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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1899)
CHAPTER XV.—(Continued.) “Was this what you were woriaing for?” I demanded, with a sudden Jeal tms suspicion. "Perhaps 1 was!” she answered loft ily. "I hope she will never be sorry that she chose wrong.” ”1 hope not!” I assented cordially. ”A real gentleman,” repeated Miss Woodward—"as free-banded and free spoken as a prince—a gentleman who knows how to treat a woman, even If she Is only a servant—a gentleman I'd work my fingers to the bone for, and so would a good many more!” “You did your best for him,” I could not help saying. “You have nothing to reproach yourself with.'” It was true, as Wlddiington had said, that all the women were fasci nated by handsome, dare-devil Charlie What wonder that Nona had felt his power? I could only be thankful that the fascination had not gone deeper. “No; I've nothing to reproach myself with,” the maid assented. “And I'll pray night and day for my young lady, that she may see her mistake before It Is too late.” And with this parting shot the reso lute virago marched sternly from the room without a word of farewell civil ity. I finished my interrupted letters, and then sought Nona. She met me with a dismayed face. "Such a strange thing has happened,” ehe exclaimed. “Woodward has left at a moment's notice. She would not give any explanation of her going, only said that she was sorry to inconven ience me, but circumstances obliged her to leave at once; and she has gone." "The most extraordinary proceed ing,” chimed in Miss Elmslie. “l told Nona that she could insist upon Wood ward's remaining until she had found another servant. If it had not hap pened that a young girl from the vil lage Is at liberty to take her place at once, tt would have been most Incon venient and awkward; and Woodward was such an excellent maid. I suppose "WHERE'S THE YOUNG FELLOW GONE TO?” she has had some quarrel with the servants- and she never had a good temper." "I wonder," began Nona, and then Mopped suddenly. "What do you wonder?" I asked. "Nothing." she laughed, "only an odd Idea of mine " "Tell me your ideas; 1 like '.o hear them all." "I wa* wondering whether Tlllott’a leaving had anything to do with Wood ward'*. I know she liked him. and thought httn a great Improvement on Charles, hut then he wa* so much younger' Of course It was very silly of me to connect the two event* " "I don't know about that. I think It wa« very sngadou* of you," I an swered "Inen there ta something What • re you laughing at? What 1* It?" "You ary right, my dearest Word ward's and TIMott'a departure* do hrng together " And then Mim Klm-lie having dis creetly retired. I told Nona the whole alary from beginning to end only eu Joining an her the secrecy which the deer little Indiscreet MIh Klm.lie could never have been trusted to pre serve Noe* « tvtatlrhmrsl wa* unbound 4 "What a plot' tie reclaimed It I* llk» n booh, and Wudeild. wh > aeease.l so quiet and *.» rc*j..-« able wn* helping it at) And u.a mm Id loll ••• a dele live l|ow strange It all la! I feet a* If I six .h a dmm The aiii wa* Msally tirlss then not hast, and and now I i«nd»r»t*nl you I 'ailed me u when yeu p* • *t»4 >e » had aeea me at Mol'un and at I ha t taken poor tag I waa puaa *d and • n I a little •»«*» huh n« “Yea you acre thorough y riyatl f*.t,“ I 'greed ‘Oh t d* hot*** ** aa.'.l Nona 'll.at m*», Widdriagtua wtti nevar, *•*>* pad (‘harIts pour Charlie, who t** my yl«itfl!-<v and fri. ad, and my p»' taels'* pet and der'lrg irtalrd fllie a common thief. You will not allow It— I promise me you will not.” "It will no*, be so bad as that,” I as sured her. "Of course he must be made to surrender the will. However, we will not talk about him any longer. This Is my last evening, you know, and I have a thousand things to say. The time Is too precious to waste, my dar ling." I left the Rectory on the following day. The next few months were passed In a dream of happiness which left me little thought for Charlie Hranscombe or his concerns. Occa sionally, it Is true, I was brought into relations with Wlddrlngton. for my connection with the office could not be abruptly terminated, and in the matter of Forest Lea 1 felt that I had a special responsibility to discharge. The de tective was actively following up clue after clue as they came Into his hands His pride and his professional Interest were thoroughly roused by his first failure, and he was bent on completing the case In which he had already worked so hard. Mr. Charles Urans combe had not left England—so much Wlddrlngton was sure of. Probably want of means had prevented his going far from home and the numerous friends and adherents who were always ready to help him. ”1 shall run hits down yet.” Wld dring'.on confidently asserted. “He must be starved out sooner or later.” In the meantime Forest I^ea was shut up and deserted, at the Rector’s constant regret; ami only a vague Im pression of the truth floated about the neighborhood, where my darling still remained, under the friendly protec tion of Mr. and Mrs. Heathcote. She had promised to be mine In the summer, when the first anniversary of the good old Colonel’s death had come and gone. Then we were to have a pretty wedding In the village church— a wedding all flowers and sunshine, such as became our hopes and our happiness. I was fully occupied In preparing for that supreme event. I was refurnish In* my newly-acquired home—a lovely old house in Kent. rtmongst the hop garden.-i and woods of the Weald—and sparing no pain* to make It a fitting nest for the sweet, gentle dove who was to preside over It. In such happy occupation, with fre quent visits to the Mldshire Rectory, the month* passed quickly away. I had no personal part in the next act of the drama which concerned Mr. Charles Hranscombe and must leave it* chronicle to another pen. CHAPTKR XVI A little maid In a blue cotton gown and a white muslin cap was picking peas in a cottage garden. She was taking her work In leisurely fashion, sitting on a three-legged *uh>I with her -S'* ' In her lap. and gathering the l -.Up pud* a* they dangled rloce to her hand Ike vines grew high that sear, and the little maid as she sat was almost hidden In the green valley; not so much hidden however, but that a hot and flu* ered police officer saw her as he tramped heavily up the path, and blurted uut an abrupt question Where's the young fellow gone to** She looked up sritb a pair uf tranquil hlqe evea growing round with aatoa i thmeni as *h* repeated after him In a * rung couatry accent Vnung fellar* What young feller d've meant" She looked so fresh and w pretty, and the yellon fringe sHu-h peeped out fr«m u»i-t*r to r . ap ws- infant Its tunc*egt simplicity that Mr <_\ Hrwun Kill a munsentwry impute* in i >pit* uf his Nuatruiton to cku*h her * nder the tool rounded > htn gad even perhaps help himeetf to * htaa from h*r red lip* It h* hadu • been so hot and »« worried where Ike dtchsn* itiuif that young rip have got iu* he would certainly hate lake* advantage « f his opportunity* As It wa* be pur sued hi* Invasligattua and reais’ed Iks • •mptattwn "A voting fsRar In a I'ght tws«4 suit he was making straight for here," he explained. "I saw him before me over the fields not ten minutes ago. and I'll swear I hardly lost sight of him. He must be in the house; there isn’t an other place this way—not even a shave of wood to hide him—and Smith and Varley would have stopped him further down. He must be in the houae." “Maybe, ye can ask," retorted the damsel indifferently, reaching out her hand towards a group of pods, as If dismissing the subject. The officer went his way, with Just another admiring glance at the pretty figure in the charming green avenue. The door at the cottage stood wide open; a black cat was doxing in the sun; all was quiet and sleepy; there was not a sound about the place. The officer's loud knock brought a stupid Hervant-glil with a snub nose and a wide-open mouth to answer his reit erated question, “Where's the—the young gentleman who came In here Just now? I want to speuk to him." “There's no young gentleman here." she replied—"only my master and misses, and they're both old." “Where are they? Tell them Mr James Brown wants to speak to them " The girl preceded him Into the parlor at the end of the passage, after knock ing at the door, and gave his message verbatim— “Mr. James Brown wants to speak to ye.” A decent old man of the retired tradesman class, disturbed In his after noon nap, looked up with blinking eye* at the Impatient constable, whilst hts comely old partner put down the stock ing she was darning, and prepared to Interview the visitor. “Good afternoon, sir,” she said, civ illy. "Won’t you take a seat; it's warm walking." Was It real innocence or only a ■ham? Mr. Brown was not going to be taken in; these people were probably allies of Mr. Charles Branscombe—old servants or something of that sort. The old gentleman's yawn was too demonstrative, and he did not mean to let the old lady's civility put him off the scent—be was quite up to that game. He glanced sharply around the room, behind the old man’s ponderous arm-chair, at the cupboard door, even up the chimney, before he answered In his most official tone— “A young gent entered this house about ten minutes or maybe a quarter of an hour ago, Mr. Charles Brane combe by name. I've got business with him—very particular business, if you’ll let him know." “Mr. Charles Branscombe,” echoed the old man; “he’s not here, and hasn’t been, to my knowledge.” “Then It's without your knowledge,” retorted Mr. Brown, who was getting croiM. "I'll take my davy he's some where on the premises; and, as I bold a warrant for his apprehension. I shall have to search for him—with your leave or without it." “You’re an Ill-mannered upstart— that’s what you are," exclaimed Mr. Walker, very wide awake now, and starting up to face Mr. Brown. “And I dare you to search my house—war rant or no warrant, I'm an honest man, and I’ve nothing to do with your scamp*; and If I was ten years younger I'd kick you out faa’er than you came in—that’s what I'd do"—warming as he went on. “Hush, Samuel!" Interposed the dame, laying her hand upon his arm. as he shook his (let in the intruder's (ace. “Never mind his manners—it’s only his Ignorance. We don't mean to resist the law; if he's got a warrant, let him show it, and he'* welcome to search if he likes. He'll soon see it's no use. My husband is old. sir "- -aside to Mr. Brown, as the old gentleman walked to the window, and wiped bis forenead with bis handkerchief—“and he's apt to be hasty when he's waked sudden out of his sleep I.e: us see your warrant, if you please, sir.” (To lie continued.) MAN S LUNGS SPRUNG A LEAK. That Why I he Cleveland llnrkmnn Wa* flit Clrently knelled. Front th«* Cleveland Leader: It la not often that a thin man become* alarmingly obese within twenty-four hour* Thld. however, wa* the eipert* erne of Martin McHugh, who In a hack driver, and lives at 216 Hamilton *treet. Wednesday morning he was too *mgll for hi* clothe*. Several hour* later be had a pronounced "hay window,” hla hand*, feet, leg* and arm* were twice their natural alie. and hla cheek* ga Ntimed rotund proportions that sur prised the members wf hla famtl). He did not *top there, but continued u> grow tug Anally being compelled to dlet-nrd hla clothing and take to a bed lit l» l> Steur waa called He sgld It was evident lhal McHugh's lung* were leaking This, according to the physl* ctgn. became more evident when It waa »eea that with each brewth the rotund j portion* roar and fell. In apeaaing of the lurtou* case l»r Steur eaid ' u | Houb wa* inlured by being at ruck with j ' the thill of a wagoa He felt aw tm mediate effect* but wae obliged to go i burn* later in the day K*ery portion of bis bud) *eemed to ncbe He then outta*need to bloat, he lowly swelling to twice II* natural aia* When «allwd ip by the family I aaw at »a>« that [ one of the man'* lung* ha >4 bean In | |ured and nae leahtng nir With IK K At. a# A»«*tt I daetded mu nn opera* i ttn* The body ea» punctured T*e «ii iv»a»e tott aith a ttmiag f e fh# | dies bled lung a as then la d Ua e |t ' bad been Inlured a eplin'er having probably entweed the «*lng Th» • <mu4 »*t Leaned and ike i**ng rto fwlty sewed From last reports (he pa j Kent waa dtuwg nicely and wMl iwu j be ul hi* otd atabd TA1MAGF/8 SERMON. “HEALTH RESORTS.” THE SUB JECT LAST-SUNDAY. “A Pool That l< Called in the Hebrew Tongue Hctlieada, Having Fire Torch e*. Where I-ay a Great Multitude of Impotent Folk." Aohn v., a, ». Outside the city of Jerusalem there was a sanative watering-place, the pop ular resort for Invalids. To this day there Is a dry basin of rock which shows that there may have been a pool there three hundred and sixty feet long, one hundred and thirty feet wide, and seventy-five feet deep. This pool was surrounded by five piazzas, or porches, or bathing houses, where the patients tarried until the time when they were to step Into the water. Ho far as reinvigoratlon was concerned, it must have been a Haratoga and a Long Branch on a small scale; a Leaming ton and a Brighton combined—medical and therapeutic. Tradition says that at a certain season of the year there was an officer of the government who would go down to that water and pour In it some healing quality, and after that the people would come und get the medication; but 1 prefer the plain statement of Scripture, that at a cer tain season an angel came down and stirred up or troubled the water; and then the people came and got the heal ing. That angel of God that stirred up the Judean watering-place had his counterpart In the angel of healing, who, In our day, steps Into the mineral waters of Congrega^or Sharon, or Hul phiir Springs, or Into the salt sea at Cape May and Nahant, where multi tudes who are worn out with commer cial and professional anxieties, as well as those who are uffiicted with rheu matic, neuralgic and splenetic diseases, go and are cured by the thousands. These blessed iiethesdas are scattered all up and down our country. We are ut a season of the year when rail trains are laden with passengers and baggage on their way to the moun tains and the lakes and the seashore. Multitudes of our citizens are away for a restorative absence. The city heats are pursuing the people with torch and fear of sunstroke. The long, silent halis of sumptuous hotels are all abuzz with excited arrivals. The antlers of AdlroridiM k deer rattle under the shot of city sportsmen The trout make iatal snap at the hook of adroit sports men, who toss their spotted brilliance Into the game basket. The baton of the orchestral leader taps the music stand on the hotel green, and Ameri can life has put on festal array, and the rumbling of the ten-pin alley, and the crack of the ivory balls on the green-balzed billiard tables, and the Jolting of the bar-room goblets, and the explosive uncorking of the cham pagne bottles, and the whirl and the rustle of the ball-room dance, and the clattering hoofs of the race courses, and other signs of social dissipation, attest that the season for the great American watering-places Is In full play. Music! Flute, and drum, and cornet-a-piston, and clapping cymbals wake the echoes of the mountains. Olad am I that fagged out American life, for the most part, has an oppor tunity to rest, and that nerves racked and destroyed will find a Bethesda. I believe In watering-places. They re cup«*ate for active service many who were worn out with trouble or over work. They are national restoratives. Let not the commercial firm begrudge the clerk, or the employer the jour neyman, or the patient the physician, or the church its pastor, a season of Inoccupation. Luther used to sport with his children; Edmund Burke used to caress his favoiite horse; Thomas Chalmers, in the dark hour of the church's disruption, played kite for re creation—so I was told by his own daughter—and the busy Christ said to the busy npostles, "Come ye apart awhile Into the desert and rest your selves.'' And 1 have observed that they who do not know how to rest do not know how to work. But I have to declare this truth today, that some of our fashionable watering-places are the temporal and the eternal destruc tion of "a multitude that no man can number;" and, amid the congratula tions of this season, and the prospect of the departure of many of you for the country. 1 must utter a warning, plain, earnest and unmistakable. The Aral temptation that la apt to hover In this dlrectlou to leave your piety at home You will send the dug and ml nnd canary tdrd to be well cared for somewhere else, but the temptation will be to leave your reli gion In the room with the blinds down and the door bolted, and than yon will com.- back In the autumn to And that It la starved and suffocated, lying atret. bed on the rug. stark dead 1 here Is no surplus of piety gt the watering places | never knew any one to grow 1 vary tepidly In gra.e at ike ('altkill Mountain bouse tie Aharon Xprtngs or Ike V alla of Monlmnr. n< y It is gen •tally the rase that the dsbbalh Is MM** of " rnruuanl than any other day and there are Hui.Us> walks, am. Honda* tide* and Monday es.urstoat Kldera and .l-a. on* and ministers of religion who are entirely .oMUatant at home son.sMs.ee when the HaM v.K dawns on tken. at Niagara Kalla »»r tne White Mnunuina, taha a day to thenmelvsa If they go iu < harsh It ta apt to he a an*rad gniwde and the dlesuutwe. In alrail f being a plain l*IV al- <t Ik* •••a), |« apt to he akai ta vailed a * ra< k aefnotn that la »«• <lie* outs* pi. ked out of lb* «ffartvnt »*# the irar as Ike one must adapted Hr a*. Ha admire lion and in Home . bur.fce* from lha way the bsdlva hold lhatr taws you know th.it they are not so much im pressed with the heat as with the pic turesqueness of half disclosed features. Four puny souls stand in the organ loft and squall a tune that nobody knows, and worshipers, with two thou sand dollars' worth of diamonds on the right hand, drop a cent into the poor box, und then the benediction is pronounced and the farce is ended. The toughest thing I ever tried to do was to he good at a watering-place. The air Is bewitched with the "world, the flesh and the devil." There are Christians who, in three or four weeks in such a place, have had such terrible rents made in their Christian robe that they had to keep darning it until Christmas to get it mended. The health of a great many people makes an unnunl visit to some mlnera' spring an absolute necessity; but take your Bible along with you, and take in hour for secret prayer every day, though you be surrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Ke«p holy the Sab bath, though they deride you as a big oted Puritan. Stand off from gam bling hells and those other Institutions which propose to Imitate on this side the water the iniquities of Baden-Ba den. I^et your moral and your immor tal health keep pare with your physi cal recuperation, and remember that all the sulphur and chalybeate springs cannot do you so much good as the healing perennial flood that breaks forth from the “Rock o( Ages.” This may be your last summer. If so, make it a fit vestibule of heaven. Another teinotutlon hovering around nearly all our watering-places is the horse-racing business. We all admire the horse, but we do not think that its beauty or speed ought to be cultured ;H the expense of human degradation. The horse race Is not of such impor tance as the human race. The Bible intimates that a man Is better than a sheep, and I suppose he is better than a horse, though, like Job's stallion, his neck be clothed with thunder. Morse races in olden times were under the ban of Christian people; and in our day the same institution has come up under fictitious names. And it is called a "summer meeting," almost suggest ive of positive religious exercises. And it is called an "agricultural fair,” sug gestive of everything that is improving in the art of farming. But under these deceptive titles are the same cheating and the same betting and the same drunkenness and the same vagabond age and the same abomination that were to be found under the old horse racing system. Long ago the English government got through looking to the turf for the dragoon and the light-cavalry horse. They found out that the turf depreciates the stock; and it is worse yet for men. Thomas Hughes,the mem ber of parliament ami the author known all the world over, hearing that a new turf enterprise was being start ed in this country, wrote a letter in which he said: “Heaven help you, then: for of all the cankers of our old civilization there Is nothing in this country approaching in unblushing meanness, in rascality holding Its head high, to this belauded institution of the British turf." Another famous sportsman writes: “How many fine domains have been shared among these hosts of rapacious sharks during the last 200 years; and unless the sys tem be altered, how many more are doomed to fall into the same gulf!" With the bull fights of Spain and the bear-baitings of the pit, may the Lord God annihilate the Infamous and ac cursed horse racing of England and America! Now, the watering-places are full of temptations to men and women to tip ple. At the close of the ten-pin or bil liard game, they tipple. At the close of the cotillon, they tipple. Seated on the piazza cooling themselves off, they tipple. The tinged glasses come around with bright straws, and they tipple. First, they take "light wines," as they call them; but "light wines" are heavy enough to debase the appe tite. There Is not a very long road between champagne at five dollars a bottle and whisky at ten cents a glass. Satan has three or four grades down which he takes men to destruction. One man he takes up. and through one spree pitches him Into eternal dark ness. That is a rare case. Very sel dom, Indeed, cun you find a man who will he such a fool as that. Satan will take another man to a grade, to a de scent at an angle about like the Penn sylvania coal-chute oi the Mount Washington rail-track, and shove him < off Hut that Is very rare. When a : man gcies down to destruction, Satan brings him to a plane It Is almost 4 level. The depieealon is so slight that you can hardly see It. The man does not aetnally know that he is on the down grade, and It tips only a little to ward total darkness* just a little. And the llrti mile It la claret, and the see- I ond mile It Is sherry, and the third utile It la punch. amt the fourth mile i It Is ale. and the fifth mite It ta whisky. 1 and the stith tulle It Is braidy. and then It gets steeper and steeper and steeper until II Is Impossible lu slop, “t.ook not thou tivcn the wine when II Is ted. when It giveth Its rnlw In Ike cup when it motvth Itself aright At j tbs last It blteth like a ssipenl. and I sMagelh like »w adder Wkelher yon tarry at h«w which wilt tie guile as safe, and perhaps guile as com fur table-•» go ta>u the country, j arm ?»ore*!f against lempialtoa fh* grata of tind Is the ugly safe shelter j • he I her is town or cuttatry There are ; watering plates accessible ta all of us | as tagged ttpea a hnnh of the lit hie without imtlag out some such water mg plate Fountains opra fur sta and oat teeaaeew Wstte if Miration gtreatns from t«haaoa A hood tiroes a i( of th* rt<. h kt Mo**s Fountains In the wilderness discovered by Ilagar. Water to drink and water to bathe in. The river of God, which is full of wa ter. Water of which if a man drink he shall never thirst. Wells of water tn the Valley of liata. Living foun tains of water. A pure river of water as clear as crystal from under the throne of God. These are watering places accessible to all of us. We do not have a laborious peeking up before we start—only the throwing away of our transgressions. No expensive ho tel hills to pay; It Is "without money and without price.” No long and dusty travel before we get there; It Is only one step away. In California. In five minutes, I walked around and saw ten fountains all bubbling up, and they were all dif ferent; and in five minutes I can go through this Bible parterre and find you fifty bright, sparkling fountains bubbling up into eternal life—healing and therapeutic, a chemist will go to one of these summer watering-places and take the water, and analyze It. and tell yon that it contains so much of iron, and so much of soda, and so much of lime, and so much of magnesia. 1 come to this Gospel well, this living fountain, and analyze the water; and I find that Its Ingredients are peace, pardon, forgiveness, hope, comfort, life, heaven. “Ho, every one that thlrsteth, rome ye” to this watering-place. Crowd around this Bethesda. O you sick, you lame, you troubled, you dy ing crowd around this Hetbesda. Step in it, oh, step In It. The angel of tho covenant today stirs the water. Why do you not step In It? Home of you are too weak to take a step in that direc tion. Then we take you up In the arms of prayer, and plunge you clear under the wave, hoping that the cure may he as sudden and as radical as with Captain Naaman, who, blotched and carhuncled, stepped Into the Jordan, and after the seventh dive came up, his skin roseate-complexloned as tho flesh of a little child. A STRONG BABY. Kcglmcn on Which One Infant fa Mak ing Astonishing Growth. There in a doctor in West Philadel phia who has a son one year old, and this baby is probably the strongest hu man being for Its age and weight In the world. Its father will hold a cane In his two hands, and the baby, grasp ing It, will draw Itself up to Its rhln three times. That is but one of Its nu merous feats of strength. The physi cian says that his boy's unusual mus (ular development is due to a dally massage treatment. Kvery morning he lays the little fellow, naked, on a blanket, and kneads his muscles for thirty minutes. Once a month he weighs the baby and measures Its calves, chest, arms, etc. The monthly Increase of weight and girth are re- 41 markable. The baby has never had shoes or stockings on its feet or a hat on its head, and In the summer it wears only a little sleeveless dress that comes to Its knees. It gets a cold bath every morning. “If nothing goes wrong," the physician often declares, “this child will be one of the strongest men the world has ever seen. He will never get bald and he will never lose a tooth. As for his muscles, with mas sage and a course of exercise that I have laid out, they will be big and supple all over his body. All his flesh will be, when tensp, hard as steel, and when relaxed as soft as the flesh of a young girl." I.om of Hair Hue to Mental Shock. In a French medical Journal M. Bo!s sier relates the following remarkably case, which Is an addition to thn group of cases In which sudden loss of hair or change of its color followed mental shock. The subject was a vig orous peasant, aged 38 years, who was not of a nervous temperament beyond being Rllghtly emotional. His hair was abundant, and a dark chestnut col or and not even slightly Interspersed with white filaments. One evening, as he was returning home, preceded by his. mule, on which was mounted hts son, aged 8 years, the animal slipped, and the child was thrown ofT and trampled on several times. He was only severe ly bruised, but the father thought he was killed, and in endeavoring to save him was terror-stricken. He trembled, and had palpitations and a feeling of cold and tension in the face and head. On the following day the hairs of thn head, heard and eyebrows commenced to fail In quantities, so that after eight days he was absolutely bald. At the same time the skin of the fare and J head tiecome paler. Without delay thn hairs began to grow again In the form of a colorless down. Soon all the af fected regions were covered with liner, more silky, and a more thinly sown, iompletely white hair. The hair of other regions was not affected M*r kikM la Iha Murlar. Ail odd iron'tiirni a *« dead* <1 liy an elderly maldeu who died n few weeha ago in Alhlone Ireland rthe Ml a fortune of lilh mm to tie epeni in 1 he erection of a church provided that her (tody elionld In* converted into aahea and uaed in making the mortar for building Ike edlfl.e Jmt Tblah a* tl. Tommy yUroggin* "I d hata In ha dai iao haad«d boy at da mu** uw ' Jimmie Wigglna Ha ha* Iota o' fug «e tommy * ruggla* "I Anna gat but )aa l lgh o' ha* In loo fa. to t* wareb " t)hb> itate Journal Meager. Iha t'anh frealdeat Are you a earn the taehler baa iahe« a half Ihleieat in a tekl’ The IniBleaiUl Adviaar - ■V< I'eibap* had ba|ia« are ha d«*« nut Income a full Hedged eh Ip par iHd aiiapoUe Journal I