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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1914)
FLATTSMOUTH . SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. t THIN fit LAW -.-r-...-. Bu. MARVIN. DANA FROM- THE PLAY. OF BAYARD VEILLER MMBMHM t't'-''- - lit. Copyright. 1013. by the H. K. Fly coirpa CHAPTER IV. Inferno. TFIE inexorable roice went on In its monotone, as if he had not spoken. "And when you are renlty slot and hare to stop work what are you poin to do tben? Do you know. Mr. Gilder, that the first time a straight jrh'l steals it's often because she had to hare a doctor or some luxury like that? And some of them do worse than steal. Yes. they do irls that started s-trnisht and wanted to stay that way. Dut. of course, some of tbetn tret so tired of the whole srrind that that "I'm not their guardian. I can't watch over them after they leave the store. They are paid the current rate of wajres as much as any other store pays." As he spoke the anjrer pro voked by this unexpected assault on him out of the mouth of a convict flamed hlh In virtuous repudiation. "Why," he went on vehemently, "no man livinjr does more for his employ ees than I do. Who gave the sirls their line rest rooms upstairs? I did! Vho pave them the cheap lunchrooms? I did!" 'But you won" ?ay tbsm enough to live on! "I pay them the ecirrp as the other stores do," he Tepeated sullenly. "But you won't pay them enough to live on!" "And so you claim that you were forced to steal. That's the plea you make for yourself and your friends." "I wasn't forced to steal," came the answer, spoken in the monotone that had marked her utterance throughout most of the interview. "I wasn't forc ed to steal, and I didn't steal. But. all the same, that's the plea, as you call it, that I'm makm; for the other girls. There are hundreds of them who steal because they don't get enough to eat. I said I would tell you how to stop the steallhsr. Wei!, I have done it. Give the girls a fair chance to be honest. You asked me for the names, Mr. Gil der. There's only one name on which to put the blame for the whole busi ness, and that name is I'dward Gilder! Now.'won't ' yoa do ' Bomething about it?" "' ' At that naked question the owner of the store jumped up from his chair and stood glowering at the girl who risked a reqoest so full of vituperation against himself. "How dare you speak to me like this?" ho thundered. "Why, I dared," Mary Turner ex plained, "because you have done all the harm you can to me. And now I'm trying to give yen the chance to do 1 etter by the others. You ask me why I dare. I have a right to dare. I have been straight all my life. I have want ed decent food and warm clothes and ' a little happiness all the time I have worked for you, and I have gone with out those things just to stay straight. The end of it all is, you -are sending me to prison for something I didn't do. That's why I dare!" Gilder could not trust himself j'Jst then to an audible command. lie was seriously disturbed by the gently spo ken truths that had issued .-from the girl's Hps. He was not prepared with any answer, though he hotly resented very word of her accusation. Cassidy faced about, and in his movement there was a tug at the wrist of the girl that set her moving toward the door. Tier realization of what this meant was shown in her final speech. "Three years isn't forever." she said in a level voice. "When I come out you are going to pay for every minute of them. Mr. Gilder. There won't be a day or an hour that I won't remem ber that at the last it was your word sent uio to prison. And you aro going to pay me for that. You are going to pay me for the tive years I have starv ed making money for you that too! You are going to pay me for all the things I am losing today, and" Thegirl thrust forth her left hand, on that side where stood the ofDcer. 8o vigorous was her movement that Cassidy's clasp was thrown off the wrist. But the bond between the two was not broken,- for from wrist to urist showed taut the steel chain of th laanacles. The girl shook th? links of the liaiid. uJT U a jrestnre stronger thiut w.iid::. -Ion are gt.ing to pay ine for this!" she said, ller voice was little ore 0 V t J ,.. -" .f -SVi u "" A "Won't you do something about it? than a whisper, but it was loud in the listener's heart. 'Yes, you are going to pay for this!" . .i. . TLey were grim years, those three years during which Mary Turner serv ed, her sentence in Burnsing. There was no time off for good behavior. The girl learned soon that the favor of those set In authority over her could only be won at a cost against which her every maidenly instinct revolted. So she went through the inferno of days and nights in a dreariness of suffering that was. deadly. .Naturally the life there was altogether an evil thing. There was the material ill ever present in the round of wearisome physical toll the coarse. "distasteful food: the hard nar row couch; ihe constant, gnawing irk so toen ess of Imprisonment, away from light . and .. air, away .from ;all that makes life worth while. : The best evidence of the fact that Mary Turner's soul was not fatally soiled must be found in the fact that still at the expiration of her sentence she was fully resolved to live straight, as the saying is which she had quoted to Gilder- This. too. in the face of sure knowledge as to the difficulties that would beset the effort and in the face of the temptations offered to fol low an easier path. There was, for example. Aggie Lynch, a fellow convict, with whom she had a slight degree of acquaintance, nothing more. This young woman, a criminal by traiuing.offered allure ments of illegitimate employment in the outer world when they should be free. Mary endured the companion ship with this prisoner tecanrs a sixth sense proclaimed the fact tliat here was one unmoral rather than immoral, and the difference is mighty. For that reason Aggie I.ynch was not actively offensive, as were most of the others. She was a dainty little blond, with a baby face in which were set two light blue eyes of a sort to widen often ill demure wonder over most things in a surprising and naugh ty world. She had leen convicted of blackmail, and she made no pretense even of innocence. Instead, she was Inclined to boast oyer her ability to bamboozle men af her will. She was a natural actress of the ingenue role, and in that pose she could unfailingly beguile the heart of "the wisest of worldly men. . She had bfcn reared in a criminal family, which must excuse much. Long ago she hnd lost track of her father. ITcr mother she had never known. Tier one relation was a broth er of high standing ns a pickpocket. One principal reason of her success in loading on men to make fools of them selves over Lit. to their cverlnlting re-, gret afterward, lay-in tho fact that in ?pite of all the gross IrfcgulaTities of her life she remained chaste. The g!rl saw In Mnry Turner the pnssibinf i-s a hul.vlik personality that inilil luefsn jmu.1i linaix-ial pr-jSt in the de iuus ways of whioh Vhe was mistrcss. '.With the frankness' char acteristic of her, she proceeded to paint glowing pictures of a future shared to the undoing of ardent and' fatuous swains. Mary Turner listened with curiosity, but she was in no wise moved to follow such a life, even though It did not necessitate anything worse than a fraudulent playing at love. So. she steadfastly continued her refusals. She would live straight "You will find that . you are up against an awful frost." Aggie would declare brutally. .. Mary found the prophecy true. Back in New York she experienced a pov erty more ravaging than any she had known in those five lean years of her working in the store. She had been absolutely penniless for two days, and without food through the gnawing hours, when she found employment in a. milliner's shop. - Followed a blessed interval in which she worked content edly, happy -over the meager stipend, since it served to give hex shelter and food honestly earned. The police informed Mary's employer concerning her record as a convict, and she was at once discharged. The unfortunate victim of the law came perilously close to despair then. Yet, her spirit triumphed, and again she persevered in that resolve to live straight. She found a cheap position in a cheap 6hop. only to be again per secuted by the police, 60 that she speedily lost the place. A third time she obtained work and there, after a little, she told her em ployer, a candy manufacturer in a small way, the truth as to her having been in prison. The man had a kindly heart and he ran little risk, so he al lowed her to remain. When the police called his attention to the girl's crim inal record he paid no heed to their ad vice against retaining her services. The police brought pressure to bear on the man. They even, called in the as sistance of Edward Gilder himself, who obligingly wrote a very severe let ter to the girl's employer. In the end. though unwillingly enough, he dismiss ed Mary from his service. It was then that despair did come upon the girl. She had tried with all the strength of her to live straight. Yet, despite her Innocence, the world would not let her live according to her own conscience. It demanded that she be the criminal it had branded her if she were to live at all. She still walk ed the streets falteringly, seeking some place, but her heart was gone from the quest Came an hour when she thought-ef the river and was glad. So she went through the long stretch of ill lighted streets, crossed some rail road tracks to a pier, over which she hurried to the far end. where it pro jected out to the fiercer currents of the Hudson. " There, without giving her self a moment's pause for reflection or hesitation, she leaped out as . far as her strength permitted into the coll of waters. But In that final second nat ural terror In the face of death over came the lethargy of despair a shriek burst from her lips. J On the side of the pier a man had just tied up a motorboat. He stood np in alarm at the cry and was just in time to gain a glimpse of a white face under the dim moonlight as it swept down with the tide, two rods beyond Mm. He threw off his coat and sprang far out after the drifting body. He came to it in a few furious strokes and caught it. - Then began the savage struggle to save her and himself. The currents tore at him wrathfully, but he fought against them with all the fierceness of his nature. What saved thV two of them was the violent temper of the man. Always it. had been the demon to set him aflame. His rage mounted and gave him new power in the battle. Under the urge of It he conquered and at last brought himsetf and his charge to the shore. . Mnry revived to Hear consciousness, which was - at first - Inclined toward hysteria, but this, phase yielded soor, under the sympathetic -ministration's of thevinan. His rather low voice wa soothing for Iter .-. tired soul, and bis whole air was at cure masterful iimT gently terder. When finally he was a bfe to stand and to v.:i!U with the ku pi ort, of his tirm'she -wiit forward alowly' at his iiie ".without feo much even as a question of whither." Joe Garaou "hud rerfuruaedperhapSj his, first action wlflT no fboushT of se"ft at the back of it. He bad risked his life to save that of a' stAnger. The sensation was at once novel and thrill ing. : Since it was so agreeable he meant to prolong the glow of self sat isfaction by continuing to care for this waif of the river. Jov G arson, the notorious forger, led the dripping girl eastward through the squalid streets until at last they came to an adequately lighted avenue, and there a taxicab was found. It carried them farther north, and to the east to an apartment hotme that was rather imposing,-' set in a street of humbler dwellings. . Here Garson paid the fare and then helped the girl to alight and on into the hallway. Mary went with him quite unafraid, thougn now with . a growing curiosity. The two entered and went slowly up three flights of stairs. On the landing beyond the third flight the door of a rear flat stood open, and in the door way appeared the figure of a woman. "Well. Joe. who's the skirt?" this person demanded as the man and hit i nlh I "T-fcli r-x- Hi iflmirtl . - Mary Wor Fine Clothes. charge halted before her. Then, abruptly, the round, baby-like face of the woman puckered in amazement. Her voice rose shrill. "Well, if it ain't Mary Turner!" "Aggie!" was the reply. In the time that followed Mary lived in the flat which Aggie Lynch occu pied with her brother, Jim, a pickpock et much esteemed among his fellow craftsmen. The period wrought trans formations of a radical and bewilder ing, sort in both the appearance and the character of the girl. Joe Garson, the 'forger, had long been acquainted with Aggie and her broth er, though he considered them far be neath him in the social scale, since their criminal work was not of that high kind on which he prided himself. But as he cast about for some woman to whom he might take the hapless girl be had rescued his thoughts fell on Aggie. He was relieved rather than otherwise to learn that there was already an acquaintance, between the two women, and the fact that hti charge bad served time in prison did not influence him one jot against her. Mary let herself drift It seemed to her that she had abandoned herself to fate in that hour when she threw her self into the river. Afterward, with out any volition on her part she had been restored to life and set within an environment new and strange to her. In which soon, to her surprise, she discovered a vivid pleasure. So she fought no more, but left destiny to work its will, unhampered by her fu tile strivings. For the first time in her life, thanks to the hospitality of Aggie Lynch, se cretly re-euforced from the funds of Joe Garson, Mary found herself living in luxurious idleness, while her every wish could be gratified by the merest mention of it. She was fed on the daintiest of fare, she was clothed with he most delicate richness for the first time ns to those more mysterious gar ments which women love. In addition, there were as many of books and mag azines as she could wish. ner mind, long starved like her body, seized avidly on the nourishment thus afforded. In this interest Aggie had no share was perhaps a little envi ous over Mary's absorption in printed pages. Aggie took a vast pride in her guest with the unmistakable air of elegance, and she dared to dream of great triumphs to come, though as yet she carefully avoided any sugges tion to Mary of wrongdoing. In the end the suggestion came from Mary Turner herself, to the great sur prise of Aggie, and, truth to tell, of herself. There were two factors that chiefly influenced her decision. The first was due to the feeling that since the world had rejected her, she need no longer concern herself with the world's opln Ion or retain any scruples over It pack of -this lay her bitter sentiment toward the man who hnd been the d rect cuufo of her imprisonment." Ed ward Gilder. . . The factor thnt, was the immediate cause of her' decision on an irregular mode of life was an editorial in one of tlie daily- newspapers. This was a c-nthicg arraignment of a master" in high tiuauOe. The point of the writ- er's attack was the yrUa sarcaEor for such methods of thievery a are kept within the law. That phrase held the girl's fancy, and she read tfca article again with a quickened Interest Then she began to meditate. It was the law that bad worked the ruin of her life, which i-he had Uriv en to make wholesome. In conse quence she felt for the law no genuine respect onlj detestation ns for the epitome of injustice. Yet she gave it a superficial respect born of t!ioe three years of suffering which bad been the result of the peralty Insist ed on her. Now. In the paragraph sht? had just read she found a clew to sug gestive thought a hint as to a mcuns by which she might satisfy her raucor against the law that had outraged her. and this in safety since ste would at tempt nought save that within the haw. (To be Continued) con mm PROCEEDINGS 31 ;;i 21 id I'lattMiiMulli, Feb. .8, H1 . Board met pursuant to ad journment. Ireseni, i;. He b ner, Julius A. I'ilz and '.. H. Jor dan, Counly Co!iimi-sio-,ier.; Frank .1. Libershal, County CI-rk. Minutes of pronnis ... ion . read and approel. when tlo fol lowing business was transacted in regular form: County Treasurer this day in struct'.'d to refund to Frank Sfiopp & Son ttie sum of 5. nr. taxes paid under prntest, account of being assessed in City of Plat I smout h and property found to be in Precinct, as -v ruling of the court. County Clerk Frank .1. I.iber shal this day appointed B. A. Rosencrans as deputy jn his mIIu-c for the baalnce of year 1 1 I i al a salary of .l,onu per year, provid ing fes of ollire warrant same. Appointment was appmx-d by the Countv Board. Bond of B. A. Hoscnciaus. dep uty county clerk, approved by the County Board. As advertised, bills were re ceived for the following work: County printing, burial of pauper poor, and county physi cians for various physician s li tricts. Bids on printing and burial of pauper poor wne open ed, but action was deferred until meet i rig of Wednesday, February i, 1!M i. The following claims were al lowed on t lie fieneral fund: C. K. Heebner, salary and mileage -? C. It. Jordan, salary and mileage Julius A. Pitz, salary and mileage Hans Sievers, salary and laundry S. II. Shumaker. repair ing pump at farm... Hotel Riley, meals to jury C. M. Seybert, railroad fare for Seam and Daw son . . . .. . '. . Auff. Bach, md?e. to J. Monroe Peter F. C!oos, meals to jury and barrels to farm Mary E. Foster, salary and expense James II. Thrasher, bailiff's certificates.. Ambler Bros. & Co.. mdse to Mrs. Mary Brown I). C. Mot-gran, salary and expense to Jan. Frank J. I.iberslial, salary as County Clerk for January, lli 4... tiinn & Co., supplies to county superintendent C. W. Baylor & Co.. coal to jail, farm and paupers The Plattsmouth Jour nal, printing and supplies Louisville Courier, printing for sheriff.. II. S. Rice, labor at county jail Remington Typewriter Co. repairs for typewriter John Bauer & Son, laler at jail (t. P. Eastwood, mdse. and repairs at jail... Frank Nemuann, livery hire from Manspeaker Waterman Lumber (:., sand and cement to jail Mrs. J. R. Lees ley, care Miss -Lathan, Jan uary, 191 i K. Manspeaker, salary deputy sheriff Jan uary, 1 it 1 t F. II. Miimm. bread to county farm C. II. Taylor, salary and expense, January, TH.nn 2. on 7.00 1.14 . 165.'. 5.n.i 171 .52 22. IS 37.1'i 108.23 K'..2'. 7."n 4.70 ir - 3.50 .7o 2.50 :;i .no 45.00 lli I IK. 7 5,. I J. H. Tarns, salary f.-r January. 1 f L. It. Egenbergcr. nn1e. lo pauper-, jul aril farm J. II. I ion nelly, work mi counly treasurer "f hVe for Jami iry A. W. White. mI-e. to Mcpherson, Fuller to-j and Johnson Nelson Jean Co.. co,,! to FuII'Tton and Kriskv The follow in claims were al lowed on the Road fii " 1 : R. C. Badey. road dra' and road work. Road Di-trict o. : A. F. Sejberf. road wor I'o.mi The following" rhiiii v.a al lowed on the Bnd-e fi;p-!: R. S. MeCJeery. f.ri !- work ;'.!." Board adjourned lo r,e.- Wednesday. February i. I'.'li. , 1.1 1. . p( . i .. r ; - 1 r. j .1 . 1 "1 - M5.eo U ai.-ri ; -i ..: . . .; ... r.. ii :.-!- ,ivf!;.-; .'','.- I r..':i;'v r r.! - ... ;;.:,; A. I.. 1 .dd. a"e; :i r. 1 ( o I 5 . ' .'.., .-.j I !,.. !;....! f . ' i . R. I: rd. r- I I: ... I n I !' n 1 . . . - i;.m. l : t .1 : 1 J- ii i - . - .1 " R -ad I -. '. . H. r:: .1 1 1'.. It - ( ; .ot 1 : r , . r . t ivrry :.- ... -. -. j: ,. ; I - ! J 1 - ... 1 h - .! - II 1,1 I ! - rn -f - 1 . i , .b-r . t- - r--r i: ei t - - . ;. t r . U '.'f. r--.id f f Plattsmouth. Feb. i. !:! i. j f -?.. V 1- i.oaro ii.-i pur-ti.iiii i. ;!-, 11 - f i...- . : !-.V,e. ; I!.- I' -.- f , journrneiil. Present, il. K. lie. li ner. Julius A. I'd and C. R. J -r- I I 1 I I IJklllllV f J if Tl I ! I I . 4 I. tM I' Frank J. I.ibershat. i:on; ty la-rk.j F- u I .t :; :! when the following ,':-i'ie- w a - I 1' ' - ' . I ' -' '. f 't. Iransacte.l iti regular f.r;n: - Bids for print in--, bun ii ..f j ' I- . pauper poor and u i' ph i-! ' '' 1 i ' cians fop ari.ii phy -.iej.iri- d.- ! slricts received a follow: I . 1 . . 1 . . i 1 r . .: :.! M 7. !"1 '. i 1 R...d t : t:..- f a r . , . ! .-a . d ii.- .'i r ; w. !:. P. . . .. . . ! - M I'a-- 1- - V '.: . I. : I .. . I . ; 1.:. -. . , . 1 . ;. .1; 1 e....r? I, . .... !I. I:. II ! i : . - . j 1 : ! . ! I r 1: - T " ; . t I I r ! P i!S-r . . u - . n: d f - -J 1 - t. .1 . 1 1' I i P ty - o - .-. r f .' ! . i. :. - ii 1 1 - f . r. j . . -1 .1 ! - - - t''-s U l! :: I'll : i" ... - r, -!-.-. 1,, f t j j."! '!!: f. ! : . - 1 .1 ; , , ! -.. -i !!,.. i: d: W. B. Bar :;i -. I -.-!. . 1 . 1 .1 - r. s . . 1 r. . t " Bar !...-k.-l p:;.: I -m.. ,! U j " 11 ' '- Journal, lo,- ea-e. ..tb.-r pa ' - " sl.oo p.-r pa-'e; eepi:.g W.i tr j b-" !!-- f ': . - - ; - RcpublMa:i. I 5c ca- . . .: h. r ; 1 '3 ' - " ' ' "! " r - "'''" ' . 1 . . . . ... .t pa-es i.nc p.-r p. , , . ' , - .1 . - Road Nolle PIr.tl-r.-i.-lth e. :-.. f.-.. ,.f - ; .., .. Journal. b -al rai.-: V.'.-. ;.- - r . - 1 . - ' . 1 ; Water Re;.i.b! ie,-Mt. -,-r r.-.!i.."d .r. , , ; ,-. '. ' ... ' legal rate; fni.,n L.-U-r. 1-..! i Mat.: . . . . .- . rate; F.hnw I 1 -al r.i!-.r .Noti,-,. to Contraet.-r PI.i ! f -- '""'' ' mouth Journal. b gal rate-:!'"' '" ': ! !' r !. Weeping Walt-r Repul-i a-au. s-'i ;- 1 i-; per rent b -al rate; Fin - i I..-.!g.-r.i r .-t. ! . f f - - legal rate; Llmv. F. Ii . b --al J " - - ' ! " " rate. t . 1 - r .- ; :all f..- p.,dspi ,1!.- Journal. leg a I r.if.--; We.-po-g Water R'-pu!'! I'-an. y pr n-n! legal rale; Fnion l.ed-er. b-a! rite; EImw.o, F.di-. i-gnl rate. Corn!nis,..ner' pt -i .;ir Plattsmouth J..urr;-i!. !. p. r lire; Weeping Water R.-j.!,'., :. i-i. ' , per line; File-:; I. .-.-r, p 1 square. Contract awai-b-d a- f..I!--w: Weeping Water Republican, b ir docket; Plattsmouth Joiin.a!. ttalance. Varni-b.-d Coj'i-i- M. Hi! I. 5 pep fo.,t; tr.itil Sir-i-'it. "?5.22 per foot. Ollt-l'.Ie Boxes M. H,'d. sf.i.o per bud; Slieiirht S!.;-!i!. per rot. Trip .. iVinetery M. II;!!. ". oo; Mr.-iJit sir.sgbt. s-'..o.. ShrotnN M. Hi'd. s:,.;:,; Streight A: Slrej-bt. -'.. or,. Extra Trips M. Rdd. s:,.o i; Streight A Slreigh!. 5.". Fb.aler M. Hiid. su.i...; Slreilit A. Streight. lo. 00. Ci'iitraci awarded to M. Utid. District No. 1 Ir. E. IK Cum mins. Z2G0; Dr. J. B. Martin. $250. District No. 2 Dr. J. F. Bren dl. -3?.97: Dr. D. F. Houon. -I5.0. District No. 1. I:. Ilnn.a!.-. s-2y.no; Dr. J. W. P.i cud. l. 2i.5o; Dr. M. M. Butler. ::o.ou. District N... i Ir. E. L. Jo:;. . 75.00. District No. , !r. o. I.. I.i--ton. sum; .011; Iir. C. L. Longacre. ? i 00.00. Contracts awarb-d as f..!..w-: Dr. J. B. Martin. Di-I r 1.1 N... ; Dr. J. F. P.rendel. In-iri. l 2: Dr. J. W. Brend-d. Distrid N'o. 3; Dr. E. L.J s. Uind : 110 bids rec.-ie. from Dt-trn t No. 5; all bids rejected fi oj-i I 1 -i r i t No. ;. Bond of J. W. Horner. .!-pu? aM'r for Center Prt cim-t . r--porled appred by C -unty Judge Bee-on. Cb-rk of the n,ti-:.-t C.. iirl .:. ! sfatenienf of time ai:d mileage of the regular jury and tale-;nen f'-r the term U I., i.r the I i -1 r i - Court, amounting to 7.' '. County Cb-rk repor. bairg rereixed 1 H cpi-s ,.f the .- braska Statute f..p U3. a per order in" January 15. 111 i. County Cb-rk reported bain recejed a warrant for s'.'.'.l-'" from cb-rk of Richards. .M n,!;r.! to reiinbur.-e Ca-s county f..r ex pense in insane cae .f Mr-. B i; -bara Schme!7e. A letter rcei-d fr-.r.i Pe-.-rd TlU-tee ,,f the Village of .-. reipae-l ing' the ,-ij,poiiitm nf .,f ,. H. anlaudingb.ini a- ji.-fie (,f tlie peace of T'ptou 1 r ' I i i " t Jo fill vacancy. Sam- wa- a;pj r no arid appointrniut ui'i-l-- by B -a.d of Counly Coii.ini--ioti.-r-.. The following i Iain - v..-..- al lowed on the II. Iii'l .il fi lid: Plallsinoiil Ii Water C. .. water o t I It. i .- " '.' .''I r. V. Hullish. in.!--, t,. - Frank Retce ....... t" . I-;-. b-r ti. P. Ea-t N.-. i.-r!- n.J!'rnI Win. IUr. bri'g.' r!:-3tri.il Cedar Creek I. ; - 1 - - Co.. !-;! I :r )'' 1 T.'.- fof:---t:;g c; - u- a !owe. ,. , !,.. R ! f !; W. B. B i- ; : g. r ... d dr.ig.rg. R.-.id ! - U i. t II. r r t !.: - , F. . I . '-:-. r.-.d .: i- -gi- g R.-.i.l f : -1 r N 1 ! f'-r I" EI ! t ' P. I'd a !. - I f Tu d... I . i i : v 7 ft'. I P. K i I. I IP. I : - l '. ' ! . Beautiful Shetland Pon! fr at all tiTi". f -r th r.'Tt loo year, ur.bv I di in lh rner.ti::'.. I Lx r v an f x!ri fr.. ta!Iion. tn r-'t i-i th br fa!' W--I br"'e f r L- t.' harr"? ard adi. Wn. Ci!rr v;r. Piatt rno. it "i. N -J. R. F. D. N t. 1. w i-;k w i : r i I ! . i t - t 'i :. J. I. I.o;-g. edd -r ,:. - bav.ka N.-'i-. -.a- !! "fie i-.'-, day f..r a f.-w .- ;r- a r- ." ! . r:-d o ik. i .-a i. r r t . - . GEaOZOIIEr ff v m ! "WKi K-. d nr "tT r r ' r rt- a p gi 'it i f- ClO.H UtCi. .-.... For Sate by F. G. Fr ;e &. C.