SU' til XUREI) DOLLAR HILLS. How An Innocent Man pected. lUHKAMAGLA AXX1VERSARY. was Sus­ One Of the Great Battlesof the Rebel­ lion-Tragic Death of Poet-Soldier wm "V.0. story was toId at «» New General Lytle. nniurd Hotel in Wasbington tbe other Forty-two years ago the latter part duy by u New Yorker who was travel- of beptember was fought and won by ug on a Pullman car between St. Rosecrums the great buttle of Cidcka- Louis and bis home, which goes to magua. Sbow the danger of convicting 1. man on Chattanooga, the objective point of < Ircumstautlul evidence. The principal 1 the campaign, has been well considered figure in this incident was not con­ the very gateway of the entire South. victed, but had it not been for a for­ Bragg, in command of the Confederate tuitous circumstance it might have force, was outwitted and outma- neuvred, and the town of Chattanooga gone hard with him. OF It seems that one of the occupants I fell into Federal hands, entirely by of tbe car on getting out of his berth to strategy. Chattanooga was then but a poor, dress missed bls vest, which was a [Sunset IX , iL'aa i ■ having _____ been 'Mioazme )/. rather serious affair, inasmuch as it struggling village, never____ contained in an inside pocket a roll of even beard of by one in a thousand of who composed the Northern money which consisted of six brand- those army. It is now a wealthy, prosperous new $100 bills. '• »1111 t,le sca'es on his face and winding from his waist a long buck­ but she knew that she could die with I..,?' , his craven’« lieart made him skin cord, and tying himself firmly to her lover. She took her own frail Him who, drunk with thy caresses, canoe because it was so light and Madly flung a world away! Is m .5 lls ioes l*°d no claws, and the Ong's legs. The clumsy feet could to paddle, though it was made F mouth no beak. not grasp him so tightly us to Pre'en' easy PAte one fall the Wnshoe Indians his movements. At last the great toes for’her when a girl, and would scarce- Should the base plebeian rabble Dare assail my fame at Rome, Jv support her weight now. It mat- rre making their final hunt before opened wide, but the Indian did not tered nothing to her If the wuter Where the noble spouse, Octavia, L« 1,1?. , , va|leys and leaving the fall. Again they closed and opened, «plashed over the sides; it mattered Weeps within her widowed home; Eier, a1 in 1,3 winter snows. The and the enraged bird thrust do« n his nothing how she reached her lover. Seek her—say the Gods have told me, E"’’ «tighter waa sixteen years head to see why his victim ref"3«® J" She kept saying his name over softly Altars, Augurs, circling wings, L. , H5°?e leavl”K tlie lake lie fall. In a mighty rage the Ong tried to herself. "Tahoe! My own Taboe! That her blood with mine commin­ Jibe 1 ' «tratest hero In the to grasp the man in its mouth, Ijit When the council had finished, the gled, L,; ,?r l"'r Imsband, for such had the strong web between the set bird s old women went to the Chief s hut Yet shall mount the throne of toes sheltered him. A«« 1 “ '* : " hr .i„ Cl'?to«n of Washoe chiefs to l>id ills daughter come and hear the kings. kirthi,1.'? *,’.e tribe came out of the the bird tried to use his horrid teeth, decision her father was about to ren­ EfliU,'. 1 ' , I',air®r than ever Indian ami each time his huge body «0mld der Their consternation was great, And for time, star-eyed Egyptian! the air tn such twistings nor’ did the tribe rest until the rosy Glorious sorceress of the Nile, M ”‘en was this daughter, fall through contortions that .»Hose who dawn hr in I? ,lnill!lrried brave and war- and tinged the Washoe peake and Light the path to stygian honors watched below stared in bewilder disclosed [rfnr, 11 ,rl,>e wished that he had meat With the splendors of thy smile. to the warriors the vast But what the watchers could I Lt t>„ dreds of greater prowess, body of the Ong floating on the wa­ Give the Caesar crowns and arches, not see was that every time the huge L“flkd’t be certain of winning Ix't his brow the lanrd twine; ters above its nest, and beside it a fnnna ^at last night at the lake, mouth opened to snap at him, tiny, empty canoe. But gently ap­ I can scorn the Senate's triumphs, big council fire, each was young brave hurled a handful of proaching the shore was the strangest Triumphing in love like thiue. L . the pipe and recount to the poisoned arrow heads into the mouth, craft that ever floated on water. It le 1 "oldest achievement of Us ¿nd down the big throat, t.heir sharp was one of the Ong's great wings, and I am dying Egypt, dying! cutting deep into the "”r"? the «all was the tip of the other wing. llark.' insulting foeimin's cry; hii-f T "d!e" a,l were beard, the points iln th , ot’oose, and the women tected flesh. The bird tried to dis­ Standing upon it clasped in each oth- They are coming quick, my falchion! him by r"bhln«. J'13 era arms, was the young brave Ta­ Ia-t. me front them ere I die. to ep''rthp m°mlng of the final day, caused the great bird lat nest still remains, and to this w gi,ni’! ai,d great stores of It suddenly arose and tried to .pe Ong's day the drowned never rise in Lake |toer "t were packed ready for the , Two magpie» sat on a garden rail Tahoe. „ As long ago as a week; ddiii» /'"were preparing for the , on(> '¿/’’tivities, and the fact that A nd one little magpie wagged his tall In the other little magpie’s beak K>m w who would be the brldc- Then doubling like a fist bls little toior, ietite l”tethat rniK,’ty band of claw hard 'rent '"tensest excitement to Said the other “Upon my word. «cpnt were joyous and lmp- This is more than flesh and blood can > vk 'be maiden and the hand- stand to hnn,l!t ,>rave fo whom she had From magpie or other bird.” tniditf« ,r^- In spite of custom So they picked and they scratched ♦ nut »’ IPr 'ovp bad long since each other'» eyes tonn« , nnp whose feet had been Till all that was left on the rail th« tJn prp’" *be war path when Was tlie beak of one of the little mag Mitam » gnTe battle to their plan. don,. the Pfutes He never And tbe other little magpie's tall. 1 cini ' ' valor, nor could he "u the right to «it with the » THE RACYCLE SPROCKETS Like No. 2 Grindstone are Hung Between the Bearings At ( ^içyiiei) flf2 Which Stone will Turn Easier? 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