E K i. 1 : THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST. 14, 1910. !iiU JU-t' From 'Washington Elm Through Historic Concord and Lexington mi r 'rue Uld.,jyian&e V '-'." v 1 Pulpit-shaped Monnnient Markmd battle Oromid on (iilt)iiiun flilt .1 v 'v'K'. ft ly t, f "1 i '''. ttizi UH-vmic. ' '5 - : - Ami rui tut mi tw 1 Jf ' V . r MWWTMIWMkW. ! iv -i .'(': ' " ' ' .." .. f ' " ?T ' ' - XSCENOI3 ItTNUTE-MSI? M.A1IBRIDOE!, Mas., July 28. 1910. f "1 To th Boyi and GlrU of Train tt. I School. Dfcar Friends: It haa ten but a ahort timo inc I X5ii hard you trace upon your maps I ,f the routs of tha 1 British red- tt as thay marched on their hostile er rand and of Paul Revere, when he took his famous ride. As I have returned from a trip to Lexington and Concord, I will writ you regarding it. The day we selected was a glorious one for rid ajid It was a glorious ride we wera to take. Starting frpra the Washing ton elm, where a number of gentlemanly Cambridge toys offered post cards and refreshing lemonade for sale or to act a guides to points of Interest, we were soon riding through Arlington with Its pleasant Id homes and later on the Concord turn pike following the track taken by Dawes, the meseengvr of danger, and by Smith, The Wayside The Orcfoid tap-Home of fcfnisej&cti birr of WmP.foris ..VIJ?. t?"r.0yln redC(ftt8' on w?uId not oby- But then on of thfc "ve- 'keep her ever free. One of the pleasant and helpful things blood, was amid fields and farms and bits ture. Immense oak, ash. chestnut and elm Lathron whom you Knew as Marraret . h ?h m ; ' . r , lnUprolbly through cn FloatlI; f mWmnhernhorr. have f out this day at Lexington was that w. . of woodland and bright stretches of hill tree, surround It arid the are hammock ZZJv?IaS S i 'Z Lexlnffton lnlBajTwB f Captain Parker's order. won,1 lalr emDlem ner noroM nav0 had several In one company who were able and vale. We had arranged to dine at the swings, tennis and croquet grounds, rustic pers." But still another .treat was T In uul .u ou- - "" a narvara teacner mjio. us mat Lincoln, i yoini oui ana recau me luarary, nisiono colonial Inn ana when we arrived a delict- arbors and great, shady verandas. A fine store for us at this lltemrv shrtnu. Mr -innJ hr.u On hnn.n .nH ihirtv. The flint ntpunlc th. Bnri th miihIm- i.. n a .... .v.i .... . . . . . y ' : lln" store ior us at mis nierary snnne. Mr. casionaj nouse, une nundred and thirty- 1 sirucn me. steel ana tne powaer our second leader and ereatest martyr, con-, and KeoKraDhlc features. om nlri.fhinnri nhivn riinnr awaits ,. . . u i . . . five years in this country makes quite a flashed. . A British soldier saw It; he also .idered It Holmes' finest poem and that he The rtde from Lexington to Concord, The Inn Is one of the original colonial course, buy souvenir cards. ' " while we sat resting under thertnes and difference in the looks of things and we had w M major turn to give .an order and could not read tt through wttnout a tremble where the second ,chapter in that famous buildings of revolutionary times, with low The town of Concord is built mainly upon hemJocks told many Incidents In the Uvea story or April 19 was written in smoke and ceilings, open fireplaces and quaint furnl- one side of the river. In Its center i an of the Alcotts, Hawthornes, Emersons and open square, shaded by elms. From this Thoreaus, which we could not get from to keep this constantly in mind. Arlington Jut as much excited as the m'nute-nian, n (,1b voice. was then known as Menotomy, the next he aimed and fired. A few others fired, ( section was called Cambridge Farms and but no one being hurt the Americana sup-. Lexington village was a collection of a few posed the guns . were loaded with blank houses grouped about the meeting house cartridges and that the affair was Just to on the green and a population In all of frighten them. But British blood was about five hundred. Since then roads have aroused and though Pit cairn struck his been widened, hills leveled, valleys filled, staff Into the ground as an order to stop streams obliterated, villages merged Into firing, there was a general discharge. The towns and towns Into cities. We were now musket balls plowed Into the rebels' ranks riding through stretches of green fields, ana now one and now anotlier of that patches of woodland, trim market gardens heroic band sank beneath British bullets, and suburban estates with here a modern Up the street came the tramp of the main ' house and close beside It a patriarchal body of grenadiers marching to the support relic of colony days. of their commanders. Eight hundred Curious and Romantic Capers of Cupid square diverge tour roads. One leads under books. Mr. Sanborn knew intimately 4he stately sycamore trees to the Old Manse ones of whom he spoke and Is himself a and the battle ground, another goes dl- poet, biographer and essayist, rectly to the river, and a third la the main j think I hear you ask whether I visited avenue of the town which divides after the "Orchard house" where the Alcotts Marrlnae Follows Rtwae. rimonlal agency of that city, and Foster's phla and New, Tork were guests at the "," ""ph- orancn xorms a lived when Louisa wrote "Little Women." ROMANCE which began with the response came, together with fifty-one beautiful show place during the week of Deauulul resiaenee street, with bouses Tes we were there but the house is closed burning of the old . excursion othera . the ceremony. standing apart, each with a garden plot and unoccupied. We were sorry we could steamer General Slocum In the Mrs. Atwood declared that No. 63, from Miss Randolph made her debut in Phlla- na lofty tree8, Tne fourth avenue Is the not go through the old house, for it was Eant river In 1904, came to light a man she had formerly known, was on its delphta two years ago at the famous "song- oId Boston ro"d' lso dividing at the edge also the home of William T. Harris, the in New York recently with the way when she accepted Foster's proposal bird gambol," given in her honor by her ' th vllla"e wlth the direct route to great educator who bought it from Mr. announcement of the marriage and agreed to meet him here for the cere- father, and it was by far the moat spectac- BoBton an(1 the Lexington turnpike. Alcott before the close of the Concord We stopped at every tablet set In fence against seventy was unequal odds. The of Geore K. Parker and Miss Katherlne mony. . ular and expensive coming out party ever "ouse . of Emerson stands opposite School and who occupied it as a summer A A eu.A ..111.. aU.A ml n ll ta.man tr u A iIahji .V..a U... ur w eai i ur uuuna ivuiug luni 1101 iuuic-uich gu uuuv wnm mxry were us- - - - -- -riolnrH u,ku . . s such an event occured or that there lived sembled to do; they had made their protest Mr Parker now 27 year old and his cause he did not smoke. "I want a man Horticultural hall had been converted Into . 5f0V,1: plM ana We visited "The Old Manse" and read . such a one who participated in the fight, and with a few scattering shots tti reply wlfe ,B u- Eoth wer standing on the who does not use , tobacco or liquor," a woodland scene, with fountains and iL. 'm? f"" V . W' UP" ain. In memory, Emerson's "Nature," until at last we climbed the slope where a they dispersed. The British let fly another upper deck of i the General Slocum when she. said, and, strangely enough, Foster, brooks, walks, rustic bridges and growing i0r , , or ana een"nK to the wrtteIi there and Hawthorne's "Mosses mounted cannon, carved In stone, pointed broadside and mith a cheer of victory the "teamahlp caught fire. They had never who was about to purchase a cigar from plants and trees. Goldfish swam In the 'oaa' ., r 18 alBO row ' horse chest- ft.om ,n old Man.e. We Inspected the fine toward the clustering houses of Lexington, marched on to Concord. met- 'Dut Mr. Parker buckled a life pre- the hotel clerk, desisted. pools and streams, and hundreds of song- along ,tne ,ot' KudlnK "e entrance oM lnter!or rlch ln hiatono as weIi M Lexington of today is a large, pleawnt . It Is sometimes hard to remake surround- trver lroun1 Ml8 Clayton and together According to her own statement. Mrs. birds of brilliant plumage flew about the l"8 spacious yard. We were told that ntrw.y associations and walked about the New England village with brick business lngs. but In this case, although the town lny 'pea overboard and were ln the aiwooo is worm aoout iiw.uuo, invested room ana sang irom the boughs of the ""su .e smce gPound8i tending behind the house to the I blocks, spacious houses, modern schools has been filled with houses, the roads water an hour before they were P,Rkea UD- 1x1 re&1 e8tate and "t0- von the cou- trees. Thousands of expensive roses were "?a"ter,, nous? ,eft "Th gentle river where the farmers "fired the ,t and churches and signs of trade and life, leveled, and the common made into a By that t,me MlM clayton had fainted and P'o's return from Sari Rafael a will was part of the decorations, and the enter- crd ro,od " tlU f,6" l" n" 8 Id yard shot heard round the world." The Battle Clayton. She said that she accepted Foster be- given to a debutante. The Philadelphia thl8 JUBCtlon' It is plain and squars. residence. There are trees everywhere, whose leafy beautiful lawn, we looked upon some of the would have been drowned had not Mr. aawn up by attorneys ln which Mrs. Uinment Is said to have cost 1SO,000. boughs cast a grateful shade upon the very witnesses of that famous fight We supponea ner. An engagement ana ""r'u':u mv broad street and the trlanaular plot of ..w h. .... k..i .... finally a marriage resulted. - her demUa The balance was dlstrlb- green wnere we angntea-ine Dattieneia or the summons In the meeting house belfry Stray Letter Cniild's Rase. Patience Rewarded. uted among relativea ecauao mey naa acceded to their par- She then paid the expenses of Foster's nt"' wishes and had waited two years to rlV6 I"'1"5' haunt8". tha boy who" monument mark, the British position and requiem was sung In the sweetest death French., ,pl.ndld bron of th. song ever known to American literature The poultry yard, the shed, the barn, the garden ground, I Paced by the blessed feet around. From the roadside to the brook Wherein he loved to look. brave-eyed young minute man one hand on his plow, ' the other grasping his ready musket, marks the position of the Ameri cana. I wish you could see this splendid statue. The figure is of herolo proportions We were not able to enter the bouse, but faithfully reproducing the minute man of soldier, the waistcoat hanging heavily with the bullets In the pockets, leaving his plow V V MA.LrAl V.. . ...I.I. ... . "rr" "7 8na qUMr OId belfrey 8,,u 8tand8 Tr.v.,.;V " V::;",r V. .I . courtshm. tna hotel nt he married. M.s. Freda . Brown and Old meeting house stood. lL are there still arpon them th brWa th,t he had never 8een' Thoma bth he"elf and F8ter' bought hlm 80m9 a Xll? ? K'ndt..the latter-th. son of - .. . . .... ... "tanflln ar there still, among them the N McCartnev .rri..i m r-.,nj.i. x. new clothes. and then said: theatrical magnate of Davenport. Ia.. re- xou anow now xne ngnt came aoout oui tavern where the colonists . hor their . . . ' .... . ... ... c.iv . ..... -.o lu let u. reca.1 It. The tea had been thrown wounded; the one to which Janathan Har- V"" Vefn waB wedded to IlT " "!,. !.K"P"Ca . 1? $100 000. June T when "aW arden8' whIoh art " they the RevoIuUon. In th. garb of th. farmer- ovsrhcard and trouble was brewing. Th. rlnftoB. ,not d()wn by BrlUsh ,., e Triage" ends a most remarkable codce i a fSiura." " Four year, ago the young couple meT a. Amy hurts British were on the hunt for hidden war draraed himself onlv to at nn th rt.w.r. . . ..n,"t 'emarkawe ' . ,. .... ,L . t "' ... achool hnv aiui Met .... u. r.'A y "urU o.o-. ... . . .,,,.. , ,,.,,, . - , ." . I r courisnip. The bride. 20 years old. and A"8 ujHe Kii me noiei wnn lour -'"n air garaen spaae can heal. A Woodland in tha furrnwi and answering munkat in r?h?wtrwrp :n,rw:r.hpotwdderwrThthe,dchrh when tr rr-r. rrs sr.s. rnc- rued-but 52 "--t--eoiurabin- .xfjz. !ohn Hnccik and sTmueT Aoam. The ihZ Ram.? . a a t vTT Thoma8 N" Martney. He answered the H.cora.. Mv t0 an A little beyond the Emerson house Is noble hymn which you know: hXnal tan ern. werj TsSng ,t InL t" 'V trahtaway the ,A, g-om !. usually a more or 1... 2' T,h fcW"-d" ' By the rude bridge that arched th. flood displayed ln the North church of Boston VI? I ! n .? l aroused by Paul Re- wag forgotten. That was a year ago. and P"""' lht to those who remember to " PV8" " elopement, the proposition after he had occupied the Old Manse, and Their flage to April's breese unfurled; and Paul RevlrS P , con,tant "rrespondence fed the flame, of l at him, but a man at Salem. Or., ap- "Jf.?,1? 'hT ooup that they would Indeed hi. final home. The main part is "c embattled farmer, stood, by dtfreWt 1, toward Concord .0 , " J11 that "tlrrln' P"" 0" ,ove unti h Prosed and was accepted to have broken all records for wait untu they were old enough to marry- old. but the addition, have given it some- o2?-2e?a VLxnrton nrnord0 & theTaVnTon nht STSi Lex,nton by 01,ver Wende11 Holm"T 1 by mail, photograph,, having been ex- nervbusnes. while preparing to advance to d'n to their parent.' vi.wth.t thr thInf of modern alr, "to " T ? . Ing the alarm. On that very night of the ,m BUr, had you bcen wUh u, on th,8 ehantre. mianhlI K ths matrimonial firin lirte. it w.. .r j would be given a big surprise on their wed- Mr. Alnntt-a h.. .u. J" I faat d"wlng to a close. The rain was Pra."'n!Cr"bnUn.WUh trip, you would have been thrilled a. w, Wh" the .room and bride me. tnr th. Mr.usburk. who 1. 48. and when . he dl day' and h. .o!d it Ta h.. ,Z' 1 " ly fallin.. but w. could not leave wW,- were when one of our number recited it: fir.t time, both n.i .h.m..i.. went to the city clerk's offiece to tret a Th tw waited. Immediately after the time to tlm. h. imn,,. 1. .k.,.v., out "topping at beautiful Sleepy Hollow , , . . ... - - - " .--..-. .... i 1 L . . . . w iiionui. r.in.).pu tn Innl. . K. II. .1. .1..-. 800 soldiers on the errand of destruction. sThe troop, were ferried across Charles river, marched across th. marshes, strik ing the Concord highway, passing through : : " ' ... T " "' when from his couch, while his children by the monument and pear the elm tree were sleeping, planted by President Grant, April It, 1875. Rose the bold 'rebel and shouldered his stood the old square box-like meeting . K'Jn Slowly the mist o'er the meadow was satisfied with the bargain, and it was Carriage license he couldn't remember cermny tn in- which was 110.000 In cash the grounds after his own taste, the low c!metery ,0 ,,00k "Pon that little cluster Bris'hTon the d.wey bud. glistened the 8ea"d by he ma"iass ceremony. The the name of the woman he wanted to and re8 reaJ Included a hedge along the walk. th. thicket of 0LVwh.r. m!.. J . ? C" coup,e w... reside InFiorlda ny. . But a man with such a ' the trees-fir., pines. e.ms. oaks. Scotch r 'Z ZZZZ . Kept to the Point. Woman has often been taxed with in- l.h.. klk... K.I . I.. ... BU 111V IWU A1CTOJ. ZZ a: 1. T.::: I i.":. Ul v. and daughteras grand a group of . . ioiuj ill iik iium III LilVVrDOOl -....m.. m m . t . . . . Klther Looked Good t Hln ' swear Wards. -.,.i.t .A t.i. 4..- . u un mui oroujiw w " A . . . , V. 1 1 . ... . . . - .... . "v. .. JUU. .1 r . UIIVUIU JLDK- . . . 1 1 .... " a party or live Sara- .H T.i ., .i .... .7. "J" should muke an excellent husband. He newl marneq pair. will doubtless forget to hide his money. v house, facln, the street up which marched Ov.V the ..e-nt dTle"" thought'. rtoClHTZZ Denier of C Uoago whlc of "the tr fa "t l a "Marble Faun " he ." a wl. bey; ,tolteW ,nd"d "m- Major Pltcalrn and his six companies of Blithe looked the morning on cottage and ,id. Now and then somethlna occurs to girls he married They looked alike. t few day" 8,0 and hea4,d for the ruined ,?,, ! k' Slut . . ... q . of the Immortals, Oaks stand about s jr:.rr J "-- ft r v--Trv2 "fi'ars -' .i?is ss ;rirTr;3; w i ? church which hung, not ln he calmly the first-born of glory have met; mobile was also approaching them-from nler was persistent, however, and asked who pointed out Ethan AMen's ? watci hi. motto "Abandon care aJl ve who enter f Hawthorn- Th aer Is ,t: wilwZ? ZUX d-lh-VOey d hm 18 bh.nd. At th. very instant when t. Edlth to e.ope. She refused and advlael pVowdePrlnhorn?UtthEeh o"dAdocumrnuh' .'l,'" IT.rer ovr the other. rJS ine. andoloV 0.' c'n SSnZ farmer. Zho cart 1 ' h their life-blood the young yn ma" Was putting the question the waiting until her parent, .hould relent. finally the ancient door at which th. revo- "There is no Joy but calm;" while on the hrouh and ot?r k MvX ?, utemfn t..oln!I ,h.v w'7 uhJJ T t r"M ' wet ! automobile struck th. buggy ond tossed Denier waited and waited and finally h. lutlonary hero demanded the surrender of window casingbetween th. sh.lves Is u t 4 u,,' My 1 " rMl"'0Vtr Z' V a . P 8, , h? 'bl. breath. it. absorbed occupants to on. side of the decided that he would settle the matter, the fort. "Is that all there 1. of the place? ' painted the " word I "OlymDus' in Greek Wh "6 P'ne" nd ak" l0 rally In case of danger "at a minute's Murmuring low in death rnu. ...... ... ....... ... h. .. , .,..... ..t.d on. of th. .,.tnmhiw ..1. P ' M wora: olympu" . ln. Qrek down upon the calm spot I .1 1 tn mis a.nna tk.i. jr.. . I. - - - u 1 a. .u u KIIU SIIB -. v w v W uwiiUDurjl 11U1I1H SL C lia.1 w v v " J a, iaTIsril I PI A el T 1 1 SI (S flnluha n . 1 vms dumb iiuw l licji 1 idtiini h 11 la v si . ... - tiKinuuu 111 icu" tint If Vllirrliarft tt th ntaalln sr halttA hi it as there w.r. no signs of th. British, wer. Nerveless the Iron hand, dismissed. At -.30 o'clock news cam. of . Raised lor Its native land, the advance; the drums beat to arms; out by th. weapon that gleams st its of th. Burkmin tavern and four other ' ,"ld- houses near, the minute-men came hurrying Thoreau's grave Is close by. The falling re Mamma and Papa Gottlleber. Ml88 ,of th carryall party turned to the tabl sloping desk a hinaed shelf ra'n brouht out th fragrance of the n. a 17-year-old sister of Edith p;.0,a' "oman a nd 8ald: "No: th'8 'n:t against th. wa'l for us. a. a standing p'"! near by and reminded u. of the odor. hat Denier said, or what Lillian J BtJ,an A"'n 8ald 8ome 8Wear wurd8 desk a couola of chair, on. n A m.ri. a ot Thoreau's oharmlng pages, which never no, matter. A few hour, la te? when he "Is head, in here, and my oup' of, ba "8 a" Aoan sold while he lived, but today in .11 at- to the common. Their trader was Captain John l'srker, a big. brave man. He drew his men In line, sent such ss had no am munition Into th. meeting house where powder was stored and then he aald; "btand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon; but If they mean to have a war, let It hrgln here." Here, then they stood, seventy Ixlngton farmers, sgainst they knew not how many British soldiers, trained in the srt of kill ing. Through the dim light of the early morning came the redcoats. They halted near the meeting house and Major Pitcairn was oaoiy aaxea. But she refused to be nammona street, fcaith was not at home; " " w,"-u w""0 cul"ln ,or- young talned pine and plainly furnished with a oiairaciea irom tne main theme Dy the In- neuner were trision of any minor Issue. Keeping the But Lillian line of communication open, she graxped was. Just wh . . ... 1 . .. . unc i no i u.m 11 1 a up. n in nui . . n n r ner oouvious lever s nana ana ecstatl- saia, aoes not matter. A few hours later " . .. .. ' rocker, an nnen firenlu-. . t. i.. " Over the hillside the wild knell Is tolling, cally murmured: "Oh. Billy. der, yes!" the family telephone rang. Papa Qottlieher "1. " says mat tne echoes or inem are ' ' ' '" .11 mospheres quickens, but never harms. Em come yeomanry When a woman I. virtually interested she answered. ,B" De"' V 11 a"a "tltn A"a mantel come, . . then the vounsr neiinle drove .wav lauah. "lanie A. through the .torm-clouds the thunder mV be trusted not to lose her grip. Thus Is Denier." said a voice. "I have ing one of them shouting back "Do you r...r,i . .u .."'.. .... married your daughter." hear them 7"-New York Tribune. "1" urum. a nice I t. tie urlde. "What?" exclaimed Rntlll.h.r Fast on the soldier's pnth ' Darken the waves o (--wrath Long have they gathered Red glares the musket Miarp rlnea the nn Biasing and clanging from wan. Oreen be the graves where are Ivlng' Shroudless and tombles. their rent, "Vnn ... Mrs. A. M. Atwood. a wealthy widow of crasv. Edith' is here In th. r-.,., whk n,. .. 11CY1 VI. Ill Ingratitude. I consider it one of the greatest privi leges of the day that I could wander at will through quaint old Wayside, for it was the place In which, more than any- erson's grave is marked by a rough stone and lies between two great pines, one at the head and the other at the foot. As we turned away these lines from his ad dress at the consecration of the cemetery rode toward tha Americans. "Dispense ye While o'er their ashes villains; ye rebels, duperset" he com mended. But they would not. They were not there for that purpose. Pltcalrn flourished his sword and again commanded them to disperse, and still they flying Wraps the proud eagle they hi. nest. Home on her northern Long o'er the foam (spread tha broad banner sun; and loud shall c.ty. - ". ' er i uai- -That 1. all right," came the reply. "I .rm"n0er uyi J !" where els. Hawthorn, achieved the Urg- . ff... . T"" T"OW.' tw " "V .nn 10, .no inn lima aian t marry Edith, but Lillian w. min . .... V ., . . , n. ... ...... . .ncjr, m ma ii.uu oi iaiur.s ;'c?.C- - r.-? a-. 81 'h" MetrPe h-'' te home nL n Pont i'".'. T. Zno" ZZ'ZJZ 8ha. 8l-.P ?' baV thicket and "'e as,y tr.p to can a- machine can take us. Are you going to give know' d2"f dat "" Wh" h his delightful cltcures of Enall.h .,.. I'n,nea our - Ana When these acorn. i.ei oncie wiey mere quieny marnea. us your blesslns?" ?" uiun 1 up aer coin ror u,h .... ...a. ..r lnul r auiiig at our teet are oaks over- Th. m.ntiai Vnnt ti .t... ...,i y oie.smg . der rawyer,i and dldn t j d and life which we read in "Our Old Home." ..,-,,-..,.. phlM,. , her martvr. wk. nf .mm.hm h, rnrr ,r.... ..... Z7T ?. L ure J. d'd- De oder day 1 t'lnks and last and saddest of all. "tieptlmlus ,hl. ,,. .', ., k. v., .. ... ..... ..... v u. 11 ju so an see aai mutt just t leave Kelton ..vr whn.. .i.,tii-h. ... ...1 T"'"" ....o. , , they sunk to n,wly wedded couple, both of whom One of the most notable country wed- .nlm hnow "Is frlen s ain't tied de can on ,h. ',,, . : . u . lf" K00. h wise and great will have are well advanced In years, left for a dings of the year occurred at WlldfieM , ar'e" "1 10 J" ana goes ........... . .,c,., luu, ltft theU. na,mvH ,rid vlrtues on the trees. .he starry fd honeymoon trip with Santa Crux a. the Farm. Phl.Up Tp'Randolph '. Ze at X' ZtiVZ'X'ZX ITLtL th'.V IUTT tha a"d rouJ from ui!t"v" po,nl' . Narragansett Pier, on July 4. when hi. .wr. "',e n.B."!.." a deli.htful .tori.. thou.h th. r-: . . . ' ne coi-renponaence mat lea tne couple daughter. Miss Dorothy Randolnh i,...m. r? . " Fff"; . " . .. . . .. . r.ext ween we visit tne haunts or Whit- Zn bri":- f V "I" M"- AtWOod W" ,ha wlfa Jh The wedding d'.TVuy" 1 " ) m or "Apil, ump ' a. UuUa " " ant,clpat'" " ha 'a- lug Mine, ln Lo. An.ale. r.eentlv Mh. r,l....I .n ..... . . . i .. i. .... .... Ioue, or Apple Slump, a. Louisa ... t.l-ui.iir. I ..uln!v to storm and to . ... Uuii.r. i u . i . . tonuiiea, ana a large com- "" ..n. .u 1 1 itrn.i . ( . ... . .n 1. advertiwmtnt for proposals with a mat- pany of fashionable folk from Fhlladel- .J.'H.t'", him." concluded the angry one, p " " " . 1 . , CLARA B. ilAbO.N. v y .mouoie toia irom thiiadel- r ul, Ul, dfct h, ,uit t ln!"-tiucc.s. The Waystie now belongs to Mr.. principal of Train tSchooL