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Medicine Hat News 1896-01-02 - 1899-12-28
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Date
1898-12-15
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PEEDESESSSOFELEEL ELSES EERE ESE ES PSHE P TE TOP EET TOPE O TES Attack on -47 Macdonald s Brigade. Graphic Description of the Second Half of 3 the Battle of Omdurman. a SCMENCE AGAINST FANATICISM. bELEELEEEELEELEL IDE SOLER PPIE PEED EEE OD G..W.Btoevens tims demribes the : Exck on the Macdonald brigade in the gecond ball of the battic of Umdur- man: All this from back to what w dar moved his brigades southward In knew what he was doing. He was gis bis right to an unbeaten crn ter get et 2 es and Omidurman. Perhaps be Dervishos and Omdus Perhaps Be would take. But be trusted to his generals and tils tar, and, as always, thoy bore, him iid nox gucw what a the unbeaten enem: io victors Phe blicks of the 18th and Mac bad form right a were feo 200 alter hom time whet ue would. he put thus thme aS Ne rgers swerved towar blacks, last Boggura foil fire w t mingten bul me the att: to Omdurman t utes silence be: cn howling storm, rusived down more crashed forth the comport, This tine it burct ie, From tho nortie d upon fis Ben ce spread- jhe and gathering to his right rear. Bor ait tite sudden swiftness of move- fone the Dervishos throughout this day never lost their. formation on as tigkdly ap cars: regi ida regiment in lines of A ta lines dro and cig Vn might have fan phalanx was alive again front and: right and rear th are up the desert 12,08 i fast and fearless warriors Around 3,000. 3 . PIERCES The Kt rove It i F i force day. Ee tauncliest dio-hards ihe green was victory or Paradise now For us it was victy Mesh and doves, ub d, orsekling Baggars vis Sider tiered slipper Of the fight. If Macc on his left, and Coli Porting camel corps, and the returned cavalry, ali oo far off by now, Ad Of Surgiam: Ulil; If they called the Khalifa could w: old Gnd chen all our Oghtlng War to bogia anew. But Hunter Pasta Macdonali Rey Ing men both ean flurry. end e kalelios of to the Sirdar Digtlnet he set and edged the British army ; men tl - shot at w Of the Lincoins forever COCKPIT QP THE cekpit of the Britiais ayence cade: 3s cas keep (t-did to kill off the: t t he comple taetielan ise in bis to watch the mai ani Zool an, on parade j Maciorald Bes * much cooler. Beneuth square-hown face you cou the brain was workin, In lee. Ho Bont his blick brows green fing wand the dec-emoke wisped jswa talions were rapidly and forward. roun and out, as if it wore omnes. 1 now to gO ue * between them. The fet bis Gua daring he made 1 30 SOME ty qtye advance at tho bugle: Battalion Were storming Gebel Surgham, Lewis aid, faciag west and south, le. They were ino M thie hallfas divl- of the Khalifa s ese the Kha d was flapping Baggara horsemen Hii-mounted perhaps to get as galloping Baggara ised a thousand Reyp- very long past. a3) stood like a wall, and Macdonald. cool as any Scotch- stood and almed lkewlse ; ifa s the but the Dervishes: were superb be- of the piped ore dverhend, nnd ads thinicd out froot. guttered and mitt was. just past ten once thelr ioaplrg FIGHT OF ALL. Now begun the (ivrcest fight of that (ita brought up Bis own black banuer agalit; tia ito the earth ami locked their ranks about It. flag danced encouragement to tho Allah-mtoxicate battulious of and Cotiservative member of Wad Helu and tho Sheikh-ed-Din. It or shredded China In. the interests of British com: newls his right or Sane a tens was spearmien churged death at every min- siot ut hopelessly. sudden i wor of be ttle lee Hunter sent for Wau tish Brigade to fill the gap ssing. For foodness' let ns Macdonald aud. Lewis. yiGenera Gatactefirat, OF ten bat rosh on rash, company with the sol brigade mo: 1 She Uiwtant, The khaki elute rightward. the fighting ine was 2,000 . Lee-Metfords, on earth couid ope The tues the Lincolns were (ie i lon to Mactongid s + Be aye See ea with the War- rane of the Egy fispute bo ciata Omdurman. Ali Wad Hetn was borne Front vagitt wus yttack. frout inc: SeogTuze n eorpee. then savght by turned tle e hait-eltele, west ving content bineks. at stolid wi fils Tor tovwar green fing and) the Kemingtonss on tin arm and iis face towards the an omler. and cantered easily battalion commander. Mav the rifles husbed, the stingin the ; up to cally i i Deipuded with them-and the line, were worthy of thelr com: Fades, and of thelr own reputation fg the best disciplined battallow In the world. A few feared that the Dincks would be too forward, the yellows too backward; except that the biaeks, as always, looked hap- pler, there was no difference at all Sgyptions stant-silence at the bugle. They were losing men, too, for though exes were clamped-on the Dervislt Charges, the Dervislr (re was brisk Mau after man dropped out behind the firing Ine. ere was a white officer with a red-luthered there a black stretched are-headed,, in the sun, dry-lipped, nicomplaining, a bullet through ils liver; two yards away 2 dead driver by a dead battery mule. his whip still gined-in hand. The table Of lose had topped 100 150 neared 00. Stil they stood, fired ad- Yanced, fired, changgd frout. thred firing, fixing always, deaf in the dix blind ip the smarting smoke, hot, dry, bleeding, bloodthirsty, enduring the Dervish fight to the end. TRIBUTE TO THE DERVISHES. the fight must stil go with the men who died. Our men were perfect, yond perfection. It was thelr larg- est, best, and bravest army that ever fought against us for Mahdism, and it died worthily of the huge LORD GHARLES BERESFOR Rear Admiral in the British nav Parlis- Lord Charles Beres- mission to ment for York. ford has undertaken merce, and: reports credit him with nope athe Dersishes 2 Phe honor. of Lime nmerged -vietorowy Mees fUrs Hans. in earefy the was charging with any as yot, intact columa of 15,000 men Theol banners and mounted Emirs Again in tho forefront: A: broad Stream running from tho south and the east, of Dervishes who had vain hidden, spre and ran to strike inapod the southeast corner of Mac- donaid s brigade. Woree still, Sheliths- ed-Din and Yunis, returned from obas- ing the Eyptian cavalry. were hast- ealng with thelr division at fall epeed so. abtack t s SORS he Shidiers ery, fret the leader down, but saw tho unexpected singular perli of the aituation. I turn- ed to 4 friend and sald, Macdonald is ty for a terrible time. Will he get out of It? Then I rode at a gallop, dis- regarding the ential hanging about, up the slopes Surg- bam, where spread like a picture, the scene lay before me. Prompt in exe- eution, the Sirdar had already lasued orders for the artillery and Maxims to ire upon the Khalifa a umn. At the samo moment the re- mhalning brigades were wheeled to face west, and Sinjor-General Wai . was gent at the double to help the staunch battalions of Col. Macdonald, now beset on all sides. Fortunately he knew bis men, and hts mon knew him, for he had had the training of all of them, the 9th, 10th, 11th Soudan- eao and the 2nd Bgyptians, under Mal. Nc ve bean te time to save them had they not Tough emd saved themsclves. Lewis brigade was nearest, but it was almost a mile away, and the Dervishes are wont to moye sothat ordinary troops seem to stand still y indecision or flurry would have soon wrecked Macdonald's brigade, but evidently thelr Dusiness, Messages which vould not reach him were being sent to him comtig. Yes; but the surging Dervish columns were converging upon the brigade pon threo sides. Surely It would be engulfed and swept away was the fear in many minds. And what other wreck would foliow 7 Al, shat could walt for answor. It was a cru- cla moment, whett a single Khedivia brigade was ging to be tested In a way from which only British squares tunately, Col. Long, R.A. bad sent three batteries to accompany Col. Macconald' s brigade, namely, Peake s, Luwrie's, and De Rongemont s. The guns were the handy but deadly Max- im-Nordenfeldt 12 1-2 pounders.- Mac- donald had marched out with the 11th Soudanseo on hie left, the Secon Egyptian in the centre, and the 19th Soudanese on the right, all being I: Une, Behind the 10th. also tn line, were the 9th Soudanese. Major Walter commanded the 9th. Ma- Jor Mason the 10th, and Major Jack- on the 1ith Soudanese battalions. Hastening forward to neet the Khall- a's attack, Col. Macdonald threw hic achole brigade Into line,.disregard- ing for the moment the asaniting columns of Shelkh-ed-Din,who provi- dentialiy were a little behind in the attack. The batteries went to the front in openings between the brl- gades and emote the faces of the Der- vish columns, Steadily the infantry. fired, the blacks ir own petfaah- ton independent.z. the Second Egyp- well-alined yolleye RIPPED INTO SHREDS. Afar we could see and rejoice that the brigade was giving a magnificent account of teell The Khailfa s Der- vishes were being hurled broadcast to the ground. Major Williams at last aud our otiieramtterles, as well as Maxims, were finding the range, and ripping Into shreds the solld lines of Lervishes. Still the enemy pressed in, their leading footmen reaching 10 within 200 yards of Macdonald 1 Scores of th Emirs and lesser leaders, 18 Well us lootmen, only fell few fect i 2guis and unsbaken Khedival rear. Searonly brigadier knew fils to try and told on,-that help was) .... tom the photograph taken by The New York World has received the first picture sent to America of Louls Lucheni, who assassinated the Fuprom oC Austria. (16 da, amo. che irs aph, so far as ls known, over taken of the Anarchist and mur: derer. The man s name has appeared variously as Lucehesl, Lucohink, Lac vest. and in other ways, bat the Swiss vuthoritles evidently have concknted that his proper name is Luchenl, for It is so -srritnen on, the, Official. pho: tograph. It was taken 1 e Luchorities immediately after the as: sassination. The assissin's taco, will be noted, Is esyentially brital, plainly showing degeneracy toward the savage animal of the meanest or-) der. Indeed, every feature of the man's face sets him down for what he is, and although he prates In the well-worn anarehistle argument, it is easily to be read In his face that a distemp- ered mentally and contortea nature are more responsftle for his miserable position than ths theorles he espoused. LOUIS LUCHENI, WHO KILLED THE ORDBAL BY BAMBOO RODS. traordinary Ceremony Practiced by Superstitious Natives of India, Tho following extraordinaty narra- sion ut facts as they ocurred, aud which, mys the Madras Mall, we are Informed, Were witnessed and can be EMPRSSS OF AUSTRIA. the Geneva, Switzerland, Pollet Bitch etit's wckoer beurs-oue the story of his face. He was born of Ttallah parentage in-the gutters, dind never how. father or mother. from the charity institution In which hoe was feared he was cast ont at tet years of age to stift for himself. He lived as best he could, always hating work, tntll he wa old enough to joln the rmy, hoping in arms to find a life of ease. Dissppotntesty that he de- Serted three thmes;-each time being captured aml tmprisoned. When fin ally dishonoratly released rom ser- e, he war for a time valet to the Prince of Aragon, and then studied law. Falling to-find Ife easy enough, he. became 1 discontented wai Attracted ty the opportunity to live a5 he wished by anarchistic theories, he Joined the red brotherhood, but he is belleved to have betrayed for gain one of the great plots of his assocl- tex. At che thne of his murder of Austrian Empress he was under y his anarchistic colleagues. a testified to oy tho mambers of throw households ceoupying large ligua In Bentinck street, Caloutts, are so re- markable that t Is worth the while of atry wnekeds tiat . pareon : ally, as thls can be easily done on the occasion of any theft by domestios in ashoum. It mhy be added that every servaud In Calvatia ie a ely, be Hever in ite, ' . at once cont A Brahmin is the worker of thes marvels. He is well known in Calcutta, aud docs not fess to work out his mothod of theft detection for money, but leaves it to those who employ him to reward him if-ther shine ie Te te sala that this really done, a good thing out of jt. A cook in the service of family in the locality al- luded to bis nephew with large sum cf money to keep In de- posit, The nephaw alleged that he placed the money In an carthen pot. which he buried. The location of thy exact spot was confided to a friend, Shortly after this the cook was in- formed by hie nephow that the pot and money had disappeared. With the. nephew's consent the Bralimin was summoned to discover the following is a bare narration of the extraordinary procedure he ad- opted, and usually adopts. in allasuch cases, Accompanied by an aid, he comes to the house, provided with two bamboo r da, abont sixteen feot long and an Inch and a half in diam- eter. Ho also has with him a sumber , of fresh peepul leaves, a cocoanut, some rice and some vermillon and cow- ries; a fresh earthen dish has to be provided by the person who summons him, aa well as a stool. Ail the servants in the house are xnmmone , they are made to stand fn a halt olecle, and the namesare written on each leaf, and these leaves, with oue inted ve pe are placed inthe dish, which, tn, turn, Is placed on the stool Two ut strangers aro then intde-to hold os bamboo rods, one in each hand, oppo-, site each other, with thelr elbows far behind their hips, so that they can have little or no influence In. turning or bending the rods. Now comes the atrange part of the proceedings. At the Brahmin s call of each.name the bamboo rods in the first instance rise together and form a semi-circle abov' they then bend, and forming a sem clrele below, gradually come together, pick up the Jeaf containing the name ones, out and throw it one of she . This strange process bs repeat ed till the Danae of the thief, aa al- Jeged, is called, when they both selze the woe ee op ana Oey, cae, gage It at the ca . Brahim Who entreats tie rode to let the leaf go. To all cppearance the two men who hold the rods make no . effort whatever. The Se fs done in such an extraordinary. fashion as to ex- ceed belief. Ih tact, a reasonable hu- man being cannot believe it till he bas wieacered it, Sao hee Pe hd lone so his amazement Is all the great- er. Hore 1s Indeed, n mar scientist to puzzle over. The two rods bend, come together, ind selze upon the right names as they are called out, and then throw them aside, ex- cept in the cxse of the thief. in this instance the nephew confessed to the theft, and a number of his relatives who had come (rom up-country to wit ness the ordes . mode restitntion. any ave irap naredrecm. TEHad Been Spread.on Bread toGiveto mace : Tilsonburg despatch Rats have annoyance around the. being clothed with power to nego- every kind of death and torment that man can devise, cling round che black flag and the gre emptying thelr poor, rotten, tom: made cartridges dauntiessiy. Their Their horseman ted attnek, Siding into the bullets fig Was left Dut three horses trotting up to, our line, heads slown, on company, never stopping, .hough ll thet view that was not unshaken nemy was the bodies of the men who ud rushed before them, A dusiy tie got up and stormed forward ; /t bent, broke up, fell apart and diseppeared. Before the smoke hind cleared another lime was bending and storming. for- It wna over. The avegging susd- ary awopt he Khalifa and thr 1 back to Me over the fletd: heikhi-ed-Din fad gail away ov an anggired with a bullet through his thigh-boie, Yakub lay dead under fis brother's banner. From, lt;j the green army there now came only death-euumored desperadoee, strolling one hy one townnla.the rifes, peus- Hing to stvrze n xpenr, turning aside fori Jot of fury. bounding forward. Ing timply to the ground. fling. in uring of Bodies, stood three men, fe the threw thonsynd of the Third Bri- Jade, Thay folded their arms about the staff wn gazed steadily forward. Two fell, The last Dervish atood up wd filled iis chest: he shouted the namo of his god and burled hia spear. Then he stood quite tii walting, It took him full: he quivered, gave at the knees, and toppled with hie head ogiona of hie conquerors, LIKE WOLVES ON THE -SCENT. Th: Dally Nows correspondent sys of the aime attack There was no Uattie in the course of the day's bloody work a fight in Aytihthe-barbirbin host dk serions Ldn nd sehercl it is sald one or two. threw spears acrosy the indomitable soldiery and a few turned the flanks, but were Instantly despateked. A few salvos ns Sie bad at length received suclt t of withering fire that the rear began to hold hack, and the des- t rushes of the chiefs and their personal retainers grew fewer and feebler. But Sheikh-ed-Din was with In 1,000 vards, running with his con dent legions to encompass and destroy the First Khedival Brignde. Mac donald, when fie saw that be cowld hold his own against the whole array of the Khallfa's personally commanded divisions, threw back his right, the Ninth, and one and then another bat- tery. He was now fairly beset on all ides, but fighting splendidly, dogged- ly. The Dervishes, taking fresh cour- ge, made redoubled efforts to destroy him. I was by far-the finest, the most herole struggle of the day. A second battalion,the famous fighting Eleventh Sondanese, who lost so heavily at At Hark, swung round and interpose thomsgelves to Khalll's and Shelkh-eil- Hin s*flerce followers. Furlous as was the blast of Jead:and Iron, the De venth, when the Sec- ond Fagyntian, wheeling at the-double SHOT FOR SHOT Without hesitation the fetiaicen. let Te lt sald, stood thelr, ground and, full of cohfidence, called to cach: other, and gave stot and bayouet point to the few more truculent Der- Vishes, who. braving shot and shell, dashed against their line. it was a tough. protracted struggle, but Col. Macdonald was slowly freeing himelf, and winning all along the in mel Corps came out to soit and formed. on the right. of leventh Sondanese Sheils and. showers -of bullets from the Maxims on the gunboats drove back the rear lines of Shetkh-el- Din's men. Three battalions of Wr chope s got up to assist In comp ing the: rout of the Khalifa. . Ti Lincolns, gent to the right Une with the Camel Corps sisted In flushing off, th bands of the Khallfa s son tho.Dersishes for the first time i all those years. turn tail stoop, and ya shook tho.looser attackiug Abeeiahiee Be GEN. JOHN M. SCHOFIELD: So EES be Imagined. No one of-us who was resent on that day will ever in hix fife behold again a scege so grandly or so stirring. It typified y sense the final desperate le of barbarism against clvil- Agation, of dogged, flerce, unreagouia fanaticism against the massed tr umphs of modern science, the ultimate test of brute-brave ignorance aint discipline. The Dervish couorts vanced, rolling forward over the desert n'a tidal wave might roll ora huge prairie fire sweep over the plain. Thelr counties bonners swayed as they moved, thelr great brond-blad- J spears 'gleamed tnnumerable a Sheet-of silver lu the sun, Their lead- ers, o0 small, swift horecs, ished to and fro across the front of thelr lin here and there, dotted conspicuous be- fore the face of the host, wild figures Jeaped high in the alr, in a most frensied war dance: the moan- Hig, of thetr-wnr-horns, the thunderous tn two mina te was ther agali in a new Tho fet in front wns ho wards ug in a whitey-bi of, Dervishes. An order. jaws gripped and hardened me spurted out 2 whitey-broven- still. He saw what to do: kn did It. At the fire nye ing watchfall behinc at th coas: fire he we knew that they wer being narsed to triumph WORTHY OF. THEA of their chief, bgeo 2 r while swing Mis: firing Ine 1 Ishea like Inatantl: CHIEF ihe Pineks of the 9th, 10th ind th, the historic fighting regiments of the Egyptian-army, were worthy The 2nd Egyptian, STRIEREEEIESEEEEEEEEEEE there was danger that the British vietory. might not ve gelued. Tt wae when a third of the Klalifa s army. suidenly flung themselves upoa Mac- fonnid's brigtde of Egyptian troops, which had sonmphow become tolited Shr death lt;P tegers ph cresp orient count Of the say wolves upon the scent erie eprets from anerpretert With ewlfter fect nd flercer courage. they dashed for the Isolated brigade of Col, Macdonald. Although we wer far away at the t with the Kiret or Lyttelton's Brigade. tho jouta, the. nolen of the deercnding tornado, reached us, From beblnd the F prey, sl. from the reat of the Shine orces tar of the hills. Tt waa a cevil-t thehindmost race, and the only one Thase ever sin th hh ohalf a. score the wwolgehind gle-handed trinmph.* THRILLIN ie Beowea thrilling pleture of the scene recard In thelr frat This Is tt 0 when the Der: about thirteen hun PICTURE. TaiFly run for ther Mvag to the ali: + J-B.GORDON. go GO) JiA. SEXTON. ROET T. LINCOLN, Soldiers and Civilians Invited ce President to Investigate Conduct of the War SSK N un the rapidity aud continuous duration Of the fire of oar Loc-Metiords wax when he saw the men in the firiig ine rushing back to the reserve. drageiig thelr hot rifles by the slings they could no longer hold them and ex- changing them for cool weapons, POSED AS WOMAN, A New York Man's Ruse to Obtain Buxpioyment. New York report: Arrested in skirts for masquerading in a woman's garb, 50-year-old Christini Breckles, a man, almost develved the elect at Jetferson Market Police-Court to-day. He has the exact voice, figure and carrlage of woman, and now that he Is detected, he admits that for years he hns posed as one, dressed as ous, but never before been spotted as man. order to exterminate them he purchised some strychnine. He spread the poison earcfnily aw some small pieces of bread and had It all y to do its work when he was woe, st able to toddle around. watohed his father the surprise party for the we petrent s back Was turned the toddler had reached a piece of the: poisoued bread. He. ate portion of it, and had a mouthful more when the futher came buck and saw what le way doing. Tho babs ject what was in ity mouth and was with all haste to the office of Dr. Reid, where an emetic was appiled, but without any effect. The stomach hen brought into nse sie the piece of polsoned 1 Was elected from the child's stoinich and he Was ont of danger. y hada pet cocker spaniel as list playmate at the house, and whon the father and sou returned home from the doctor's the little as a corpse. In thelr ubsence he ha eaten the piece of brend whieh Mr, Parker had made the child spit out of ies mouth, and had died In great age CONVICTED OF BIGAMY. Cornwall Woman Thought Her Husband Dead and Married Again. Cochwail repark: Three weeks lu the county jail was the sentence meted ut to-day by His Honor Judge Priigle to Mary Laughrin, the North Lancaster wowen, whom he found to be guilty of bigumy. The extennating circumstances doubtless saved Mary from a longer sentence, The ouse was peculiar one. The prisoner s maiden hime was Mary Compo, and in 1874 she was married at Cornwall by ev. Father Murray to Patrick Laughri: Iu 1890 Laughrin went away, and al though he claims to lave written to her several times, ste denied. haying heard from him, and swore that she belleved that he lind been killed at Mille Roches. A letter addressed to ler from San Francisco, and signed by him, had been read to her, but. sli Still persisted In thinking him, dead When Langhrin returned to this sec tin he found that his wife bad been married n pitts before at Laiti- thr + Battle shont, harsh x crasl: of tl A storm, dove thi grey-brow K nly wall of dont ky sheet of elked however, aw was the : much da. one admired Aid jonged to continue gazmg at. the farbaric onslaught, the fact. that these men , were In deadly. earnest hot long be not. ignored, for ignored it daltied Boon and Lincoln op the. spectacle marvellous southeri slope of Um Mutragan hills t that can EAT whet makes hardly 1 and the only sign an observer ind of Mereor Street Sty tio: sae ae saying that, as a married man, and her of a family, he hus Invariably found it easter 0 find. employment lt;0 womnan than ase man. Whit he was still Inelsting earlier thls morning. to the pollee, that. he Was ho man, he-was hustled off to the. where there Lea mipron, Halt an hour later te Was hustled back agats, with as, nn gry and indignant remonstrance from the matron, who had quickly discover- ed Breckles was a man, Whoo arraigned before Magistrate, Deuel, with Ee yell still over lils face, Breck: few ead: 1 do not ee why may hot Mires aa a woman so tong ae behave in a ladviike gnanner Breckles was fined 10, not for mai rrsted-and sent to Cornwall to await her trial, whieh took place to-day. nly a Soldier: traln was abont to leave ikelt the other day with na number of soldiers aboard a couple of young women entered the fore most Ith a basket of fruit. One of the girls rushed up to th nearest uniformed aan ger sald: Won't you have some. fruit You have been such heroes we want to io something for you. Yon are mistaken, miss neither to the nty-firet Rough Riders, aid. the soldier am on fn regular, consequently not a hero, querading toxieation and disorderly conduct + nthe took some fruit Philadetphin Reoor my CE A Prologue, Iu a large w from -the seash ed ge school Boarding Acad mon, 1, Hugh 1 ly ten sears Thad only arr fon London, from my fathe in the chuse of ns the New Mor had long been somewhat neg accompanying 3 derings, wore the care, or cw At last Thad ampton to. com tory edneation, Tt was aftern my uew seliool clos by. Fe used to Tonelin able. I merel the time belng, whatever In m; As I ant the into brown slight sound 5 Are you-the vole. * T nodded, and gator, a girl o whose. black e3 ina way very child as sho se Her arms and she was fondlit bright eyes a geeed to tive mon with her c too, that she wi they were ver ing, What is you ed, in the same ultogether wit superior who with, SHugt what what? Hugh Trelay I felt somewh tone of the Itt boyish eyes, see senior than she She continued same keen serv Inoking at my Who Is dead 1 still wore t and, with a Yolce, I told he She ald not s preased no syim to the school-rc out, saying, and play with. I don't chr tired. Stined. with ed quickly. T made no rep pared for. the to imply that I duit, but had no mach In so many She understoo although she 5 my condition, t more: questions. Glad to direct myself, for her made stooped down kitten which s the floor: Ever feel her eyes sti when. I logked 1 ELT, ane rua This embolden to question in 1 Are you the : ter? s At this sho brightly and 4 . good-humored blunder, that, m her bagan to lin Desides being a was a very pre Why do. you At you, she take, int for M am a strangi self, My pe in South Americ My mother is member her. M3 go back to him. She added, quick 1 nodded. qs he kind tc that sont yout But without 1 to her questions fathor orled wh eis 8 mi Ine these ear mother had wor he kissd them. from here, in a you hate Bogle: This was ratl but being Ina ing on disgust readily assented it Is a drew iolh an mi nearly every da where I came bright there, a everywhere, at of fruit; and th end beantifal s that can be ta your neck, and f As sho spake t that T was tra of which she spe sparkling, her sunny, her form, der beanty anc ened; and her b gionmed and E ders there, wit over ber head, Noating round snakes gleaming and dusky alaves Going her court borne in mind tI dious boy, fond of travel and a toring in my. foreign lands. M pled of dwellers realized in the the first time. At what age and more parti to the gentler miration? Ia new friend perc It dd hot displea
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Image 1214 (1898-12-15), from microfilm reel 1214, (CU1749479). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.