Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 16, 1893, Page 16

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& | H 1 16 \ "AQ NR ERNITY | doeree of clairvoyant power, and m.,.] N l“\s 01‘ )\ \ i secretly investigate the occait. The Se y »f Psychical Research, composed of many of | s our most brilliant men and thinkers, has proven beyond a doubt that, despite the Ella Wheeler Wilcox's Keen Analysis of | fraud existing in these matters, well authen " " ticated ouses of spiritual manifestation exist Woman's Alleged Sinfulness, I'have many dear friends, of noble life and spotless worth, who tell me they have seen TR the faces of those who have passed into STERN TRUTHS THAT MUST BE FACED | spiritlife o wuch Bt or RAFROW 48 to declare my friend ars or the vic of A delusion. When I hear a chord of music it Wrenching the Germ of an Tmmortal Life | aply & sound, stirving and beautis | from Ita Setting Private In | ful: but I have friends w harmonies | view with a Beautiful, But ind chords within chords, which T knoy nothing about, in that same sound Unhappy, Girl, In this stme wnner 1 beljeve Marryat may ha uand spoken ¢hild fnvisible to others: and what a tre [Copyriyhted, 1893.) mendously moral in cosach o universal all our church pews throu the RIRE Sould in v HUHE Y tod flized world there sitdevout professors AL AL AL o) Vallasine t religion whose save stained with crime T AT B ~women, whoso b « heads, bended knees N she tone and earnest responses through divine sers private deeds have shocked high n the “W of mate and broken one of God's | ind herself face to Should these women be t i hoer mur- gether, arrvai; d for their crimes, ¢ T t if there is a court of justice in th . 1% large enough to admit them. 1 refer , i i ever increasing number of won ) or ¢ various reasons, object to becoming mother | o t t and who, facing the probability of such a Ayt 1 i S event, take the matter of life and death into | oIt W48 only i sl their own hands | for a private I fow. Thad known | For many of these women my heart aches | a beautitul, ar ¥ i 8 BapbY with pity and sympathy. Itisecasy toun- | ted wife, \When 'y derstand their situation ana to cast the | d to me, between mantle of charity over their crimes. When lied, s you know: iny public disgrace stares a weak woman in_ the b ACHORL L MY face as the result of an indiscreet act, or | husband does not seem to care for me and when poverty and hunger and disease scem | complains of his wdded cxponse since his | the inevitable portion that life will bequeath | marria Now that Lam convinced a child | to an undesired child, the temptation must | is coming to us he is furious with rage and | be overwhelming to'n sorrowful and bur- | despair. He suys ho eaunot support a child, | dened womin to prevent the cat of | that it will dvag him down and hinder him birth from any hope of independence. 1 am so un- | Only those who have passed throngh the | happy, 1 have come Lo you to ask you how 1 | expericnce of motherhood ean understand | shall prevent this burden from falling what it means to contemplate even under | me. 1 would not wind it only for his s | its brightest and best auspices. Witlihealth, | but he says other women extricate them. | love, enough of tiis world's goods toavert | selves from such troubles, and that Iean.” | ancial worry, and with stong maternal de- | If you were burdencd by a helpless old | L yet it needs a bra rt, a stoady | father,” | re WLl you eona: o, Ma | ape, a spirit of self-sacrifice and infinite | and ask mne {ivon nurdering him? | nee to pass through the months of | This is just A Go and tell | ordeal which it involves, What. then, m our hu | it mean to the unhappy wife, unloved and | © Gy | neglected, and atready so ourdened with un- | sought ¢ welcome children that she cannot free her- | ti \ | self from her gailing chains, or to one who | former sclf | is obliged to toil early and late to keep | She eseaped the ca starvation from the door, or to one who feels | ine a child into thi | nerself the victim of u hopeless ma | cape meeting that which a helpless ¢ will inherit, and yet [ wher the woman who prevents the 1ife of that | Aslk vourself th I germ from maturing birth commits the | tortured woman, who cof ; erime of murder today ) I believe the false idea of many so-called Christian women in_re wwd to this matter is | due largely to their liscral transtation of o IORLDI ST N OLES: of the many figurative scriptural phrases S sy 2 It scems to be the impression of such | According to the closest possible esti s, 15000 men are b work in Jackson women that a child has no life until it has | drawn breath, The science of modern times, however, proves such an idea ridizulous, A | devoted churchwoman of my acq k, an inercase of more than 1,100 over the st force that has been inside the 8 since dedication made an unfortunate marringe. She was | The last of the Columbian half dollars has | obliged to return to_ her parents before six 1 coined at the it Sales at $1 each months had elapsed dangerous illuess | have been rather slow, but it is probable | which followed her return was not wholly | that during the exhibition all can be dis- vosed of to people who want somc of the great fair. The Johns Hopkins university will make n | ‘ fine exhibit at th World's fair. The col lection of scientific maps and instruments | and geological specimens was exhibited to the students in Levering hall last week and is now on the way to Ch President | Gilman is very proud of the showing that in scientific h relic due to mental agitation from maternity accidental She had purchased surgical skill to aid her unt ing nature’s laws and t vom the responsibility of a fathes 1t was not difficult to undevstand her temptation, but with he religious views it | was difficult for me to see how she had daved commit the “Oh, but a child has no real being until it has breathed,” she said. “It would haye been the loss of a soul had the breath of life | entered the child; as it is, why, it is merely a misfortune, resulting in' pain aud miser was her escape will be made by the university results, s queen is the finest col e world. She of me, that is 1 to the far for in Als f 1 The collection came o a creed that can be content with such an ar- Kaiser Wilhelm 11 from G t! moment a woman kno: re invoiced at queen’s laces have never 000 francs. The before been pe s that mother hood is a probable event for her, that mo- | mitted to leave the royal houschold. Sho ment she has the soul of her child in her | guards them with jealous care, and it w keeping. Nomatter how soon she escapes | only after repeated solicitations that she from this menacing maternity, nho matter | consented to send them to Chicago. The how immature the germ of 1ifé she prevents | s, protected by a strong guard, will be | from culminating, yet an immortal soul gocs into the spirit life which she must sometime meet. rom every pulpit in the land ought this truth to be thundered forth. It ought to form a part of the moral training in every young ladies seiminary. The sinful, poor. burdencd or diseased fvomen who commit this crime are few in numbers compared with the vast army of d in cases in the women's b ennsylvania university u place at it is possible to mak resentuacive of the sti ty, but in some particular y a little unsatisfactory. Of the | twelve departments of the university nearly all will be represented in the exhibit, About one-thivd of the space assigned will be de- ilding. exhibit at It ha an_ex- sth of 1t is been tound t hibit fairly selfish, fashionable wives who do not want | One-thivd of the ; to be troubled with children, This army is | 1pec to the coll e of : } the university, of which the Babylonian and growing rapidly, us medical assistance be- | Y10 WHVCESILY, of wiich the Babylopian and comes more plentiful and skillful in this | fuasFE0 RS Sae oSt important. Fihe col- especial line Of course, it is not the business of any reformer to criticise the woman who chooses to remain childless, so long as no cf committed. All clear secing minds r 1 in 188 pedition to Babyle in this country. ‘The great organ for Festival hull at the World's fair, which is almost completed, will 4 will be unique wind pr sureas the pipes will permit.”’ In the matter of room the builder: been stinted, which was the ¢ constructed the Auditorium s will have access to g that there are too many babies in the world, | be 8 wonderful picce of workmauship. I will | itisa misfortune to the public that more | have 4,014 pies and sixty-three speaking women do not remain childles: wzood s, NOL SO many as the in the organ mother rare. ‘The breeding of the | Auditorium, but in resy | species is not the on spectable voeation | World's fair organ will be su- for woman. There in the vegotable | , being *voiced and put ou s high a | gdom. many useful and beautiful plants and trees which bear no fruit. There are many women who remain childless from choice, who ave an_ornament and benefit to hiave not when they orgau.. Sizht 1l parts of the the world. Unwelcome children are almost ] 0 i always o misfortune to the world and to | Uval hall instrument. The echo organ will | themselves. The desired child. generated in | be placed at the extreme end of the hall and love, is really the only legitimate child, and | Will be operated by 3 feet of electric cable the ‘only one that should be born. Bup | Marvelous effects will be possible between the main and the Among the mo cho organs. than 100 diffc when, in order to prevent birth, the germ of an immortal life must be wrenched from its 1t con- | W, 75 dastinet styl stores 1 th »ontrol them nnd ghow, t I other fold he el n the celebr *Mon- ve, eich one which Prices rango f.om $ only asoline is guaranteed, sto; Oak Rocker $2.25 Worth $4.50. Write for Biby Carriage Catalogue. EVENINGS; enty differ. u fact, 00c Worth $2 00, 13815-1317 - Farnam Street. Wil LOW CHAIRS. . \ ) Ireezers INC RAIN CARPE BRUSSELS CARPETS, SV MOQUETTE CARPETS, WILTON CARPETS. BABY CARRIAGES. Reed enringes, raftan wres, bas rringes, onk ¢ MATTINGS. foront stylesof the very best mukes, o remember, we control the celeb nted ( it stylegy besid LINOLEUMS. “Foatherstone” carvinges. Wo o o ' Largost stoc below all othe more folding beds car sk to sco in the city at priccs far sell Heywood’s our leuds BRASS BEDGTEAD IRON- BEDSTEAS. y many styles of Adams & celebrated brass bedstends; == < NOXZTHERN RAFRIGERATOR 4 The Best Refrigerator Made Hanging Lamp CHIIS DS We diap! Westlake Walking Chairs, n ved at our usual uniform low PRIC 32 15 : Warri Al than any other res o ; ~ 3 rigerator muc hard_wood.” Dry, cold P Price $296. L g . worth $14.5 PRICE 1 Write for Illustrated 128-page Catalogue, mailed free. Mammoth Installmen Cheapest Furniture, Carpet and Stove House in America. - N Wrought Steel Ranges, Price $23.50 Worth $40,00. Portieres PRICE $o.31 Worth $7.50. WARRANTLED. VASE, LAMP Price 90c Worth §3.50, Price $2.75 $6.50 Worth §1 Write for Refrigerator Catalogue. setting by human force, I then the | eresses to be held during the World's fair, 2 vrlmnbn{ mu h-:\- {I s been committed and | the x‘mspi\ es of the \\'nl'l«l.\l'unm'hk\} 2 " must be answered for at the bar of eternal | @ y, the one that stands out unique oS &5 £ H Justice, both by mother and physician, For | and alone, having no precedent in the his- | [ b SR Special lndncemen!s to Young Folks Starting "ohsekemflng- b those who do mot bel in a future life, | tory of such gatherings, will be the World's s there are certain physicul results of this | Youth's congress, which will conveno on = = — = = = - — — = S e | e gt ST M s St any - sesslons [ CRANDEUR OF DESOLATION | choride extond aver a vast arca of land. | we were miles from any human habita | eloud of sand, and ooeasionally as :\5 Death valley and Daggott, on the Mos § known womentwhol committed this |girls findiare: deawn from the grammas and | WIVANLY LOUL: \ From a spring in Furnace ercek wash, | tion and it would have been impossible | stronger puff of wind came, gravel and | jave desort, we exporicnced a cloud- 3 erime over and over again; and 1 ne yet | High school grades of the pnblie schools in the entrance to this arid country, the | to have secuved other animals or repair | even small rocks were hurled i our | burst which nearl) nend to thed ok such o otia who ‘was ot hardonod tn | ovory county ln the Unitod Statos, _ though | —_ Pacific Coast Borax_company cultivates | a break. . We ed our heads with | whole trip ere that after ieart and fu 'here is something about it | confined to ages between 13 and 21 years. i about thirty acres of land in alfalfa, the “On the fifth day out we r unkets, and the mules instinctively | the water ined away we e, REL ek 8 itia mornl fiter 66 the nlug, f In Olieakos tho ot wie thken v ssvith | Receut r‘"!”‘“"}‘ on “‘; Mojave Desert and | on1y evidence of eivilization in the entire | margosa, the abadoned bor turned e tatly to the wind. With all | could notice many alterations in th SIS oD CossLnot ibelieys thor | /KEG pfnithe sohodls undor.tho Death Va distviet. Were it not for this ranch it | the Pacific Coast Borax eompany, and [ these precautions we did not ¢ », for | topography of tho country, We were & embryo child possessed a soul | recommendation ol the Board of Education | 2 ! ¢ ) i i (3! h B R LB i N Eo tmat wuiTod | Ananens e anURRE A E RN SR e et would be well-nigh impossible to make | here rested for a few days. [t issixty- | my guide’s face and my own bocame | on the cdge of the cloud and sheltered, = the begiuning of my practice I used to help | Rate enrolled, Most of these delegates are | the trip across the vallc by no other | two miles from this place to Doath | badly bruised and lacerated. In our ex- | and thus e 1 the full force of the women who came to me for such purposes; 1 | chosen by an W contest in the several | A REGION WHERE DEATH STALKS ABROAD | means could feed for the horses be ob- | valley id we had to carry wa for | posed position experienced all the | downpour, nevertheless [ lost a used to think t wn unhappy wife or a very | schools, 1it was hoped by the committec tained. this entire distanc We ocenpied two | fury of this desert simoon, As the | great many plates and other articles.” BRI ML bk hettar (R faud 1ot sh/ [ having thia cony harge that the acl o The nearest accessible point to Death | days in this last streteh and we traveled | winds traveled across this i sand =l world better off by avoiding maternity i es everywhere could be chosen in this | yumeless Graves and f hed Bones of | valley is Da t, & small station on the | the entire route over a bed of roc nd | they increased in heat to such antextent A Chinaman's Fortune. this way if sne could not in any other; but | Wiy, but it is now so important that the 3 g | o TR ey ¢ £ dift - my expe roved to me that I was com- | names of these representatives of their Man and Beast Mark the Path of Atlantic and Pacific railway. It is 105 | gravel, accumulated by the action of reathing became a matter of difh The will of the Chineso physician, = mitting a double sin; I not only destroyed a | ral schools should be in the hands of Vietims { to Destructio; miles distant from this point to the val- | cloudbursts. 4 ; - I.i o Tai, h nfiled in San Pean- ? b e e e nttse. CElthe ommittee ag the earliest possible time SR o S L o ley, and requires a journey of seven d “Theentrance to the valley isthrough iis storm lasted two day idh | ka0 Foiwas il yearelolds SiANUa ¢ mother. [ huve ocen sh on this committec urges teachers every 4 to cover the ground. On the road th a canon called Farnace ereck wash, We | all this time it was impossible to move | ofthe estate is ostimated at about $50,- » exation of good wouen aring | it once appolnt iu thelr schools o are but three springs, two of which are vived here just before dusk and at an 1 position, We had to b | 000, and consists of real estate, the store offspring in this mauner » the teand an alternate and forward their sixty mi re, the elevation of 5,000 feet we obtained the ) that peri being unable o | ynd stock of medicines kept by the doe- « repetition of the act seve 1es slays the age, coun me of schaol Ane Prederick T. Monsen, a popular loc 8l s : i ) > I . I dici pt by e an for almost any de- | B0 o Frodorio Wity of the | artist and well known bohemian, re- | selyes and beasts, and when it is added | toward the west the Paniment moun- | of this “time wo o covered with | peoperty, ineluding 810,000 in cash. To T Is n pity we have not more physiclans of | Tnsurance buiiding, Chicago, Y& | cently returned from a journey through | t one has an inordinate thirst on th> | tains stood, formin, the wall of | kets and literally starved. I never | Lissons Id Cue and Li Tai Cune is be ths kind. “They would be of vast aid to 5 - the Mojave de t and Death valley and | desert the burden ean be considered no | that side of the valley. ust | want to undergo that 'zphwl]_‘v win queathed $30 each, and tohis widow, Lee ¢ huupminl\ in its growth toward a hi Mud VMiners. in an interview in the San Francisco | light one. behind th western ridges was [ This was in the fa Lo lwl |v’4'1‘- See, and his son, Li Tai Wing, all the ¢ spiritual plane R ; + “A man will drink three gallons of | sinking the ruddy sun, bathing this | wind were so inten ot and suffocat- | pomginder of his property, both real and 1 A ar ud miners” is a te e c- | Chronicle gives a eresting aceon ge £ y MR f Y proj . 1 have personally observed many women | NG M Pbporm used to de- | Chronicle gives an interestiug account | oy Gay and rthe animals' twice as | desolato production of God's hand ina | wt they can ba likened to blasts | personal, share and shive alike. His § whom I knew 10 bave parnotrated this | Sl el l:nw;-‘\.»‘.: to | of his trip. much as customary. But little good | purple-tinted light. Moment by moment furnace, and scemed to draw the 4 widow and the lust-named son are ap- ) erime, and I have remarked that the one of | lubor in a tunnel which is being built as ith ention of publishing a1 ater re; ‘e rom our bodies. The storn axeC 8 - fine lustincts and sensitivo feclings is madea | & conduit for gas under the East viver | \vith the intention of publishing a is found, as most of the water | the shadows crept over this sceno of d fzomeuubodies, $hoa0 1 | pointed executrix and oxcontar e physical wreck for years by one cxperien from New York to Brooklyn, The | Small volume, profuse with illustrations, or springs wre charged with alum, | desolation. No sound from the twitter- ul wround owr wagon and | tively, He also adds that he desives his oven though she iy believe herself just | pressure of condensed air is 80 great in | Mr. Monsen determined to make this nic or borax. tering lark or the wild canary fore ything., ; . and Leoug Lee, and his | n what she out there is an instinctive | fy ciale g (g2 n the following day after m warned us of the approaching” night. | ly, looking down into th nd Li Cie maintained » | the tunnel that even strong men labor | trip and started for this barren spot g duy alt y arnec AP g nlg shock fo hor bigher self which uot int only two hours and are then taken 10 | aloue. He spent mearly thrée months | V8L 8t Daggott,” sid Mr. Monsen, All was as stiil s the midnight hour | B largo sund Wit | and cared f | he fumily 2 o Of oran L in i 0 CJOWEL | the' surface 10 rotuy Recently | B e left, equipped with an outfit consisting [~ **We prepared our cump, exchanging vither and thither | qyping their natural | . order of won dulled moral percep urface to recupe ently | o the Mojave desert and took over ! of buckbourds, s and a guide, i rdly & word and glad for the moment | sountry, carvying the sanc tlons and course-tibered-foctiugs, way pass | there have been several deaths in tho | O j | b ands iy of buckboards, ”l:“l. d a guide. W | hardly a word and glad for the moment | inley; SATLYING She sa: - h through it agaiu and again without serious | tunnel. So frequently have the ambu- | =00 Photographs, besides innumerab crossed what is kmowr the link of the | when we would become oblivious to these | g L A New York genius hus in o i al rosulis. Only the exprossion o | sbeen summoned to the entrance | skotches. He opened his story by giv- | Mojave river and journeyed for five days | ghostly surcoundings. By xaaedingly " o Denino for the self-propulsion of ships, 1t 3 grows harder and ner whole ap- | the police authorities are making the following deseriptive account of | OVl & region destitute of vegetation or “The next morning we arrived at the © 14 snppamparadle ko = ao 8 of loug stron platforms, riggod out o * is brotalized ! investics F P TP e { unimal life, with the exception of a | entrance or level of Death valley and cep over this country in - on either side of & vessel, that rise and fal long belioved that the souls of these | B iuvestigation, with a view to lessen- | the country growth here and there of dwarfed cacti. | from this point saw for the first time a Y In July or August, with the roll of the wayes and operate a pro- 8 which were not allowed o come | :::’,“”I““' RoRer jo.5he. “T’,'“""“'.““f'""" | “Death valley is known as the region | ® ““Phe oppressivencss of this desolation | sand storm. Incidentaliy I may remark | with the thermometer re ing from .. peiler. " Aho mation ot khosy 1Al aFIs Ay oo e rolllysy ure to be examined by a physician | 2 ¢ ) J 0 AR el 1 strong sea he simili AU of the ”"”.‘m m-I ”‘:‘l ,'f‘u-‘\h caplel | 38 pNES “.n..--in.v:nm hl}_ 1ysigien { of lowest depression in the world, be- | and extreme solitude must be experi- [ that these storms during ihe n [:n to 137 de in ”[ wade, i wl' pump nandles of the ol ned fire en- § eI PR et e | dieie . d Ll »s claiming the flattering JAlation | enced to be erstood, Namele sr months arve very frequent. When = be impossible any living creature to s when the *bo ve “shaking her - remarkeable book b, lor- | | sides claiming the flattering appellation | enced to b understood, Nam s | mer months a ) | gines when reyat, the well known ,u\m..‘,! Sl i 3 | of being the hottest place on earth, It | graves of poor unfortunates who at- | we saw it the northern pi of exist in it eve Y 47 ) live Phoe inventor thinks that the y of an author, which confirmed this | Sarpri t AR 48N Hent bl ow thn i inval ot iha e | tempted to cross the desert during its | valle, was obscured in a brow \fter havir ) .|,wwl, h of these outriggers nid ’1,4-’ to This lady inhewited from her father | Jumes Payn, the Engl el apgho ) i 8 | heated term are the only break in this | colc sloud, which gradually thinned this sana storm we continued our journey vessel us well as to forco iy | a clairvoyant or'a mediumstic gift, which | gives an odd instance of mi I'he vi is seve five miles longand | gpeary monotony, and eve year new | out until it ecrossc the entive val- and [ made a thorou f the y wouldoparaio th » Maad i el gnables her ab times to see and spedk with | tion. During an from eight to fifteen miles wide. On | mounds of earth, marked only with @ | ley. Never at any moment. did it en~ valley o fa il o 4t 10 b R APt orms invisi o ull eyes, but whic nany | trospass broug W one 2 o ey a wvalley 13 bounded'b > | stick or stone, show © Spo ere | entirely obscure the s hich looked told, but owing to the absence of muel d B the moat (ntelligent winds. of this bgo bo rospa brought 1 n n ‘!; east the valley is bounded by the tick or t 3\ h-\ (h» | ot wher entirely )seu th an, which ) : S e e sla hot | - 1 lieve exist in space, ust another a witness was put into | Suncral mountains, which attain an ele- | some adventurous prospector perished ! like a mere ghost of itself claud ol my date and sta [ A who spend ! During one of these times this lady states | box u\_\u made a great sensation. } vation of from 6,000 8,000 feet, and on | from thirst and the excessive heat and [ moved with great velocity in our di venture ive you .m{ —.‘nun m "v}‘ o can islands ¢ that she beheld and conversed with a child | liss llhw " he said, “'was thrown over | the west it is inclosed by the Panamint | was butied by ‘“'lu.lulzxu\ : ,..‘-“.,.,’,.,M “.‘.,,...1\).“.‘-.',-»”.,,m-- or hot obacrvations, us fmuny o “""j‘,““ ARG g 45eP TANIOUA. VOIMSIENL JAGTeN wio praclaimed herself to be premature | the wall not on but half a dozen | range, which reaches a height of from “Desert travel during the summer | puffs of wind reached us. Onarrviving on scientific examinatio 1l tests carn very large salavies o oW soue | infant (lost through an accident) and of | times S 000 to 10,000 feet, | months is attended with cxtremo dan- | at the end of Furnuce crcek wash, we | ““At one point, however, [ may remark | folie mighteall doublo lives, Thoy ave abledure? whom the mother had never thoughtas | “'Stop the judg ‘why. “Phe valley is un independent drain- | ger, and can only be mplished b i saw the sand storm in the northern part that my guide pointed out to me seven | A\w‘iyl 10 win |‘I“\' 0 ln Bun Fruws | a0 NOwi/ maturing in spivit life | we know iing of this. Who was asin, and the eastorn part is filleq | traveling at night and camping during | of the valley. This was shortly after = nameless graves on the trail, which 1 enjoy all the pr N4 and the 0| While 1 am aware that many phases of 80- | Aisi [los, und why did they throw he /ith & wash of rock and gravel, the re- | the heat of the day at some water hole | sunrise. The ent horizon and sky | could be seen from ¢ we were stand- | gi0 SR P thle \ the I8 called spiritualisin are believed in and | h . 1oy throw her | witha wash of rock and gravel, the re- | the hea g L hole | sunrise I tiro 1 y s 29 SPeR 0w 040 MRro Ay | ¢ at thero is little i sought after by wortnless aud immoral | OVOr the wall s0 repeatedly sult of cloudbursts, Immense ficlds of | or small oasis, was obscured the sand and gravel, ' it ow the poor unfortung Pt | lands but attend strl navles L.mh- and are productive of much evil, | And after all, it was only the witness' | borax and soda cover a large section of “If an accident had occurred to our | which were bucyed by an atmosphere | wandered away from l'wl;-«m\ and 108t | 4 man to recuperate b eyl ;‘A am also aware that our churches | peculiar method of pronoy g ‘‘mis- | country in the eastern part of the valley, | wagon or mules on the desert it would | oppressively hot and stiflin, | \ln‘ v lives no one can ever tel civilization, and thusto prolong their dualy teem with individuals who possess somo lulu:." la.m salt warshes of the almost pure | have been a very serious proposition uul “Soon we were enveloped by @ dense | 'On our return journey between | existonce.

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