Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 26 Oct 1882, p. 1

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«"Iguwa ’z‘; push a‘long,’~"is what the man wiflx £1;u}fhe§giinorrr)nv mid. “The {1132 r mini dame prigzipaitqu with Adam wh; n he 83.1401} the hornet. ’ ’ mh mx-My. blond and fbeauty tell. al- though mm are only ‘rkm deep. _ ' «Human {our aighkis not. dependent on tha p-mreasioufif tympmiyg‘oj‘n; . _ , Grille-d mm (m c'nuich 'gtefi'plea\,rséme high. bun (he; nungr. 149$:er W1“ have them. â€"-“ leeaca is gnldrn,” but we l'oquucioun barber actnx an if mlvar we“. good enough for And now in bemny she fl 1‘, my dwalliugâ€". W'iLh love a acuihug :Lml 'mdv’filod; And luvs d Lh guard hm. both furl undzflsrvenbâ€" No more a servant, nor yut u chili ~Questinu answered: Inquirer. What is the vxwema pvuahy {or bxgumy! Two moxhen-iu-hw. M {Sc airn‘ye good 30 ~Hmszn W110 are kindly oblivu ua of your advuraiay. ‘ --~ Emily Faithful ,haslnrgvur'married. Her motto WM " Smnper Fidelia.” . «"1 gum-Ha l’i; push along,“ 'is what the -- “ Slle barber actw him. â€"Wb:ru 3 {mm on ym, bu manafo friend. -Funuy (m! hm“) lows ms gvip on the stouxly m a iia. â€"-A cmnpusinvr on “19 Kinpétén Whig mad-.2 that, wpw pay a hmdsumn 0 )mplimem to No mru'n, ‘ a? mi of ecnbes. lanterm. funn- g rhs. um! light whit)! We“ if it Enku n1 0 1‘er Ymh Has? A: mm“ ’A '1" I! deem ut‘ « 1 mt“; girl nu m ~â€" L moon} amiamr So we twin hearted, from (111 film vaJley Did chase and rally tho ‘ iubliug ewes, And bomqwnrj dm u tlmn, w - together, Thro' blooming henher, “ml 319 .mmg dewg‘ â€"â€"T!m 1‘er Ymh “(mid may: “ Dues moon“ in row. '1 " IL dos». wi'h ma traflulg dabiammtv 0f «1mm ri an e 2‘. rust-10 btnch ~~ The » strcm 2 of fun (:0 -»â€" Waking whiie a Hutu-1mg mzm gust ough my woxd p p- pthe‘e-lby pg) 9' :, . nâ€"ai-irlâ€"VE‘kt tab 0118 v ' ' xivar-s :he “an: imch min giug’whbu he minus of we sat fi:i.1i l ~111212mr ? Why, of Gummy, he x v t : " 2mm 34an Ie-member m In Damn-ii. an 33 Manâ€"hearted )nunu man gave up we pr mm: of majxcine “Hm than 3mm um Mu eurrwuudud by um hum-Ii:qu of mankind. $0011] , :x E: ti 'i ‘19 a 'B have we" in ywrsu I ;y awed, mztuml um. bitinzm Lu” 31 moat 12‘ finiaw {h}- R 1'? 2m?- wfiv mm“ L y in its IL, ,bn‘; 651mm : I 5% witu D0' in. flu shepherd maiden ‘ Her crook \vufi lu 011 with wmmheu flowers, l 5m and wooed her through the sunlight wheeL in?” _ And shad ws Ste filing for hours tmd hour 2. ’I‘lmt simple u'luiy £50m grace did lend hesâ€"â€" My l)«7|'i3t011d81‘_111y Doris mime: That 1 her \vgaalen‘,di:LitilmL}s bless her; ‘ Am omen 1)}:35'5 her to take her duu. dice fiir 6 mm d: H1 :3 lowin, '. Pei-+3: I 1 ~»“ \I W. :rcfern (1," my husband muttt‘rs in ],i« mas-p, 5 mi 1 know as we]! as I want to that he m: .m Hui; mum; whinkey. I can tell it: by :m-hzemh ', She b‘ushnel and stun->1} and 5mm] awaiting Asit‘d:xbut111g in dr um «livmo»; Bun 1 ml 11mm 11mm ~I t 11d her p] @111)“ She duu fled vuiuly; she musL be mine. temp: (mun; knuw She touched m" 51110111 lor wit“. fr’sn'ful finger Hhe snhl : “ We 1 Iago ; we must nut stuy ' Mv flovh’s in danger my sheep will wunde Behold them yu11114-n'â€"hmv131%th stray “ T'my might rmnbmbu‘, “ That 1:). Lbs urn \u [qlV But If 111w (we me, is. a 1n I am at sm‘vunb, not a CM Then each hot ember glrm‘ml quick Within‘me, And lo e’dill w:u me to swnn 'oply; “ Ah! (1 I but. prove m», and norm shall bin ‘1 you, Nor Iray, llu)‘ Lind you, until I aw." ~ Bumdi manage a in MN Uku u Lint nhprmrietmy said ” Tintm is mummy; new bun \kat has once bun 0H." (Sm-Mar nudmly know hash when he MW in. And 31191117; Doris, whom, 141) incloses \Vild Summer roses: of rch p0 fume. Tha While I sued her, 1mm hushed and hnm'ken’d The shades had durkux‘d 1mm gloss to gloom I answergd 1)01:19r,"N2Ly,1¢t melwm‘ you, And will be near you. and still udoro ', No wrnlf n r stranger will touch one year ing Ah! atuy my darling, one moment mu :5." She Whispered, aighing, Bowrml to marrow, 1! MV fold un mu‘ and, my 151nm 1.0 smMod ‘ w Said I, replvw‘h’y“ If They» uth tn kiwd And well rewurflzed 1 Should be the luhu ~91: ,‘IC sazc s-ix dim-rem types of the Gnd~ {germ nil nah all m.) in Marina-9,, and n“- gf ’vm 3.x: mm”: in a way ym would I; see) your aim-r {uh-pt -~~ Wain Whinum «minim?! in one of his poems: H (five ma ahiztudv !" Very easily obtmnud, sir. Sun. 10th up a, subscription for the Wm-hiilglfln Monumenb. MA mmhrr who fondly put the query to her yump am. “ an wculd you 00 thh- out. a mathun Yam ‘2“ was dumfounded with the rrpéy : “ Do 38 I hkn, ma." {less u; that pf ’vm 3.» Au; see your sirb ia an lairmlwa w a v 0 do} iu mm; in gurqu, in no hair in, u} 11;.{12t st' )Oil do v {mum 1595' am»): a 1“. war. Wain a iinle pm have Rprnt -h~ sxl‘umur v. the um ‘smrr; 1: m .H. g: m i iemer gm deacon ‘f" Md a. B: Gav. “ N l: in: y, dun: 11m L us‘mut “ i' “Adi! ia an dancer: n; Gav. “ N ‘9 11m prus‘mut dance" “mam mi ‘ £th {Sun Gav. “ N ,iixlfnibii‘: I think," was 1130 prus‘mut up. i ‘* ihn Wind isn’t right." «4:;sz rd of nur axe!" ')g» s; are da'vo‘ing mmsidurub e <p1«caloilleimpoxtmmu()f“000k» mg mils." It‘s no ure, \Vr don'L want them ovum-d. Tue mw damsel in‘ goov} enougu for “5. -~Iv11870,"che wry w:~t year," English whenhgroux m1 whim: aoil. WM found :0 mel»; 17“? my tw.) pounds tr.» Iha bushel. my; {Urn-Ia whuut ueVrDSy pounds tr mi the | ushel Milan. (. an 9:» '1}; iv” a n“: \uwfi‘ry er'iitvr there 24:) 2m Mum lmt. lfkméwanr PiSL E24;â€" eru um bun €61) tho country (dnur, yr::\1:i:-‘ty<u ma hgm if he were noz by hi: t AV hm " ' ” I ~ A 'I a 1 it I, 3A]; BMW N v~ 1‘ I'nuzjx her am. (4 Clii‘l'l'r‘. 1m: -- The. Nv'w Yurk want» to know if xh Br «my. iimwr ~â€"“Z\" 1! V‘nry won: I'm jnaa ‘ f --"I’m \‘s sorry to hear n.’ flmwn wax.le ;; w mmdbimz handsome 10 know just «in» 1%“: Wu: may fay. --We notice that ix takes a- very rich man to appreciate the blessings of poverty. Soloâ€" ,( mm â€"» G0 in the Skylark for high fl :wn ideas. ~» One mim'g just is another un’e jaun a. ielluw â€"» l’uok The La We 5p mu}; swirl 1: m 3521M tmm. Had ’z i iemer may for min, tovdny d suici- Agnes Lu 1‘ c Irii ID BUDGET. now thd”: UV ;‘i{1’£y§0 \nri; 5m: gun 7’" A PAS‘ Mania 1am cr chro'ie‘lea the atâ€" ?n of 0':- Agnra Wuntifl. Of mu raceway, {wt Wands-rs, yuu schools nhauld 1m; be miss ‘x. E’umh \vlll pu‘u‘dah the in]: un WV Lela has gone to Au 5!“ h a 55 1' mm ears of sLym in (“Hunt/TB ix miniature v girls. are lush-mi to let llzeir if it, ‘Ln a nu war to do is 54.1110 {ha 'do mix you, you when ), nu got home y friend and neighbor r from whi ‘h yuu cmue," in or gunlun hoclc plays Ell“; nreiLb-sr la 8. [also Hy an) that 11 mm who he t111;h.aiways clings ,“ ’1‘ var: win he sorrow VI to e tu»duv; ‘ flock unfulded, I sent uwuy.“ TURAL im ix.~k‘s:':-. Gmmnbmiui Advertise} nush“n=fia x)“ "Ctre‘fit’b (a pthylile me. Why, [hm 81‘“ the} hm“ H. m n {cmpzirmim : rmyl nu nriuiua] u :1 Punch Lquor and 3m bays gave ha =2 nsfi‘erod {neekly Md .,hee;o are mid, no so fexx'ent; ,. I rating- â€"â€"Dundaa Baumr: A very iiiaordcrly gang of Hamiiton youths paraded King street Wesi on Sunday night, just before the 8 o’ciock train left. singing and shouting. People coming from church were much annoyed at their conduct. “When Eve brought woe to all mankind, uld Adam on led her woaiwn ; But when she wo mil with love 9‘) kind, He then pr mouucvd hrl‘ Wino-mun. But. now. \viLh folly un-l with prid. . Thmr h'islmnds’ pockets trimming, The w:imen are so £11 101' whimq, ‘ That men pronounce them wiiu min i â€"“ He did Bliifii!01!0r8}|)9[hing to ms, and 'Lhiit'a why I shot. him. " said Patterson. after {fling on Burke, in Indianapolis. Burke's diapleani' 5; not was to advise a greenhorn. whosu Panerson intsnded to rob, to leave moat of his money in u hotel safe baiora go- ing out :i a spreo. â€"â€"The following nmice was posted at a negro ball at Unrliala. Ky.: " No white Demons allmwd to dasficé. "' Martin Murphy dwfimifly walizmi wiah a black belle, and abut. Nick Hathaway, (1 floor manage-r, who inter- fared. Promiscuous firing ensued and {our mm were wounded. lem this country wants is reply posisl cards. and 1:) save trouble the reply might as wt” bn minted on than in udv-u-m by the Govemment The words, ‘~ Vlry son-y, Lu-z uan'l pay your bill this wenkpaome other week,” would about. hi: moat. cases.~Brad- ford‘Sunday News. -'â€"'In Boston landladiea do not advertise far-leanlem.” Thry simply anneunoe Lbl‘mlgli the culumna of an influeminlaud n priubla journal ihat it would nflord them amt pleasure to cater m lhu ldiuaynorasius .,-f u f-w “ remuneratlve guants.”â€"Nuw York (liuwmarcial Adwrtiser. â€"â€"-I\'. would seem as if the warlike nrdor mixing Egypt, whxch at present prevails in Land, had given} 3:01:13 of nhe Cockney ‘arlillmy on we bmixi.' A young man the utlmrdaynctually firedva cannon in one of :lm Lomlo‘n' sumts, and 'wounued ayouug W-.:m»m who was paasi ‘2, »-»"Am yqu the judge of ropm‘aates ?" Enid Mrs. Parmr gt rn, as she walked into big uflicml pmruca. =‘ I am a judge of prohne,” Wm; the rep‘y. “Wu”, that's it, I expect.” (110:1; ma um lady. " ynu see. my fashdr d1 (1 detestrd, and he lei; several lmle infidels, and I wan: to be their executioner." Cigar mrdcd-v twflighh bl'okgr- thb d sg:uuuod»â€"â€"L11us 1 spoke ' All LU yl’b’ juily, \vnsnlmn mlly, ' Melancholy, end-in smokga. â€"--A mac Vfi'yinrmd boy went into the country v’ flung. About. the that thing he gun was a; mwl of bread nnd'miik. He tamed it nudifimn heaimhcd a moment, when his 111mherg»k<:d if £22: didn't. like in. 10 when he [ep‘IUIL umuikmg his lips; “ Yvu' ma‘nm, 1 mm nuky.’ xwhlzxu that wu‘ milkmau in wwn vguuid kwp}; cow. - Lucinda, denrmt, meal): the hendivg tree, Samuel Lu K113 the strum“ that lave» us font, I’Jl nnuw the 1mm; : and think but of thee, Will lunchvou em Mark lmw the pin. dd titlu flaws sumo hly by, No 0 ywuder b mk 1141 .w mm gal-dun gorse: ’i'is Nutum Specie bzmk. What's in mm pie 'r‘ Ugul steak, or roux-so. Sip Hfo's sweet. cup of jay, love, in this spur: Fnrtneea no u b r-msm, 11') haw r (1r gs; ’Tis nectar. Huh! l’vc tmrl you I cuunnt Eat; hm‘drbuned . ggs. Tho dx‘awgvll d Shade 01' wiklww and of ash Sprawl ( o‘er mu walnut gmss tuxâ€"11,3 sweet And lovo w the snlufl (1 re}: A ‘ 7 And sonkuuflxa c kg. Whn‘i? Hang it ull! Each day I speak in vain Luanda, (hm i~: shunwt‘ul â€" mly look! No umnmnl (m 111w sandwich. H “gain: Dine urge Lhe couk MA fatxk'u‘ufid' how the Bnmklyn Eagle: “ And you love me, Jared ?" “ That’s about the size: of it, Mar) 7" “F‘htuua has not Smiled upon yuu â€"â€"you are poor." “ Rich in your lowâ€"pour only in purse." “Yet all hope is not lost. Father )5 presidem of a bank. He Will give you r. situation." “ Then I am yuurs eternally. We shall be married in “mm months. In six months the bank will be in the hands of a receiver. We shall we}: a home bcyzmd the 8!. Lawrence, where the mid man can live With us uudvr the name 31 31mm," “ Oh. Jared l” “ 021, Mary ! " mm was; worth about 375,000,000 when he ssii : “ A good name is to be chosen rather than arm: riches.”- ~ Norriamwn Herald. ~~ A woman lefc her baby carriage with the baby in it in (ram of Mamn’s has store on James street, Saturday afternoon. The carriage was run into the ditch, the baby tumbled out and the carriage fell on the baby. ~16 is said that Mark Twain in 61:0,oner bi‘red by thou: who think they must 2qu nothing but nonsem‘e in his presence. It would seem from this thus 1m author does not always enj )y quotations from his own works. â€"â€"Buston Transcript. 74 5 , UX‘ uh an 20°, below the mmpcmlum at much 1% (meme, and 10 3.1)}:law tint: «i he. WELLt 1‘ which was 'liL-mi to ($1101 in. Of comm mu :uwortmn 0i hvut by [the eVerroraLI()vi of n, pm’tml! of mm mm r ace-mum fur 1m reirigwa ting ‘ ii cs, but. me mm): mama‘n 11mm been 5013-1 . and immv‘wurqwlv alh. ed that. “1% «Xp rmem wnud in: \K. (:11 worm repea‘dug in tmr we v'i'be mflumnou lmtmwu a: dnudy and a. fat hogâ€"one is dreaaua to km a d she other is killed to dress. \Veuviug hazy memul shr ,uds; WA; ,chng 11 ling smoke up whirling, Sofa. ’curlingto tlge clouus, Minds u-m 1 Wed from mere mirth ; '1lele IL», 51162;) suth have more worth, Iqm L m iug us the shrmkmg S uscn, siuking, fires the 0mm. Thoughts that sages may have 119 d, 111* Luigi): pages g ave and glad Thom;th Lh.l~. nvrgthlllq, 111w smoke wreathing‘ S “mesa D $11.13;; muku me sad. When you’re “Lnry, night or day, Smoke a chem‘y yard ox clay. Wueu I’m smgkiugJ glins. joking, ’1“l_,1_eg‘e is uothg g half so gm. py ngluzy, far from 9r(_n\'ds,_ VOL . XXV. COOL COMPOSITORS‘ LUNCHEHN SMOKE my; gangs to smash -â€"A fall of snow occurred in Melbourne lately. Most of the inhabit-ants had never seen one. The temperature full to 39°, almosc, some aver quite, unprecedentedly low. n mu soot it; puweriul manure for garden, amps, mare especmlly onions. A good dress mg of the mil wnh soot; _bef0re the seed is sum; is mm to'maggo'té. It has been found that land (li‘essrd wiLh Boot yielded crops nearly equal to that heavily dressed with good stable manure. -The Gavernor Geiiéml of Kiefilately told a Jewmn deputation m Balm that many of them had been compelled to return from America, wbiie in Palestine they were starv- ing. If they only knew it, they were better OH in Russia than anywhere else. He accusad them of producing talkie evidence, and advised $11: in to give to their country a little of the love they lavished so inordinately on money. ~~Tea merchants of Kinto and Osaka have resolved to rebuild a mmpfe burned down at the format place Inst yvm‘. It was erected 700 years ago by Menu-,1; a priest, who inno- ducui the tea pmnt into Japan. â€"â€"-A writer in the London Garden mentions a fact of iutglest to l’ittaburg and Cincinnntl â€"--"I do," said 9. young man at a Colorado wedding when the minister asked if anybody knew any reason why the cougle should not be united. The objector explained (thht' the bride had premised to marry him; but that was not consudered a sufficient reason for stop ping the ceremony”, which was concluded amid the tinering of the assemblage. â€"A boy foiled two' burglars at John‘scon, R. I. They had stolen 81,500 in a box from a house, and were making 01! when Willie Page. aged 14 gave chase Thev separated and he overlook the one with the swag. Then he holaly aimed his umbrella, auu cried : -â€"Uuiro occupies em area of between three and i an Fquum miter), and contains at the present (13y not 195:! man “0,000 inhabi- L'ézutg. ~. The elmdol'aflgrds pleasant as we“ as histqrfic' m’xd dipamfi‘edgquauere 10 lbs victors of Tuiml-Krbir. Ewu 1n the hottest part of wevyxum‘ in is cool among the alubasbar 001 name and “pan the mube osmts and galleries of the Ms'hemet Ali Mosque which is the chapel of the fortress. â€"-»The Society of German Hairdressers in Paris have urgently dissuaded membas of their prolewion fwm coming to Paris until [he prevailing Demrchubetze, or German bunting, in that city has subslded. â€"â€"The Mushem mountains, county Uork, in Ireland. are now lixemlly swarming .wibh grams. khere bang nobody to shoot them. The landlords are too afraid of their tenants m go neur the place. and the latter have no guns. having bud to surrender them, under the Coerciun not. to the authoritivs. It was in mm neighborhood that the Informer Cunnell and more than bunny furmera’ sons were an rested as moonlightera. " Drop 1}. or I’ll abuoi. ’ It waé too dark to can an umbrella. from a gun. and {the com- mand was obeyed. â€"â€"Mr. Hammond, engineer and general manager of an impmmm Brazilian rnilrosd, heme slung testimony to the Value of coffee as u pnvennw against miax-mnlic invert; He imtancea Hm case (sf Father Vang-hm” “ho on a jnumey through 9 an ax unhealthy country how Panama to the River Plume. (:HLSHAUICII tin-Hm qud his hmllh to taking ME”), and men-inns that rinca/ the natives in pwlilem :limicxs iu Euuadur have taken to drinking it It, the death rate has fallen con sadera‘biy. â€"â€"Mis. Séaw, a San Francisco dress re formr r, ma informed the police that on Jan. 1 she will brgm to We-ar trousers in public. nmi slm demands protection in case arrest crowdfi insult her. But the chief of police; w zm Lu mink that it will ‘30 hiu duty to arr rwt llt'l‘,‘ an ill“ around that her conduct would be disorderly. As to :he form of the proposed garment. Mrs. Stow says: " My trousers are made with a plan! and descend just to me line of beauty in the calf of 1.116 Mg, just whrxw the dresses cf young girls come ; and it young girls wear their drrees there. Why should not old girls adopt lbe same fashion ?" She is advised by a lfiwyer that Galiloruia'has no. law under which she can be prevented from dressing in that (ash. ion. «Tim practicability of photographing land- scapes from the Window of a train running at a was of forty miles an hour has peen re» gently proved by Dr. Caudeze, who 'uaes wlmtho culls a gyrogmph for. she purpose. The apparatus comprises a copper tube simi- lar to that which carries the lenses in ordin- my camerambm the lenses are placed on Opposite sides parallel to the cook ; it pre- sents LWO quakanuular aperatuma, which. ac» cording to me position of the shutter. do or do not lehv wise the light Tays in making :5 quarter of a turn. This rot-awry muvvm'ent m ollmined by meama‘ of a‘ spring lihrrnted {rum a catch. "An exposure of only 1-100lh of a second may be had. Wlth a little pracv tme wendtrlully distinct views can be ob tained with the apparama, â€"Some philosopher explains Why talk is so poor and cheap. Ba pa) 3 that conversation is more than half the time a refuge from abought or a blmd to conceal it. â€"â€"â€"The Amman army is to have a. railroad brigade familiar with putting up and destroy- iug railroads. â€" Mirrors 45 by 52 feet and weighing from 1,200 m l 600 pounds have been lately placed in film Paris Opera house. ~Pauper lunacy is larger on the increase in, Londnn. T116 greater“ dxfiiculty is ex- penenced In finding accommodation. ~â€"There '15 still some wit left in Ireland, ihongh it has last much of the exquisite q-mlxty for whieh it was once calebrgted. more hat-1 been a good deal of fun in 31):: land 9 nuts. Becautly a suitor, being questioned as to tho qualzty of the manure used on his lands, gnaw-1 War he used bow solid and ar~ uficial, the former of which he‘preferred. and let he only employed 'che other when he be-' lieved the ground rrquired a stimulant. The nppminu counsel vigorously cross qneétidhéd‘ him as to the meanmg of the word stimulant. l‘he farmer replied : "It is just the same as if 3011 took a glass of brandy before gou came to court. to make ynu talk the more.” The court was canvulst‘d, the loquuciuua barrister Hat noun. and '11::- farmer retired. saying: “ W.d tell his Innan ihe divil a much that giutlvmlm made of me.” uâ€"The Russian composer P, Tchaikovsky had wriztm a new overiure. The Y‘ar 1812. which in said t_0 arurrprnssr allhia previous :m‘ks. h “(as in 1812 that the Bufliuns ml!“ (1 t0 thefduh-ncu at the r country against {\‘apoiwn and 'tixe Grand Army. In com. memormiunuf that wont the gmnd Cntbedml 0! Chris: Lhn Swiuur 'waa oncted in Moscow, wbiun took fifty years in building. Tchaik- ()vbky propmed his overture specialiy for the dthCUl‘aliOl’l hf the dathedml. Escunfly, at um Tsiogcnw IDdUEHiifl ExhihniJu, The Year 18?}. Wm: pej-rfon'ued for the first time, and Wm Mmeovitvs were Wild abnut is. The rune is cumpmed exclmiveiy 0f Busvian :1 an.qu mm. M bpgins mm a grand church Inmn‘ Lied, Saw Thy l’uople. and embraces a numbm‘ of anldierr Bough of 1812. Then mllows Tue Battle. wilh the ringing of bulls, the beating of drums, the shouting of the AROUND THE WORLD. RICHMOND HILL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26 1882 in which he avers the Holy Virgin appeared to him and described to him the exact spot where’ Carey was to be found. In the morning be related his dream to a number of his neighbors and told then; that he thought he knew of such is pluse as the one described in the dream about two miles north of Hart'sdwoll ing. They booted at the absurdity of the thing; Msgee was induced to forego his original in tention of seeking for the place, and joined in the search with the others. As night up preached, howeveri and no trace of Osrey had been found, his strange dream made such a deep impression upon his mind that he re solved to go in quest of 'a place resembling the one described to him. He found it with- out much difllculty- a large opening in the‘ earth between two hills some six or eight test in depth. apparently formed by some convul- sion of nature: The walls are noky and pre- cipitous. and there, at the bottom. strange to say, lay poor Carey, the object of all their search, buried in a deep sleep. Mr. Magoo lost no time in arousing the unconscious sleeper, who. through exposure and want; or: proper sustenance, was unabla 9-: stand upon' his lest; he could give no ‘Satlsisotorj' acoOunt of how he had go't’there, not how long he had remained in what would have 'sssuredly been his living tomb had it not boa-u for Magee’s discovu‘y. made under such remarkable cir- cumsisxlcgs. With considerable dimoulty Mr. Magoo got the old man out of the pit, and. being undblo to osrry him alone through the brus‘hwood. made him as comfortable as circumstances would permit and hastened to make his discovery known. as has already been described Remarkable Fulflllmentâ€" The Virgin Ap- pearsâ€"Lost and Found. From the Kingston News. During the latter part of last week an un- usual sensation was created in Lo‘borough concerning the disappearance of Mr. Lawrence Carey. who resides with Edward Hart, about four miles north of the village of Inverary, on the north shore of Loborough lake. It appears that on Thursday, the 5th inst., Mrs. Hart left her home for Kingston to meet her husband, who is working on the K. & P. B R leaving Mr. Garey engaged in some Work about the place. Before starting she euutioned Carey against going away from the house during her absence, as he appeared to he suflering of late from temporary fits of mentalaberratiun, and on several occasions wandered away from the dwelling and last himself in the surrounding hills and woods. Upon her return at a late hour in the evening, Mrs. Hart made inquiries concening Carey’s where- abouts lrom her lit 16 daughter, who informed her that on her return from school he (Carey) was not about the place, and she supposed that he had gone to some of the neighbors. Mrs. Hart suspecting that some- thing must be wrong, lost no time in giving the alarm. and a number of neighbors called together by her eflorts made as thorough a senrch in the immediate neighborhood as the gloom and darkness Would permit. The search was protracted late into the night. but without avnil and they retired to their several homes weary and footsore with their futile sfiorts to discover the missing man. Early the next morning the search was renewed and kept up without intermission during the two succeeding days. On Sunday the whole neighborhood for miles around appeared to be in a state of intense excitement. arQ‘i‘soor-es of men could be seen wending their way to the scene oi action, eager to join in the search. It is roughly estimated that at 10 o'clock a. m. on Sunday there were upwards of 100 men engaged in seeking for Carey. Preparations were now made to treks a more thorough and minute examsmtim or the adjacent'country than had been made before. The men formed up on th‘e‘rosd near the house at intervals of some ten paces, and moved forward in the direction that Mrp-‘Jarey was supposed to have taken. In this order they advanced some three or {our miles through swamps, woods and brushwood. and owr rocks and mountains, Where it who aln most impossible at times to find a foothold. and than, forming again to s. flank in the same order. retracing their steps. Ii. this manner the search was kept up during the day, and a vast extent of the country was explored ; but when the sun sank beneath the western horizon no trace or clue had yet been found of the missing man and those engaged in the search. thoroughly’tired out and disheartened with their Want of suc- cess. had assembled‘at the residence Mr. Hart. Their worst fears appeared ‘c‘v‘tve been verified, and few, if any, though't‘ a see; ing Carey in life again. A feeling of sadness pervaded the whole party.ior Carey’s honesty. unassuming manners, and good nature had endeared him to all who knew him. THE LOST RETURNSE An open prayer meeting was held and the Rev. B Young engaged in a prayer for the safe delivery of the lost one to his friends. While enumerating his many virtues as a friend and neighbor. there was source a dry eye in the whole assembly. Mrs. Hogan. a relation of Mr. Carey's overcome by her emo- tion, was carried oil the ground in a. fainting fit. Before the meeting had broken up, as it in answer to the Rev. Mr. Young’s shooting appeal. a joylul shout was heard and Mr. Magoo of Inverary crime up in hot haste with the glad tidings that the 10st was found. Mr. Magee, it appears, had been engaged in the search all day on Saturday. having always taken 8. very warm interest in Mr. Garey. On Saturday night he had flow he was Unroiled'and Crumbled into Dust {tom Which he Came. . I l " The Fnuenl Tent of an Egyptian Queen." It Was desirable in the interests of science to ascertain whether the mummy bearing the monogram of Thothmes III was really the remains of that monarch. It was. therefore. uni-olled. The inscriptions on the bandagas established beyondall doubt the fact that it was indeed that most distinguished oi-kiuge of the brilliant eighteenth dynasty. and once more. after an interval of thirty six centuries human eyes gazed on the features or the man who had conquered Syria and Cyprus and E~hiopis, and had raised Egypt to the highest pinnacle of her power, to that it was said that in his range she placed her pontiers where she pleased. The spectacle was of brief duration ; the remains proved to be in an fragile a state that there was only time to take ahasty photograph, and then the fee mres crumbled to pieces and vanished like an .apbaration.‘ land 80 passed away from human view forever. The director told me that he felt such remorse at the result that he n fused to allow the unrollieg of fiamasis the Great, for {ear oi a similar catastrophe. l Thothmes 111. was the men who overrun Paleetine with his armies 200 years before the l birth of Mosea, and has left us a diary of his adventures. for like Caesar he was author as well as soldier. It would seem strange - that though the body mouldexad to dust the oombatants. and the groans of the wounded and dying. after which the noise of batlle dies away. and the clergy lend the Russian people in a grand thanksgiving hymn. Several Russian and Slaw marches are also eflro- Lively rendered. The overture ends with the Russian national hymn, God Save the Czar. AN EGYPTIAN KING AN INSPIRED DREAM. A BTARTLING nynuxg. Miss Emily Faithful] will lecture in this country this fall and winter on Modem Exn ’Irgagance. ‘ Mr. ueoma Augustus Sula, himself a gen- uine Bohemian.gives the lollomng description at the order: "The hall mark of your true Liohemiau is that he declines to own himself a whim: of Mrs. Grundy. 99 has emanci- paml bxmself from oonventioualitias and shamannd dues his own work in his own way ‘Jl‘uieranoe and charity are among the leadmg characteristics 02 Bohemians of the genuine, not the sham country, be it under- stoodJ’ If this be true, who would not be a Bohemian ? The Botsohilds are virtual owners of ena- fiflh of the fertile land in the Delta 01 the Nile. Their share in Egyptian bonds is popr ularly estimated m 012,000,000. An envious anti-88mm) onlonlanes that the income of Baron Wilhelm lthsohxld is about £28 per hour, or 92 33 per minute. Lieutenantflolonel G. B. Wolseley, York and Lancaster regiment. a brother of Sir Gar net Wolseley, has received a five years' stafl appointment as assistant Adjutant general of a division of the Bangal army. Another brother, Brigade Surgeon Er Wolaeloy. M D , has bs‘en appointed secretary $L>Surgeon Gen eral Sir A, D Home. V‘" (3.. K. C. 13., princi- pal medigal owner in India. Sir Archibald Alison. who commanded the Highland brigade at Tel-e1 Kebir. is. eldest son of the laie Sir Archibald Alimn, Sheriff of Lanarkshire. and author of the history of Europe. He has been deputy Adjutant.- General in Ireland, 1874~77 ; Commandant of Sandburat Staff College,1877~78; and was assistant Quarmrmaater-General under air Garnet Wolseley when the war broke out. He served in the Crimea in the 72d High~ lenders; in India. as military secretary no herd Clyde during the camwign of 1857 58. and as Brigadier and seem; in command to Sir Garnet in slug; Ashantee war. He lost an arm at! the renef of Lucknow. He is a fine looking soldier. aged 5'1. Gen. Graham,‘who commands the Irish brigade and led the Royal 115.311 to the charge, is an engineer officer. and also a Sootcbman. Brantiord Courier : There was a. diversity of hats worn by the players, but withous doubt the arrangement mat adorned the ciaasichead of J. Heath capped the lot, it being one of the Lady Duflerin Guarda’ caps, which it. must be said fined him to perfection The memorial statute of Queen Victoria, for erection in the Town hall, Birmingham. England, by Mr. Thomas Woolner, R A., in uuw nearly finished. The figure which 18 abom six feet in height, is madg of the finest, whice atmuary marble. Batch Nordenaklod is getting ready for anmher Arabic vxpedition, which is so set out fmm Stockholm next summer under the patronage of Wilhelm Schonlench. a Benin mi-rchsnt. flowers with which it had been wreathed were so wonderfully preserved that even their color could be distinguished, and they looked as if only recently dried, yet a flower is the sery type of ephemeral beauty that passeth away. and is gone almost as soon as boan, A wasp, which had been attracted by the floral treasures, and had entered the coflin at the moment of closing, was found dried up, but still perfect, having lasted better than the King, whose emblems of sovereignty it had once been; new it was there to mock the embalmer’s skill, and to adp point to the sermon on the vanity of human pride and power, preached to us by the contents of that coffin. Inexorable is the decree, “ Uuto dust shalt t hou return.” Bonn ing in the same line of meditation, it is difficult to avoid a thought of the futility of human devices to achieve inimortallty. These Egyptian mon- archs, the vuiest types of earthly grandeur and pride, whose rule was almost limitless. whose magnificent tombs seemed built to outlast the hills. could find no better method of insuring that their names should be heid in remembrance than the embalmmen of their bodies. These remain, but in what a condition, and how degraded in the uses to which they are put l The spoil at an ignor- ant and thieving population, the pet curiosity of some wealthy Yankee. who buys a royal mummy as he would buy the Spinx, if it were movable ;“ to what base used art then come,” oh, body. so tenderly nurtured, so carefully preserved l ch far better to have mingled with friendly Mother Earth and served the nobler purpose of enriching other lives in Nature’s wondrous transmutations l Brick Pomeroy still insists that John Wilkes qulh isflive and ip gogd health. Mme. Dasobappel, !; Quebec woman. found a 520 gold piece in the first can of oysters she; purchased this year. Jo 000k sighs to be an editor and is skutryâ€" in'g around to g6! some one to start a religi- ous weekly for his benefit. Why doesn‘: he throw himself on tracts. Francis and George Darwin. the sons of the great nmurah‘st, are about to mama from the old Down house to \he viomiLy of Cam- bridge, where they will establish a large lac- wry for making philosphioal Insirnmenta. Capfi. Webb has entered on a tour dnya’ fiont‘in a tank of water in Horticultural hall an Buflton. He eat: from a. floating table and sleeps with his hands clasped. behind hlfi head, leaving the water for.“ a moment once each day. It has been a notion of physicians that thirty-six hours in water woula kill any man. The Bishop 0! Saskatchewan in i}: London. Out... on route to England, where he will be most of “19 Winter. The London correspondent of the Manches- ter Guardian says that Canon Liddon will probably be 'Dr. Pusey‘s biographer. “Dr. Liddon will, in undertaking the duty, be necessarily compelled to give up some of his Oxford work, in any rate for a time, and will probably reside in London while he is writing whm must in any ease be a book of firm im‘ portanoe. The irritation felt among Dr. Pusey‘a friends at the tone of the reminis- cence of his life published in the Times. which the Guardian, I 508, ascribes to Mr. mozley, make it a matter of supreme interest $0 them that the story of his career should be written by one who was intimately conversant with his inner lifeâ€"n condition amply smil- fied in the case L! Dr. Liddon." The fillowing curious observations of sound have been carefully verified by an extended series of experiments a The whistle of a 1000- motive is hesrd 3 300 yards ; the noise of a railroad train 2,800 ; the repprt of s musket and the bark of a dog 1,800 ; an orchestra or the roll of a drum 1,600 ; the human voice rrschee to a distance of 1.000 ; the crosking of frogs. 900; the chirping o! chickens. 800. Distinct speaking is heard in the sir lrom below up to a distance of 600 yards ; 1mm above it. is only understood to a range of 100 ysrds downward. It has been ascertained that an echo is well refl~oted fromthu eurlice of smooth water only when the voice comes from an elevation ' Othersimilsr phenomena connected with the Irsnsmission of sound have been observed. but the results disanree, either from inaccuracy in the observations or from the varyingnature of the circumstances affecting the numbers obtained. Such varia- tions occur to an extent of ten or twenty peg cent. and even more. The Weather being cold and dry or warm and wet are the chief influencing causes. In the first place the sound goes to s greater: and in the second; to n. lesser distance. v - -' OBSERVATIONS ON SOUN D, PERSONAL Feu- be it from my purpose to criticise that august body in any particular, and it is with some degree 01 hesnmiun that I new venture to suggest that a more proper regard should be paid to blood, lineage. descent and those qualities that go to enable and dignify our race. Q â€"--‘ Have the colored people generally secured a firmer grasp of the subject of anni- mry measures ‘1’" Aâ€"z “ They probably have. We know of a. dozen cases in the last two months where families have taken to usmg ohloriue of lime in the (rent yard and burned [at barrels in the back.” 11' :3 Hum. The Secretary than read a postal card from Cufiee Grange N0. 27, of Noxfulk, Va., asking if it was mm that the lame Kiln Club had petifiuned the Tariff Commission to double the duties on imported watermelona. Brewer Gal-duh- answered that it. was firm-l The Amariean watermelon was not only good enough for Americana but their growth should be encouraged to the utter exclusion of the pauper labor 01 Europe. The more melons we raise and the more cloudy night we have during the seaeen, the more is life worth living for. 1882. To Brother Gardner ; The Lime Kiln Club, having become an es- tablished institution of the coumry, may I not venture to ask if the membership to the same is no! a little too promiscuous ? 8TBXKING A KEY NOTE. The following letter then [all like a load of brick upon the members 2 Puma, um: NonroLx. Va... October 2, " He felt an be had a duty to do by de church, an’ yit he entered acirous by de front donh, an’ de soun’ of a fiddle put new apeeril into 1119 feet. “ If he did not sing his hymns from de housetops‘ neither did de world h’ar what he said when he arrove home an’ ionn' his wife sick shed, do hired gal gone an’ d9 baby howl in' Wid a paper of pins in his mouf." macron Samuel Shin was ordered tr place the there mometer on ice until the temperature had taller: 15 degrees, and Sir Isaac picked up his bean box and carefully elected the follow ing candidates : True Bill Taylor. Wake Him Smith. 001. Jones, Prof. Pauslic, Pro- Slavery Hastings and Kiflroy Thomas. CLOSE SHAVE. The Secretary announced a communication from the President of the Board of Super visors. of Richland 00., Ks.. submitting proofs that Prof. De Soto Smith, an honor~ ary member of the club, had. been guilty of retaining a ten dollar bill which had been paid him by mistakes for a one. II: was the request of the board that he be stricken from the roll of membership 0! the club. but Brother Gardner placed the letter in his poc< hot and replied : ' “ De mom. I kin promise jist now am (18% 69 case shall be invesngnhed on its merits. If de purlessor knew dat it was a ten-dollar bill, un' went home on de gallop an’ hid nine dollars under de house, den he mus‘ go; If he put. de bill in his pocket an’ didn’t knew dab he was nine dollars ahead until he went ts buy two pounds 01 dark brown sugar 821' three caller orndles, den he will be cautioned den i: am a. clue shave which hedn't better happen 83in durin’ his life time." 3mm“ STATISTICS. ,Theeommittee on sanitary measures re» ported that may were ready £0 send off lheir qnsrlerly report to the National board 01 health, as follows : Q.â€"” Whut epidemics since last report ?" A.â€"“ None.” Q.â€" “ Discoveries for the benefit. of asni~ tax-y science 2” A. â€"" None.” Q.~“ Have you any suggestions ‘2" A.â€"-“ Only one. We beliave that broom handles should be made with an elbow to them so that a woman can punch a dog out: Irom under the bed without having to get down on her knees.” Q.-â€"" Any improvements in ventilafion f" A.â€"“ Only in oases where the owners of buildings have taken away the doors and win- dows to induce non-paying tenants to move out." reniediea ?” A.-" Yes. several, and more coming. We know of a case where a house inhcted by sewer-.333 was completely purified by tha hired girl letsing two table cloths, three towrls and half a dazen nupkins with a pink border Sake a run into the sewer." F 01' the last fifteen years I have elevated myself to researches into the ethnology, biol~ ogy and Philology of the African race. and feel assured that I have traced these studies upjo their fountain head. “ He did not call hisself better dun his fel lawman. 1111' bit he had a kind word fur A boy wid asore toe an’ a ton of coal fur a naybur wid gibroken leg. From an examination 0! the uranium and pedal extremities I am now prepared to trace the senealopy of a. person back just ninety- eight generatinna. can tell if the blood is of the commvn strain and also i! the predomi mm individual traits are transmined or ac quired. “ Be made no great ndoo’bout his honesty, nn’ yit he remembered when an’ whar’ be borrowed a has or a shovel. I propose shortly to visit Detroit and deâ€" liver acolrae of lectures on these and kindred subject» and I am of the opinion that before I leave there will be a marked elimination of your club membership. “ He nebber gin a dollar to de heathen in Africa. but he allus paid his debts in America. “ A resident of my nayburhud died de od~ der day, an’ die ebenin‘ be committee ’pinted to write an eulogy on his character war’ showing me a. draft of what day had prepnr'd. De eulogy am in seckahuna, an’ I will quote it to you : ' " He was a man who did not gib to de poor wid one han’, an’ steal from de taxpayers wid de adder. " While he did not purfeas to be a perteck Christian, he remrmbered dat only one seat belonged to him when he trabbled. Meanwhile I am engaged in preparing for the prose my illuststed work in two large volumes, the subscription price to which will be $10. but to members of the L. K. 0. a discount of forty per cent. will be made it re- mittance reaches me in thirty days. I respectfully ask that you make this anâ€" nouncement lo the club. as also that I will lecture in your city before or during the Christmas holidays. l have forwardeâ€"d by express today a full set of my works in nineteen volumea‘ which plgase give a place in your (jxtegsive lihxnry. As Boon as my new workâ€"Th5 African Peeragemis out, I will forward a. gilt edge copy. Very reawctfnlly, danmlmLEKm GREEN. P. Q. 11; There was profound nailence for sixty sew- onds. and than Giveadam Jones, Pickles Smith. Trustee Fullback, Waydown Bebee and Raver?! (tuber mpmbers all arose to speak in ones. When the floor had been talented and units: xeatoxed the presidem asked: The peach stones ceased rattling around the hall. the windows went down. the munch- ing of peanuts was hushed and Brother Gard ner had a. firm hold of the platform with his toes as he‘urose and began : WHOLE N0. 1,268 -â€"-NO, 21 THE LIME KILN CLUB. 5“ Any discoveries of preventatives or Remarkable Cold Winters In The Past Fourtaen Canturies. The following statistics of the good old win- mere are curious In 401, the Black Sea wua emirer in;sz ever. In 76 i, not only the Black Sea‘ but the Swans ot the Dardanenes. were frozun over; the snow in some places rose filty fleet high. In 8223M glem rivua of Europe 77 the Danube-JIM: Babe, exo,â€"were so hard frozen as to bear hxâ€"uvy wagons for a month. In SGUJhu Adriatic was frozen. In 991, bverylluug was fruzrm: the crops wally tailed, audiamme and pesxilenou closed tho year. In 1067, the most. of the travel-n in Germany wme frozen to dumb on the midi. In 1133, the P0 was irezun from Cremona to the sea: the wine casks were burst. and oven the trees split by the action of tha host with immense noxae. In 1236, the Danube was frozen to the bot- tom. and remained long in that state. In 1316, the crops wholly failed in Germany; wheat, which some years before sold in Eng- land at 65. the quarter. rose to £2. In 1339. the crops failed in Scotland. and such I fem- ine ensued that that poor were reduced to feed‘ on grass. and many perished miserably in the fields. The successive winters of 143233 8ft were uncommonly severe. It once snowed forty days without interruption. In 1468. the wine distributed to the soldiers in Flanders was out with hatchete. The attendants, frightened out of their witsr precipitater left the room. J ruined by reinforcements they plucked up courage and returned. The covering was removed from the lace of the supposed corpse, and the mar- ble white of death had been supplanted by the rose of youth in the cheeks. Baspimtion was plainly perceptible. It was plain to all that she had been in a trance She exhibited all the signs ethic. and it yas thought aha. would rapidly recover but after remaining in this condition, without the least change for six hours the color left her cheeks and she was to all appearance slit! and stark in death. She remained apparently dead for the space of six hours. and began to assume the lip pearance of life precisely as: before. At the expiration of six hours all signs of liie again vanished and she was again a corpse. She has been alternately alive and dead twice a day for three days before the Times inform- ant left there. During intervals 0! life she does not appear to be conscious. The case is a remarkable one, and is exciting the wonder of every body. The gentleman promises to write and give her condition when he returns to that locality. In 1681 the winter was exoesaivsly cold. M05. 01 the hollies Were killed. Coaches drove along the Thnmts, the ice of which was ele- ven inches thick. In 171:9, occurred the cold winter. The frosts penetrated thxee yards into the giound. In 1715, booths were erected and fairs held on the Thames. In 1744 and 1745 the strongest ale in England, exposed to the air. was covered in less than fineen minntel with ice an eight of an inch thick. 11: 1809, and again in 1812, the winters were remarks able cold In 1814,5119“; was a mi: on the frozen Thames. BRADSTREE P'S WEEKLY REL PORT. His disappearance was a. source of surprise to everybody except. Miss Bunion, to whom it was all but a death shook. When she fact tbs“ “.he had gone dawned upon her. she fainsed and fell over on the floor. She was picked up and put on a bed sud all the known remedies were then brought into requisition to bring her to. but they were uniformly without ef- foot. The color left her face and she as-- sumed the pellet of a corpse, end a corpse her family and the neighbors thought she was. Preparations were heiug made to de- posit her in her last. resting place. Her measure was given the undertaker. and she was lmd out. Two of the neighbors on: up with the corpse. Toward midnighs incohern en: sounds issued from the corpse. The Extraordinary Condition '0! a North Texas Belle. From the Dallas Times. A Times reporter met a gentleman at the St. George Hotel last evening who gave him the details of the following extraordinary story. The gentleman is a man of known veracity and the narrative may be depended upon in detail. Be is from Somervell County and the location of the story about to be rela- ted is nrar Glenrose. Several weeks ago ayoung man, who substquently turned out to be a St. Louis drummer. stopped in the community. He was a handsome man and a good talker. and therefere out quite a swell among the ladies, of whose company he was fond Among those whose acquaintance he formed was Miss Amanda Bartlett. with whom he appeared to be particularly fascinated. He devoted most of his time to her; it was soon whispered that awedding was imminent. The whole community and Miss Bartlett shared in this belief, but the drummer did not, for of a and- den, and without the slightest warning. he disappeared one fine night. and has never since been seen in or about Glenrose. New You, Oct. 13.-â€"-Speciel telegrams to Bradstreei‘e journal this week. indicate that the general movements of merohandize con- tinue at the lull. The distribution of dry goods in large particularly on the Paorfio coast. The cotton plant is now almost be- yond reach of damage from the weather. The late storm along the South Atlantic coast ditl no serious injury to cotton so far as reported. The general tone of manufactured iron mar. ket is weak. Speculative values 0! petroleum are higher. but refined is oil one quarter 0! a cent. Coal is selling rapidly and the export business is only fair. The damage done to wheat. in the etoek in-Daknta will spoil a good deal of it for bread, and reduce the eetimatei of the tonal yield in that region. The total number of failures reported to Bradstreet in one hundred and tiventv-five in the Uuited States or four in excess of last week. and eight more than in the corresponding weeklaat year. Canada had sixteen, an increase of am The principal wheat markets close firmx lo} the week ending October 7th. The recgkpta 012‘ wheat at western points have diminished._ Corn closed at the highest price of the week“ with diminished receipts at the, week. -Abandoned at Sea; Ala ’ ‘ n4 stomach. - - “Gamma gum When he sat down silence was :8 thick as grease. and after it had endured for a long tum minutes Brother Gardner quietly ob.. served : “ Let us adjourn." It is probable tha‘ he will have his battery all ready at the next meeting to dejeut the lineage project â€" Sir Isaac sheepishly arose and replied that he didn’t care for himselt, but if there was the blood of :1 301111111 Senator in his veins his wife wcu1d add two shillings to the price of a day's work. Elder 'I‘uots said he had been called a bald- headed gorilla, and there was now a chance to prove that his grandfather was perhaps a Mx‘orish Sultan. Old Man Hut! said he had always felt as if he ought to be a member of Congress inatead of a whitewasher, and he proposed to be traced back to sea where he got that feeling from. “ Gem’len.” said the old man. in a. strange whisper, as he looked around, “ am it possible an you want to be traced back to see if your blood am de aommen strain or nm? Sir Isaac Walpoleâ€"Elder Toots-Old Man Huff, speak up 1” “ What am all dis row about ?” “ I reckon I kin answer Iur myself an” a score of others." replied the Rev. Penatook. as he rose up. “ Iâ€"I-â€"-dfl$ am to any, nabâ€"I would â€"” “ Brudder Penstnck, dn you mean to in~ form me dat you want your genealogy traced back ninety Fight y'urs ?" “ Yes, sub 1" “ An’ me 1 an’ me i" came from all over the hall. BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH. FURTY DAYS OF bNQWQ

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