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About Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.) 1898-1915 | View This Issue
Big Hole Breezes (Jackson, Mont.), 25 April 1913, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1913-04-25/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
JW PI Survey of the World’s News A NEW plan of Industrial train in a for children more tbnu four teen .years old Is outluiod by ‘ In: Hermiui Schneider, dean of the College of Engineering of therporu University of Ciuduimti. Tbe Ne\ York board of criMuinte's ootnnitUee ou school Inquiry employed Ur. Schneidet ss one of eleven educational authorities to Investigate the public school f-y stem of New iork city. Dr. Schneider favors the establish ment of a compulsory continuation school law making it incumbent on em ployers of children of school age to Bend the children to school for uot less than four hours a neck m the daytime whenever the public school sy»uuu es tablishes such schools. Me has a co operative scheme, bused ou un agree ment betweeu a group of manufactur ers and a school system, whereby the manufacturers agree to instil uto and carry on a thorough and comprehensive apprentice course in their particular trades ^nd In which the school agrees to give both general and specialized Instruction to the apprentices. The school course Is devised by the school authorities. In most oases the amount of school Instruction Is equal to the smonnt of shop work The apprentices are usually divided into two sections which alternate with each other for example, by weeks- so that w hen one section Is at the shop the other Is at school, and both shops and school, therefore, are always fully manned The apprentices are paid for their work in the shop on the regular apprenticeship scale of their particular trade. b b A WOMAN POLICE CAPTAIN Dallas, Tex., has (lip unique dist-im- tlon otf a woman police captain, the first of the sms to fill that position fche is Mrs. J. J Farley Cap^atu Farley Is a busy member of the Matins force The list of policewomen, though! ferunll, is gradually increasing through siMN^S^of pone “U> give to the nwakened desire of the pub1!.- ti,c highest, truest In terpretation of life\ through the medi um of the stage. The orgauizatiou is lum led and Is selling sb*U's of stock. It K 7500,000 , LONDONERS A lund of. Interesting luloumatiou ('oncoming London and-riffle adminis tration of its affairs is contained iu a voluminous work entitled ''Loudon N.alisUos,\ circulated by the Loudon county, council. It is not generally known to the Londoner, bred mid boru, “ ENGAGE P E O P L E ’ S SENSES TO SNARE THEIR REASON.’ If Hems Merchant Follows This Ad vice He Wdl Be Agreeably Sue. prised at the Result. F a r m A d v i c e a n d S u g g e s t i o n HOW YOU SHOULD SELECT A GOOD HEAD FOR YOUR HERD A young mail who euute to the city i P°mt* ^**at Count tn a Dairy Bull. 1 Don’t Discard an Old One Until You're Sure His Daughters Won’t Do. four years ago “broke” and who start ed up in the grocery business ou bis nerv e a lone said recently, according to the New \ ork Press; ' vy lule 1 w us a clerk I rend consid erably, and I have always remembered oirc bit of advice from Lord Chester field to Ins sou, 'Engage people's souses and you will snare their reason;' I re- nicimiorcd it particularly when 1 cn<lt that there are 111 local authorities by j clci'luug and bought out a dchcalessen whom the government of the uietrop- l shop ou upper Amsterdam avenue, olis is carried on, and another item of ! Mcln-atcsseu shop may not sound nes- uiore general .interest is the statement | thetic. btit, believe me, if you run if i that the popuUil.mn id greater London now numbers T.boiumn. In this urea women are in a majority, fur there are L12X females to ewery Lniiu mules. 'Particulars ot llie jliissengers car ried In greater London'are indicated iu the following table: 1 .lit a! Tram •• Omni- i n i!U a \ k . \ a a \ s ImsoH. \M .. GOfi. (UII.I.lDH W7 . . . ... T'd> L’ioi.unu aSli. (L’ kiimh 1!»\S s.. id.!*, hi iu Hiiii.iKH'.H'n ‘.;S.;)UH.IMI|) |:»n:» . 4ic . i|.nf)n KIS. d O* i Mli.OHH.O.K' !:Mit . .. .|:!;i, :v l .ODD Tibl.TliV.HnO nui .. ■Pi. i!'*,HID .S;:i.SI!i,i)iH) ;nt).oiNt,i)ou The average Londoner makes ”'21 journeys every your and has just dou bled bis rale slime INffd. Tliefte were j tfs many cans, ((s i,0V(,s its llul.(1y ,17,',11’T persons killed or injured in the j ,|y of varieties rightly Wou can afford not l\> be ues timin' Well, whou 1 acquired j be shop l looked! about tl««, neighborhood. I found several high class itpn'rtinetit houses near it mid (wo oilier stores selling delmatesseu within two blocks that bad steadily been taking trade from the previous owner of my store. “I wanted something distinctive, something that would appeal to the artistic Nctiso of every man and wo man. something that would make them (tnlloringly conscious of the good taste they knew that they possessed-, some thing that would evoke it and satisfy it So I emptied my show window of v'&iL; V * Mrs. J. J. Farley, First Woman Polios Captain |n United States. out the country. One of the most en thuslastle advocates of the innovation is Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt of New York. She believes that women can accomplish much more than men in certain phases of police duty. B B FLY SWATTERS' ARMY GROWS Since the fly swaiting campaign of last year leading men of this country and Europe, a number of scientific ones among them, have become identi fied with an organization having the extermination of flies as its serious purpose. They regard the fly as about the worst enemy of mankind. The following are a few of the men and women associated in the crusade to finally extinguish the fly; Dr. Albert Vanderveer, Albany, N. Y.; Miss Alice Lately, Cranford, N'. J.; Mrs, Caroline Bartlett Crane, Kalama zoo, Mich.; Mrs. Robert R. B. Bradley, Boston, Mass.; Dr. Joseph Y. Porter, Jacksonville, Fla.; Dr. S. G. Crumpine, Topeka, Kan.: Dr. Woods Hutchinson. Colonel John Y. Culyer and Daniel D. Jackson, M. S. and Edward W , Hatch, Jr., New York. Local organizations and sobeeaimit- - tees are being formed in city and coun try Just as fast as an interest can be aroused by circular warning, letters of Instructions and offers of training in fly kilting methods. Not -only In this country, but in Europe and even in Asia, the action has been started. B B CLUBWOMEN'S BTG WEEK Clubwomen from aft parts of the United Motes wifi tie in Washington .... April '—. I S tnsd-STTTraTfewr T5e F o 5 u -' cfi of the General Federation of Worn en's Clubs. Mrs. Wiffiasa E. Andrew*, general chairman, is in charge of the i7«grafe. 'It B WOMAN'S NATIONAL THEATER afreets In I lie melropnlHitn police dis trief. the IVI a I eases being 3(17. These 3ii7 deaths were attributable «S fol lows » abs, motorcars. Ira incurs, mo tor buses. Iiprse buses, carts, vans ami j other truffle., B B NO ADAM? NO EVE? '-indents of astronomy at the I ni - versity ol v'Incase w iM not l>e likely to get good examination marks in future if they C.\ >bm|i the doctrine of c oluliou ' h.v tie biblienl story of Ail-mi and Eve ! Professor Wtlliui’ D MacMillan of the i astronomy department told Ills st.u dents that the account of the garden of Eden iu the hook of Genesis could j uot bp accepted as soteutiftrull.y true. Professor MacMillan asserted that the Scriptural story could not he recou i riled w llli scientific thought B B BRITISH NAVY Great Britain- constant effort to I maintain her supremacy at sea is ev i j deuced I,v i I he fact that twenty two i battleships and battle cruisers for her j navy, all of the most modern design, will he under construction in British shipyards during the present year Then there are the three battleships which Mr Borden, premier of ( ’anada, has asked the dominion parliament to [iresenl to the mother country, and file vessel for which the Federated Malay States have voted the money and which, like those from Canada, will he a modern tmtlleship, British shipyards are also building six more large modern warships for foreign governments The total new displacement under way amounts to (ioii.liiiO tons, and the cost will run very neat $-l(iii.uiiO.,iuu To complete these warships w ith the necessary speed will require very care ful organization Already recent Brit ish programs are In arrears, nnd there are likely to be some delays with this record in warship construction Here tofore the admiralty has Calculated on two years for the completion of a bat tieship. but it ts probable that it will now have to revise this estimate. B B MISSOURI’S NEW GOVERNOR Elliott \V Major of Missouri had jimt completed a four yours' term as ullornoy goneral of the stale when 111 dinted into the gubernatorial chair As a youth he studied law in Champ Clark's oilin' and later was a law part ner of the speaker of the house. He served four years in (lie .Missouri state senate. He was editor and compiler of flic revised statutes ot 1MIP. stale orator at tin- Omaha exposition and is gur and went Iu for-sug gestive simplicity 1 called iu a pa\uter nnd plasterer from around the corner. \ ‘Faint the walls iu the window? of the store so that they will look Itke oak.' 1 said. 'Fut up a pine wainscot ing halfway to the ceiling and paint (hat oak Put up a couple of rods so that I can drape portieres to the sides of the w indow s 1 B hat a this,' ho said, ‘ r beauty pa rlor'.c ''Never you mind.' I answered lou do (hat Faint the shelves in the store dark oak, and paint the barrels that ton’ “I had sliding panels put over the shelves, with a small window in each so that the samples within could be seen 1 had cheap artistic' tamps In stalled I went tn strong for refine merit and subdued light In the win dovv 1 placed only one or two samples, nnd (hey were pretty and delicate. The rest of the display consisted of cards, variously designed and nicely engraved with hints of the delicacies that could lie obtained inside There was nothing 'delicatesseny' about that shop Its window was not suggestive of the odor of herrings and cheese. “People passed, looked and walked in, and they almost sank their voices as they did so “They came In droves, and they all went out with the same old potato salad or pickled tongue or Camemhert cheese ” A Man of Method. “1 do not see that you are practicing economy by buying a $15 handbag for your wife\ “Its interior is so complex that by the time she finds her money for streetcar fare her companion will have paid for her\ Buffalo Express. ^ \iu sciecl.iug a bull to bead the daivy herd it is not cuoyiglt that the uiuuial he a I'tu'e bred and registered bull,” says George U. Suusoiu, iustruetor in animal husbandry at the Oregon Agri cultural college. \He should be both iif these, it is true; but, Iu addition, he should be from au advanced registry dam. \If this is impossible because tlmre are no udvuimcd registry cows in the locality the bull should lie the enlf of a cow which Is known to he u Burly heavy milker, a high lesl.er and a per sistent milker. His sire should he a register (if mend animal if possible. \The annual which is being seleoled must he a good representative of lus breed and strong in const it in muni v ig or and masculinity, If tie Is old enough to he considered a tested sire that is, if lie Inis daughters which have been milking for a year it should be seen that his offspring have uniformly in herited the excellent qualities of their sire. “When selectlhg a new herd hull one should not he in too big a hurry to got rid of the old one until his heifers luivp show n their quality Know, if possible, what the old one has done n- vvell as vvhal the new one probably will do before the change is made loiq pletelj \ 'Way Ahead of Us, Belgium ha- Bit head ot rattle per square mile. Denmark I ft. Nel Icrla.uds l.i.'i. while the I oiled Stales ha- Biij| L’M head of cal lie for the same area The figures show the evlcnl that the cattle business linglil la- dev eloped in lids country were anywhere near the same number raised that are to be found in t lie countries named Kansas Farmer A Timely Warning Haven care how you allow lie-huh to roll ill the field.- vv lull the ground is so soli It doosn I appear I-- iniuri il lad w lien you m IOC to fa rm il v ou II tiinl II parked and lull'll and - ..... . -illm will lie difficult throughout the entire season Keep a close vvaBli ou the meadows too 1 ton t allow a hoof >-11 them in days of soft soil Iowa Home si end Care of Little Ducks. It Is highly important that dm flings always have shade and that the pons lie kept clean I never leave feed in t he troughs and alvv ay s ha v e t In- vv ntcr in the watering troughs deep enough so tile ducklings can wash their heads bill so protected that they cannot got any other parts of their bodies wet Corn Silage Not For Hogs, Hogs will consume some corn silage, but it is not a food that may lie con sidered w ell adapted to I hem The ling's stomach is too small to handle any considerable amount of silage to advantage Hoards Dairyman A Dish of Dewberries — m if,; -X fy ^ r a -. . 1 i'lioh-gi aph I-:- l.ong Island ugrauli I n sonic parts of (bis munlry berry, is not known as well as il otiglil to la- planted instead of il oral r \ (tr |i Mil a 1 1 SUita. 1 ! Ill*’ dewberry, closely I'ehiled to the black li-si-i ve-. |o In- Many berry experts say 11 , heller fmivv n relative. The dewberry is .sometimes known as the running brier planted By U foci apart given i-h-a slakes or prm nlef-l w i t h a rack ot In or tIn- running bho 'klferry It ts usually i i-til li v a I ion. ami the vinos arc lied to lit.- It propagates readily By layering II,v brills of Hie bho. kberry and dew b erry arc ennuuiMi *^4* <• F F <• 4- •S*fr$ t * v5*-(ioJ*'Soi\>‘ <■ * DO YOU RAISE HOGS? * PEACH TREES FROZEN? v 4* ❖ ❖ 4* 4* * 4* 4* 4* 4f 4* 4* 4* * 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* Its a Hard Job to Gfct Them Into !s-)|n •1 lines a weelv s nlllll ram 4 * Shape, but It May Bs Done. n Voll t Heal her will s •tv in \u'X , 4 * 4 * \ 1 \ i *1 'lent i ris MlLr frequently in 1 . 1 ’i|y i illMIlllj ||| lilt’ll L I' i W 11 , 44 |*e t h 4 fi’i‘w ihl : i- that of handling or il is ID >1 | Hi \ In I d * .1 ..hi lh*;js 4 » 4 » < I d . (Is th-il ha i ’ 1 It‘en Moel'ely injured 11 ■ fi t l(T l\ il'i'ea 1 W-'ikI l >1 l! 4 * it. Win rl free/,log ree- in such or \ •ii Ii; v e y niingc uiies t It e; 1 1 he V 4 * t h.t (Is a r* M-iia By \ el V III llcll VV'll I kl-ll 1 1 • I n 4 * et| h ■ v iih\;i \s I'D* M\ el w it li difficult y It u lo-a rl v a 1 ;ti- ' *>sl x;l 1 e 4 » a mi III nam m> 1 a iD es die a II ogel her St *im* 1 . ........ Iff si >\ \ S es|H* l.l ll.l 4 * »> h ha ~ I mi - M) 1 *>iii d 1 HiaJ a mmltMnlP It In n -vv tic- ea i l \ Sj •1 log Inter- 4 * he.i I hu 1 Hit Iv |s the hes| |iniiiin.n | n»a! i »\ii h-l tic IT^ ith i His l 4 * 4 * liiel 1 .ra\ t licm with Ik.‘I'MH’ilf • Min 11 1 t'l’s M' ? vMM'i hfit e*l W.t* lx m dn - <ni \\ lillc cal III. * * id e e \ er I \\ 11 4 * * h<i » ieii I'll.Ml l„ il l*i Ft • •* v ej a ml Me\ pr Ut‘(‘lx - 4 * Mia 1 e ( esi 1 a Iit' l 1 e •s ’V ell W I hmi 1 lin.V 111 It f 11 it 1 t \ jii'i HID lit il has 4 * 4 * Il ' e ) n H id •* lit’! !, ml ImztMi 1 1’pps* It MM) t . hid J 1 ha 1 lo eetlii H ai 4 « j, WII I Il i I'e le 11 \ 'll: •Ml a n \ 11!11i1 1 nff a rp t; Ita lav \v 11 h ' mai 1 he < n | ul *r 4 * 1 D * 1 .tin 1 i 1 * i T It)e PlilM’e m ,| i<t|. h 111 m 1111 l ! I'I l ;- I i - > itei n tlet 1 FIIS f Tin l : f (Will s| rl> s e ■\ w ea lx i \ nr ir 1 M 1 a 1 ii o— I \lie ll.l i! 4 * n d ilai \ The door- I,. I l.e fail'* W 1 Mlf 4 * I BIS Ss ill' Il ; re id a'tf.i 1 *a i |x | at iipf l> >n«M' si i on Id In [Te oil to tic if 44 t e 1 i In W ' mm | \i t w i Ml' til I'PF U'JlfH • ( mi H m VVl l 11 11 V' Uitr a the et h.: e 4 < list) lilt Miahe ,i w ( It lalamiMj yrnw t It un el t\ | H< v tMlI (lie W 1 ID I ? ; ml St D Il !’('< M\ 1 F Tin■ rpi’t»\ pi \ is net I I'.vHl I ih i \' 1 11 U i*l) I hr Mini Hu1 \ i mi in* pi,Lr'- I h rm I ’»HiTi'GN « * ❖ 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4 414* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4» 4* <• 4* 4* 4* ^ 4* M I vv ;i \ ‘v ' \IlijipMr. lull Is nrar!) n ! v\ ;n s lirUrr Itrm umlrr umst i >H hm tmM lit ni* « oil hi r \ < «i*ij| Iriiiii n On the Appointed Day By ADELAIDE RUTH WENTWORTH T Senior Berean Sunday School Lesson ,111. Mat v I a■ 111 - ui w a- a vv haler ilia! nun li- v oy a ges t n uu Xc vv Beilfonl alioii! tin middle ol I In- nioclei-ol ti ' col urv I lie on! v lest i III. -I! v 1 hat I ha v e In persona I Iv beat ill I lie mailer of her last re turn is that I was one of those who saw her the morning -be was observed Golden Text - Be ye kind one to an other, tender hearted, forgiving each oilier, even as God also in Christ for gave y ou (Eph. H. 32). Elhstt W. Major. Who « h Mmeorl’t . Easiest Attorney GoiWrei one 4*f lbe-lte-4 kwnnr e*ajftafcaprs fa- „ . . , _ fTbe-tratr. 1 m i n s bK term *ftor»>T A m * * * ^ » m * » r ««7 j ^ t r l t«* M fm l j-nfae I . the Tort; Ao * m a m \ m O m i S ' ^afiargiae tim a ...* * the m m s L 1 ■ m m m a m r n -■*»*■* .mm ^ 1 * ^ feraaei (o srort m the iv& jrct fs I fry a ff rebrr etfomry g m e n h tio r e * * P ? * ” ’ to o A t I'x d ^ fts jrrsiae'wt is Mrs. N. V. Nartrs- $r. The fffthgipff at ststes £be |w t Setoet itol fwa Mjejat a e B m - N t w WM b rto New * *t Sff-fp A WfWELC«* STATION eiM w K tar ttsrti a* • rferieA iBedea at Verse* F7 Fraternal recom-iliations. Jacob knew that be bad to faee bis brother when he returned to his na live land. He therefore skillfully planned In pacify Esau’s wrath if per chance it yet burned against him, His messengers carried a word of coin-ilia tion, but they fame buck with the news (hat Esau was himself coming to Jacob and 4(Ki men with him. The man of peace was at once disturbed, and be interpreted the intentions of his warlike toot her In 1lie light of what had happened twenty years before. After the first impression he decided upon a diplomatic course of action. He sought the help of God in earnest prayer, and expressed kfc gratitude fqr the unusual favors conferred on him. He then prepared a present for his brother and sent it on as a peace offer ing. ^I’lider cover of night he also conveyed his wives, children and lay- longings across the river Jabhok. Ja cob was now alone on the hither side, and lie was alxnit to experience the greatest crisis of his tife. rt is true (hat he had acknowledged God during all ttiese years, but the element o' craft and satotety was a repellent fea ture of Ins character which had to lie conquered. * • * “lifted up hi- eyes\ The dreaded meeting was drawing »dgh. ami with characteristic rpsogrrerfrrbmss Jacob—arranged -H»- ewBpRN.v so m to make a favorable itsf fresshm and to secure safety, “fiwbef end Aoret* Irenderm***-” His favorite wife *ad eWM were fdaced at the extreme end. ■wtoee they w-oaW he n«*s-t serare. “Fassed prer tiefere riwat.\ He oowr t x a t to the tttmt.. #»C > • « ■ $ U m O h f. to Esa>« to * wo«t etfbtofesfve xsatiffier. “S e v « ';tfffleis.'w S«»t4t % w e & a £ fm 'v * $ « royal perara toeaB's *« - irfles were, totwa-rer. totaHes*. Hi* too(toe «tonr «4 M wm H to *e ewtto. “E ta* to Mtoi ***.*\ * • » * was slaiiding’ behind Jacoli. They all, one a tier another, (hen came forward and paid their respects to the hrnlhcr In-law and uncle, whom all had dreaded Verses X 1] Proofs of peine Esau had been told by (he mes-on gel’s that \all lliis drove\ ihc goals, rams, camels, en im-ntioucil in * hap ter xxxii. 1,'i lb were a present to him T*nf repetition is a common practice in (he orient, and Esau inquired mm-tni ing il from hi- brniher. so Unit he may hear from his own mouth about the princely gift. \To find grime ” The present wits a mark of respei-l and a token of good will. “I have enough.\ He hud a sufficiency and so did not care to receive any more, toil Jacob pressed him to take it and urged as one reason that the liteeiing was most gratifying to him boeause the favor able reception was as though be \hail . seen tlu;_X(Li:.jjf ,G.tuL” ..Hti. could- Mat have paid Esau a better eompliment nor have impressed him more win some !y. “I have enough.\ Jacob bad more than sufficient. He had “all.\ and if his brother w-otikj accept ids gift that would soul the kindly feelings that now exist between them “He took it.” E-.fti was persuaded by tins reasoning, and he accepted the \Mess ing”--“gift\ w hich was clearly a mark of good w ishes, Jrs acceptance would $-lso imply that noflirns but good wifi would exist bel ween the brothers. Verses 12 17. A o-ii<\t journey, A great load was taken off Hie heart of Janoh __ lie waa. graafly-rts-. lined f« kfs.w that he was icrw on friendly Terms with bi:- brwTber. hj-att is bis iDagn.Ttrintftus way offered to es'sirf bis large comiwny, Iffrt decSaed t)te offpr tm the firefext That fbe’ctolffreB and ffoefes needed '1 wifi lead «• swfffy“—liy xtoges *i»i aewrjy. -etowilag to the strength o f tos e*-»W(fta*ay, •ifFbirt »ee«. lrr*\Tto-8i1kw-«r«|!* fbe W t$ r W M W * i BaWV sfrong «tett. The fact N tiurt did nut wa-st t» tore jngmtos bw c to A* wNh Ms Ixntfbnr. Me TjarOifflnff tofese t M ’ S r -jTTMWil'It Ttifltf to be making sail- set I In i plain aiiylluiig or scii-utiliciilly readel' I i do ul 11 o port with all her nl going In try to e\ cilliel' ps.yi hologically Tlia 1 I shall lea v c I he -r rending the -lory The Mary Denioii was nauicd for the oiei-e of tin owner There were a liillnlicr of liciiPiii-- in New I'u-11 on I at III,-it lime, i no-! i v sailor folk- Mary was alioul twenty Sin- was in |m i- with a yo'ing li-Hovv mimed Keudell Edward Ken.led a tine young fellow, but a laml-inan ixcinb-ll vv as as lull'll in love with Mary as she whs with him. but In- was at the beginning of life ami was not yet prepared I'u sup poll a wife. Mary bad a love 'for the sea, inherited from generations of sail or ancestor-. W betla-J' it whs Ibis that induced her father to n-k ('.\plain Denton P> lake b\>' on a winding voy age or vvlo-lher lie vv,ailed lo gel Inl aw ay from I ton (on with a view to breaking off llie iiiabli or t<> pass some of tbe tiuj\ I li.-it must elapse be fore I licit- marriage 1 don't know. 1 •never -ftca-rd'+toH'-fhn-Dnnt-mw -httrf -jrfrr objection (o Keudell provided he could lake care of Mary. A! any rate. Mary went with her uiu-le on ;t voyage that was to-h-st ihree years. Edward Kcnded seemed hetirlbroken v\ iicti he lu-tird that bo was to be sep- ai'iiB'd from In- lo, e for this long pe riod- Mary wonkj iiavr l»een ttotighterl to go had it-not tM\n for leaving a io-vt-r irf-bind. As if was. she was cq-tia’lly east down. Kite cheered her lover wfrh the ic-ipe that by the trine of her to- ttrrii he would to* do gg veff i*i l*u-I- ness and ihcy i-i-mld bp married. . VA b-ever i ou-'crv ed ihi- plan of sep- 111<| I lie \ * Ml II | lii mg Ills girl lao k In bon ” 0 lie- Ihlrd a n ui v el'sa I'y of her di-parl ell- o in| some said flint if lie wore ahead ol linn- on nearing port he would slow low ii and if behind would hurry Bid as he mu dependent ou tin- \lutl- Ill's was doidilless said in cu'oiii-age the dovv nhearled young fel biw Naturally we vvonderetl if (lip slop wnidil come in on the appended day Keudell seemeil to think it \ o'iId But I iioii eil one thing about bun a! tor i t erlain dale lie liecame very ilespondeiii lie said in exphtlia ti\ii that In had had a dream or a sen s.'ition or sooielliiug of the sort, that t lie -nip v\ as in I roll 1 1 le I shall never forget ihc third iiniii 'crsnry cf Mil- sailing of the Mary Denton It had rained during the before, and the morning was bid w ith fog I vv as silting at k on the second ffoor |i\ a win o ing llio luii-bor w lien the sun md I hcird a try from the \1 lure she is, (nH, (.tmugh:” I saw (he fog rolling away 'hip with all her canvas set in under a very light breeze, t ran finwust,arrs and into the street, to find several people looking at (he '■'\eibg --hip. Me ail agreed she was (In' Mary Denton. While we looked another Bank of fog enveloped her. A\ n , w alU'd -lo see It -Trdi- a war-,—tort\ I here was no break in if fill sunset, when it suddenly vanished. Btit where was the Mary Denton? Me all had expected to see hef riding I here was not a sigh of he eoald not have sailed away , for there had been no wind. Stfeeou'd imr have sunk in the harbor. I was sfatiding beside Edward Ken- dell w-imr, tin* fog lifted. The moment I saw the -..'dp was not there I looked at lilt’s. An ashen gray slowly spread d-elf „ver hi- face. «s jf ),8(j torn-bed to a specter. With a litoau he (rimed arvav and disafifiearefF There ivt-re five of ns w) k , saw the STft; \ night i Kl I f t i ' . ini i|i>u I' m * i 'JIIIH’ n h o’.kiiu Mini ;i cuiuinx ci t. hvr u-D-n nr S!(i ‘\BTas 1 have said, agreeing that stw* was t*w Alary Denton. Mf«t TBt lieO^ved that s)ie had tor atnne rea son wiat hi some BbespSaropd ra y sbitffied in flip fog and prfdaTffy drift-' wl oat to sea. Itut wlty she stoaold not - have vast afir-bfir te phrm rie*r i 4 ber N as ferrtslsfbt- a# itototo IrEtitp# are gjvejt The hn'er-fche'W'that.- ■|sr..'*ffs. ■» »«* f-Sfiectajj gauger of fosing 'Ms- fere wWBe t4M' Bp on a vesHet with; -<Wy lt«> «!d -tsiMie a-a6 ' rt/NF' 44 ’xto-! re&aed §#*»„ and a rrcto* ty tor ffliy-sfcfae. w-Jifc-Ji v » • |w t'to**' m m g i w i t o S S T A^feato; * V * ftfle -rhMe after she* *»« **» b *S- ^ ^ sw a thetitoe-w f to.- • W i % tor' #he Sljrry DnMe« f*t «to? to k rO tfe 'fntfft..' <* Meet fSedffao. M a g fhen #to «nOer <«* » r Jrigr Nfae Is « • ♦to-xrWItag late^ry. : w « , » r # f J « ; » a i KetiArit was eye* fnms to v* t w e t h h w r a iu* riJttrtto tonne frsAksr la The *£L .ja n a /L Tbe |to r « * t e S v i t M L ttU L _ __ I’Wff I f ^ CIK.JBS3W W& dt IIR nn ui 4k* *«*» «tenr- ftton* Ulito M M k 4 |lO » i ll * « 4 j ! S