Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 8, 1888, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY ' APRIL 8, 18838 —-SIXTEEN PAGES. SPECIALSALEOF 3,000 YARDS OF Desirable Dress Goods! AT 9 and 10 Cents Per Yard Worth 10c and 25c. Monday morning, April 9th, store will open promptly at 8 am. The goods to be sold at 10c are manufactured by Jo- seph Turner & Sons’ at Kent, Ohio, and are retailed everywhere in Omaha at 25cper yard. THOMPSON BELDENELT 1319 Farnam-st,, Omaha. This natural hauteur, and a good deal of it is pride of the ordinary sort, has A View of His Historical Castle— | tended to build a hedge :u'(‘vunfi ar markable man, better worth knowing Argyll Lodge. and admiring than are many popular — heroes to-day. The head of the Camp- A LIBERAL ENTERTAINER. | bells must nec: ly be o man of high notions, and the = native canniness cropped out in the clever and ambitious L Nobleman Who Loves His Books a8 | match-making for his son. Viewing it Well as His Friends—His Dislike in the lowest way, asa speculation, it For Publicity—The Duke u failure. It made the duke more 2 unpopular than before. He was more COANIORID than a little cold-shouldered by peer who inwardly resented this presumption RN —[Special | of a Scotchmian, and, no doubt, it drove ERQELON f Mazch 20 [Special | 430 fuko more’ into himself, Alw rorrespondence of the Brg.J—The head | 30 o minent speaker in the hou o the clan Campbell is by that sole fact | Jords, it was the sheer foree of his e of the great men of th rth to | ties that opened the door of Mr. wvery Scot, especially to every Camp- | stone’s cabinet to him. —Incomparably boll. the ablest statesman and orator among cesting sonso it may be said that | the old whigs, the duke of Argyl In no jesting scnse it may be At | jever received into the innerand upper the Duke of Argyll is a truly great man. | circle of his party. Perhaps he is und ed by the many. | In his native Inverary castle the [ am not at all sure that he but there | duke is a minor deity to the country s asingular conspiracy of silence among | round. The Scotch thinl much more ho cliques who write up every srib- | f their dukes than the English do. 1t ipkola JEHOD, OF D" | isa grrand old castle, historical in ev dling friend us a gonius. 102~ | gione, and furnished in the half-m rolling gun!ry_lu\‘n a weak man, they | diweval style that lends so delightful a sannot appreciate a strong one. They | flavor to our older Btitish homes, The 100 often toady to & would-be somebody, | duke has done hard wor well who is thankful to use their laudations | stocked book room. ~ Here he wrote I el TR e R F “Reign of Law," his many controversial a8 stepping-stones to fame. Ther essays on agriculture, science, foreign lendency in some quarters to policy, domestic policy, and theology those who have alveady risen, or who | The “severe bent of his mind may be are born so high they need not trouble [ traced in the curious recreation chosen lo rise higher. And perhaps the Duke [ by his son the marquis, who toncd of Argyll is himself th 150 of hisown | down the frivolity of his semi-court life Jemi-isolation, for such is his situation. | by turning the Psalms of David into His character will, to some extent, ex- | Verse. lain the matte In London the duke has been alavish Though a duke, and nearly allied to | entertainer. His fine house, Argyll lo the sovereign, the titular rank of | lodge,is one of the old and harming “Argyll of the Isles”is only that of a | mansions situated in grounds that it baron, which standsthus in the order of | will — mnever be possible to precedence; archbishops, dulkes, mar- | multiply. Here —aguin, though the uises, earls, viscounts, bishops, bavons. | rooms “and — hall ~abound with Tis dukedom is Scotch, and docs mot | art trensures, mostly old fashioned, vount in the Enghsh pecrage. He sits | the study is the principal feature. The in the house of lords as Baron Sund- | duke fings solace in work from the many nidge, which is an English title, and by | cares of his family life, His heir, the that name he speaks and votes His [ marquis of Lorne, is not happily mar- son, the queen’s son-in-law, the N ried. He is cold-shouldered by his guis of Lorne, is in England only o com- | royal brothers-in-law, and_has not the moner, and has to be elected” to the [ art of winning friends. His younger house of commons like any other M. trother, Colin, has recently brought but the constituencies reject him, grief to the venerable duke, whose The duke of Argyll is in his sixty- | spotless life has never heen assailed by Afth year. He succecded to his ) scandal, Another brother is on the 1847, For many years he has been an | Londou s exchange. The duke is Intimate friend"und adviser of the queen | poor, and brought up his sons to earn ~legs 50 since than before the marvinge | their own living, ~ None of them pos of the marquis with the princess, e | sesses a tithe of their father’s splendid was a brilliant scholar in his student | talents. fays. Nothing thut concerns the The are few finer orators in the practical welfare of his class, | United ingdom,and none more skillful [he dandlords, and of his tennnts hus | in controvorsy. If only the duke had been neglected by hi rewd Scotch | been born a ‘commoner he would have brain. The duke hasbeen o hungry de- d as prond & place as Disraeli or vourer of every book on every new pro aind would have been a g jeot, new philosophy or uew social move- | popular her ent. By instinct and training he hus | He is very particular in his friend- always been u liberal, genevally sn ad- | giips, His entertainments-—at least in vanced liberal. At times he bas shown | [ondon among the most select. He an independence amounting tosheer ob- | js averse to newspaper publicity and stinacy, bravely holding himsell ready | possip. Of 1s EAeAT) s to prove the majority against him wrong | Sioud, this has been mone in facts and in deductions. Perhupshis | mur) Another cause of his being physique accounts for this. made less of in the g > des In stuture, the duke of Argyll is # | serves is the fact of his yery short man, quite o midget for a independence duke. He has a really handsome, noble o expressed b S Y T face, & fuce like that ¢f John Bright, so shad again come into power, b like that in certain positions it would be | cause, liberal thou 1s.bho hami easy 10 mistake one for the other were hat the 4 forme of this lust e thelr bodies invisible. The ducal nose | tury have not been mainly due to the is rather more tip-tilted of the two, und 4 y .. 1 have, thorefore, this gives a sharpish expression to an | S sccount of the nccession otherwise most dignified fuc A | for a time of the conservative parly to wealth of goldon v foats back- | power, no dismagfwhatever.” % ward from his high arched brow right In his speeches the duke- is intensely over bis cout-collar behind, a Niagara | carncst and animated. He is a fine of silk, that waves and Hups as he takes | figure as he throws back his leonine his bounding strides along the floor. | heud and its waving mane, and rolls out His hair is all but white now and the | his always clear and *sometimes loftily shanged hue increases the dignity of | cloquent poriods; He is apt in culling Ms exprossiou. He is rarely seen in re- | his illustrations, so thal the hearers HOWE, KERR & CO’S. RED LETTER SALE OF CHAMBER SUITS, ON MONDAY Suits worth $25, sold at $15. Suits worth $35, sold at $25. Suits worth $55, sold at $47. Suits worth $85, sold at $72. Suits worth $175, sold at $155. We have just received two car loads of Chamber Suits in the latest designs and finish, in addition to our immense stock, and in order to make room, will continue the sale On Monday of Each Wesk Unfil Our Stock Is Reduced - 15610 Douglas Street, Opposite Falconer’s. HOWE, KERR & CO. might suppose him to be athorough [ A VOYAGE TO GREENLAND. | shooting wild fowl on the ice, T came to | reigned within me when T cested at full man about town, a sportsman, and gen- ! f ) ¥ more than the co:rade who had ace c alagoon (or pool of water surrounded by | length, bulanced as it were on this, my | panied me. Bye d accom erally o very shrewd customer, which Sea aniohiT inEmiboib tetmin s wtbhl| (oaly Foolelof Balyatan des T ONTas Ba et e e e yn oLy s dind latter he certainly is, but his true and | Wgten for JOREh, M. 4. | ceals. T sang to the best of my ability | me from a watery grave, My chum, by | this poi reRd T eken ol CIDECHHTY dominant note is that of the practical | Now let me mention-a few words | aline or two of the Scotch air. “Anmie | this timo, had renched the othor side in | dlose thnre but orparcetionably had u philosopher. 1 do not know that he in- | about the animal itself. From a com- | Lawr Up they came and BBty XA P toCA I Int Ve e O Re ot | ool R e ete el bad more Hulges in any sports, but his walk pro- | mereial point of view seals may be di- | their heads above the water and Tnough presance of mind wis 1aft I mg | one who 1016l vieten. tia ojyords of claims his liking for se, and his | vided into two groups. with silent admiration as if spellbound, | to tell him to hurry to tho ship for | ave the follewing sentimeste e ol whole bearing indicates the highly and T am sure that even had. $he grent | ropes with-which 10 cesoue mes bt o | “My lst sxoreisy op oroiis, He suye: cultured, highly tempered head of a mystio Orphous (who played so divinely | fAirst bado me to make an atiempt ‘to | prolassion mesostoted rons uties. of my proud Scoteh clan. |G ) OhIEENvTet ALY sl Tat ety del |l cover e Femaih NETort on T AI s ATt S RN o Acaine R ithyan fexpey GEOF Second~-The fured or cared seals or | lsten 10 his music) baon porforming ha | but this time my swimming mothod | crashos in ha in. Sous. Our ehip wus Otandze. could not have had _a more | failed me, and I found myself all fours T AT P The former aro valued for the ofl they | attentive or uugust audience. Yet these | in the waler. I serambled buck, how- | was a hopeloss straggie of starving mos e : e iy D OO Is have to all outward appearance | ever, and again took up my former posi- | rotten with seurvy. ngaingt the meseilooy Sid Lovett of Layara, Col., has on his | ¥1¢C, and for the hare con- ) 0o re—only a small aperature two | tion on my old friend, the square pieco | fo { n ] ; 5 ranch, near that place, an'animal having the | verted into leathers the latter for their | ) ches hehind the i OGRRRG RIONY olWhiteH o RbU Slinas e A T sron e o s o an N S LY, QUOR M0 pelof ahog, the head being a perfect | skinsalone. It is entirely with the first | sound can be conveyed. ‘This aperature | circumstances, as I was "lhnx!uuuv;xll“tv ;,'",II)':)(]I.".".""."{.“"" dieds Out of twenty dog's head, with dog e covering the boad | group that T have to deal, as the second | ix capuble of heing closed by afine mem- | drenched, and the frosy Bainiin e [ Mioke s Thchrorolhregtl el nriihin gy Qum is a large hog weighing 350 pounds is confined to the Peribyloff islands off when the animal is under water. | made matters extremely uncomfortablo. | the purty of rescue found e One. of young Texas farmei the const of Alaska. ear, however, makes up for | Secing that thert was 1o help but to | the three died on the homeward. voy- ught to town @ O ] e e atTes Tabont Bixifeet cncy extern. it a bony | make for the ship Tam, wheeled round, | age. One lived to reach his ive able freak of mature. Th { e amber just like a shell and curved on | and soon was lost to view behind an ieo | place and to sink 1o rest with his wif iz with elght legs, two tails, four cars, but | 1ong, although they swim and dive | jtself. Their sense of smell is v hummuck. Left to myself in such an | and children T T only one head and mouth. It'has two bodies | with the greatest ease, often remaining | acute and their b ' £ ace things certainly looked | man left nm‘ur \)mtl-l -ml "f ! -I L up as the shoulders, where they | as much as a quarter of an hour or move | harsh bark or grunt to u plaintive very black for me. = Minutes tecemed | to be worthior of God's me oroais B ooriho aie i ndlis danandant Tor [lororhine ke d chiefly on fish, | like hours, and I was driven nearly to | to make God ( lobsters. cuttlefish, and occasionally | desperation. 1 felt I could hold out 1o | pier in this world, and worthi birds, which they seize when swimming or. all the actions of my past but | world that is to come.” | o ov flonting on the water. t life came up vividly “before me 3 Fe e quently resort to sandy beaches, Tocks | T rust [ may not be thought tao cgo- | 1ike a flash of lightning, and yet I was the other, and weighed just one - and icefields for the purpose of bring- | tistical when I recount the cirewm- | unwilling to die. being foud of life and pound. The hens of Maxeys are getting up | ing forth their youhg, which happens | stances which at this juncture very £y, 5o commending myself to the Harvard university students nad a prayer quite a reputation for strange shapi about the middle of March. The youne | nearly led to the loss of my life. It was of Him who “willeth what is best,” | meeting last week With an attendance’ of A2 Doyleston, O, man discovered that his young | o s the close of our socond d vaited on, patiently. for Tam’s re- | °%: chickens were ‘being stolen from time to | & Seai hun Bt prafecad oy ices | turn. pMoody made mang couvorts at. Leadville, time. He missed half a dozen or more hens reluctantly, and have actually 10 be | 1o veturn to the ship, some four miles s lo T bnasarad b e sl Emekninoraiiasemo take 1o his fervent ',],:::1ff,{1‘,;',1’,‘:":"\".flf.‘,l“;:"ll,,,‘,‘.,".‘('.','{,},}’,'\'(k'C"{,‘"“;M‘:m‘: taught to swim by their pavents. The | distant, for some refreshment which | handed, for he had heen unable, from | Bishop Taylor of is on his way the coop discovercd a pocketbook contaiblii |\ mher of young produced is one an- | hud been left behind. Our commanding | 1he natire of the ice, to vench the ves. | t attend the goneral *Metiiodist conforenc e e Mhervom | nually, oceasi onally two. They are at [ officer, deeming 1t unwise for me 10 g0 | o1 ALl he said wis: ~There’s o hope | 1€ hs just been holding the - Liberia cons munity first covered with o cont of very thick, | alone. ordered the sccona mate, whom | for’vou, leave me your N]',’. ‘mm ferenc A singular freak of nature, originally dis- | soft, white fur, and until it sheds or | L Will for convenicnco designate a8 | ish this cold blooded remark ho ¢ The choirs of the Church of England in« covered in western Australia, is likely 0 re- | 1411 off they do not enter the water wm,” 10 accompany me. On the way | Bl iy the | pemurk o do- | cude 154,000 voluntar, 000 paid male main unexplained. 1t consists of nine fine [ 15 7 p X ator, to the ship we came across the smallest | o' selskin cont w paghas atine | singers, and 7,000 voluntary and 2,100 putd earls adhering together in the shape of o | Their mode of progression is remark- [ soul T ever saw to o Kind of mon- Eoplekipioons whioh Lihadreoolvad (ifomelopin tin cross—scven in the shaft and oncon | able, The fore feet are used in walk- [ strosity, so I bound it on my ‘k with K kOl B Ellg “l‘l 404 ‘I"}r The v debt of the Southern cach side of the s A suggestion | ing, the hind solely in swimming. Thos | the itention — of " proserving it | oy e shan et g su el | MoodiauBehnoniiin S MAr IR Ay s that u frag o I o v " 4 i e % i Ak 3 esources L2, ow # 1465 a notub) is that s fragment of seaweed in the shell of | o onland or fce the hind lmbsare | when I got on “hoard. We | e up my mind 10 rtrace my. stops | reduction in léss than one yoar cross was built. perfe lll‘) Bkl -“”!j:;ll:'i: ‘\}l"]':'h'?"i;"l camer ‘:;I’ A "‘;:“:l“]m"d & m"m'.“ the wuy I liad come, 5o rising on iy feet | The largest colored church in this country There is r1ady in the town of Cla Frd s P orQ hne A parIeC BeUNUOE|i1i1j1g ¢ skimmed over the ice, fualling | i8 said to be the First Baptist church verhere ls a young lady In, the town of Ola- | tail, * with " the soles of tho foot ving annel about two hundred 1 ;f,uxJlf;‘.,l,K.f.&”'fnulnma'.,x the des, fulling | 3330 arg, Va e LapLey Shurol 86 sit at the table and with & napkin about his applied to ecach uxl‘n-x- and often raised | yards broad. This had just been newly | some seven or eight tim 1ill 1 | Gordon, is temporarily in New York neck it takes meat from a plate. with its own | to avoid contact with the ice. It is | frozen over black in color a8 | yetuully found myself oncs mors' on the | Kev. Dr. Heor terlee, rector of B oot e “apicare. When | by the action of the fore limbs, | compured with the surrounding winte | {hivkcice, A fecling of intenss arowsi vk city, declines tho given e of meat on o fork it will hold | combined with the powerful flexor [ice. Now the question came 10 this: | jesenow ecame over me, and 1 would o of asslstant Dbishop -of Ohio, on tho $e fork In its fore paws and take the meat | muscles of the trunk that the seal | “Should we be able to cross this ‘‘bay | faign have luid down and fallen sslaep, | romud Rround that he must stick to his own y Ty . | Ly « f I own allen asleep sh work. from th Unes, and when given @ cup of milk | shufles or wriggles along. They press | floe, we could save about one mile and | 1o neiiyeving tho words of my eaptain 4 Y it will hold up the cup and_drink. " The ¢at | {jo palmar surface of their puws'on the | a half, und thus veach owr destination | 30" aver 1o rd of ot & The Rey, Ida C. Bulton opencd the Towa O L et on eadi fosa. | S0 palman Eur{ace of sheiv paws onithe | d thus reach our destinalion | thut if ever lost on the ice alwiys tobe | senate at es' Moines with ‘prager, which is paw, ice, lifting und drogging the body for- | soonorys Woll, [ must confoss I Coubled | on tho move [ bogan to roum about in | bolioved to bo tho first instancoin tho bis Y PR R e T 5 }-I sin w succession of short jumps. | the safety of suc h aplun, wnd was for | wild dismay, ay_every step my frozen of the world of such oftice being perfor In@row; one is but a barre n this way th manage to move so | taking the round about route, but on [ yypments causing one to feel the most | bY & woman. uving stripped it of its | fu8t that o man s all hecan doto | my shipmate taunting me by saying | geute suffering rkness set in,which Mrs A. Kingsbury supplicd the pulpit ri The other three are gnarled : keep up with them, k with a lnugh that I “hadn’t the gump- | ude matters worse and had it not been | of the Unitarian chur«l at Los Angeles, C twisted. Recently just at dusk some negr One great peculiarity 18 in connec- | tion ot a mule said vell,go ahead | g, 1y good luck I stumbled on a | Fecontly, inthe ubsence of the regular saw these trees otlined agzainst the ey tion with the arm and’ forearm bones, | old boy and Il follow you. did oy | thik by good luoke & swamblady on 81 o g enite o and mud, she bad a e Ul throuens they looked like @ gigantio | which ure conceled in the general | notice the manmer in' which he pro- | would in all wrobability. have been | 'FEe 8h appreciative congregation, 185, They at once decided that thut meant | hody cavity. This is so different from | ceeded, but a few weeks after I learned | goqjeq Lo ¥y ABYG DeeD | Ty o American Sunday Schoo) union's that tho world was coming to an e (1;14““7- mostother animals. They have a regu- | that there was a knack in walking over | . T4 o N 7 s premium of 1,000 for the best manuscript and the rosult is that, & very powerful ve- | Jup"weason of migration, moving south | newly frozen water, yiz, *Keep in your o allay my severe thirst I killed a | for the purposes of the society upon *‘The R ROINE 01 60! ’ i in winter, north in summer, They are | breath and shufle along with your | baby seal which happened to have been 1 Obligations of and Capital, A reporter discovered in Findlay, O, a 't yeuglly harmless and inoffensive, | teet, never standing in one place for overlooked, and [ hope I am not too in- awarded to He Caduay, of ieer freak of nature in the personof 4 - | (1gugh heing polygumous the old males | minute.” I stalked along as if 1 had | delicato, when L say that [ drank g Frapeisce, Yiass blower. . The boy's eyes are as red as | Often fight desperately with each othe been walking on Farnam strect, when, [1ly of the blood that issued from its [ What makes the coming scasion of the B e e FabiL, onil he cannot see (o | their skins being frequently found cov- | to my dismay the ice gave way beneath | mouth. [ then lay down in tho midsy | Methodist Episcopul Chutch conforonce o distinguish an object ten feet from him in R ars. i it ot | me. and I was obly prevented: fram ens | of the skins and whatoscurred afterthas | [iercsing Is the fack tuat the elliullity of distingulsh_an object Lon oot e sun. goes | ten results in o case of the “survival of | tirely disappearing by stretehing my | I know not, till I awoke to conscious: | und the sdvisability of abolishing the renoe down and darkness comes on his eyesight 1s | the fittest,” They are fond of | arms straight out” at’ right to | ness and found m (o A Aloaning | AuaARRA ML Y A B R a SR better than most persons when the duy is | {heiv young and easily domesd- | my body. “Oh, I'm in, Tom,” cried I | berth on bourd & large Norwegian | puier pr RS : brightest. ' Ho is a lively, boalthy child, and . SWeE kot one Yo ‘board, | “Well jamp out and ewim over the ice,” | steumer, my hands and faot in . foarful | yo Weateatos e fe foumor of iuy n all other pespoots his facultles are normal o usod to amwse themeelves | shouted he e if nothing hud huppenod. | state from frosthite. All scemod like o | nowsboys' lodging house, Lafayette plase; gentleman_ in Atlanta_is peeuliarly af- | fagching it all orts of tricks. It ulti- | How I got out I ean't woll deseribe, but | drowm, an cind young Norseman | which became in 1552 the Mission of tho T fovied, "Ouoof hisoyes ia dark blue and the | toly hocame a splendid_scholar and | at all events I munnged it and instead | who had been placed fo ot as my nurso | maculute Virein, where the poor wero cured other is alight gray In the daytmefrom | oo obcaiont as to carry @ walking stick [ of pising on my feet T began literully to | would insiston my keaping quict, and [ for without regurd to religion o race sunrise to sunset7he cannot seo AN | when ordered to do so, or miso its lips | swim over the ice, my~ weight bei 1d on no aecount velate o mo the Joseph Cook crowds Tremout temple, Tos- and well with the gray one; and from sunset s a kiss when any one advanced with | thus equally distributed. But, alas, cnce of ey I [ had partaken | ton, week, and tho ‘Lraveller says his to sunrise he cannot see anything with the h o token of affection. By its strue- | it was hard, hard work, u tough !of somefood, Atlastl got round him popularity is owing to tuc fact that “he \ one, He can hear only on the blind | ture aud habits most people think such | fight for dear life, the ice beingas | and learned that early on the followi Apeake cuplatically, foarlossly, upea live thus he can hear with one ear dunng | un animal little fitted to bo a_compun- | smooth us glass. Quite fifty s | morning their men hid stumbled on mo | Juestions, and s sulcleut po o A e the daytime and with the other during the he e u el v 5 s i > me to the ship | he e known sentiments of many dead-in-earn: the daytme aud with the other dUring the | fon"of man, yet, perhaps, there is no | strotehed beforo ino, ind this 1 Kud to | and bortie wo to the ship like ey and women.'! Ight wild animal which® attaches itself so vel fn such o mwanner. I felt my ) I received every kindne RAR A MG 4 e e Cently Yendily 10 the person who takes care of | heart sink into my shoos, for 1 knew | while on bourd, und shall nover coase | Gl eventiy delivercd s scrmon o itoms Among the curiositics recently acquired by | ¢y d*feeds it In the zoological gar- | that without w vesi I could never ac- | to remembor it But what must huve | perance. Upon the edgo of the pulpit he aucisco museum are & numberof { g 0B Theson el naek London, these | complish it. In perilous positions there | been the unxicty und suspeuse on board | placed seven bottles containing samples of ound imbedded in a stratum of ud 5 s found Imbedded 10 o “Arisona | Animals can be scen in’ captivity, gam- | is often one redeeming voint, and in | my own ship. =They sl ugreed. | huuors fiow soven different ulpons The O from their position they must | boling and sporting in their tanks, and | my cuse such presented itself iy the jto a —man, that I ha w | preacher then proceeded to give his hearers | } bacorr 8 prey w th s p results of @ chemical analysis of the PART I Written. for Sunday Bee by A. G. Jamicson, M. A. First—The haired or earless seal,or in scientific language the Phocidse. merey and trics nd hap- L. Atkinson, of Maxeys, of the showed us on Saturday last the most extraor- | their sustenance entirely on living prey e have ever yet scen dis- | captured in the water, yet they fr - RELIGIOU seals take 1o the water at first rather ek or some of th | have died in terrible agony. One of the | when going through their various per- | shape of oue solitury | hick ne ra | @ A bodies is that of & woman, and ber ears are | formances one can arrive at an estima- | white ice ubout one and | of ¢ :x;:”“::“\\lzlll“l. e l".'.x::u:].};} .\“,’,:1‘:‘.(:.:}"‘ (: oruawented with tubes stuck through them. | tion of to what extent mun is square. There it luy some s | watery depths; but lo! the lost sheop | 1y ainister A 3 efloo ey are covered With 6 Goaro neting om | educating such - oreatures,. They. are | iu front of me with an inviting smile. | that had gone astray returned one day PECAEAT poscd of gruss and tho bark of trees, WHEY | 1y|] of curiosity, and it is a very old aud | Oh! if [ conld-only got to it, thought I to the fold and great wis the rejoicing William Merz, & San Francisco grocer; state .Allllcun, 800 years, and it s not known | apparently well attested observation that | [ might still have strength to reach the | not as the prodig b while laughing beartily fell from his chaig to what race they belon Fhe perfect | they are strongly attached. to music. | other side insafety. My hope had come out of the darkn 1 > | and broke two ribs, The broken ribs caused form of a rat appears, which shared their | This 1, on several oecasions, had prac- | me, and on I pushied, and you can imag- | shiviug light. = Sowme of these tough old | such injury to internal organs that the oes burial place, tical proof of, Owpe night when out ine what Ieeliugs of " thaukiulucss - ws actuiily weph with joy and uo cue | bas siuce died,

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