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Huron Signal, 1852-02-19, Page 1i *won 1111 UIRLLINOSt la nava■Ca. S ,.....•.ate ••R.}!•- • - Siguat "THE GREATEST POSSIBLE GOOD TO TIIE GREATEST POSSIBLt PNUMBfi1l VOLUME V. poen). OUR MISSION. ax *aTaaxaI oo . react orrw.s ret Tai LBW TRAIL Britain! America! Mother sad child, Ileartily happily reconciled, - Look te the world aroma etrickea by guilt, with frenzy dt/tsd, A sterm•toet ship on the surge+ wild, Yoea to M wrecked sad drowned ! Leek ! for the Nations seethe sad boil With wrath and fear and peril Aird toil, A cauldron b.bblieg op Geyser -lake, with loud turmoil Scattering seem open every soil, From Judgment's crimson cup! Look ! for the people are hot with bate, Mae agaiuet man, State quiet Yate, Watching with widish eyes Europe's depots, wise 00 late, Helplessly forced fear to await The tempest a 'Wilkie'. )o nista ! America! Mailed. and stout, Stand !Argolis', and rule this route, Stern sad strong sod Mill Teeebiag the brawlers 'trued about. Mole, true liberty, well searched out, 1. to obey God. will! 1• to *bey !-s• bend, yet free ; Lifting the bead, white b.sdieg the hew ; Order's imperial raee.- iea►leeely faithful found to be, TMeg\ the moustata's choke the chemist *ma, Aad earth b• moved out of her place ! Britain ! Aaserica ' hand to hand, Lake twte-sagels lovingly stand 'cosh frena the Gelds above. - Linked together to brotberbood'• heed. Aad swore to *ow up• every land I4b.rty light sed love ! Mather sod Daughter against the World! Vaster !maw peaceful Gage unfurled Right* will rally at length : While Earth'. bnrneane, iewardly curled, Apes' r,th the ruin of WroagU down• burled, Weakens and wastes it. strength. Yee, stud •111: but in ready array, Misgl.ag sot 1s the Nation's fray, Till they have fought to their fall ; Thea,-•• Wisdom leads in the way, Wits we t•gether the piss of ab day Coegnertag Peace for them All ! MARTIN F. Torras. Albe►y, January 1, 11139• GODERICH, COUNTY OF HURON, (C. W.) THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1852. white -mired ear is to e uteri- cad Andros.; and upon this eminence a sharp ked beearw is Ms fought for Greece.- lookout was kept during the greater part of That M„ is my gather --bed so fare as there ; the day. But alone„ towards wigbt, the is a Gods Heaven, be shall sot be deliver- white topgallant sails of a holey ship were ed op to his death thus. To -morrow morn- made out away to the snuthwaid, and hav- ing the Turk mils for the Mairmora, but by ing become assured that the Turk was coin. the powers of Olympus, she shall sever cut its waters with a Greek prisoner on board. Azores!" "Sir," returned the younger of the boat- men, thea designated. •• Step the mast and loosen tbe furling hoe. And you, Maltho, stand by to shove ber bead round." As Parthesito spoke, be seated himself at the bens of the boat, and in a few mo- ments more, ber sail caught the night breeze. A few words will esplain all that the reader seed understand ep to this time. Wbea the tyrant foe first overrun the fer- tile plains of Attica, old Partbenins gniber- ed several hundred of his countrymen to- gether among the mountains, and there they determined to defend themselves and their daughters. The younger Partbeiius bad also gathered together a band of choice spirits, but the sea was cbosea as the theatre of his actions -.ed u Greece wag now Literature. THE GREEK PIRATE. BY uvt•va�cs cos. Js. dare our bog within the Straits of Silota did she skin alone. Parthenies had given For the following sketch, the reader is before it is daylight, for I would lay o6 the helm to \litho, and with his night -glass sot indebted to the writer's imagination.- Cale Dora in the morning." ' be had statiooed himself clow the end of the " Silota!" returned the officer in aston- bows t 'Cas iaetdeats herein related are bat a few iw' smttog tens of thousand*, equally as thrill Whilst "I thought hos -{pore booed _ [or' 1kcked something of one o'clock when Sag, which are connected with the groes Mao. be came hastily on deck and ordered the injuries and final downfall of the Dace no -":hot yet;' said Partdeniw. " Do you topsails to be clewed up and the pard• to be turned to the Turkish commander and said: bk Greeks Every topling wall and pros- know the "'kart" I clewed up and tbe yards to lie eased down '• (,o, thou infidel tyrant -go to your trate column speaks to the beholder some" Do you mean the ship that lits in Port on the caps. The Turk was directly ahead, proud master, and tell him that Parthenius tail of wrong, and even the dark and dismal L1oo!•' and in fifteen minutes the meeting mnst•take scorned to crush the poor viper that stung streets of tbe once proud Athens might, by p " The sante." lace. The brig has nothing set but the' him! Tell him that (:reek scorns to glut other hearts than those of Greece. " fore and main stay staysails, and Partbehius his revenge on thine who fight u slaves, at Well, she shall be mine; or at leaf, rightly concluded that he should not be no- the beck of a still more slavish muter; and their silent story of woe, draw teas from " I know her to be a stout ship," It was just at dost, many years ago. af- she shall be in my power." !iced 1:11 be was too near for the ship lo' tell Lim, inns flat there be some Greeks ter the turbaned Turk had trodden down ; " In your power!" iterated Marco, in ut- never wall be slave,." the liberties of Greece, that a young man who n only of the bete s crew had fallen.-- made alien.- made his way *Iowa from the city of Athens Their bodies were removed to their own ieavimg Pincus on the right, towards the armament three times u Leary as ours. could now be dearly traced in tt y vessel, and found their rest beneath the d 1 J while the dark 5 TWELVE AND SIJ PENCE AT Ti1F t,U e► 7na titan. When the Greeks first boariel, Nee "Oen dollar." said the lounger , "can't hal( of etre IsLars crew were below m thaw youe "k°1". doS than llar is the price." hammocks, but they soon began to crowd Another half hazer hail nearly pas.toJ, upou deck: they carne unarmed, ignorant when the stranger ,nqutred- •• Is Mr. *int home of what was going ou and most of them "Yee, he ie in hetprintingofice." -ame only to their death ! So uoespect- " I want to e.e him," said the Iouncer. The shop Soy immediately informed air. — that a gentleman was in the •lure wailing to see him. Mr. — w.r emit be bind the counter, when the lounger, add book is hand, •ddrassed him thud : '• Mr, what is the loirrst you ran lake for ibis hook T' •• Oue dollar and a quarter," was the reply.: "One dollar and • giarter ! why your young man only ..ked a dollar." •• True, sir," said *tr. —, "and I could trate better afforded to hairs {.ken a duller then, than to have hem taken out u( the office." The lounger seemed surprised, and wi.h ing to end the parley of his own making, saiJ- "Come now Mr. — tell mw the very lowest you can take for it 1" "One dollar and a half." "One dollar and a half ! why gnu joist offered it yourself for a dollar lied a guars ter." "True, and I had better taken that price then, thin aduller and a halt now." The lounger pa.d down the price for the Wok, and went about hit business -if he had any. He had learned a less n which no did not soon forget. The Dame of the bookseller was Benjamin Fran klin.---.•lmericaw Uir(sw.• ing up through the Straits, I'arthemua called ed -so sudden had been the attack, that Ilse lookout down from his etatioa, aaad got ere the 'Turks could arm themselves, the his vessel under way. The wind was fresh Greeks bail gaited the advantage, and still from the uorthward,and westward, and the pressing on, they cut down all that oppos- brig, taking it a few points free, off towards ed them, until l'artt anus stood upon the Seio. As the night darkened into a state quarter-deck. For a moment be dropped of almost sable gloom, with hardly a star the point of his sword, and gazed about to beguile the gaze of the mariner, l'arthe- , him. On every side gleamed tbe sword nius called his men all aft, and thus address- and scimetar, and head after bead dropped ed them : and fell-- At lengths sharp shrill cry arose " My brave comrades, you all know, of from a number of Turkish officers who bad course, the object of this ctuue, for to crowded together upon tbe opposite side of Matho tinct to Azotbus, and to my brave the deck from where stood the Creek lion, Stereo, I have already rereal•'J it. With- and the call of mercy -for quarters -arose in the {text six hours, tbe proud Turk will above the clash of the death seeking steel have cleared the Cape, and without trouble A proud look of triumph gleamed upon tbe 1 tan cross bis track, for I know the exact (;reek commander's face as be beard that coarse be will steer. You know that some cry, and waving bis sword {ugh above his of our kindred lie• chained upon his deck; bead, be shouted: and now, my men -hearts of Sparta and " Iloid ! Back Greeks !-bark ! Strike Attica -1 will lay you along side of the Is- not another blow except u defeace."- bar; my foot shall be the first to touch the Aad atridiag forward M where the battle tyrant's deck: - T {'ill you fdl to mer' raged h°tte,t, he struck down the uplifted yoked by the Turkish power, our youthful There was no wild shout went up from wepon-, and bade the men stand back. bero, was held in the light of a pirate. No the deck, nor was there any wild bent of In three minutes every sword hung dnp- otker vessels suffered at Its heads save those eutbuaiasm, but fafty bright swords flashed pin; by its owner's side ; and striding aft of tbe Turk; bet, among them, his ravages in the rays of the deck lantern, fifty knees to where stood the officers of the Turk, bad been so exteaaire that every seaport I were bended, and fifty lips gave to the air Marthenius shouted: along the coast rang with tbe tale of his (an oath that their countrymen should be " Now, proud Turk lead forth your pri- deeds. The sou was still at liberty, but free, sono. Bring up that grey-haired old man the grey-haired sire was aprnoner, and the Partbeaitm stepped back with a light' whom you hive doomed to the traitor's headman's bloodstained cimeter awaited his tread, and seizing the wheel in his own I death; Snd mark me, if harm hath been arrival at Constantinople, whither he was grasp, he put the helm up and gave order' deco to but a single hair of his head, every (or wearing around upon the opposite course Moslem heart that now , beats upon your Tbe brig was upon the exact course of the' decks shall send forth its blood in atone - skip, and the yo'mg captain was confident inept." that if be stood back in his own wake, be With trembling limbs went the Turks could not fail to come in contact with her. to fulfil this mandate, and ere many min - The wind still continued fresh, nor had it utes had elapsed, twelve prisoners stood un - was pear midnight when the captain rounded altered its course since nightfall, and so shackled upon the •goarter-deck. With a to alongside the brig, which lay at single taking it upon the quarter, the gallant brig heart leaping proudly in its triumph and anchor just off Keratia, and as stem u the started back towards C'ape Doro. Until joy I'arthenius sprang forward and clasped young captain had gained the vessel's deck, after midnight the Greek kept on without his aged parent to hos bosom. be ordered tbe author to be hove up, and interruption. TI e deck lantern had been "God bless you, my noble ane," mur- sail made as woo u possible. extinguished, the lighter sails taken in, and mured the old mut, as tears of joy rolled " Marco," said he to the chief officer, who over a comparatively smooth sea, she seem- down his furrowed cbeeks'v had remained in charge of the brig,' I would ed to creep rather than health so stealthily The Greeks took up the cry of blessing and like the clarion's peal rang their shouts of " Partbeauus and liberty !" over the dark sea. The rcka ed prisoners were conveyed to the brig, and as Partheuius was about to =tep over the side to his own vessel, be to be sent to meet his doom. The moon eau just peeping over the is- land -dotted bosom of the Archipelago, as the Tight quince of Psrtbeetas shot from the land, and with a moderate, but fair wind, he made tau way towards Cape Colooa. It sea coast. He was not more than twenty- five years of age, stoutly built and wearing that ezpressioa of cousteaaaee and naan- -ser of conduct which, at a rtiegte glance, be- tray the determined and resolute man. Just outside the entrance of Port Lion, about half a mile font the stone pedestal, upon which weed to stand the large marble hon, from which the port took its name, laid a small boat in which were two meu, and to - words this spot the above mentioned dual made his way. " Where n the brig, Malthol" asked the sew comer, as he laid bishand apon the bows of Ow boat and pushed Ler off from land, after which he leaped oa board. " She is just off the Cape-iaewly fifteen miles from here," said the older of the two boatel's. " But tell me, Partbeaius, are yea determined to go on board to -night{" " To -sight !" repeated Partbenius, while a wddes fish shot from bas dark eye. "Yes sad ore it be tight again, my vessel shall here pas through Sikh." « Wbat has \apposed, my tear eaptas, that yea =oak than Amor your planet I thought yea were to sold esethwsrd." For • eaoeseet the yang captain geed Wm* W kirber; sed ties slowly r aisisg bis bpr, be seal, gleed m • whisper -bet s a whisper se deep that the etebrye hr rinse roared s its t•••m— « De roe as. where tare spare rear their tapering peseta 'here thin haw yens•" «Tbit is the Moody Turk. The Int •eassesse of lbs mosutaie heed that sank filbsKy among tie reeks, sew lay s the Mit et Midst shirt ed owl item i• • avoid his purpose. ter amazement. " She has at least a hun- ".arm! every ole ofyou!" said the Greek tired and fifty men on board, as well as an commander, as the tail span of the Turk "e mist " Yes she has a buudred and fifty men," air. "Arm to the tcelh!and press forward green swat oftheir an , exclaimed the Greek captain, in a tone of to the larboard bow. Be ready' for the waters of the Archipelago received three bitterness; "but they fight for paltry cop-' lean, and remember that you strike for your score of the fallen Moslems. pen that fall from the band of the proud kindred, and for your (rod, and for Greece Ards ! I Cork, while we -we Marco, fight for oar You,Azotus, look well M the grappling•; homes -for the memory of kindred that ysurely gently sloping- Ells, see that the are thrown.—Let have perished, Ties of affection that have ber tomo up -Luff Lay" been snapped in sunder, and for the ' bitter Malebo put down the helm, and the brig, wrongs that have been heaped on our coun- trymen. In the hold of the Tsbar goes my old father to bis death; has noble band have all been shot down like beasts, or taken prisoners, and the bloody Turk thinks he has conquered. But he has yet to pass through my hands, and may his Prophet have mercy on him, fbr I will walk over the eorses of every owe of them if they stand between me and my father." At that moment a voice from forward awwosaced that the anchor was speak, wed Marco turned to see after the furling of the topsails. He knew that his captain Sever used idle language, and he knew also that what he had determined upon was sure to be carried out; but bow the Greek brig, with ..ivy fifty toes, waste rapture the heavy Tick be was at a lees to eo.pveheed. Of oat Hing, however, be was certain -woe osd Greek that trod the deek ppf the a aael wed Sleek it Portliest= bid them go. .S the Wig clawed the break of the Ind, She limas tease hp fresh ad strew, awl wham tie see rasa as the wait more- itU. els W resided Caps Dee, sad her tow lama was laid to the Met. { above the sisal water i "Fidel the Greek laid tewsr'ad a prsjsdtlsg AL of bare reek, tits stnmit et width weisami d • fell view fief i b•idsbist et water bates• Ethers . i. .,•,�,,. Ts. NawspATIRR.-1p no other way can so much. so varied so ueeful information be imparted, wider circumstances ■u favourable for e.ucattag the child's awed, as through • judicious, wellcooducted newspaper. To live int village woo, once, to be shut up cad eostracted• Bot now" man may be a hermit and yet a cosmopolite. Ile may live in the forest, walking miles to • post -office, hwisg a mail but once a week, and yet, be shall be found as familiar with the living world as the busiest actor in it! For, a newspaper is a apyglaat by which he twinge mit the most dutaat tbiags-••e microecupe by which be leisurely examines the moat minute -so ear tramper, by which he collie's and brings within his bearing all that u aid and dose all over the earth -a museum full of conwItiee---a picture gallery full of living pictures from re.' life, drawn not on Thcanvass, but with pr ere Lok on paper. e effect, in liberatizu.g and enlarging the mind of the youo g, of that weekly eomtuereo with the world, will be appareet to any 00e who will ponder u. -Once a liberal educa- tion could only be completed by foreign travel. The eons only of the great or the wealthy could indulge in the mostly benefit. 114/1"774a 1 •�" ' w well ef"er eM.d, and is a Ire years ebbe a sake e/ • heave% slat loot els — \e•s • marriage IMO MAO M lar by s rsguet bt• dukes sea M loth' WEST INDIES. From Jsmatca papers to January nth we musket -lulls, which serer reached their find that the cholera a still raging with great violence at Savanna -Le -Mar. Certain merchants of Kingston are en- deavouring to procure the means of com- munication by steam between that cry, South America, and St. Jigo de Cuba. The want of this communication has seri- ously injured business with Vie former, and pat an end to it with the latter. from the city;and the swell multitude The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company have manifested enc a . orou for the intere.ts of tho island, that partied ral had sent out new supplies of ammunition begin ser,ously to cestomplate depriving NUMBER IV. weemerweeeoesmonencOmmue T1IL ENiiL!!tll MUSKET. The followieg is a letter from as .« Ofti ln.li to OfJicri" to the Lnndou Tirana on the ntu-ket now in tax in the Ereelisiarmy: Every. u,atitary man wall e,neur iia the justice of your remark' en the subject of the iuef'cieuey of our re IJatios musket. aid thank you for makieg then. But we • needed sot thio miserable e lilt!.: war' iia South Africa to Jemom[rate the iseliciency of which vos4an justly complain. " It u aeceeeary," 1 you my, "that our soldiers should hit the enemy with their musket -balls and that ...this' one thing they unfortunately esrjtio'. Jo," was too often prove;{ in the course of the uabappy war in .tIiglanistan. The British musket was no snatch for the Affelan jezail. Even w fair open tight, when the enemy were not sbtitered behind their prccipioue rockstl,e AA'g!:an=, uutaucly ed by our musket -Lath, mowed down our fighting men like grain. A notable esam- pk of this was furnished by the action (dur- ing the rabid outbreak) on the '_3J of No- vember, 1St 1, when Brigadier ttbettoa, with a strong Britiith force, gave the enemy battle at Belunern. A recent writer has thus described the incident, and i think you will consider "it worth quoting iia exemplifi- cation of your excelkot remarks:- " Tke one gun was nobly worked, and, for a time, with terrible effect tiild upon the multitudes, who bad only a matchlock fire to give back in return. But, thus nobly worked, round after round poured in as quickly as the piece could be luededl it soon tweame unserviceable. The rent was so healed by the iucessaat firing, that the gun- oers were no longer able to serve it. Aua• - munition, too, was becommiug scarce. What would not thou resolute artillcryaseu have given for another a al The firing ceased, and the British musketeers were then left to do their work aluue. Little could they do at such a time against the far-reaching Affghan matchlocks. The cacmy poured ", a destructive lire into our squares, but the muskets of our infantry could not reach their assailants. The two forces were at a distance from each other which gave all the advantage to the Affghan., who shot down our men with ease and laughed at the positiou."-ICayr s history of the R'iti in if flgh.rniatun. And again, on the some day, says the historian- " The enemy returned to the field recruit- ed by new hordes whom they met emerging horses the gun; b v f i h thorough dereg•rd poured itself on our battalion. 1 he Geste- them of every advantage which has been with another limber and how g ; hitherto cone.iled t., them. and it was soon again in full operation, pia] - The aril step hue been taben n the pate- ing with murderous effect upon the misses ing' of a bitl by the A■sen,bly w subject Ibe e Royal Mail Steamers to the payment of of the enemy. But again the 13ritish mus - tonnage dues upou the gout. they bring. leets were found no match for tlx Ail baa The nett proceeding is the attempt to on- esaih 1'hei c were truer eyes an� steadier tarn steam communication between that 1 and South America lied Cuba, irrespective of them. The Trinidad rapers are occupied in dies cussing the subject of Emmitrattun, and bands too in the ranks of the enemy than io oat- owu, and now with unerring aim the Afghan ntarkuron mowed down our met! their reports of the legislative proceedings Its^ ;Two:, at the Port of Spun shy w the question to be Cahill is a Ion, way off; and the Eon: adjudged, in the highest quarters., one of the Back from Athens, taw the trout greatest importance to tits welfare or the India Company part the expeuses of this colony. 1.nrd Harris and the Council of disastrous war. So d lap?rued that the reposes between two town of Marathano, where a quiet vette/ Government havo arrived at the coAclusiou that emigrants from India and Chloe otgbt lessons which it taught (and many were there are a number of glares. Ocie of still to be sought at all reasoaab!e hazed. the. , both military and political) were et• and cost, while •port oa of eke press ...Mt; trrl 'thrown away. It u to be hoped that them, wi,ich raises its marble slab a few rods claree that th. Uoaed States is the .ot• j up on the northern slope Liars the simple country from which emmigrants coo tm pro- ' the Caffre in war will be turned 10 better re" cured for the {stand. A few emmigrauts count. It is not enough ibit examples from North America have already mutedu, ,ih�utd be furuialied. '1 hey must be Trinidad- As long ago a the t3th of Nov.,Noss must ala the cons - fifteens four of whom were men and the re- mentcJ npon. The � u d t which had been gradually falling to the lee- ward, now came up towards the bows of the n•me of Partbenms. The goat-herds who approaching ship; and not nota the was tend their flocks upon the neighboring hills toted that slab from harm and peculiar within a cables length did the Turk- discos -y P er the proximity of the stmngrr. I light sparkles in their eyes as they tell over I h be repose beneath n mender women and children. a•rteed at the hart of the telescope, and brink Stan Port of Spain in the 1! h r'n owed scents beneath the eyes of governu.g bodies the deeds of nutty one ashes The grille] Admir.l by ntdere,l s t •ort " I lail° there!" shouted the omeer of lbe Modern instances are of hale wee, if the Inbar, tot yet sole to distinguished the char- I at -who was once so dread by the Turk ai Inquiry on the brig of tar Prometheus. press is chary of its wise saws. We shall aster or size of the bra;. "beep away! and tyho was denounced by the Moslems I account of her firing 1.10 lhht Prornutheus I continue to spend millions of money Arid h ,." The Greek Pirate: s up with your brim! By the beard of the Prophet, the fellow will be afoul of u. A MODEL BOOKSF.Li.ER. "CART Yoo TARR A LITTLm Leo. ro- tten a thin quest.nn •,kee hr the Tum BOUN•ART .i5 et Nos :.i:w, .- We cannot artificially produce the organic !waste throesantis of lives on unprofitible ac Ids from then e' -teen-, W• are still wars, if the satnfs.e of both in our distant formed feints and d � t • es be without suck turning to his own beltttlpiaa," Down rgn not bow they are in p colones anyeudenc t with the helm! Down with it, quick! Let! animals, All that is known on thin point teat ai ]ourself. emeernme the vegeu.tdarmete is. that theyan exee ', are forayed from c•rb.'nte acid sad water ;---------- - the two chief ro"rees of the n ese•htveet or Why if ys•i ame ►&Maty as 5 Mg he, ioif e. getsbl: s. fl .t by win po+er. 55.l t" IMon t cry abs.{ tt Let k . do ma ..f rlelat t what manner, 'hese two bodies are deceit le wp is! .,siw.rd1 1.•..e•. A t,de".w'tlt to rnruhine :n the gape -tine to 1 .rn tar eyes {set nls„e,. 1. perM.i •J caw•. a►♦ ' tarn acrd, in the (suit of the Ian, .n toe tot tr,.,,kaa w a p..uUciaaa rresJ, a nut 1 les go the jib and fore -stay cal sheets. By _ " purchaser, wives told the price of an .rttele. the power of ! 11.h, the fool will be wink. Tae Turk had taken the course which, People seem I..t *.up1100posenamthat a Inherethe haat is out esing price o/ aril others, the Greek could most have hu wares,ineunJockeying in tre.t', a now wished ' for as the heavy ship came up in- looked o upoFn as one st:ct of curse e* ctransac- t* ania - to the nod, she lost her headway, and in theory, lees ',o prseur'. ilhorkeer*rs the ks with the tower- bare hod as ranch t• do to bane ging sheet a toeesl tong f' ,res tag farm of rarthentn at their head of tbu state in of things, of at g on* pow and yang another, a the people them - Trim spots the tyrants deck, and e'er the turbaned Moslems could collect tbeir scat- tered *eines, a dozen of them had fallen hewed the retributive strokes of the strong. %loaders. " Strike for Greece ! for Parthenon and i.iberty ! shouted Marro, as be cut kis acIves ; is truth, mcny mark their good* with reference tolthu feet• 'Ve hate read an anecdote of a old bookseller, whom we eonedet a model is bis way, and therefore give it for the Monett of our reader.,n • On rine sae morning, marry y..►e a g , aardAie aged mss might he sees 111-••••w•—.-, u b Ply e.gaged in propene( his sewepaper for the pfess, when a Integer esesrsd hes store, (connected wab the Dice), ae! eons - wry through the kali-fir"1pdc Turks. menet. " The GreekPiratt " tried Ibe officers spendng half so hour is Ib. maonor, M fleetly selected oem, cad asked the boy tbe •t els ship, ao they heard that dead wase 1 -•A Ass say Arab protect ss " 1 r Me dollar," was the awwer• kr sg over the books, . After fn"" e.tne ae„1, In "1°1'4'4 to 6.r n u,a'tc ! a bie, awl a suiuth that .hMenee ts se'', ''''.• we are entire'] ,gnnrsnt. We: t. ear, aaI ..,. av no. • jock anew w b, here *teed as it were •w the h".nr•lary I:ee i,taure re.y.etrd .5,1 551,,,,55. sy tWwe our knowledge. it ill tlef 55.4 of toaFuusorpetrol In a•s• 1 c.f.11t ai.•a eft- metedue atm fusers pus•r..•• a gaud 10&.i fwd e vises b.yoad this limo, further 111110"rd I ki.J dispo..r'a'1. l..n It oho wad r. ►+anti Ilea must show. In the rivervi irel1.1..'►piano. E.•, t,, a r."ka•raw d,.. sesame rust that the ak•,,non power pie,y •m1 a .•e.rt 1 Ik•..t. •1'M wase Leh eau*'. the *knots, I , and b1... .«v. dge Ir.tws tit eo,,.p�Pa me +/ ►M 00 10 pot forth truss lbs.erd -we este -fern ..r the aymmeley +1 isoI.I l lib it vital power -.e .ten 0,4 to poehoc' „e ort os of tae hest. claimaal eombraaunwa and decemilliw,tw • _-_— mor• powerful and ,ns•nfntd than a is pn. nnwlaA N eel mond d t"'�' 7N .ible fur ib* chemist to arc.tutptitt 'n h'• Moil to t IM eel u, whet. ant h'T retorts and ereeubta•. In tMs ono* *e i• gurd the ornate so ids, a• to Ren •r1I as +oriel eeli.A w„h .A'.un, retereat.ayy Ltd p,,..i to r etas 'e w ..v'., t.'rin rive eas•�i4 • f mals. I -era a g M, e trees the Water: se the f plet.eal sae t' jtiigotewl, pin Mos•, sial tat• '' Mb1,:t► erose of the vitae edrtvrty of plash sat Pet- t -1 right p.lae•es•'' ' 4 a tin eP"me' "r... �--- � �•� _ s.-' '��r� -- locker i tGi weather peimiit- T w M t per='s rtew�all! »terptre"ad the ac • reiM Otho tssNurl• each iastaotly 1 Y ialg,r the beth Pl.peae— - e 1 i :lit, a •