HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1893-01-26, Page 6_1�
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,a � 1. MAP_ __ __ - .,� I -, '. SPORT8 UfL WINTER IN NORWAY.- , — - TWITTING ON. .FA037).
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�, " �- 7� . -. .- - 000"'CIA " - . wrecks rer ust Year, Shoe Races.
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�� , 1. - __ � , . - ay-,- '' o6ticb, - 4bout - We have. In fact, we have just beer
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_U .14 I . - - 11 . . . . . Wue - ` ... - I I I - - :. I .- -- L'_ We hear much of the many finely -model- The amusements of Christiania are those
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. 1 $__ - � - I ,,,� " � - �Iwmsipeedilymroused by an of all cold countries. One special delighti - listening to a very animated discusdon be-
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.the.thlie; therefte'ther - , I'.... - s
. - .... - 4 _ . . -, I -led ships tha"r4 built, from time to time, �
,"igje &.We Alysteros of Nature that B&"-, 7 - tl MO _� I - fact tween one of the " natural proteutors" of
I . . --, 1� . a time, whoult. had Val Y'Z - _� - I., - T, -'- 4, Is 'on. "I hastened i6_mY_-l;Ok �but little of the many vessels that are lost. akating on the frozen snow; it may in
#50 LISP—' .,- � - . t - . - e
__ �,- 11K4W48,o1Ve4_WA"1_ '01LOMers- . Weknqw,t6d t&ttOdi I �. - be called the nation lovely women and the partn r of his joya
. , - .now I � C I outpost a h'. The flames- were spreading Occasionally public interest i al sport of Norway in
�;, R�iA&Ia aid:mv- _? re th � � . . is excited by �
,
IiLee�i�_k I ". tho ; .th6rWore, th , a .
I I y- coo, , - I _ - -,- - - ' t e�oity. It Was an' ocean of fire., heroism displayed in saving a shipwrecked
�, I . 1- , 1. '. - � . - the cold white months. For the peasants, and Borrow&
--:. kim IT ., EMU. " � I _. . .
. ." 0 11,W , - aaa. the Icampsf from sea to-valleyil bre*.-, but'in many cases the los; of a gor,d
I - � .4 :been a t4we wh-pa "on - i no I .,..- .
-- j "14051gfA185V'*f" k -"i-, "'.. however, it is no mere sport,, but a necessity .
o I; 1 � , i, - At 4 about a pair of boot-la4aga.
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� -_ , W 'a I-- j��11 n _�� �1_ I � kfijil-fe ` zj6w. Indeed, e am ion Is - a It I -
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I . I __ .4i, ck --- 4he hip is only'indicated by a line or two in the o existerce, whereas in the towns if is a
.
- - , I A � �` - - rloolving - e' 'a recreation which every on Moguanght them. - -
, 'i --g nebaous, ' , de'
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" L� i:;:� . - A0, - Ahat iv was once but a niass of were aroused by sa'awful sho
- irresistible r p A stra6tion of some great magazine behind, th She said they were not long Soong:
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; ,,, Lfiery d I list of casualties in the daily papers.
. - � - -, a, I var - space now oc- e loves �o share in
--�,�__�Vo �� - � � - oq_ j� � e - ' . fining the great _ The snowshoes are long, flat, She told him she* knew,
- n � - _
.1 - W rl�tar, sub y Redan. In quick succession one, two, three, - Who, for instance, or to watch. said ihey were,
, I our solar system. The plane,!, would think that
- i�of grav-, cuple _ four explosions followed.' At 4.45 a. m. the last year sixty-eigh and pointed, and he. remarked : " Yes, of coam,.she &I-
1� �_i � � I jelatallwaff t-9-0- fe 1J714P=F%f r� then have had no' separate existence ; - t vessels, the largest made of light, elastic, but solid
ter"'Of,P509 could , magazines of the Flagairiff Bastion and Gar- wood. When wearing these anoVhoes, a way
' itSVP11, 8,0�1 YVI - - '_ . - , therymustlia,ve formedapartof thetnebu- den Batteries exploded. The very earth proportion ships, smied from some port or balancing -stick is neces _ emely Tively,
Cr - L*& ean AM& - a knew everything !"
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__1 �, IfI4 t0e; ��! /141*4". at "i"e' , ions mass. The fact that the-,p"ts all other, and, according to Lloyd's annual re- sary, bat the most After that things were extri
4h L1. 1W ;1 --- t th . I skillful skaters only need a little branch. The war of words ran high. The very fiie�
. Wma-44 v�id . -1 ' 0 -Mr -00 -lar . trembled at each outburst, but-af -5.30 a. M. turn, never again were heard of, and these,
fg witho" 9 ,. I �� - 11" � �,-qfifiig, rekolve Around the sun inthe same. dirw--
. system QWma&� TO= =WX when the whole:of the huge stone fortresses, -too, were fairly good-sized The rest of the equipment is much the same on the window stopped buzzing to liatt,
L 1ion, from west -
, �Tla! -.�n crafts?
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N ,j� I - to east, and that they move Z1,
- aitiale thb6t4t9f6fient wM-,.. "" - .- . �',_ -11 - the Quarantine &:ad Alexander, were hurl- What of the crews? The story can never as for ordinary skating, except that very and no doubt took sides among themselves.
. - I.- 11 �, 1. a] t in the same plane, one with another, -
. .11 - - - ,- J , mos I ed into the air almost simultaneously with be completed . long stockings and very thick mufflers are The husband called the wife a liar, a tva-
� ,�,' �, -� - kz ot, therm *r4*00", ; - �� -_.:� 74, , is a strong proof that . they were all Once a P the suffering may be but
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given At 7 lucGolumeme . . U worn to break the force of concussions ; for tler, a
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.00 , .. � . r� - a was vwbwl V 11 woman ofdoubtful chars.
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__ he",RG jrea�lvqqabl - I � part of the sun's bulk: in other woi;ds, _ Tpp , .n I 'd her colonies have more
tbet �_ - g f th Y skating on snow in Norway is really a mad various other epithets not pleasant to listen
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, tr - I -,C, ., .. . lie, . . strong Pyoof of the truth of the niebulax � W�l M � ab
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. I - t !Feir bre * ` �dl t at tWk , - rush from the top to the bott,om of hills, to.
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sun man t . 4 � �.. j�PtF;�ffifw`%,Al - ' , I - "*' but'while we make up a
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- 6 .ter . � i of More. than all this, the spectroscope has i;i 0 $ - ilt% � 11 -, - 41 losses, w6
(0& in , hypohisis. . 11 . ,�_ a 4e, - It
i,14- ' ' Wk�' ' ander. with sudden leaps in the air where the She retaliated by informing him .that he
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-W � d-e9dalWorution or-pli6dfilr�he , , shown Us � wt-a";nVe � .- W - 49,100 bo&'which have thus
�JD .49y of nebulous masses in vmrioas� parts gro :; - fleet e,! � . ground, becoming suddenly vertigal, disap- wasacheat, a rascal, a scamp, I and a bo-
. n . y � it I � . .
priml- t q -4 th� e#Lo "r wa at , '' t.. pears from beneath your feet. trayer of female innocence,
ing the conditions p "'a , it! ,I- - of record. '
I ilve simplicity -cif we9d.-li440 o,luxurisut of the- heavens, all hav - - I 'i�, - , -of " It is an intoxicating sensation to speed And both bore this torrent of abuse, and
'� . khe V�y -1., ere a ti w - . ,
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, ave -for the mass out of 4' 4 11 � , � 4 ., �4 I - - w�, �w4si .too, seems large-
. I been assumed � V , _� , -, a - , , --
- 1&d of this that h I � -place 0 on - , , neither boiled over.
beapty of thei�,prqierktqWt� - I fn-'- b Vi '54*1 _ �1 3,94& 6wig, but it must be
- ,- which our'system was formed. , They' are I g P - . through the air as quickly as lightning, as
no welf - forn�ed j,6raW h any' doubt at.. mysterious errands. Thirty-five magazines remembere d why ? Simply because these things
in TRI lonably throwing off beat and con- d that there are probably always lightly as a' bird, the lungs inflated with the An
all. �-,The pfadifis'-wi-eAlmipty overwhelmin _- - ' in all were blown up, and through all tne afloat on the high seas over twenty million pure air, the blood rushing through one's
I .9 were not facts, and each party knaw it.
lir - A f, a of - m*g ,Just as our mass did, ani we are night of the 8th and the morning of Sep. tons of ship - ping, which fact, although it veins, making one feel strong, vigorous, But presently Mr. Hix overstepped the
1 1*6 , � b hav - I e it d, by the glorious achia*ments
. '� a-,;? ' � tb N,411bli0flazow =101 I wime Out � 6, , us pe tEmber 9th the Russians were marching out increases the surprise that so many vessels supple, and as if one's limbs were elastic. bounds, and to'd her that Mrs. Mix, who
been a work of thousands of ye - - hOw andinventio of scientists,, to seethe work
W� , of the south side. We could see the bridge should -be lost without any news, indicates This salutary and delightful exercise, violent was her mother, had been in the poor -house,
than shall we interpret -that scriptalral-line, of world -making actually going on. A not-
, ablellnsullft�ofthi*% iv;,tbo covered with them stilL At 6.45 a.m., the generally a fairly low ratio of loss -3 to .4 as it appears, is not really at all exhausting, And then the blood of the Mixes roBe, and
I 11 In six days God made thebeavensand the - , . feagustdIation last body of infantry crossed the bridge and per cent�. , of tonnage. . and delicately bred, high-born young ladies she made a plunge for hdr husband's foretop
earth?" It is a matter of unmixed wonder Orion, where it has beeA noticed for.years. mounted the opposite bank. Yes, the south It may be accepted as a testimony in fay. ean take part in it. Truly it is a beautiful and informed him that she would as lief be
to me that ten people out of -twelve take the .T4eT1i§1pJr4Qf.tbAt. J� will ofte is rijht in .
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word " days" as used in that line to incean our own sybtem, the condition of the plan. side was left to the possession of the Allies or of steel that of the total tonnage lost eight, and thorougblv Scandinavian, a sort in the poorhouse as to rob graven for a liv.
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4 ii Vv0Jupkfi�v,a1l&Sawrn. The telescope en- at last ! Sebastopoli the city, the docksi and only .12 per cent. was constructed of this of glimpse into the 1�eroic ages of the sagas, jug.
days as we divide the time, of tw-e4.ty-fol the arsenal, was ours. In half an hour more metal, while .41 per cent. was --of iron. and to watch a beautiful fair girl in her short Which was a spiteful fling at the mernory
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. hours each. As a matter afact;- A iiisaus 6 see violent disturbancea that .the end of the bridge its&lf was floated away 47 per cent. was of wood and composited gray dress, with bright eyes and glowing of Hix's grandfather, who was aupposed to
nothing of the kind. I�t - mean�s- 'periods must be produced by heat. It is evident by some invisible agency from the south vessels. But it Bhould also be noted that cheeks, shoob like an apparition from an- have supplied a medical college with 11 sub-
,
of time, of course, but very long &riods. that they have not yet cooled'off suffic'eat' side, and in lees than an hour the several the wooden vessels generally are older, so other world across the whiteness of the un- jects)' occasionally.
We have the warrant of the -Bible itself for ly to sustain life.; -in other words, that their portions of it were collected at the. farther that age as well as material may have con. trodden snow. After that the twitting on facts be3a,me
the assumption that " God's days as a thou. mass, so Inlach greater than that of the earth ' 0
, Band years." - . - I has not yet reached its cooler stage. 'All side of the roadstead. Meantime, the fires, tributed to the result. - The races on the snow are among the general, and in the ensuing five minutes we
I Even if the Bible were silent on the sub- these facts, it seems to me, substantiate the fed by small explosions, spread till the town Again, ships bulk more largely than -greatest fetes of the capital, and all the learned more of the personal hiatory of tile
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' seemed like one great furnace vomiting out steamers, the latter making, 43 per cent., world, headed by the court, goes to see Hi xes and Mix es than we ever knew bef o re,
ject it would be contrary to all the known nebular hypothesis; indeed, we could hard. columns of velvety black smoke to heaven. and ships Z7 per cent-, of the total; bat age them. The most celebrated Norwegian though they had lived neighbors to us all
laws of the universe, to analogy and to good ly ask for stronger proof of its truth short ,0,
I
li sense, to interpret the story of the I creatipti- oof a direct revelation from the Creator him. , con after seven o'clock columns' of smoke- again must be considered, for a large num- skaters compete, but of late years it has their lives.
I as meaning that Ood completed the work sblf . I I I . began to ascend from Fort Paul. lit a min. her (124 vessels of 47,910 tons) were con. always been the young of Christiana who Now, what is the moral?
. I ute or two more flames were- seen breaking demned and broken up against only 18,635 have carried off the prizesi The sport is Simply this: Avoid twitting on facLs.
, in Big days of twenty-four hours each. That But.our qwn solar system is not the limit out in Fort Nicholas. The first exploded tons of steamers. becoming every day mire and more of a Nobody likes to be taunted with misfortunes
V . . it = Ita. � -thesis. The spectroscope has
, _7 ; ,� � - as
iritielfro atlop Idl �1 A19ttheCreator of that hypo i which they cannot help. Least of all do
- P y with a stupendous roar later in the day ; A ship is more readily abandoned at sea national i titut on, and it is not unusual
. � pr -.1. *c;tki4i6- t- gicidw,6 thair-1 he sits in shown us that fixed stars are all akin to our the mines under the latter did not take fire. than a steamer because wi-en the masts for y ung nobles to spend a long time up in they like being twitted -with the faults of
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heaven, ordains by a breath the making of sun. They have the same elements, the -
� The retreat -of Gortschahoff was effected "go by the boa'rd" in a storm the ship is the thountaing practicing skating. Alpine their relatives.
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I I a worlcb and throws it out into space it a same characteristics and virtually the. same with masterly skill.-WiLLTAm HOVARD often helpless. We have therefore 50,576 hotels and inns, which used to close at the Little minds are fond of twitting.
I
f . __ ... juggler tosses a glass ball up in the air. conditions. Why, theni is it not reasonable RUSSELL, L.L.D., in the "Scribner." I tons of ship thus abandoned against only beginning of tile cold season, are now kept Yoa have all heard the story of the man
. Even-ia the abseaceof all proof-,1-conld not tc�assulne that all space was originally fill- � - and wife who quarreled ay.d were divorcee
* � , '
I -0 I 9000 of steamers, which latter in itself is'a Open for some weeks in the depths of win
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4 I '� - bring juysAf t� belibving that p6a�ible. But ed with nebulous masses, which,. like that I
.4- - � large number ; they were all of large size ter. because he was worth twelve and a half
'� uniineing ARCTIC. � _ _ Very soon all those who value their rep- cents at the time of their marriage, and sh'.
� thdrif ia; pfWfif -ofthe'r'ffoat t . , kind of our system, shrunk, condensed, radiated NAVIGATING THE too averaging 12CO tons.
� that the formation of car solar system was heat and threw off secondary masses to form . �_ 1. - '
� ce. �'It is interesting to note further that utation in society will go up to greet the was worth only twelve, and could not 'beat
t� a work of agpi and not of days. I Purpose planets and satellites? a . .an New Year at a height of 2,000 meters above to be told that her husband had raised her
�i . - - -ago now. � I - I steamerscolliddraore frequently than sbips,
giving -yous,few of them in plain, un- - The experience. that 1ae been brOugkt or �the results are more disastrous. Thus the sea, flying about all day, as- the saga to wealth by marrying her, and that he
-
�__ - profsp4ioi�ql t6rms but it -would be better - � __ - -
;� I . � - . I I THEORIES ABOUT FEET. down fro6i'the 'vimrlous 'Arctic expdditions,. we,find that while 45,076 tons of steamers tells us Frithjof and Ing eborg, did cross the might have married a woman with as much'
- 1.
I
" i I
�, _&stto--d-xpWm 4io* the great work was and more:: particularly 'from the diffisrent *e -re lost by collision, only 12,849 tons of snow fields, and,at night, throwing aside as himself. .
I
, . . .
.
"
-
, donei. Peculiarities of Character ]Indicated in the whalers w1_146h �very-�_yekr traverse miucli'of ship losse the costume
�t - . 1. I 1. are accounted for. of the skater, dance in full 0
4 . . I haTe spoken of an original mass of Mode of Walking. the nortberada. at, - , The number of*essels does not show the evening toilet in the brilliantly ligjlted
., and - y.seasi"hasildneeda0eleme _1 I— - �Z ; __ - ELABORATE FEASTSa
"I
�, isbulous matter, composed of gases In the form of the foot the sexes differ as of csrtai0!j-iiiiio`A,ibtio navigmt-6,' whielf, d' , d of the former against 47 rooms of the Kursaal. Those who are bless-
,, same uparity �
4 �1_ 0 I -,mW406iie stbues, and- with -a diaineter of 5,- - could Eiic_ ' have been realized by the of the latter,' which would indicate that ed with vivid imaginations already see the
, much or even more than in that of the hand. lil I
_ y- -
I I W0,0ft000 miles. - You -will naturally ask A woman's foot is usually narrower 4in Pro- heroes of �_�eriod twenty-five or thirty years small ships more readily collide; and one heights dotted with a whole series of In Venice People Glided Oysters, and In
* , -
- -
'. . , . . Zf. ma" Wa's aegumed .to have a portion than a man's, while his will be ago. The capture, by the Melville Bay pack, may be pardoned the assumption that these winter stations, a sort of white Riviera: England They Ate for Hours.
IZ I _ - �
�, . .
I
.?� rMame .. X cet4ainextent. The. answer considerably stronger in the ankle and more of McClintock's Fox in the latter Part Of are mostly in home channels rather than on for we no longer dread the cold ; we have It was the vogue at one-time in Venice to
I -
- , to nestion is found in the radical dis- - August, 1857, couldscarcely beparalleled to- th �
�p � already begun to send those who have any -
I powerful in the formation of the wes, - e high seas. . gild the roles of bread and the oysters on
� tance of the la et Neptune from 'the sun, espedially of the ball of the great toe. day, except as the outcome of i norance or
��, - 19 Of course the hidden rock, the fog-bedim- thing the matter with their lungs to winter the supper table. The candles were also
I .
.- I
�� - which, is 2,7 , , miles, the diameter When a woman owns a strong, firm, wide disregard of every -day ,knoWledge. In an in . � ' among the snow, where, after a few week's r-oated with zold. We reacl of dinners of
�
:�11 . .- . I ed, rugged headland, and the overpower. -
-1 of its orbit bein twice the radiiis, or 5, foot many of - us experience, perhaps, no average season Melville Bay can be travers. ing tempest are as disastrous to the steam- training, the most delicate will write their state which lasted four hours. Something
�5' . - I of their nature may be discerned in the
�� 50D,000,4000 miles. AsXeptuneis-theout- sensation of surprise r.t finding her k1strong ed about as readil y as almost any large body er as to the ship, and we find that In each letters with their wi idows open. Skating
1�" erm4ost planet of our system, it marks the - of water lying Southward, while its earliest case about a half ot prevent the brilliant pictures of Verouese, which, seen
- - mindt;d." When a man trips along on a of the losses are attributed on the snow does 33 Norweg-
": � 'boundary of the'nebulons matter fro'mwhich . n be predicated with a to these more or less unavoidable causes. .
7��i . delicate little foot people instinctively be- seasonal passages ca a from successfully practicing ordinary in Venice, give us so vivid an idea of Vene-
� , . Ian
�
�Z�' the system- was formed. '. - - Precision almost akin to mathematical cal. As to the natio � lity, we find that the skating on ice, and among the crowds on tian life- three or four centuries ago. There
- . �
1-1 .1 I lieVe him to be lacking in power, and often � na
I I � As. this mass of matter slowly revolved in put him down as eff6minate. - 1. culation. .The hard pack-ibe which has " deat,hiate " of tormage.of Britain's fleet the Karl-Jolians-Gade we are sure to rec- were, of course, also banquets of quite ex.
. .
I
-_; - I . space it assumed a, globu . Ur shape. � The par- If, instead of the cramping imprisonment accumulated as a result of the winter's frost, is 2.67 per cent., and of the colonies 3.13 ognize one or two champion Norwegian ceptional lavishness in honor of the dirs.
'_ ticle� composing it were held toother by of*.boots and shoes, the toot from'infane and has to, an extent been held together per cent. I skaters who have carried off prizes in both tinguished guests who were -constantly
. I . . gravitation, and as the rotation coatinued , y through the large bergs which are here and *
were allowed a free, natural devefbprdent, I Britain has a -heavier loss in ships than hemispheres. drawn into the vortes of Venetian gayety.
`� w. there was a gradual condensation in the it may be questioned whether, under sue there scattered through it, usually shows steamers -her total losses for the y In 1552 the Patriarch of Aquileia feted
h ,�ar being 0 -
1 That oenter, in the coursa� of time, conditions, it might not be rendered capable
v_ center. I the first signs, . of weakness between 3lb vessels, of 282,712 tons. -[Engineering. , Ranuecio Farnese, the Pope's nephew, in
;4 � became a nucleus of solid matter in which July 15th an 20th. Large cakes . A Famous Fearl,
;11 I of performing other functions besides those - I Liong famous pearls is his palace on the Giadecca. The rooms
.
1'� . � there was great beat. There was heat of locomotion and sustaining the weight of or pans of ice have by that time a Serpent. The most curious ai were decked wi th extraordinary sumptuous-
.�_F 'throughout the mass, but it was greatest at the body. . � . succumbed to the powerful.oceanic currents � Shark ani Be that which, three centuries ago, Cie French ness ; cloth of gold, pain, ings, and illumina-
!�, the center. '. -,unlucky r- � produced- by the
--� Certain at least it is that some $ . - tions adding to the effec
,-, I that are directed against them and detach- Mr. John T. Carrington contributes to traveller Tavernier sold to the Shah of Pe,
`1 - ' ,I,-,,- -,.The&--' .Ae 4k e to throw off heat, a I It is still in the possession Patriarch's cooks. Among -the guests
I ,_ _ ___m4A� W&b ,�, ing themselves from the parent mas , float the Field an article dealing with the various sia for $675,000.
-,
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R . afid"thit mass shiu6i_.�n_dl;]��98_&rmaii� off to'find new .havens of their own. The species of sharks which have from .time t,) of the Bove n of Persia. ' . were twelve gentlemen in fancy marine cos-
�; ��;. - - -
1W . and -more. And - the more it shrunk the as contm*ues until most of time been found in British water3. The AnotLer rMig,tern potentite owns a pearl �
;�a tume of green satin with red lilting, wear-
�� hotte-r' the center became and the more either r4A oved or melted largest species of..Beitish sharks is (lie of 12J carats, which is quite transparent.
col I . says) jug caps of the same colors, and each ac -
rapid was the rotation. The slower rota. rg,.the close of -the fourth so distinct that there need be no difficulty in It is to be had for the sum of $200,000. companied by a lady dressed in white.
, - - .-
tion, of the mass had made it gl6bular:in t a' " - � I i cess Youssoupoff has an Oriental
I Ae'be�on 'shoie�ice (944re�;, identifying it by'the.gill arrangements,'for Pr n This repast also lasted four hours, varied
`-Z . ' 'but as the rotation -increased the e I ' �
I shape, I . 11 � ,�� - -1� fnditate bh ba,rrier whielt, att""bed to them are elastic rakers, which pearl which is unique for the beauty of 'tF by music and the professional entertainers
. globe btomme andflatter flatter, untl it �� colour. In 1620 this pearl was sold by
.�as � b�fori rendered'apassage all act like the whale -bone strainers of the .
".., ut few-Apys
- I � ' not that the peculiarity is said,to ext i � of the day. It ended with the outtiDo, up
!2�_ - I I -4 S, , - W - 'The-treind of - the ice is- baleen whale. Their object seems to be to Ceorgibus of Calais to Philip VI. of Spain of
�� - ., � sume epform of a disk. . er .S I A I elf even to ;U-9 condtilptiop � aid th certain large pies, from which"live
'' - � I - P - � ut imprZei& .
� , I - -
, f * lef
, a � ,,
I -'
�X_ '. It'. � _Atl certain stage of this flat'tenifig 4pro- 'readserhe&-tv emore -westward through the Bay, the -west-- sift the �water before passing through .ts. To -day it, is birds flew out into the room. The guests
�, extremities a� t ' . liable to orth n i the at the price of 30,000 duesL
�� cess the law of gravitation be i P � ward to the American side, and finally south gills, and retaining small crustac?e, &c., on valued at $225,fif"'. Pope Leo XTIL , again,
�_ - � . came'no erm- disease than thr. right. � 'ecessot strove with each other to catch -those birds.
tive ; it could hold the mass together 0 But, perhaps, the most expensive banquet
_df' as m The,more diffieult movemerts +in stage to the open sea., It was the purpose of the which the animal feeds. Unlike most of the owns a pearl left to him by his pred
r�� body no longer. Then a ring of matter was of St. Peter, which is worth
Fj�l -thrown oft into space, and the central part dancing are usuallyexecated uponthe right Relief Expedition to reach the southern sharks, Selache maxima is timid and in- on the throne arls ever given in Venice was that to Henry 111.
� - foot, and it is generally considered that an- boundary of the Melville Bay pack on or offensive, feeding upon sea -weeds and minute $200,000 and the chain of thirty-two pe of France. He was feasted in the great
U -of -the mass, being thus relieved, again- as- I - . . . It is known by the Eng. owned by the Em ress Frederick
i_-!, , ess double practice be accorded to the left %bout the 20th of the month, and there watch marine organisms .p 'a est'mat- hall of the Doge's Palace, and there were
�F sumed a, globular shape, again shrunk, con- . - until the oppor- lish name of basking -shark, because Of its ed at $165,000. ,000 guests. At another
e I .1 .leg an uul3,rracefnl preference for the righb the movements of the ice $1,1 00,000 is the price of the five chains
z�l , densed at the center, increased in rapidity will be shown by the dancers in -their per- tanity for action arrived. An earlier traverse habit of remaining perfecly, still, probably time the same monarch was entertained at a
10
__ of rotation, flattened, and threw off a ring f rinances. ,
N -1 . . I might possibly have been made through per- asleep, on the surface of tLe water. The of pearls forming the collar of the Baroness sugar banquet; the napkins, plates, knives,
I , of matter. This was repeated several 6 tent 11 butting" of the ice, but the dangers Irish name- is sun -fish -doubtless for the f' ,ustave de Rothschild, and that of the -
I Most people tread more firml -with the als forks, and even the bread (so called) werc
11i, - times, and then the center of the mass, hav- Y, incident to this form ct navigation Were same. reason.- This shark sometimes reaches Baroness Adolphe de Rothschild is almost
�__ - - - right than with the lbft foot. There seems . � all of sugar. I he Venetians were mightil-v
4 ing reached the lastetage of shriakage and- to be a greater capacity for propelling the such as to render -slowness a prudent meas- a length so great as 40fk, but from 25ft. to as valut.ble. Both these ladies are enthas. pleased when Henry took his napkin in lif.,
.
- condensation, and with it- the greatest 3 equent size of is,
r;z_ � body with the foot ; trom-this tfie - horse. are of safety. -[Dr. Angelo Heilprin.. in 0 ft. seems to be the more fr stic collectors of pearls, and their jewel- hands, and, to his surprise, found it brolit:
i7 . - I I
I.V possible heat, became the sun. _____, I n"s " 5tirrup. Scribner. . adults which are found in our seas. Being a lers have instructions to buy for ,thera any to i
, __1
M", _ fleft ig4thp E , ieces. At this feast 1260 different
The g ,,, pribgsaith th _' - - - I 8
� i uring - 'I a his play - very bulky fish for its length duals of
- �� -hW,s that -were throWn-off"A , indivi pearl of unusual size or beauty which they dis
�1�1__, . - . unless " 1-band&2.� no - % - . large size run to great weights, such as half may happen to come across. ee were served, and 300 sugar effigie.,-
'� � ltbeqe �ep�;Aed motions -of the central mass, hops naturally upon the left � were distributed among the ladies.
111�_ * - � rw _�, t2li Co ndinsed " Skimmed " Milk. he sister of Mdme. Thiers, Mdlle. Doane
. z , 'no 6ha:ordinary .
I bTm unive in their a ton. Another character is the beak -like T
, k--- - , , �% rsaL law. begin -tk*Vte4
3-�� - - -, � tu - mo _ _#",9= _ftwopl: Whatever might have been said againsp
� around- the densest part-' he .. . t � ati be�t "ve '_ aeculiar. A correspondent of I I Food, Drugs, and
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.__ ._- , � -�_r� - nreiv;r ;X
--- ____ g" .ev!ffii ,P �4 projecting snout, which frowns over the is also the owner of a very valuable string the Venetians, they were a hospitable peop1c,
.
- " P- ,; . *V * of pearls which she has collected during the -
- � " t`- f 'f di iduirch4kidtor§
F. . Drink " says: In none of the reports pub-
'5 � , - ,that composed them. Tfi y con- eyes like exaggerated eyebrows. Themoutb, -this, to, in small as well as in grew
- . � inatter 6 tea o in iv _Tp,e plainly .
��--._ � �C_-, - I lished-by you -do I see any records of prose- also, is far forward, and not deep under the last thirty years.
,.",;�,,_-,�- traeted, condensed at the center and thiew I n tbidt,�.ait4pe sail- � r - , matters. Wheii,forexample,in 1476,an
� I , ;#!§ g, th 0 sol - cations of vendors of 11 skimmed " condensed black pearls the Empress of ambassador from the Khan'6f Tartary visit-
�- , off rin f,, precisely as the original mass had dier?s stiff, the coantr an'MIting gait ,head, as iusharks generally. Thecolourof Of so"called
.,�_�.�`: -_-, 9'. . . - Yin .
-
,�, - I � done. � I- . __ I are immediately recognized. .. I milk. I am the more surprised at this? these animals is blackish brown, lighter on Austria possesses the most valuable collec- ed the citv, and it was known that the
F__ . . - Tho, is a simple -and � easily understood Slow steps, whether long. or short, ail . e you give so goodly in array of cases the undersides. The snout is'dark red. . I . Khan and'his suite carried but one shirt
.
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1111- a. becaus tion. .
� - , C5 of prosecutions for adulteratibn of ordinary disb, dirty . whitish underneath. The Lfdlle. Marie apiece in their bags, the Senate formall-�
'
v- explanation of the famous nebulat* hypothe. gest a gentle or reflective state of mind, as � A story is told of the actress N
��
,z�!_:� - � � I m rtality of infants - -Magnier and her pearls. One day, as she
ie-,� sis-promalgated by Laplace. It is accepted the case may be, . while, on the "contrary, basking-sharkb are not always in voted 20 ducats that they might be proviA*.
k'-, �, bi the most eminent astronomers and quick siteii seem to a _eA �f agitixtion and under one year in England, " Wales was active ,in their habits,, as they some- was about to appear on tlie scene, somebody ed with additional shirts, which were ao
� ,
S
� tl. �� I - I - .
k - - , - scientists as the only reasonable solution � of � . j , ap I � 151 per 1000 of the population-; 149 chil- times- leap out - of the water, - exposing made the lemark that h6r pearls were really cordingly made " a la tartareseba,"and pre-
-
,4��,., . . energy. - � I _� . I
,
_- I . _bhe� gre*t m dre 11- out, of every 1000 born died within one. most of their huge body, as size. "It is true," she ro- sented. We can imagine how the good
__ . "ery of creation. , According Reflection is revealed -in frequent pauses though at play. of an enormous
'
.- , - - . ail] � and out of every 1000 deaths 231 he plied. "The lady whom I represent on the,
�,_ - � -to it the uu ious of the'oiiginal rn�ss formed mad-walkieg -to and fro and backward and year, Another curious habit is swimming on t councillors and citizens would, enjoy this
, ,
- � � .
1. -- _�,, _,,�, le ��th� Burr, the, nuel�6'4 each, secondary mass forward ; the direction of the st�ps, �� stage no doubt wore smaller pearls in real
. 4ekths were, 9,hildren under.one - -year old. top oL the smooth sea, with an undulatin kindly little jest.
-1 wav _11 -"� . 9
. - I
�, �'-Tod6hmve dodo*eatseki�i &� _- ` fi' - h , life. But what can I do? I have no small
-1 _ y Watn ng t e
.�- formed a planet,. and- the nucleus of each eiin impuls __ I " . 't .motion, the snout and eyes being well clear
ik jof
_��, � . .. g and following every changing &1j1iA_'Againsi _urchasiaWJ' - d , "' 'ihe�va� r. It is sappoBed that ibis habit pearls." 4 -
t- I ,rony a secondary mass form-� of ihe mind, inevitably betrays 1 _p _epurlous, con en ,
- tin ` thrown off f ii�certmintlw �
",I 9 .
I
,
_. - 16 - i, j is tho;origin of
I- �. : I I Oil inilks and,dfi6mts' fo6&j-_"bu.t what s;re'th6 1, I — No The Hidden Treasure.
�,_. . ad a plaueVa sateRits. hesitation and indecision. - . I the so-called sea -serpent, for
- 11 �
.
-_1 . . �__ r a Acts inspedoi; doing ioailo�w , � A quarryman dis covered an immense block
- -
111'�� . . I The proud . al . �p i ". s sow anau measuredg,., I'll - 11 -1 I � In that condition the snout and eyes would Colds.
,
� . - Oq,r earth was- one of therings throwif off ` ' - a � � terr' . %ive the, =red conditions (with a little 'ad intelligent in such mat. of marble which was almost buried in rub.
- I - . � I' ia sale 4 tfie_�aitticlesl? It is
�1 � I .
�
- 11 - *ft0th ithe original aiges; and, it, in turn, I 11 - �A' , , _. � .
I - ' - .
.
f'- . - _ usl turned o 0, I � _- fig the pulilir;_ � And, m-hothit v
-1 . , - the -toes are conspiono sly turned o .. 11 0 , I � . added) to the many descriptions of that The prudent a
- I I throw,6ff it ring, w1rich became the mo � I 8, _1 11 . __ % � ' d _. ar additional cloth- bish. Upon removing p. -rt of a crust of
�
I . On. leg is straightened. In vanity the t - � ntire r to punish � the ` ors. -1 , bica.1 beast. The capture of these shar � ing as the season advances, as a precaution- I
_ � � ters will be careful to we,
-,
_�� � � " !� - -, � rhe seven other plariets7of our system were,- -ratlier, more, aracbfully-tvned, the a ri . I - b Is dirt lie discovered s�in� letters carved oil
� �_ - -- . .. a have no objection.wha nl�t i. interesting and exciting work. ary measure, remembering that most of our the marble, an
,
� I ,'�, f formed in the same, way. It is supposed b _r -4t . her tever to seeing "skim is b , ly d after a little scraping be
. . ,3r ad "' e� � ' ofte an
-� . ' I � _tlesft,"_,.�m f Js Very med" condensed milk used with tea or 00f - They are easily approached while baskina diseases result f rom taking colds. ,Care at made out the following words:-" Blessed
,
I 6cf,jcn'4ra6de t_- " " , �, . : - - -1 0
�s - � some astronomers that a ranth� iffig- was as - - 4 Y. - - . fee, althdugheven then it is an imposition dily awake, even "
ig . thrown.offbetween Mars an or sleeping, and will not rea I
R��,,-_ - - d Jupiter, which ,,-ti!ii��-*iliin'g��ii��bolizes surpriae,-cur- this season, when our systems are debilitat. is lie who slia I turit me over.
. upon the purchaser unless it be sold- as after the harpoon is thrust deeply into the ed, enervated by the unusual warm weather Now at thz� time this occurred there was a
.
��,?��, � - - -disintegrated, and that 6he niattgr Roiity,, discretion-or,,mystery. -Obstinate 99skimmed" condensed milk.- It is the body near -the gills, Once sensible, however, preventing tile usual re -action, warding off tale going about the quarries to the effect,
�w - - - - -became -
- � �
ft, Z I o-'; 14-th' --Eli formed'the asteriods Pdoplewho in an argument'rely more on le of "s-kiranied" substances for to- the -fact, the� plunge with trememdous a h -
-
� � _�!. � IRI�f c mpose a r1i . .
.
� � that havi--their - Orbit- between those tw- 0 ularity than -an intellectual power, rest r � n V
�_ . I la ge a I such attack-'haii in the spring, when the that there was hidden tre, sure in t e neigh
F_�_- , __ muso� - feedinrb bies that ]-think should be re-' '
i
�;�,�,�, - a That-vei* ii strengthened by the� - , � force deep down iii to the sea and roll on the . .
__,: . � L:� , 0-40 at flat ad fipp e 11
y"
11 �� I ,,4R groinid, walk garded as one of the worsb,:ms it undoubtedly bottom'tr*ing to disentangle thg" deadly cold weather and pure, bracing air 11 tones bell hood.
�7 - C-- " �
nq . � � , -the distance -from Mars Tr , �u ridl �� r 8
', V I dt� . 'to Jupiter - e A ' V1 �w*,14 - ad_a�� - ill ' up," that we may expose ou selve with The man at once j Limped to the conclusion
-,,:, AV -W _ - e le98 is one of the meanest and most heartless, of -weapon, and then race away, at -high speed. contracting colds. A cold is that his fortune was made. �
, � 4� , � less danger of
- . , - is about,340,000,000, miles, which' exceeds firmly plaat`Bd an& far - apart. Turned -in frauds. The number of poor women who,
,--
-1
I— .
-
I - � � . We gradual increaze of distance b�tween the -toes ate often 'fea - ad with ,6re6 � coppied,- I -mb- ignorantly, use " skimmed " I a exerted by those in the but another e:
- I xpression for closing most, if He rushed off home and obtained the as.
�___� , - .. . - Eveiy �cari must b
a7
=��,,, L. Theref6re,'the . I .. , -Isubstances is be ts or the -chances are a catastrophe. A
I - �
I— -S" . , I � ot all, of the millions of pores, thus pre- sistance of some of his friends.
, and th-- planets .y:.spgy* 31�e' "-'- d -persons. - .- n
,
-1
�� _ s fitfrom I legion,. -and we shall never reduce infant free running -line of a couple of hundred venting the escape of the impurities of the After two hours of patient toil they suc
� - ., - st have been thrown off them� _�� :Z 4- - . pointed and � di � -
- � ring mu �, I _ -he sale
� . I _ � ____ 2 !aRgeil - on the awitality until i -of such articles is fathors is the first thought, for these fish
.- � : . � . - �
�: , � � 11 . * -
I . - - ' 0 ' i " '"� �
_ Z - �,� _1 e- ptooft- f Up aws hypolihesiq� ground with slo*,'ineistLrbd�stipg.ivia--iipoin- - sty dealtwith. -, I � __ .
�, I'— I.., I As'td 01 , 1. . I I 11 � . I '. : . - rigorou - . . body,ofcourse producing disease. A dis- ceeded in turning over tile only obstacle
1.�, - �nvy--'Ptitftse-, u er uponasoiefiti pous appe - Perplexity occasions. ir- _� �
-1 I - , I � make a gallant fight for life. Theyarekilled Unction should be made between a real cold between them and the sapposed treasure.
- �� �_ :� � . -0-r-not - , , - to, -e� t A � .. &ranCe.'_ - - _�_ � .
. I �
, � (14i , 1: Ontario's Building- at'Ohicago. liver, which is said to be of very go
-I_-- I the . �
,=&
,,,pve
�� - . --:ftadisdtikaion'6,f thein hire. . . . . . -xe,gular.-Akew-and ,� r -W, mints. The I - , for the sake of the. oil extracted from the and what are so often so regarded, when Judge of their surprise when they found
- ' _- - - __ I I �r_ it". .- 0 , AE � th
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_�__�_ � _41,,� - Mg . - A 20 much
- . I . I '11 � - .1 n commisi - quality. - -foot female produces as
- � ohnieml , 6!1,!p:,ty-,ft�e,trorit�-u-,v�x*ag - 3ioner Awre� -is making. good pro. . of the eyes," an irritation of the membran-s side of thestone, wasas follows:-" Thalikk
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_� � I __ " 'Wreip �!�,*1411!�'. P� _2�,��R,,*�," ,��.,-� :,- � the pre�Zration of the exhibija �as 150 gallons of such oil. The range of thi of th
�� . � - � _, � I ktunately'll a -Statemeat -of tbab. . I _ . . 'Pla-rk I . . I I - I -gress with . a e nose and ears, not necessarily con- my friends; I was weary of reclining go
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- -
- I - I � treceAsary to _. _b -f I - esen e as stoop�:., -this- L
.. _,�"_ - ;�� 't - for .World!s Fair. He was in. CU(*go a species includes the Mediterranean, and is nebted with closing ?f pores, but resulting, long in one position. "
� , - - - k , est ,,-, The�miser'a walk is i6p t & .
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.�_- fL:, , - - - 4NM-den.e. of,- & truth' of 1' � .. � t, a6j*dtWj annoug few d'g.s ago, looking - after - - the condition not rare around t6e-OrkneyL oftener than otherwise, from a derangement -
- - , I I iug,moiselesgj� with _ . I .
'A I . 1� ghor , _ � _ _ R, I . -,
,�, � - " - , . �Iie_ . _. -_ , 0- I of -thii ivgetables and fruits, and he - found - of the stomach, from eating too much of the .
1, - *=tint' fumetuda - .. I " the-wilk-islivelSt � � .
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, kl- , Ftiii - - _ - - . -, I - �
��_ Z AZT , . 1. . ._ ". - '' . Fourteen Villagers Burned to Death.
� � -, 4,41iiiassiAitacterige a happy that they have stood 'the cold storage ad- � is, the sweets and starches, the -
, ,--.�;,� " - - _ 11 M _rrol% - I IV ness- r, .e -8 - - � . . I fats and oi .
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- -,-- iA - ... - ,% -1 , ' fats and oils being the most prom- A fire has nocurred at Berson, a vfl.lage of
- I 4 ? 1 1 - - M-1 - mirmbly. He -has, at .
-
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--:?,� -�'l-,,;--------".�.�".�,-�,!� i - , wvakt i'd-e. -1s. , r, 1@0 ,!A--W-r �i i0th'thd- cause d_fthdJ.9y - bags of -grain -read . N 2n) ,,, 99,48anr-s, , I . inent cause of such derangements. In such Gironde, France, and fourteen of the vil.
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I - I � �Iioy in _ I ., -11 Irt W49 Fouineew Ilifebes- Round and Still ' the
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, �_��x,,z*� , -_� arltf�ozfiliieurkOik�U_&` - 4 kv. ,�r, � 'm -,wu-m wdoi,' 6xg � ing� cases it is well to take less food than usual lagers were either burned to death 'a jjr
- '1_'W-__,- �_A - - - I �: �R! *,, k Oipl* Thelumber for,thel)fi , 2
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,h� , , _��s ady and will b . -- Hot Wheis Picked ITP.
,2__i �_.j_ - abundance of pure air. homes or were killed while attempting -t-.
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5 ;-� �:� � T I 91% -1 - I , _ . -An Albany, Ore., despatch says: -Fred
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.- , of COR] I :�,�,*4ion� L.
�':��,, - I -, � I - . 11 The Shah Sarioufly It'
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_�j - - , "g to ito'but th� southeast y6sterday. It was
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, - - :- co -&�Rv "O . �, � . ___ �'W � ., - - ' ' h - v4gr4pidly� and with a rushing Bound fell heran says that the aged and little children a number V"hed
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- � �; �--�.-, � & - :It, . ' , - V t�id - � -� 1" lint it, together. There are two rooms ; t e
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, - �4 _1 . , . " ., �, - 66r mwe, of - b the street,. followed. by.bright sparks. � hall of 'Persia is seriously ill.
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-1 :�Ui " -- f - -.-, �,� !�'tZ .�:,� . h -9sis. 6stened to the spot where it struck of the illness is not reported, but the Shah
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RM,u - - I I fl� � of theearth anclf-dund a rock about fourteen in
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_�� 0 ��, Ahe moul a the recent troubles in. his dominions, and to lack Of food and proper clothing.
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M
111�I can assure
the �iouth wer
with the Born
The speaker
Ceylon Tea Cc
after having I
Archipelago, E
was spent -on I
- 1,'t'ords an
borror of the
.
goes on in th�
only means of
fernicious sys
now refer
Chinese labor
neo by the sla
Singapore, wh
I labor agents
of their dEtest
- To the , 1
is in need of 3
labor in BOME
is made upon i
the planter th
ing, and that
man—this in r
way, is il: alin
4,11u�,.o,f ,
to p.v :.,��-;
the tobacco pi
,
mam" is expec
each coolie's vv
his own pock
slave is paying
nwn hire. I
agent,' begins
agents up into
China, to scou
sational tales 0
in a beauti;
lul
big pay,' says
other false enc
quisite numbe
cilinamen, to j
-All men '
"Yes. Wo
Borneo tobacc
got their men
sign an agreern
the planter :330
a twelfth-mout
mind there are
days of rest of
hardly neece
these poor wre
document to w
for the can't r
next proceed
graphed. The
his breast or o
the iniiials of t
whom he is b
marking proce
I
leaves all ngly,
about five ine
serves to identi
tempt to run a
tain to attempt
of life to which
"And there
ference. in th
"Only one
my knowledge.
voyage from Si
, -
the unf orturia
of our boaL T
down from the
totally unaware
they were two
slaves gleaned t
with a China
crew. Then, f
falling truth d
earned that th
of their fellow -c
victims to the sl
liberty for a me
" Thereupon
into their ovm
Mutiny followeK
per was obliged
Here Governor
and after hear'
tile coolies he c
vessel to release
one case brough
one out of the h
As a usual th in
put into port at t,
because they a
irons before the
thus they are car
" And finally"
They arrive at
unloaded like a
the estate to wh'
" abou
Borlllll��
t4 A mere ban
-it is this localit
comprise the Ma,
Borneo ; the Ba
wild tribes of Su
of 'Northern Cele
It is necessary be
from the persom
I
that I may go
standing of the
these poor slaves
ed signs of R_grn
a dense popula,ti
There are the ret
dens and grand
numbers of piles
prove former habi
-all of the Malay I
Therefore, when :
dences of former i
as to what has he
"The only ans;
tains, who tell a
times past so Cox
one another that
mination. To be
be found along th�
rivers- .for poetic4
day. But even tile
wide apart. And
custom of head
died outbecause
prohibitory law o
tempts at head hL
be admitted that 4
to rob its neighl
possible as trophio
I I Were you evez
I asked, half in j(
serious an answei
I I Yes, once --*r
answered promptl
I shall never forg
chased me aroun6
Away I flew, tw
until I reached -%
charged my rA
back I gained or r
are the very fello,
the galling yoku
slav�s. What a
monev is -not tv b,
of crime. They
ready aid to the t
*_ reward of $5 pei
Chinese slave the
them allva. TL
4d**, fre� is i
.
�