< (CorTM«*T im PT KOMET P1UPBMP OUPP.l
| finished I saw I had. made the irai pression I hoped to make. At my ] nod Gar a-Saak aroao. Hia fierce eye
“And the iron?" swept over the throng as if he were ‘They are not far from the begin- feeling the temper of hia audience. Bing of the channel.’' | “Men," he began, and hia heavy, “Very well. Xow to the point. | powerful voice filled the caverns Tour Jumar men are skilled in the • aronnd, "arc yon ready to follow the working of iron and stccL Could | greet Oolek to victory? Will yon they, do you think, by working stealth- j longer be slaves? Will you wrest the ily at night, build " smelting shops, i fair island of Talmooeh from the tyforges and other work# in the river- rant, and say to your women, ‘Hsr* bed, and begin the manufacture of are your bomes, free again?’ Will guns?" i you ’make the women of Galneor The two Jumars looked at each ] smile proudly on their warriors! peechless amazement. j Will Ton brave death, that yon shall
The leadership ol
« well established. He
■pie; they knew
CHAPTER XIL
[COXTISUCD.]
e iron?"
■ther in speechless amazement.
’’The project is agreatone," Isaid. j bo f ree v-
"and dangerous,
liberty. Will they do i ’ They can try," said
“And wtlltl tab work witl
"We Bark.
"Then let us begi: become-known that
reward is Hi
it?" 1 'T—
Crnru-Saak.
paused.
Garn-Saak knew the
i ir\, saiu imru-nsas. , Knew the people; they knew tUeu the people of Brompor- ■ l ea( ]er. A spasm swept over them. ;h us?" I asked. ; Their spirits were wrestling with the no people," replied Oso- i bonds of hopelessness that had so
| bonds
! long held them. The revulsion was
once. Let it coming. I saw it, and was delighted, •morrow night | Oso-Bark saw it, and his eyes glUited at a secret tened, as he leaned forward eagerly, channel. We 1 os if expecting something. Garn-Saak ’’ saw it, and stood proudly waiting.
j Mr. Avery saw it, and his thin lips
rered with emolii
the Jnmar men are
meeting in the old river must apeak to them and arouse them from the 1<
which they have fallen." j qnivt “It is well," eaid Oso-Bark. “I H Finally will talk to them as I used to talk to j
u they were soldie:
mojeb, and we were still at
••One other thing. Have yonr wives get some of the women together and make np a lot of fancy trinkets. They . arc handy with the needle. Tell them to sew for liberty. Tell them I want
a pack full of useful things.” “For what?" asked Mr. Avery. “I shall become a pedcler,” I
plied.
“Peddler!" echoed Mr. "Oolek, selling pin-cushii hand!
ion.
cheer like the roar of
1 thunder smote the air. The mnlti1 | . „ I tude gave roar after
iUon - I stamped their feet.
in the air.
strnctions to ir.elr heshand*. Thai; while the wife of Poko-Bains was of laces (which Tat worthy
» progress
oat for him. toon sullenly
he wiser his kihd
of the work that was laid _ And if a Chiness soldier stood sa looking st ns, ho was not the for hie pains, for to him sad hi
! wi ' ■ *
1 to hit
ras but a poor Jnmar, seeking to earn my living without having recourse to the hard work in the mines. Even into the mines I went, ostensibly to sell clothes to the miners, but really to sow the seed of revolution and to learn mors of my people and
their country.
It was in the mines that I saw tbs greatest cruelties practiced. I saw men who were fainting from exhaustion prodded with the swords of the guard, until in despair the poor fellows would lie down and beg their tormentors to kill them outright and rid them of their misery. Sometimes this invitation pleased the Mongols and they accepted it, I saw men, bleeding from the wounds given by their heartless masters, thrown cut on the mountain side to die. Often my indignation nearly overthrfw. my nrudenct bnf J
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°A*« Mat, N. J, | The .. xhrtoe ^ Woek World" was a r|R. WESLEY RODGERS WALES, i brilll * ot *“<*»“ lho loginning and bs» U ; becu steadily growing ever since. Time
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III
Jumars.bat: insrriage fc They wer<
than their
resembling attributes.
The two
apart.
a once
closely allied by interaoveral generations, ■till smaller physique
Galneor, though solor and mental
them in col
talk
tho-u when tney wer. staters ox ari- | tn( , e ^ re roar ^ rotr . They
sUmped their feet. They threw their
hats in the air.
“We will be free!” "We are still men!"
“We know how to fight!”
These cries were taken np and carried along by the united voices. I , knew that I had struck my first blow, re ' ! and had won my first victory. , I Garu-Saak continued:
* Tery ; i "We must have arms. We cannot
dl.r I <»» e». .a. or,, tie ; ; „ a , ho , tho „ | .ad eau UinAfn?- , ...un.d h „ to L ,, p , oa . Her. ». ily toe»a. the .H.Qtchac, «U j , bujia , t, 0 r k , b „ D , ,.J »»: k.o. .hether I p.j !ar , „ lb , u , u l ' bj h,, 8 ° r 00 l, , , - , - : treant we done, wo must gothcr hero •'Cno.noro, that imori^n brain , ^ tl , t «,
7*’;;!-,jd“rv7ho p ^r\o"-
M, w..h« wot, curtod nnt to th. | ,, ka0 „ wi „„„ ■otter I rated oomo of th. honra bUd , „, a ^1.0 will
jn Gwlttcor on tho followini, dg. All b , raa K stream of Jumars began pounng into Iorwlri
Mr. Avery s house. It would h.ve j ..j m;n ^ .. he ^
^ ™ ~ — ■»
as to how that house held the hundreds of men who ware filing into it. None w«, I rut, yet the house did not fill up. X feared’ that a guard would discover them, but they were wary nud chose their time wisely. When the ibflnx hud stopped there were two thousand able-bodied men in the river
wo cities were about ten miles
apart. A wide, smooth road led from
Galneor to Bromporrah, a
on to Quiental.
i, and from there
J^EWIS T. STEVENS, COUNSELLOR AT LAW, 609 Washing toe St., Cape Mat, N. J. Master and Solicitor In Chancery.
Notary Public.
Commissioner for Pennsylvania, irety Bonds secured for contractors, ials and fidelity purposes.
This I found to be a continuation of
of the Invade:
Galneor.
the Street
style of nomenclature pre 1 Bromporrah that I found in The people of Bromporrah were,
possible, more dispirited than tho J) mars. They bad had the honor o -—--to the island the last rulini
giving to the island the last ruling family, all the members of which had
been killed by Hon-Ko-Hi.
I was received everywhere among them with a confidence that amazed me. No one questioned my authority or donbted the success of my plans. I was joggiug along one of the principal streets one day, and stopped before a comfortable-looking house in
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oek World is absolute-
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IF YOU ARE A FARMER
uandsomk NOME . . -
channel.
Oso-Bark vrav tho first to address them. I enuadt prrtrcy to yon the ml fervor of bis eloquence, uted into English, it may seem •it certainly is tumcas compared
fire anil ferrt Translated into tame—it certai: with the peoniii
tongue. There arc words in Jutaareso for which no synonym can be found ux English. Hence the bcsntyof OsoBsrk's eloquence is sometimes lost in translation, but wbat he said was in
substance as follows:
"Men of Jumar blood! Men of Galneor! Men of Talmooeh! Hear 11 have to say to you. For twenty
■e bent our necks beneath
what years
have bent our necks bene
the yoke of a foreign tyrant, who has filled our hearts with grief, and onr once happy land with misery. Onr women sing no more at their work, as they sang in the good days of oar prosperity. It is many years since the joy of hearing the langhter of a child has come to any of us. The band dTriffen-Ko-Hi has been laid upon ns heavily and sore. But it is time to rise. We bare prayed far our deliverer to come. We Have prayed and watched until our hearts were faint with disappointment and onr eyes were strained with watching. But he has come. He who is to deliver ns from bondage lives even now atnou;
He is not of the Jumar blood He is not of the Kalek blood
ives even now among us.
He is not of the Jumar blood alone. He is not of the Kalek blood alone. He is of all of us a part. He tells us that if we do his bidding, wo shall be led from the darkness of this slavery into the dazzling light of freedom.
' ” trike at ttmr-Kb-Hi,
1 that bind us shal!
fall to the ground. Hear, then, what our Oolek has to say to ns." The silence at the close of this speech
Every eye that in that
i of s
• profound. Kota a sigh broke the stillm was turned on me. I moment lay all iny eba
I hesitated. I did not know whethi
to launch forth in 1
whether, in their ] wonld not augment
brief end ensure. tioa.1 chose theJi
rtectug myself, clad is the _ uniform of Cha Fong, where all ooald
aeame. Isaid:
"What Oao-Bark has said is true. X am come to free yon from the tyraat'e bead. Bat I matt hev*^ a nation of
eloquence,
uliar mood, .. my power to be By a happy in tub
•very command mast be efc •very wish of miee mast be to yoa a tow. There is maofc u do. sad the tame to begin is now.; Yon will listen to Oarm-Seak, who will be my chief
e was no i
There could be none. I heard s woman shriek: “Gorgret, you shall yet be free.” It was Hankannsn, who had come with Miss Arnold to listen. Thereupon the tumult became so great as to be almost deafening. The Jumars shouted themselves he
the best part of Bfotnporrah.
garden took a
^‘Hoi
the |
1 was a woman planting corn. I j tray of handkerchiefs from tho
id went to her.
are yen, good worm "Good woman" is the n
good woman?" I
asked. "Good woman" is the nearest
translation of the word “1
Jninorese.
She > said:
a Kalek woman can
Msntchoo
JumarB biiuuvcu momamvea nuarac. They embraced each other. They ept They laughed. They danced, lies t was glad when they dispersed, for Bor.'
ey were b ''
“That is
rhen they disperse! e beside themselves,
is a good night's work,” I s Mr. .‘.very, who was the last
e eyed me a moment and then
"I am as well a# a Kei be with the bruise of thrust in her heart.”
“Alas!" I said. "And have yon suf-
fered, too?"
"Yes," shej-eplied bitterly. “I have been so deep in sorrow that even death would seem welcome. See yon this?" She showed me a mound in the corner of the garden. It was covered with fragrant and beaatifal fli
ive;" I said.
"18 is a grave," I sa "It ts the grave of n
It is the grave of my heart. There the child of myself and Bodo-
was tl
"The deatb-
has
said, as
• leave, was going, tell of Hen-Ko-Hi
sounded.”
"Crickmore, you have heard my last cavil. I believe in you now as firmly as do the Jumars. I believe do anything. Good nightl” CHAPTER XIIL
proud possessor
>y beast that was hon-
ored in Talmooeh with the name of horse. This animal, at the time I tade the acquaintance of its owner,
?ed in the honorable duty of
so-Bark 1 small lu! n Ta'.mo
This 1
honorable duty
plowing the fields of Oso-Bark's "
was
rustic pursuit and w lumbering, ricket’ Avery pronounced
tributes to
ler-
iken from that harnessed to a
ty vehicle that Mr. I equal in all its attisiorinal “one-hoss
a historical “one-1
shay." This vehicle had only two
body of it was so
somesome-
us, at one time,
wheels, and the body of it w« hung that the weight of it was si times in front of the axle and sc
5 behind it. Th:
timi
the weight of the load was sustained by the patient horse, while at another the weight of the horse was all that prevented the vehicle from tipping
over backward.
Behold me. then, with the reins of this fascinating turnout in my hi furnished with a full supply of k knacks, made by the Jumar wc
ivory in of
rumpucCTUi.
"And your worthy husbsndwork? T trust he is well.” "Bado-Ror is well,” said said; •
Bromporrah.
“And your worthy husband—is he
at wi
• ‘Bado-Roi is within.”
“Take me to him," I said. “I went
to speak to him.”
"And who of the Jumars shall I say him is here? Are you a messenger
Garn-Saak or the Oolek?"
ek,” I replied.
follow.
her.
I expected to eee in Bado-Bor a noblo-looking man such as were the chiefs of the Jumars. Imagine my surprise when I was nnber»d into the jprekende of VwizehedTiftle old Yellow it least a foot or more shorter than
tob froi
om Garn-Saak or the Oolek?” "I am the Oolek,” I replied. She bowed low and bade me
myself.
When we entered the room he seemed to be very busy. He paid ns scant attention. There were pots and jase scattered about. A hot fire glowed in a little stove. He was working with chemicals of some sort. The expression on his face was fierce and rapt. He was thinking only of his work, bnt ho had become so fierce from constant thinking of his wrongs, that his face never lost its tigerish ferocity. “Yon are Bado-Bor,” I said when I
went in.
He looked up and nodded.
"This is tbe Oolek," said his wife.
"I knew it," was all he said.
trn.»k« mil,, by the Jumar women, I I waited in silence, amused at this jaunting around Galneor and into the I cool reception. The situation was one country beyond, even into Brom- that might, if prolonged, become porrab, pretending to sell my wares awkward. Suddenly his eyes gleamed, to my kinsmen. In this way I was in | “Ah! I have ii!" he exclaimed, constant communication with my fol- j H® put down a jar in which he had lowers and feUow-slavee, without been shaking some kind of a mixture, being suspected by th# Chinese end motioned for hie wife to leave ns.
soldiers Bnt suspected or unsnspeced. She bowed and departed.
I was not a favorite with th^soldiers | Plunging his hand into the jar he of Hen-Ko-Hi. I waa inknlted and bald oat toward me e handful of white abased on all side*. It was no on- powder. He did not speak, bnt divinusual thing for a squad of these in- mg bis wishes, I examined it. Planing teresUng rascal, to rush at me in the ! * «wdl pinch of iton astone, be struck street, upset my cart, throw my goods it a sharp, quick blow. An explosion
ell over the ground, and then jab s i we» the reenlt
sword into my bores end send him j "And what is that. Bado-Bor?" I
clattering away. At these times I had greet difficulty in controlling my rage. I knew it wonld pi esse my
and give them an opportunity to take me before the governor far punishmeat. Bnt that would ruin ell my chances of meekly bore their
SfiSSil
■eked.
HU grizzled face twisted itself into
“Wbat was the reenlt of the tbe eontrihntion boxes?" “It was e tail are. Aftet n tow austoye toe rsMLW ’
nue, and I
bargain.
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iape Mi
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From THE ABORIGINAL TIMES
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Embracing
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BY
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