagr 51 nf l.n.lnau Clnn mean. n foliar " . ll.lnr tOlU l,'"r . Mill 'TM has been made In the ugkatlon at tj, ws, M 'ou ecc(unt l IT 7 tripie-aecKea can for tne aecoaimoaa avr you cf, tlon of tU aulmala In transit 'WclaliaM tb 0,u I t