THE ' OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL,
PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 13. 1003.
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Ella ' A
s
y.vtHS weat ia gone; It ha. b.en
ww I pusnd constantly farther , i'
I weat, back; 'across tha oontl- ' ji
an jient and on but Into tha Pa
cific wher. la hu nerpi
with the far weat We have no fron
tier left The wild rough days of tha
homesteader when, men carved a pre
carious existence from ths wilderness
and hewed. a civilisation from the foe
fats, have passed. They have van-
iened with ' the men wno made them
wonderful, with the blaon. the great
ranges and the cowboy. Today men are
content to dwell in oltlea or at most,
on comfortable farms where daily pa,,
pers and the telephone .connect them
with the 'outside world and bring to
their doors the luxuries enjoyed by th '
city dweller." .
Itils is a statement, sometimes a
lament, that we hear often. And to
a large extent it is true. Even here in
Oregon the west has receded from us
until we forget that we live in a part
cf the country that to the New Yorker
la almost beyond the utmost bounds of
civilisation.
But we have not quite lost our west,
nor have the' days of the frontiersman
entirely receded into the past There
l still a narrow strip of the wild be
tween us and the, complete common
'place, where strong men and sturdy
women art braving the discomforts and
dangers of life in the forest. ,
You- don't need to go so very far from
Portland to find this remnant of the
past, for the atrip of the wild extends
along almost the entire Oregon coast,
it is in this narrow strip, lying-between
the mountains and the sea, that
the wilderness is making Its last stand.
And here t Is also, that the home
steader is making his last stand. You "
can go Into the Tillamook country, or
down Into the Sllets, or almost any
where down along the coast below, and
find the last of these frontiersmen.
1 If jfou want to get away from tele
phones and telegraphs, far away from
the locomotive's whistle, away even
from beaten paths and dally malls and
all the comforts of a ioth century
civilisation, get on the train and go to
Newport and Yaqulna bay, there clothe
yourself in flannel shirt and corduroys,
put oil heavy, corked boots, and start
north along the smooth, hard beach for.
the Stlets country.
It is little more than 20 miles from
Newport to the Sllets river and about.
- half the -way the road runs along the
beach itself, an easy, smooth highway
during tha summer months, but one
where great care must be taken during
the wild atorms of winter, when the '
tide's great waves,' driven In from the
sea, are liable at any time to catoh the
unwary traveler and sweep him away to
certain death. About six miles beyond
the Cape Foulweather lighthouse, and
'10 beyond Newport, the road leaves the
beach at Otter rock, and climbs over
a fairly respectable mountain and for
some miles runs through a forest of
fir and spruce. It is no road for eke
automoblllst. In winter it is almost
Impassable for horses, even, and at the
best season of tho year it Is full of
deep ruts and mud wallows and places
bridged oVer by shakey corduroy. But
if one la afoot he may leave the road
and take a trail which runs through a
tangle of alder, salmon berry bushes
and other shrubs, out onto smooth-appearing
downs, brake clad, where sheep
grass on sunny slopes and the restless
.sea beats Itself white against the Jagged
points of Otter rock, hundred ofrfeet
below.
A mile and a half from Otter rock is
Rocky creek, a turbulent little stream
which rushes down over mossy rocks
and Into a deep, narrow inlet of the
Pacific. Shadowy pools fairly reek
with mountain trout, generally email In
else, but all the better eating for that.
Three-miles further on Is Depot bay,
a natural freak of the coast. It is a
circular enclosure, perhaps a quarter of
t
i-r.'t. m
rs ar eltr br1 men wh ve wearl1
f ths rtnH and strain ef bualneaa and
have fielded tt their craving to gt
away from It all and try ths slmpls and.
irenuous lire, iney nave sorrenierev
tiie pen and ths typewriter , for tha ac
una me risning rod. And tney oo not
ma Me bad homesteaders, either.
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It Is net alone men who dare' the
hardahlpa and dangers of this life. There
are wunn In these fnresta living alone
In lhe.tr tiny huta. perking thalr provi
sions in on their backs over tha rough
trails, c'tarlng their lands, and Iti their
Aya of iuliure, hunting deer and twar,
or flahlng for the Immenae, gamer- trout
tl.at teem In tha river. And Ihey art not
all women to the manor born, for of
late hnmmteadlng has come to be a,
fnahionable fad. and girls who hare been
brcusht up amid the comforts and lux
uries of city life -bave donned flannel
end khaki and eomatlmea whinner It
aof tly trotmers, snd heavy corked hoots ',
ana nnv gone into in roreai to acquire,
by living on the land, 10 acres of the
flnem tlmb-r In the world. :
I wna sitting in a boat one day, whip
ping the river for trout, when I lookel
up and w another boat com In ut
itrm. I loolred again and rubbed tnv
eves. It dlrtn t anem poaaible, but II
waa. The fcoet came nearer and I saw
in It two gh-ls not the typical girls of
the frontlT, but young Indies such ns
one expe-te to meet In the faahlonablt
filai'en t hf city. They were dreaae.1
n city atyl. too. except that, as I saw
when thrv came nearr. they ench worn
heavy bonu armed with long spikes In
the bottom, whli proclaimed that thev
aero not wnndorers fro.m tha metropolis
atrayod bv ni cldent Into that almost un
known wllUcrneas.
Lnter 1 mw them again. Both were
drrescd In klinkt-.wlth ehort skirts and
men's hats, ana thev wers ' tramplnf
over a rough trail through- the forest,
each having on her bark-a heavy woodu
man'i pack. They wore (ha daughters
of Sheriff Rows of Lincoln county, snd
each Is holding down a homestead which,
In a few months will becomo her own
by a patent from the l.'nltod States gov
ernment. They had quarters adjoining,
but each., a fs necesssry under tha law;
had Jier own cnbln. built on her own
land, and lived there aloma The wild
storms of winter, prowling bears, fall
ing limbs, torn off bv the mighty winds
that rush through that country In the .
winter, had no terrors for them. They
were typical girls of the twentieth cen- '
tury. - ' i
The old homesteader, the kind ; who
formed the. vanguard In the wild Okla
homa rush, and has been first on the
ground at the opening up all the other
new lands which the government has s
thrown open for settlcmet. the typical
boomer is not as extinct as the dodo
and the great auk. but he has been'
driven to his last strong-hoU. You meet
him oocaalonally, trudging along through
the trails of the Oregon forests, or pull-,
lng the oars of a rowboat up ths Sllets, '
or you hear the sound of his ax as he
dors his slashing along the river bank.
Originally he was a plainsman, but bv,
force of circumstance Is now turned
woodsman. He hns forsaken the prairie
schooner for the shake house, and glvea
up the plow for the ax. , . ,
Andryou find, too, the typical woods- J
man, Who has ranged the forests of
Maine, Michigan, Wisconsin ad Callfor-'
nia and who has finally been pushed
i
"J
a mne across, the bottom uncovered at now ernes, rrom its mouth to its source. lng tne stream itself. Not infrequently est comes down to the edge of the enough of the tree left to make as much
tow uae," oui ai mgn na mo waiorn inwro re imns ror snort aisiances out a oougn is Deni aown ana ilea and a waier.
of a forest-covered homestead offers on Into this narrow strip that lies be-
mem a quicaer way or maaing money tween me sea ana me mountains, in
than anything else they can find. Oregon. '
Within the pest few weeks an artist Not all the Poles who coma to Amer
of national reputation has purchased the tea stop to work In the sweatshops of
relinquishment of a homestead claim New York and Chicago. You will find
from the original filer and has gone some of them In the forests of tha Sl
lnto the Sllets country about a mile and lets. In fact, there are a large number
a half back from the river, to live on the of them scattered along the river, from
land until he can "prove up." . "This will its' mouth up to- the Indian agencv.
give me Just the chance I have been With some few exceptions they are not
looking for." said Wanxel to the writer, . looked upon with favor by their Amerl-:
"to finish up a lot of tha sketches I have can neighbors on account of the fact
made the last few years. And I want that soma of them seem unable to dlf
to paint this country, for it is the most ferentlate between meum - and tuum.
beautiful I have ever seen, either In But thev are as a rule frugal and Indus
North or South America. Look at that trlous and hold the cheerful belief that
stretch of river ahead of us, with the the- land of their sMoption owes them a
tiny cabin nestling in that little nook living and must pay the debt,
in the bend. Could anything be more Homesteadfrlg may, to a largs ax
exquisite?" Where he pointed the river, tent, be a fad nowadays, but it is a
tree-fringed on both banks, made a profitable one. There are few of the
harp bend. Giant firs rose beyond the homesteaders .who could make as much
lining of alder bushes and climbed up money in the same length of time anv-1.
the mountain, as If their own magnlfl- where else as they can living on their5
cent height were not enough to suit 160 acres for the time required by the
their ambition. And Just in the hollow government Tha law reoulrea that
of the bend, so close to the water that a man must live on his claim three
U was reflected In the glistening mlr- years out of five, if ha Is to get It for
ror, nestled a little shake cabin, the nothing, but he can live on It 14 months
tall firs and spruces rising protectingly consecutively, and get a government
about it, a little stream from the moun- patent for.it by commuting for fl.25 an
tain running close by. and the clear acre. And these claims In the Oregon
waters of the river reflecting back the forest are worth, at present prices,
whole picture, while en every side rose anywhere from 15.000 to $15,000 apiece,
forest-clad mountains. Small wonder Those homesteaders who got tn earlv
the srtlst wanted to paint it. and got the beet claims In the! Sllets
The woods are full of college men. I countrv. have on , their atiBrt.n.untinn
a fringe of alders alonar ha more "sheJce." It la aeneraJlv est mated u.m . um u m i" wn u munn n in.uvv.uuu 10 ao.oou.-
lour into the pocket through an ex- always they end at the river and on wooden box fastened to it in such a stream and back of this an almost Im- that a large shake tree la good for six "c"001' "0 are living on nomesteaos a ooo feet of timber worth on tha stump
position that Me man carrier, pasalng penetrable growtn or immense nr. nouses. u ' J ik i Th ! Sri. ? s I " rami io,ti pr
an drop in tne letters he spruce ana ceaar. ureax your way into Aunougn lire in tne wuaerness is u,. ,,, n t ir"n-auy no eiaims
take away those left to this, if vou can. and you find your- about the same today as it was 60 government requires that the man who. left untaken now. Few of the Jlnst
ne.l Rum' K V n la elf anrrnunrieri hv ' ronlferone o-lanta vmira in the character of the home- taKea up a bomeftead shall no a certain ones had lees than 4.000.000 or B.OOO.OOd
where the'Hlleta wanders throuah the mall carrier twice a week mn.kea the uhlnnltoue tht tnh the kv J00 or more feet ateader has rhnnc-etl to a laree extent, amount of clearing and shall build him- feet. So a timber Claim In the Si let
i low marah lands, meandering through trip fromthe Sllets agency to ths mouth Oregon Is full of beautiful rivers but above your head, end thst ara . 10, There Is still the old-fashioned pioneer, self a houso and live in it and cultivate in worth anywhere from $3,080 to 116.-
' thS narrow streams of a delta, streams of tha river and back again. Part of there Is no other that can compare with and even 12 feet in diameter. If you who lives in the forest because it la the soil, but this Is only a pleasant oc- 000 after, a homesteader has obtained
which at high tide are reepectable riv- the distance he makes on foot with a the 8ilets In natural beauty or crooked- are commercially inclined and know any- the only life he knows, and who would cupatlon when one Is burled In the heart his governmet patent. So it Is not to
era, but which, when the waters ars pack on his back that often weighs ness. Although in a direct Una It Is thing of woodscraft, you may estimate be as completely lost In the city aa of the forest and needs something to he wondered at that claims are anxious-
Oui, are lime morn iuu annua ui iiumij i ituuims. a c uiner limes ne noi more man in mnea irom me mouill mai some 01 ineso Kinnia, n cut aim inn average city awener wouia d m "::irjr nm nuim. uu mm uino JT ioukiii ior anu in ine locators - re-
of the ,Sileti to the Indian agency, sawed Into boards, wouin proouca more tne depths of the forest. But there are tne nunung ana nsning. ine oeai in me cetve bign rees for placing would-be
which Is on the rIVer, by water it is than 10.000 feet of lumber each, more also people of another sort who have world. Deer and bear are plentiful and homesteaders on unoccupied land. -And
about 6. And every turn discloses than enough to build a large house, made themselves homes where the sky- the creeks are full of trout, many of the da'v is not far distant when all tha
new beauties. One Is constantly being ' Fred Butterfield, who haa a homestead line la broken by treetops Instead of them weighing three and four pounds land win be taken up and the tnagnlfl-
aiimrtsed. At interval there .r nlear. about 1 5 mllea un the river, has one bv tha roofa of akv-arranera. Some are a niece. It Is no uncommon thins lor a cent forests nf Ore an n mafrttlnaA tk.
not even tne wooos rruiaer. in annoua un levtrai mnea dick rrom tne river, mgs along tne names wner nomestsad- tree rrom v.-nicn ne naa aireaay newea mere ror tne excitement or tne lire, rianerman to eaten more witn a roa man nungrv . teeth or tne sawmill. When
to try to make his way through the deep In the forest, get their mall-In era have cut Insignificant gashes Into "shakes" to build his house, barn, hay-- some for the love of nature and the he can carry home. that day comes the homesteader will
dense forest that lines ths river on boxes placed along and often overhang- the wilderness, but as a. rule, the for- ricks, outhouses, etc, and there is atill outdoors, others because the acquisition A largo proportion of the homestead- go the way of the cowboy and the bison.
'.j s'vsi i a as vu tun jvv- v v - vkv j v. u n i. tuo (vci a tnj, vita w uuiicn ut a n-o i
. namely narrow cleft In the rooky must have a boat or canoe to go on position that the
heights which shut it in, and fill tha The way the United-States mails ara in his canoe, can
, basin, carried through this country is lllustra- may have, or tak
- J: 1 few miles further on ona oomes to tive of tha difficulties of travel. The be mailed. Unci
'mud In the flat plain. ' leave the foresfr and takes a canoe, of
Don't try to tramp tip tne suets woicn ne nag tnree cached at various
river from its mouth. You can't. Ths places along the river; bearing on them
rfnly way to get up Is by boat There the warning sign "U. S. Mall." Most
are not even foot tfalls, and no man; or tne nomestesders, even those who
A MURDERER OF TIGERS
By Slgnor Saltarjno.
rOWARD the end of jhs eighties
met him near an lriaane asylum
on ths Rhine. He was dressed aa
sre most of the wandering; artists
Miss Karola to a tamer by the name of
Bauson, who had come to Germany, I
was told.
"For more than a year I wandered all
"Tsn years ago I sold mr mens eerie, have often worked with the tlaera in Europe. At St. Petersburg I was
THE COWARDICE OF DESPAIR
By Ella Wheler Wilcox.
B YOU are discouraged and blue and
life looks hard and the future hope
less today, do not grow coward
and think of self-destruction aa th
harbored dark, despairing thoughts of can look about and gain courage for
aulclde. , fresh start
She had made a mistake; she had lost
. T aa .-eii n.3 f, it .nV . ...." v.. v,...- .... "Yl;" told that a tamer waa working at 8a-
1 i. i .X '"V i.""'""'"'!. ..T'.'..rv:. "V".' mara In rtreua Petroff with two tigera T
A Ll - a, laaaa,.at a. a.1..a. " w " ..vi (. IIUI Mill M. 1 Ull IICCU til. "(.Ml V IS SfiM V Ulf UUIUS i la. A I a a . aa aAa.k a S . . . . .W- . .
1 1 decided to enjoy life as a well-to-do lng will happen to me.' l"V "7 "fharf. in th. eiuBtrv rf I m Dara "na V her "elf-respect, and every Imaginable es their rooms are "open night and dav
onthsRhina He was dressed aa bourgeois and bought a house at Wles- ,hm .... -.. rolled into ths rlnr Jl L i, m an TdJS I le" to)y. d0 not "row -ordly trouble seemed to threaten her. Hun- a",'d l,n, f,rj roolmt" hS "ity and in ever v
are moat of the wandering; artists .tP.ut.."f, 'ou.p T'ek' 1 ,cuI4 The three tigers. Caligula, Nero and t Uld not Tcfll the murderers of my and think of self-destruction as the and misery for those dear to i her clty ,n
Lie union thev ars to bo found.
who travel from county fair to 0K,(f &nV?Ai?2S8' bulIe" , fc , ot ' "2 rVW&lA' "0 lWVr
county fair. A light, rather loud suit th. globs and was always longing for d0"The?alcnium nght thrown'upim them t JA inlo'whemVtom. TU d,J not mak ou"eIf- toucan- thought. towVd the coward's goal- dur ""V X Z theirs to the letter
with a velvet collar, a long blue nfcktla, excitement My first trip went to the evidently made them wild. .S, "? bit -its.n ,1m V. f th?n! t"naks youreelf. suicide. (h w)u help u tj r, ,n(1 k
a heavy gilt ch.l- which w.AtronjT V'fr 1 r'SSVhSr g "L'kSS ,T lf th' -"5 'S TSf tt5 d""" -
enough to hold a bear and with a fob .The trrat attraction In Paris at hsblt of Karola's to let ths tiger, lick Ln ?"s.n,, ya n' 'Ji-Ja- ithi fxplain tB, wo,,d,rful mrv'' of the changed. She bss risen to new spirit- After you have reeled for a day,
made from the claws of a lion enoruated that time happened to be an acquaint- ber hands calling them one at a tlma rr J rWonn wagon llt Principle within you. Science has ual and moral heights, she hss obtained brsce up. morally mid mentally, and d-
wlth dimot.ds. He Introduced himself ance of mine, the beautiful Fraulein Today the animals fefuaed to obey, evl- ZT':". t"w animals Ths shut- found all th. Ingredients which com- work and s leading a good. usefuU clare that vou are rolng to mak. a new
as Mr. Carl fichoenfer when I found him Karola from Vienna, who waa perform- dently becaua. th. new costume lrri- wer chd th It w-a. impoi- pose an . chemically and an er Ch.TistB Utfi.. ,u . . start, and that th. way wUl open, must
alttlnt: In the corner of a beer garden lng in circus Franconl with thrWbeau- t,t"1 ihm- , . v slbfe to see thVbeasts lnilde w. J .1 L . w Sh' nnsT thosa dear to her open and his al.-ea iy opened to jrou for
feeding crumba to the sparrowa Hla at- tlful royal bengal tlsira. "Karola took a firmer hold of her 1D'e to sis msiae. which resembles the hens product can hsrov and comfortable. a new life.
tendanl waa not wr "V war Vad "How It hinoened tht w. metan ""'P- The eye. of 4he beasts lock.d "In tha evening when th. wagon was ba manufactured. How much better than to hare sunk This a.sertkm will strengthen yo t
wstched him cloaelr sll th. tlina old tamer sod a vming-glH rioaT- like balla of fire. puahed Into the ring I followed amngf t it will not produce life. them tn the de-.tha of a lifelong sor- amastngly PfMeve In yourwlf. In
Formerly th.4nn -'Pascholl Nero Pascholir th. crowd of ft ts and whispered Into Nothing can produce life bu- th.' row by a raah attempt at aelf-dAtruc- right to a useful, l.appy and succ-i..f , l
!, r hanrtCJ Today . wl. no lnnr TIP ..2 i. ,i "Ph. beat th. roaring beasts furl- the cage, TaJIgula, Hannibal:' Th. two nnnamabf roy.terlou. p-wer hack of tlon an attempt which destroy, only life. Remember how many men r.av -,
S.r,. a man ?ot Tt kni I waa T.d.nlJ ruai? aaCThri v-ii-i! "' tigers tremblei stopped walking up and th. anlv.rse. C'reateu bing. crrv on trre outer shell, but Uaves the feal ba- been In poverty and d.spalr and hv,
Ku,uP.lk " r!nr ll" ihouV Veil Z to?hml0TM mhlll?J'tZV "I turned to one of the stablemen and down and retreate.1 Into th. farthest th. life principle through aucceedli.g r.- to .uffer on until It work, out and rUen ..ut of them to pow.r and u.ef a.
Ma ni?k iiki "thai of a hull luT! i ill T. t . T, . It . , told him to bring a red hot Iron rod cor""- ., . , u . K -L. fenerations snd centuries but lis pre explains Its crime. ness Ktfr-,,,4.
, . n J li Vi. i r.. .J! -ili. . ii- M happiness ou,e,ir. Ju.t then the terrible hep- 'The artists looked at me rn tnrprls 2uctlon and creation ramsln Cr-Vs e- No matter what your troubles sre to- Truet n th. invlictbl. forea ef vo -
5 fTai".T Tha Srhi.rIioutt.,,I W'VL"rt .,0 'V. . . p.ned Nero made8 a Jump for th. glVl nd Immediately recognised m. aa a cret H. wh. Imagines he can lestror day a year may .citter tb.m and l'av. own di ln. scol to becom. one ef tW
of blue, soft ees. Tli whit. raousUch. Kvery evening I stood behind th. in(i burled hi. long yellow whit. teth tamer, but I saw now only the bloody that principle Is as gre.t a fool ss he you with new hop. and new lntere.1 In and r-rllev the Angfle of Light
p"rI.,? , lit a-. f"" . at mr fiance, perform- m her boson. The other two tigers, body of my be or-d, snd n.var thought who says 1. can explain It And he ilf. , hear the rrv of deatirlng anes on en !
Toti ouglit 0T?.m - .Vif !nrj. ot toT OB "om.nt did my eyes also msde a rush and attacked the girl that I was going to kill a number of u a criminal beside M If you are an Invalid a year may re- will sirengthen -you.
ago. 20 year, ego JSacrlaaioto, then leavV her and her tigera and, believe from right and left Then I .became Innocent PPe during the next moment All that death does Is to shift th. .tore your strenr. The war will and meat open for v-
1 was a lomptrr. The whole world me, that although I am a powerful man. Insane with fury. In a bound I wtas at . "A. I raised my hand to throw the cn of action to another form and Thla is a wonderful age, and people if vou torn yut away from d .
spoks of me. I was the rlrst man la and bar. never known fear. I wished the cage and tore open the door. There rnamlta- at th. tigers, one of th. plana are beginning to res I lie that health is and despair pnl and Inwsrd
I he world who trained a tiger and who .very day that the contract Mis. Karola la something strange la th. expression clowns standing cloea Mr fried out: if you are miserable and vnhappy greatly within one', own control. The world oee.U yeu or you
made old psnthrs perform tricks to- had signed with the circus bad run out of the eyes of a tamer, ami th. beasts oo out boya, is Karl Bhoepfer. rwu do not become hafP by going t. Klmpl. food, well masticated, as !tt r.0 oe.
gether with goeta It waa a seesatloa. no that I could marry th. glrL Immediately recognised It and slunk th. marderajr or tigers rront Pari. I another town or state You tarry your tie meat a. possible, much water, con Your place Is waiting for you f
imce the late King Victor Emanuel of H la never without danger to par- back to th.lr corner leaving their man- hat waa all I heard. I threw th. wretchedness with you. tinned deep breathing, to feed th. bodv it!
Itslr. Ood bless his soul, called out a form with tlgn- I grew nervous as sled victim o the floor. I picked up dyasmlt. Into tb. eag. and there wa. a it la precisely the ssrr w-n you with psre oxvgen, aad contlnue.1 kt-
batisJlon of Infantry st Florae and soon as I saw KimU MUr tha cage the bleeding body of my fiancee In my terrlM. eiploama. a closd of yellowish rush out of the bodv by your o n act. tlon. of heelth and strengih. fre-n t tm Jtv nf T
In frost of all the soldiers h. pinned .nd something within mv4f told m and was abost to leave tha cage. srnok.. crle. af wounded men and jf you ara called out or th- oMr ev aourca of all energy, will rv.tnrr thr,e- ioo7 w uving.
th. medal of valor on my Coat lapel that her beautiful eves did not soswh Then I happened to look at Nero, whose women, and tneti everytning was quiet tha same power toat brought to,, Into fourths of tha Invalids on aaj-th with To folks who r ro grest shake.
breause I had saved two Italians from the neyeeaary .trenVth to ln.k. th. 'ceth .ad Jawa wer. bloody. I raised TTT'f,L L? . ,ha u "f ' 'FI'O. no ail of medical skill. A two or tre A ad ha v. W pll.
being tora piece mr a tiger. I anlmaia obey If they got unruly my pl.tol and shot th.east dead tha Jw? itT t-, Zf'.ZZ? ..5 h,t dItloes ar. ready for you to months' or .von weeka'. diet of raw What flavors life and tniku
ess show you som. marks of that fight Mm day Karola told I w that ah . ' ,v i, it. rT.T. hHri wJlr .tart t another rlac veg.Uhjs. or mUk and egrs. wol It worth war whU. t
ven today" had had a now roatams . ki, "Tour tarn will com nom. ether by t r '"S I bad wr I n th Rus- ,Wslt for that call. store half of t- remini-T. If cooped
Ehe-rfcr hawd an. his l-ft hand " V cVt wl ITTrer Jn!7t ".?t vaN ,hr two ti ttF'&ft .lJlr2 ..WIi'LiiT J Tb- tor ma n"hM '. with th right mental altitude aa-J - Ii- IVwjgM th- answer Irtr,.
whTre twW fiogetV were ml-lng. sod aw trewrt ."5 Ion g boot. T 'Twa days later Karola waa burled la nJ- ht,,mJf J?I??a LiiTKOP ae'r his ce gim epoi.a tn. play t-me. Ii a word
toM w "kit I IRS W MM llw -loTwT rdTliTve-T. et Ifc. .ta Per. Irh.1-. - , . - - .f1", 'Sd or PP1 r aad ruins M. wn chances for .lory. Th. day I. sesrlsf .cte. It wti. iU. t -
iSf , t im tilto.J.- .r.!i -A f-w dev. late t fOfltid my-lf la PoP'- sns t..4 t- -rly aret e, until win mean dlaarace or keck of br.!-. , Waeataf? rl
n,.t -T ret aa, u that eo.tssa grsdually. I fhm psii ecll of a Fr-ach Insane aev- - " " 11 yon tear is. rU. Meji.Mi. think If yo kav. o mooe SP4 m t. or- -- , r .
-J M . J . lam. ror thre rear I remained there Tercel ins ; wall of rnr Una and ready to do ml make no retir rnJn.1 that bon r. .... - -
1,,,.. Th.i . . nrt .tM. ,.!(,, Th. fcr.- LTV' " raving maniac. kn-rlna- lathing and rur-b- S eat 114. eomleg to yoo. If - l-a-
srond re- telirve I ass crasy ana that I know thev do. eat It a na. a, tSa- T - I . w . T-i a a ah,, iti a .vu it.,.,, K ...u.ini v - w . . . . , M n, w ..... . ,
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'y beva.a. have shewn th world ! rwa t raa leatlfy front .).., hatred of th Knu'i w
i'J"? rlT, . w . .v Mlri' n-ordcted nr fiance. A fw i
ht,t,-T Inaerfcd p1. therrha In lh T -n i 1aar.ra ar )nded nwlt. later ara. dlach.rged a cored a
r-a r-.,ea or r:a vst aad suatglitenod rd,ewi'w. all yovr
..tt-.f tp jreoily. pui Xai.c. r; UeJ aijj
pcecatjtloa,
cd tsrrr r-eo-
ho l-sd T1 .m a reaa. Tommy T , nlm In tt wr',d today ham be lat nna imr in rn h
mTth. T'wnr-i.rsi going to grow a beard. a. wV'-a g 1 and aa ant-arry as roa cut rr-w heter
and Im- tnrl ttyT - ar at onm ma In tNeir tne. if yr, j ara H rMr
fejateiT hern to r-li for tha t'gnm. Tommy pneane thott I va't M") la Create-r Kr To. -a tr. live to- t'n r r i t- r
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