Loading...
The East Huron Gazette, 1893-02-23, Page 2­­ ­� �;� �k­ - -- -�P-­ - �-­- - --p ; - — I— - ­-, -­M-�.� iii ­ 11 � j:z- - -* a I Olt, U 1 i ��! Qg 9 I I -� =: , ­ -- -, ,�� — ��- I ­� , � ­ - ,- M ; ,� - 11 P -- K,.� - ­ - --- ­ � -, J,��,z�-,-- i � W ,�---�-�-;i�--25,-7-,�-M�-�-,�*�V---M 01 - -----A-1----- ­Z�7 W2!0�1�974 , _: 1�1��,­ 2 " = � , --� --, �7 ­ —, -��—� � , -,- - � - --- 11, �, Z, I M WN &--- n e I k —: xx�—i � - �"— I - : i � - - - , -1 --. - , �kq,.`�- - - - - ---,—" 1, ­ - I - - ww.­ L ftm ,---- � ­�-��mft� 1 1111-� -1 -1 -.----- ­ - 5 - .­ _-­` -­-w­­-��--� , ­-­ -- - �W ME R- �;-- WER"All .----- - -��zg ­ - �-- : �, ­- F NMN-',11-�­ - �-. , , ��,,- - -- , ­9� E , -- -� - ,- - . , � � ­ , - I 7L � I - ��,:­-'-- I ­ - - WIN I 9 . ­ - Z, -. " ,� - - - " 0FRE I - �, I . . I - I I : . , ; -­ .I - ­ - - � � - ,. - -,�-��-, � - � 11� �� -- 7 � I ­ - , � 11 - ; � � � . � ­ �� Z. - � , . � :`�­ " -- � � , � �, - - -,,� -�� � -� - -- - -t�, - , "" - -- ;-:� - - , : -��:­ �-- 'a '. � ­�.r,T�,­f--�;W�,S:----- --�� �� - - -- - " ­ � �7 -,� - -,7f�f � ,­�� �'. - ", - . I " ­ - �` �4­ -1 Nmm . . I ­ Y-� - --im-, ­----,�- -,- . � V 0 5- - . - - � - � ­ .. ,--W. -T- �", i -- .- - - -. �� -- - - I Ai�E�� ­, ­- �­ - - ,,,l I - .. � , � , I ­ , - I � . - - N : - - �!'�� .... � � I , - - - : -111 .1'. - ��� � I -�� 16,- ­-��, �4 - . . * � - --- - �--- - �7* , -; I', - ­�­�, -�� � ;-!�,- - ­ ��­ �0 I j � - , -1_1 ­ , , - �-Z�- - ­- ­­­ � - - - - .. ­ - �'­ ��-- ­ - - . : ­��,'­�-t --­­ ,',-- ,7�!-"!­ - - - -- , - - - i ­­ - - - - I . . -1 I - - - i ­�Ars�� ­ - I -- - - � . . I - - � :�1'1!�, -­ -�� �� ,,��t;�:-t�-�A,,S,;�4 -7.- ­­ -- --,--" , � �­ ��`- , , -.' � � ­ I .1 - - I . �, I . . . . . -1 .. , - 7 - �, � . ­�­�,- -7 , , -- - - - ­ '----1, - t - - . - - �� - - - . I- , 7., � -:--?�:� -� 3� ­ , ;%� R, ... , . -* .. � . - - I - - , - --, ­ , -, - - � , j - - - - I ,- I , , "I , ��, ­.­ I'll, - I., , ". � -,. .- � �,X;��-&W---�- ---� , I -� . ­­Z� , � - � ­ , - . ­ �-��,_-- � ---,,- -�:�- - � " - ,7, - z--- .. - - �. -11 , � a ---- I - - . . ;::-:Z -�, ��:-L7--- --, . - � ­:� �. �f � t r,-,�;,� 3�1,f Z5�, 4MN , -.�­ -1� 1. , .� ­ 7 4�_;� , , - . . I ­ . - I . - - -�� " t,--, r� " ,'I- --� �'7 11� , ­� ­ I � . I'll I - - - - - -1 �1.1­ � � , -, ", � ­: � � ��� . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I - . - � - " - - - ,� - -- � , - , ­ ­ . - I � ­ ­ . . , � -�- - - - - -;-, � - - -� -- , - --,,- - . , � - � I ­� � �'.. ­ ­ . . : � I _- - - I - I --_ I ` . - � , 'f .... . . . :�� ­ �r, � - , - I . .Z- - - � - � I � � -1 - � ,�­ , - �r .... � -, - ,­ , ,� . -� � , . � � , ,r. � - ­ - -- , - - - . ,� � --- - - -: � ­ - I � . - - I - - =- , -- i7 -, .w ,�� , --�11 - , I - ..�?: � 7��,�t,, �� ___, " -, � - . . % , . ­ ­- - -� ?%��,�:­ -, �Z 1-1---.­t�5 � , I . - - - ­ - � ": , -1 I.- �a - I - T � ­ , . . I , - - - , ,:; ­ --- , - -, - . , - - I ��� - - - � - , `� , � - ;�' �. ­: - - 11 - . - . I , . - - . . . . - - � � . - � . . , - . - - � ­,, � -,� f - ­�- - �- ­`- -7, -,-`­� I , ,:� �c :, � " : ` �­ z-- , : � �, � - - I - . 1. � , ��- - . � I . : . ­� I . , ";:� "� 1, � � 1. -�� - - ­ � ­ - ­ - . I - ­, - - . . .- - , . - � � � -. - � -, - . . I- - - , , - , - I . ­- . . - , , - - � , , , , ­ ­­ - -- � � .71- -- .� . .1 - , -.-, - � , , �- 1� - .- . - - - ­ -:. , ,�­. � - . - . - - I - ­ I ­­",�-", - --­­--- ----- - - � , - - -, ­ � ., I I , I I ­ T . � I 1 7-1 ­ -1 .. .1 - I . I - � - - - ,� -- � I � ­ -- -- -- - -- 1�- -� - -z': --- ::1 � 1, �'. . . - � ,4 -- . . . I I . I . , - ,- . � I-` - - - I -- - I I - .� -­ ,.: � � - . � - i, - � - - - � . --� . .- - , - - - � - I I I - -:, , -- -� -� ­­ - ,- --,-�- -­�- � - I . I - . . . I . � - � - I � -- --- -1 - !�­­: , .,­ - ­ ­ -­�, � I -, � 1. - . . . I � , - - - - 11 , . I . ­ I I - - � ., -- ­ - - - - ­­ -, - ---. �� � ­ � , - , ­ - ", � . - , - - � ;,-, 1� ­ - � , . � � - - 11, , . I �� ­ -�i�- -fF�, - - , - 7 - � I � . . � I . � - I � . � .1 I . I - : - . -� -: - - , ,, � -, . ­- � : � I � I - - , , I - � � - I- . - I , . . I � . I I .. - � - . I - :- � , , �� - - m, I - - , , �. . .. � �.� - . - - I- . - , - I -1!1� - ­ - I I ,� -- - -- . � . -- , - .1 . - - �� � - on- -- - -- -- I . ­ , - . .1 ­ � I . - - - ­ I . . ­ 1, I . I I I " - � - . - I .. � . I - - , -, I ­ - � - - - . - r I � - __- , .;% ,Z *,-�- " -I :A- ,�. -- ",.", --- , .- . ­ - . �� . . . . I - i - ' - � i - I than. this, it was impossible: to ead . 164 i mX-er gazwg toWard the stars when he stick (he had some time since taken it to - I Ding 1 I . . � . � . ape", on - 1. ­ , I -Is. " on . the skins. For Sunday 0onteraplation. . -_ - Hark! 6 - cquL . pieces), in order to reach the bird and bring - I . � thei temple, though it Was butt-teld m in. duo'b sleep, as he W. ­ Ke ' . - - - A Remarkable- - Wental -1, f -perte-noes- -deed that� --the-�Chinam Aioubl' ' I Religion is in a uwaswe the living Dub - � I . � I . � � �it . - ed, � tj� � em- 7 - A weak , went - by uae%'Wtfully, and Nor- -it to earth a second time, thereafter -to bel 1he truth -there is in n-.. - DOW - - I . . — I - �, -� - selves -to set awatch. upon hit movement% - -iis still remained captive, as far removed thrown beyond the high wall - - Vat an I . . I � , - . . . . I I Thus confined, ,Norris . cast about. iu -his from liberty, so it seemed, as 'on the first A proud heart and a lofty M-uritain are � Im 6,va - . I �­- -. - U He captured it without much d'fficulty ; never fruitful. -[G uruall. LOtAS 0. A THRILUNG STORY OF, CHINESE TREACHERY., own mind -as to how it.mt,gbk.­ Ki jQble A&V Of -his Vonfinement. , � . . and so intent was he upon the subsequent Come I I . , , : -e I .- -- 'commuR-icate.*iW,.h` je low _y saw his captors ; tl . I I .for him to W � I ,s,. He--rarel ieir curiosity 'CO1 7 . . I . . I action of undoing the knots which secure. Riches are the baggage of vifLue, which 11 Yew . MAPTER IIL-k -TTI'TUED bered the treachery and the greed of the He had valuabl ' _regarding him was long ago s fled-, -and always hindereth tile march. e ; and, nation, whilst an achine, . e pos3essions-possession& I atis ed the stick.- that he did not for a moment Tellral At last, two of his captors cam - hopeless pain whose worth be had not- UlI:u0*: realized; seldom did any of them enter his open-air , d at his heart. Sappose',he should and these were comprised in -the power or prison . sAve to give him food. . or two realize that time had passed more Four things come not back -the spoked MifiK. 11 perhaps perceiving his condition, one of thenf gnawe . - - I - - - quickly than he had dreamed of, and that word, the sped arrow, the past life.. the How 41 . . give this thoasand pounds unconditionally, - �tbe possjbili�y to write since - e po as tug,c Do, Mi would the a . I loosed all his bonds, head and feet and '- h ssessed Several ide ,,6stive of escipe had tile Chinaman, with his food bad entered neglected opportunity. I Papa � . mount satisfy his captor� ?- ale Mabel' hands ; but Norris simply lay still unable . the necessaries to-do so. For q9me days he peoured to Norris -one that he should so from behind, anct now stood watching him, Our character is- but the stamp on our Stuart . - to move, and it was some hours before he would it not but increase their avarice ? had --been unaware that this wis so; batin Ithewall by the arduous fa�rication of holes with curiosity expressed upon every line of souls I I recovered so far as to be able to 'sib up and Would they be content with,this, or would his solitary captivit ` of the free choice of good and evil w4 . . I -y it Wks A6f very long- in its surface, whereby he might, with diffi- bissallow features. . rt ke of -food. During these hours he they not rather blee(rhim Of1is whole -for- ere his mind gmipe-d uArath Git 'was bean. culty, mount to the top. But there were . have made through life. - Some 1 K. a he was ne � for the Chinaman tune, and, then perhaps kill him by cruel tiful to him when known. -reasons to bar this gate of hope : the holes The swallow was struggling feebly be- O,therfi cied ala, � - I neath the coat. Norris was intent upon It is heaven upon earth to have a man's Doe- � . who had placed a, dish beside him, had sat torturest in the endeavor to force more when . in the -wall would at once catch the eye mani move on charity, rest on Providence, Term' " � � I He the paper -the , of both If his work. Suddenly he looked up. -Some Bett,e himself down thereafter behind the English- there was nothing left ? , margin paper the.man who brought him his food; and and turn upon the poles of truth. -� . ire that he The position in which he was placed seem- the letters which he had received from in, he might, indeed, succeed, in mak- consciousness came upon him that he was Who V � man so that Norris was not awl ed to increase in horror at each new move. his uAnoyrn enemy: it was little, for him. �ga not alone. A hand of iron seemed to draw Like rose leaves, good thoughts are bless " Tim� . � Was watched. - � thby was evident, he must not pay this much -ay! very much, for by the scarcity in stepping-pl4ces to a' certain height, his heart-qtringp together. The door of the', ed quests and give out a sweet smell if laid I Ding, I ?ne bugt beyond that, beyond , his reach temple behind was half open. He was dis- I up in the'jar of memory. -4 Gradually, as he recovered in the warmth 110'san pounds, even with the promise of of an article we learn to value what we pos- . e achin � . - of the day the use of his limbs, th . .9 sess. For pen he -had two pins WfiUst standing on the, gr�ojind, how was he ",I freedom ; it but opened paths which led to -one would I covered ; but the man who had discovered It is good for us if the contrary winds oe- I A Ll� thought filled him that escape was impossi- have sufficed -the only trifles -which his to do so? . - �J ble, even though he were -as he believed fresh danger and to new terrors in the end. ca . tors had left upon his clothing. For And this, like - , him was alone, and as yet bad made no casionally blow on us, for, after %11, it is I . p . many another idea, had to sound. . himself to be -&Iona. The power If his For coulcl be believe that the unknown � they that make'us strong as we sail the � ink, was there not his blood? , I be abandoned; for Norris - well'knew that t 11 Now,, body was so weakened that he co-ald scarce. writer of this paper could be trusted for With apparent callousness he undid � the voyage of life. 11 it When, at length, he succeeded in a moment to fulfill a - pro But these possessions were little without once his carAori perceived any possibility leathern thong which he had bitten from � mise 9 His ' � your m ly move. very method of treating -his prisoner the knowledge' as to how he might apply of his escaping, lie would . immediately be the skins upon which he sat, and which he God gives peace not as tlie world giveth I for some conveying the contents of the bowl to his them. A wild idea of casting over tl:e wall transferred to. another place, or possibly now wore Many forget this truth, and when all is I this icebe Omouth, he felt somewhat the better of the (or the temple's prisoner) proved his- - around his waist. i small messages, tied to twigs with threads chained, either to the wall or to some huge favorable without, think they hav4; the i 11 All ri jlt d; and, as the day wore on, recovered his c0w�ardly.IoEging for gain. Who was -this luckedfrornhis clothes, suggested itself stone, as he had seen the C . n This he made rapidly, and yet quietly, peace of God. ; - I -who could he be? I p I hinese prisoners into the form of a noose, as forul,-rly. The i I I Good. at use could this be, as chained. Then, indee the last ray of Chinaman was observing his every act, , o rength, in so far that he was at length man? to him ; but of wh d, The way to avoid great faults is to be- I andrthen � . able to stand up, though reeling as he did - At this point conjecture became vague, .the dust without e'r them?=aud hope would have gone! And so,- urged by curious as to what was the meaning so like a drunken man. - and, returning upon his thoughts, Norris ., - -would cov Of, all ware of small ones, therefore pull up in thenorth The Chinaman was watching him curious- decided that he should endeavour by craft 1r, indeed, by any chance one should reach extreme caution not to hazard a failure, he that he saw. time if you would not be dragged by your Bruin a ly, well knowing that Norris's strength was to undermine his unknown e Y?s intent; a human hand, that hand would be Chinese. waited, eagerly examining the while every Norris stood up; the stick in his one hand, neighbor into the ditch. 1 watching ! nem Then a still wilder idea of capturing the loophole of escape. I Eight in justifiable in such a a S . forthe time being as nothing; and that forcraft was surely the noose in the other,'as though the two eek not prond riches, but such as Aou I . - .1 even putting that fact aside, escape would case. I � swallows that ever an anon crossed the court And at length he was in� part rewarded, had some connection. mayst get justly, use soberly, distribu�e i looked in came to him, and then despair that his for he perceived that the roan who brought, Making some pretense to bind the i black spec . have been an impossibility.. Norris started If the answer came to his. leluter," 11 Yes, throng freely and cheerfully, and be able to leave � eyes, but . . . i when he perceived that he was not alone ; you will be instantly set free upon giving chances were so few cast it -3 shadow upon his food was growing more careless, Prid around the stick, lie suddenly fixed his eves* contentedly. -[Lord Bacon. i - . the Chinaman was seated smoking, and, to ii�e a letter to your bank , " then he could him for many days. Whilst he was still would at times leave the door behind him firmly and abruptly apparently upon so -me i the speck all appearance, much interested in the move- ,give such a letter, but -sign it with a false buried in despondency, it so chanced that half open when he enterel from the temple. objeA behind the mail v�ho stood near him. A man who has any good reason to be. 4, I WOW two of the birds upon whose aid he had cal- Upontbis N�rris detern­aed to act. The The Chinain . lieve in himself, never flourishes hiniself I ments of him whorn he had evidently been name ! Ancl if he were set free -well, then an obeyed the natural instinct . " Its right . he would consider how far he was bound in culated with a wild madness for a moment Chinaman must be overpowered silently and he half turned in the same dire -,tion. before the faces of other people, in order i must he a set to watch. Very soon'*Nbrris became or two, some days since, met in conflict in quickly. Instantly the noose was around his n that they may believe in hint. i convi need that escape from the place where .honor to pay this thousand pounds and to eck, J not make I he now found himself was an impossibility; take up the false order upon his bank ; and the air above him, and, whilst he watched Norris had no weapon. His hands alone enclosing throat and pigtail with a terrible If you would be well with a groat mind " Wouh ' to scale the wall, even given that he should if, as he was rather inclined to fear 'the them, both dropped toward the ground,fin. were not sufficient to do the deed at once strength ; whilst the Enalishman, with leave him with a favorable impression of self, "if I - , ally falling in the court, with absolute silence and rapidity ; so he knee and left hand, held the'man from him, you ; if you little mind, leave him v, i th nice seal at some time be left alone, appeared beyond promise should prove as nothing, then at * the power of man; to pass the baildings least he should not baVe given the first . The feelings that filled him -wild hope, set about carefully twisting a species of whilst his right, without mercy, experided a favorable opinion of himself. -[Cole- surpr4sed ? � evett more so - taste of blood to the wolves ; and who could intense longitill, terrible excitement -few rough cord, or though, which he made from its &sperate force upoll the thong. ridge. - All t , his . - , and further, his temporary an riderstand. . . - strips bitten or torn with his teeth from the There was no cry: suspension of breath what his f; 11 freedom from his bonds would, in all prob,. say but that the fals�' order might lead c " � We are made for wide communion. The bility, be of the shortest, duration some day to his .discovety andoescape9 T -o -secure one of these swallows ! skins furnished him to sleep upon -a tedious had been instantaneous. The man moved man who isolates himself dwarfs and lose$ on the ic� � . � His . . Thisseemed the wisest, indeed the only His heart burst within him in wild pray. processindeed. These he twined and knot- his hands wildl for a moment or two; then t'he power he believes fie is cultivating. forget, the .feelings was a mixture of agony and er. --- y despair. 'The- houmv passed with leaden course to pursue. - . tedtightly together. ' This lie did chiefly their motions grew feeble, and his face Our need is to have intimate communication " I don' � . Having come to this decision, Norris pro- . Ha approached the birds. One flew off ; by nigh t ; and on the second ,day following blackened ; and still Norris held the cord with our fellow -men, and with as large a a nice fat . . step. Toward, afternoon the first clew as to ceeded to examine the note which had been 'the other was so wounded and torn as to be his resolution to overpower the Chinaman, and forced the man's body from him with variety as possible, always excepting, of "When I � th6 reasoh of his imprisonment was given to unable to rise upon its wing, though it flut- he was in readiness to seize bis opportunity. all his strength. � know ther - � him. Several � Chinamen had come into the seit to Iiiin, and which he still, held in his course, the depraved. place of his captivity. One of these, taking hand. It was writtpn upon paper of foreign tered - wildly and struggled vainly to rise He had a noose, which it was his intention - A wild, exultant hope leaped through So tryi I . . a paper from the purse which he wore under make -English or Germ . an, not Chinese from the ground. o - to ciist over the man's head thus to strangle him -he was free I for the China Lady Holland was always lamenting she that his fat . man was had nothing to do -that she did not know �- - I and this'struck him as curious, in so I fa -Norris could have counted his heart -beats. him -by drawing it tigh t from' behind, whilst, killed as surely as'he would have been had o time he feI . � . his garments handed it to Norris, wha, upon that a Chinaman, unless of some high rank, Hastily, -taking off his coat, lie threw it his knee should be pra6ed against the China- he dropped some feet with a rope 'around. what to be at or how to employ her time. care, Bruir � . e . - unfolding it-, read with the greatest surprise would be unlikely to indulge in �'luxtir twice- over the bird which now . fluttered man's back. his neck. . I I I recoi amend her," said the poet, Rogers, the iceberg these words written clearly -in English: y along the ground. Each time in his terri- Stich was his crude idea ; but the oppor- When he knew that the man was dead, "something new -to try and do a little He set o -1 I I I You write note, mike pay any man ten - such as the using of paper other than ble excitement he 'misted it. Yet again he tunity was not given-, him for a number of Norris lost no time, but dropping the body, good." Once fairly engaged in that busi- -, . Chinese. As he looked upon it,.the thought I I he drew i . Englishman's hundred- pounds." tohinithat, by carefully preserving threw the coat. days, for by some chance the man came hastened tothe door and gained the inside ness, one will never "have to complain of really was ­ � Where bad this paper been obtained? "me nothing to do. It is a great cure-all to Iazi- Clearly-it bad been written by a China- the paper, there was. a dim chance of his Indescribable joy filled him as he-perceiv- accompanied by another from fhis time of the Temple. The door on the other side ness or listlessness. I This mad � English tracing the man who had written the words. ed lhat the swallow was beneath ,- then forth. stood open ; beyond that lay a space, then youn - - man knowing something of the That he was not an Englishman was evident, carefully he se � cured it in his hand and set To Norris, in his despair, it seemed as another temple, through :�Vhich he must Tall pines of the mountain range In fact, be . tongue, and k-iowing it, too, not as a guide - . Form an outline I figure strange. .. - alike from -his diction and. writing -even about examining the wound. The bird was though every. possibility of escape were but pass ; and what lay beyond that again I father wen . lit know it, in the most.childish, form . � Alion, with upli f ted crest . , I - �, igeon-English. -i but little hurt. On the mountain Feems to rest, . mig putting aside the connection with his captor, flaunted in ,rony before him to vanish Norris could not say, only his heart san'k as ones(both - If p Considerably. less than half an h thereafter into nothinva6sa. . be perceived in the instant that he was as And in Minne-squam below that he kn( . I �L - 44 You write note, make pay," it struck -and from the fact that one tbousand our liter In his bitterness he recalWd- th6 incident yet far from free. Darker does the shadow show, I ­ � Norris at once. Little as he knew of pigeon- pounds would have been but a small demCud a small piece of paper lay before him, with � ing on a qu - ,. English,- it flashed upon him that his guide, j il. some words - upon it written in his blood. l from one of his own race ; so there was _ of the swallow. Strangely enough, he had Rapidity of action was his only chance. Butas any one draws near the seal. I - -� . for instance, would rather have said some- deed, but &faint possibility of gverascertain- The swallow was securely wrapped in his looked upon it. as conclusive at the time ; F or a moment or two he stood in tile temple - Lo! the figure, once so clear, and saw ti . I Slowly seems to pa s away, � I . . -thing like, 11 You makey write some piecey �ug'who had penned the lines. Notwithatand- coat. His thread he had procured from the now he began to think differently. The then, with an inward praver, he leaped into Fade into the clouds of gray. Brain got in I note, belong can makey-pay." - ing which, Norris. determined to carefully rough edge of his clothes. All that now Chinamen bad seen him eat the living bird; the open space and dashea across it to the Only pine trees. straight and tall, flop and tin I I why should he riot trade upon that fact? build ng beyond. Stately stand there -that is all. . . Such was his thought; and -he continued preserve the sheet. I remained was to fasten the paper to the i e Dear me , - - o much swallow!s neck, or, better still, he thought There were many nests along the eaves of As h did so, he became aware that he So our troubles seem afar He was sur . I to follow the train of conjecture instant- The time seemed to pass rapidly -s I the temple. Could he but reach these to was seen. Two of his foes were after him. More than what they really are, atill and leu 11� - . ly suggested to bim'when his eye had fallen was there to ponder upon ; and although round its leg and then to throw the bird capture the birds, he might still succeed in Fear lent him speed; but the loud cry from Magnifted to wondrous rize, -By this' ti - � -� I . I upon the paper. the sun was setting, and, in reality, more over the wall, in the hope that it might by the carrying out of the old design. And if his pursuers had gone before him, and as he Closer, fade into the skie.�, of his fathei � I --� 11 . thantwo hours had passed When the an S-wer some chance bem his message beyond the he were cauglit in the attempt ; what mat- sped through the second temple, and reach- — -am ws� - " be sure and - - 11 Ten Englishman's hundred pounds !"- to his note arrived, it seemed to Norris seas. -- I - — . � . one thousand pounds : a large ransom -more that his captors had scarcely left him ere He folded the small paper carefully, and ter? Was it not as food th%t he sought to edits exit,o another foo met, him face to London's Life-Destroyffig FoZ6 theice aftel . - than these men who stood around would they returned. Yet his imp%tience as to as carefully replaced the pia in the inside secure the birds,? face. - . each one tb - . . A London despatch says: -After a sum - ".1 I think of exacting. the reply -was none the less stron g, in that Of his wat. ' During the night-time he--brokie from the With the impetuosity with which he sped mer and autumn abnormally healthy, the away with -- . - eri o The only traces that remained of his ex- tree, climbing it with eat -like caution in he dashed the man over, so that he fell be- "Oh. iny! I One of -the Chinamen interrupted his he had been consid ing . every point re- death rate in London has su.ddeniy alnio-9b . . I - � thoughts, pointing with his finger to thewrit- garding the demand which had been ma;de. periment at th!s juncture were the'presence order to do so without noise, several fore him like a reed ; but, as h3 fell, the doubled. The mortality is now above thir-�,y I ping a monii 1. . Ing, as- though demanding an aaswer. But In a second oftime his eyes had pertised of a thread upon the ground, a small folded branches, which, being piececC together and Chinaman clutched vaguely, and caught Papa and I -1 per 1000, the increase being almost entirdiY - the paper which had been given to him'was the lines now placed before him. And paper, which for the moment he held be- tied with pieces of cloth torn from various the fugitive's ankle in his hand, so that he confined to diseases with respiratory organL then all tha� � not one which could be replied off -hand. In 1his was the answer to his note : tween his teeth, and the swallow wrapped pa ts of his clothing proved, althou � " Make r ,Th slen. was precipitated forward upon his face with The cause is ascribed by nearly every one to him. 4 - der, sufficiently Ion- to reach to t e swal. terrible force, and instantaneously stunned. He looked F the first place, what was required,?-- " Wfite bank make pay; then you go free� inside his coat. o to the low temperature of the past three . I -- � pay any man, "-what was the meaning of Write pay any man." . I He reached out and took the bird gently. Jows'nests. (TO BE CO1-M-XUED.)_ weeks. It never seems to occur to London- I rible howl - - this ? He had no English bank -notes with The reply was what Norris had anticipat-1 in his hand. ­ At first it was his plan to disturb the - ers that the lick of oxygen and the presence where he w; . ­ - him, and ther writer of the paper must have ed. He should be free so soofi- as he gave At the same instant the doorof the temple birds, and to strike them with his slender, idea in what I I . been aware that everything of a I valuablenat. the necessary letter to his bank -a letter facing him Opened, and two of his Chinese rod, as they issued from their nests ; but A Margin of Silenee. of poisonous gases in the atmosphere of tile the easiest t � . metropolis at this season constitute a posi- r­ - . I ure, watch, chain, pencil, knife, everything Which the recipent had apparently so-ne� captors appeared. � - putting aside the difficulty of such a pro. The city man who goes to the country tive danger to health. The so-called foggy way on a gri , had been stolen from his person. Yes, means of disposing of. Now the question One of these, instantaneously perceived ceeding, there remained the probability of seeks a certain remoteness from villagers days of the past few weeks have brought, " Ough , �1 I � � everything, save (for somehow his finger came to be, Was this promise to be relied the bird. The utmost dange'r faced the so injuring them, that they must prove use- and people ; he wants a inargin of repose perhaps' rreater discomfort than ever be- Just then . - wandered idly down the inside of his coat), upon, or not?. A few hours more would test Englishman. His lips had closed over the- less; whilat on the other hand, his weapon and silence about hiin. He is eager to get fore. � 9 the ice, and -,. . a couple of English pins, which he had idly the case. - fragment of aper held in his teeth. The might snap in the air, from its unwieldy away from the unconscious but very real he air has been surcharged with " There i I I p . . . ' 'fumes of sulphur, carbonic acid gas and -a .placed there two days ago, to be used, per- " ritiiig materials were again placed be-. bird was the suspicious point. .If he hesi- length, at every attempt he made. Aban. pressure of dense populations ; to escape the smoke, There his been very little real f -,-,g. Bruin, "and % - haps, as substitutes for the buttons of his fore him. He headed the sheet to his Eng- tated, the�bird would be taken from him, doning this idea, he determined td endeavor noise and tumult and constant presence of On day, when it has been as dark as miJ- time. " .­- - to form of his coat a species of net, and, mobs and crowds. There is a deep instinct He started �,,�� � - clothing, which were constantly triving way. lish bankers, and, endeavoring to disguise and these men would begin to question how I ­ It was evident, therefore, that the only his hand, he wrote: I rough and crude a a the plan may seem, it in his soul which prompts him to seek cLuiet night at noonday the humidity has been a-� -- z- , . and why it had come to be in his possession, o t) rised to see � low as with clear skies in summer. People p I - thing which he -could give, and the only' "Payto bearer the sum of one th ' wab by this means that he ultimately sue. and solitude in order that he may recruit toward him. ­.- I - ' , ousand andtoaakwhat 4ehad intended todo. - c,,ded in captu ring, at long intervals it is his depleted spiritual force. lie has a sense went about with smarting eves, coughing ­ . thing which could be referred to, was a note pounds sterling, for whichl shall acknowledge He knew that one of the Chinamen saw _ ' a Man -a ma ­ . _ and almost gasping, and complaining hope- - L I - to, or a check upon, his banlrers. 'Did the thii order as full xeceipt." . � the swallow. To conceal it, or -attempt to true and in the face of continued and fre. of being submerged and lost ; lie craves the lessIV of what they called the fog. A Lon- But Bruin - . - . .�­ � writer know of the English form of issm. And he signed, � - opportunity of returning to himself and re- don fog can at any time be banished by law, knew no.'hin� ­. - I " conceal it, was ruin. . . quent, disappointment, several of the swal . � .- ing checks ? If so, who was he ?-in what I Albert H. Dyson."- Never did Norris experience such a lows as they issued from the eaves of I the covering his individuality. Such a margin just as the same sort of fog has been sup- . it was a new ' I'll I . � posioon! These were points the considera. The Chinaman took the sheet from his - moment of intense agqny of rapid mental temple. t . of silence and repose is the ,Constant neces- pressed in Pittsburg and other American he ran ahead -��. - .1 tions of which set Norris's brain on fire. hand, and once more Norris was alone. conception as now. By day he was the pos,;essor of a number sity of every thoughtful mind and every cities. The same statute which dissipates Bruin got I,. - -, The Chinaman pointed, impatiently a . I . � � � The Chinaman'spoke to his companion Of short sticks, which with difficulty he fruitful career. An active creative man the London fog will bring another great ject, when su ,�­ I second time to the aper. Norris could . both bad now seen the bird; and Ncrris, concealed from the sharp eyes of the China- must be in the world, but can never be of it; boon to the in trop lis. Lhan any the " p e 0 It will give it ­ - ' --,. '. beditate no longer. A vague hopefulness . CHAPTER IV. acting like a cold, dead thing that man wHo brought his meals. At night he must keep it at a distance, and resist its comfortably belted homes in winter. The inade,and al ­­ I - filled Min. He was, as he knew, in the re- �, knew what it was doing, took the strugglin he pieced these together -an arduous approach as if it werea deadly enerr the leg D ..... I- -1 1, 9 . y. To million or two grate fires of bituminous . - ­ re wing 01 -1 mote interior of the Temple of Confucius; A secon& night of Norris's captivity swallow in both his hands and to . ptocess nightly to be undergone, and draw one's inspiration from those deep coal make the London fog, a -ad nothing else. and. as 'he]. ' .-- . , 1, . � .-..-, " frorn wing, and thrust the living flesh and Is threw a cloag ­ I- but alreadV a chance- was given to him of had passed. During this night he had then with his light coat simply extended spring which feed the soul in silence and Occasionally a newspaper timidly s,iggests ­ ".­ � - I communicating with some on6,(who, at least, been 'free to wadF about for his bonds the warm feathers in a hideous pretense be. by means, of transverse stick at the top', hidden places and then to give tl i . ­.." . . ils inspir- that the use of anthracite coal in stoves and and put hini i . �­ knew his language) in the ontaide world, be were now removed. Every hour that tween-his movina, teeth.- somewhat 'as it might have hung on ation to men through all the powers of ac, furnaces would banish the nuisance, but an -e. ­­ - - � - Then Brui� , - - 7. , -- be, -it only in Pekin. � passed had been filled with anxious expee- , His heart sotood stone -still ; but the chair, be made his tivity and self-expre.�sion, is to live a whole iuid taken to ­ -, � �­.- . I Rapidly he made signs that he required to tation, Though it seemed u-seless to hop6, Chinamen saw him eat the living bird, - f the swallows' nests, covering sound life; to attempt to draw one's a was put over -­--�� - . and round o - t pology and an admission of the i mpractibili- ��-­, � . vor strength from the world is to run dry, and Experts have recently ieported that there �,- � -1 - I write. The Chinaman understood at once, he still hoped, waiting through the long by that he was saved ! I each with the coat whilst be endea y of the suggestion always goes with it. bite, his thre( �1 and on off to -seek and the one Lh � ­ - . ,9 of them hurried what, night hours for that liberty which he had * * '- * I 1* ed to disturb the birds, when, with drawing become a dusty, and chandbl inste&d'of a -- I � I ­ ir is sufficient anthracite coal in Wiles to It was not i - .." - . was required. Evidently they knew what virtually bought, though upon the dismissal It had become fullv evident 66 N�rris it, a moment that they Lnightr issue from the" living stream. Many active, earnest men supply all Britain for several generations, --� I Norris had been asked to do..� In a moment of his second note nothing. had happened, that his freedom was not likely to be given nests, he would rapidly endeavor to bring and women, in their eauerne cieved, and hi -w,-- . . ss to serve and but the death rate in London will have to I - ­ . or two, the man returned with the miterials save that a,large bawl of food bad been tohim, and that captivity and :4eath only 'hem in collision with the -coat on the chance achieve, ,violate this fuuaemental law of deep go away above epidemic point before the tile time that -- I- I .-II, I -1 used by the Chinese in writing-& brush, handed to him a short time thereafter. were before him. . . of their falling thus entangled to the living, and surrender to Cle world that . the sea. � , - / Englishman will give up his soft -coal fires. �, --�,- a pot of ink, and paper. During the night hours Norris endeavor- -That his life would he - spared for groundi which is not theirs to give. A margin of I He was cart I _ ..-.--, I - Norris was 8 well , Many a weary and helpless hour did he silence, repose, and solitude must protect Influenza of a mild type is again report- home, and wal 1, � .Qbl;ged to place these upon d to -convince himself that -liberty must. some time -to come he could I ed from various parts oi the country, but, ­,��,- �V- - I - - the ground, calculating at the time as to surely come with the morning. His note understand, since by killing him all prospect spend, in- this pursuit. It seemed beyond every life that steadfastly grow$ and X. put him in a q - 11 -1 - . � e the Lancet, the chief medical organ, to I'll, � , L what he should write. Then he took the bad been dispatched too late the evening of further monetary extortion would hitpowertocatch the swallows. Stich as pands; to live without it is to violate oil his los's of ho 1 � . - -1- � -' I . - brush in- his hand and dipped it in the -ink, before, -he argued ; and t1tus be hoped disappear. So that it se . struck against the coat, immediately there. the sanctities of our nature 'of ,day gives the comforting assurance thal fault. El . - 1-.. ­ I I -, I -whilst the Chinamen crushed round him in againsL hope. . - � - 6�rned probable that ' Out of the there is nothing at all approaching the visl - . ... :­.. -, , , I so soon as the 06rder upon his bankers was after escaped , and Norril noticed that the rush and tumult of the world one must often tation of pist years, nor isfthe disease like B,-u;n is a J. �­ �L� i I ng to i .. - � --,.� , creation upon 8 I c quite used tx, f .1 .- curiosity; chattering in their ugly tongue to Once he wildly thoughtof endeavori returned unpaid and as a false birds appeared to be growing IeBs in num. retire into -tile silence where God Speak y to be ome so severe and extensive agait I- I , 1". -one another. He dim every stroke with I escape. Alas! escapeowas impossible. The his part, his captors would be so much ea- bers, as though' friglitened by him from with that still- smallvoice never heard amid Of people. Bu -_ . for a generation. On the other hand small - 11 �- � . ,"­", . - . his walk to j -�, - -, � �� . - the utmost slowness, for each stroke gave tree, his only chance, stood many feet re- raged as to proceed to extremes immediate- theirliomes. � Accordingly he devoted him. the uproar of �aobs drid cities. An hour of I pox has broken out in an alarming manner beautiful icebo ,� -�� .. � -him the longer time to think as to how he moved' from either wall or temple on ,every ly, since thus they became 'aware of the self entirely to one side of the court, lest he quiet, silence, and solitude every day would in many large towns and typhoi(I has assum- - p-.- - ,,--1 z� . deceit practiced. In the mean time, if he and -N'1;1,71131�1 i V-­� -, ,I � was to complete his reply. Thisia-whathe .side. - I should frighten the whole of the birds before save many a man from intellectual bank- ed almost an epidemic form in London. Its , --�'. . �K�,­-, , . � wrote; - ` I am youi irisoner. If I pay one -Nor did he sleep-, wom though he was were pressed for further sdins, he decided he should become sufficiently practiced to rUptcy, and many a woman from nervous chief victims -so far have been ainong the growls sofLi"-,� I 11 ;'0�,�­ ,-I ­ " tliousand pounds,, am. I free? My money with long protracted fatig(te and agony of that ecure them. vvreck. The physical need of repose is as upper classes, who, in this metropolis at any - .. � � I be should, after holding out as long as 8 troubles are a! ' -,I - � �, . � has been stolen. All I can give is .a letter to mind. - . As the human mind will overcome all ea as the intellectual and spiritual need. . -[Harper�s Y �11­ I . - - possible, give as many -further orders as ' rate, live amidst hygienic conditions which , . -1 ­- ­ . ��-� �� I -- ,- - bank to pay one thousand pounds. Ift When day came, hour after hour went by. might be necessary,- signed- with the false difficulties through time, so Norris overcame Irle body cravei its quiet. hour no less than 'i'y The Chinaman resumed- his post of watch . ...Z,.- r- . do this'shall I be set free at once ?" . . I I I I maybe said to bealmost ideal. Batforall I ��N---- . . name. I ­ that which bad at first seemed insuperable, the mind and soul ; if the senses are always that tile Earl of Londensbarough, Lord B `�,­;� ` - � ---- . � thought sufficiently for a lengthy period, but there were no ' As the first of these orders had to ning in the early dawn he on the alert and the tension is never broke, Stalbridge and several other peers have been �-YS�3;� � -1 -,'V, - ­ go to ,.]��,V- � - ,.�-.­� ., --- � � explicit He 'had learned, ia lo�gofie, :ikns of liberty after all and it was with a England before his trick would be- discover- caught his first bird. - . the nerves succumb, and the harmony of & ,9e regular ir 1-7 ,,� .. ��, � - �- - ense of thankfulness that Norris recoll From this time forth it became easier: nobleinstrument is turn prostrated bj the dreadful disease, and I ,� VY�;�­�_-_- . days, that it is well to cut a letter short in ect- 6d, and as the news that it had been refused . I ed into a discord there is reason to believe that typhoid rages in d ones, tin �- t"I M--.--_- . -y- these. The � -, A'' that helad acted -prudently and had payment would take equally long in a large numb r of West End houses un - .!z�--Zn;�.-r - . . ease of doubt, -so t& convey someLthing of (Id . 2y escaped, and disar pointment followed full of miser The gr�ater one's work and of --�R-N- of transit, mal �­ - 1j; -0' , - lisappointment; but ' �-,� ,,, . e -, I 4w -v,. � . . enes7s own doubt to the other side, if it be not trusted' to, the word of his unforseen Norris. calculated that- even sapposine it 1; notwithstanding he- power the deeper one's need of privacy. - - a7l matters pro , k��.'a��' - - known to the general public. V, arious ­,Zj,�!. �� � tible, by an atmosphere of brevity. . ' f - � I had been,-- d an Occasional bird, and these he may be inferre� - - � - ­A�7; , 1-` I . pos.. 01. sent by,camel-pwt overland.to St, secure uses have been assigned for this state of �- I' , ca �Z - i� V .11-..- � He folded the sheet, and gav6 it to the Et was not quite apparent that One Petersburg, a means frequently employe -i liberated with the brief ,message. and cry The Serpents TootlL that a clock Wi , , � . - - - I ... -.-" . - . � things, but the explanation most popular 1 - :1 -- 1. ---� -- � . man who had brought him the materials thousand pounds would not purchase his by those living in Pekin, lie might look for aid written in blood and bound to the -wound up ata �� i -.. 1� , .-,-­c�'. - - a first freedom from the Temple of Confucius In upon it as a certainty that the reply regard. leg, in the hope - among the masses, who can not afford pheas- 0 conforming to t � I- ­ wherewith to write. The recipient .. � that some one of his Eng 11 Didn't I send'im to Reton. an'Hoxford ? .1 77 - - . � Didn't I send 'im into the harmy, along 0, aiLts and grouse and that sort of thing, is I . -1. I "­ -, . I � . proceeding was to re -op -an and scrutinke Pekin. . -- 'r, .,,-, , ; .- I . ingthe order *ould not reach Pekin for ,lish fellows would hear. � some o' the biggest nobs in all Hengland, that aristocrats catch typhoid fever through hurnam bodv. a -1 I-— -- I . - m -­ - ibe sheet,- notwithstanding that hebadbeen, It crossed, his mind, that perhaps the probably four months to come. - In this manner he caught and liberated with an allowance fit for & young beail? eating putrid game, intrica�e in'a'hl � . ­­ 1 c -­­ � I . 1. I-,-- :-,--, -, . -- carefully observing -Norris as he wrote..; and - man who had demanded the -note of t swallows as the days went by. Once derfully Made, -1 --- , � I . . - - . I hand At the expiry of that tiThe he forsaw cer- en I � ­ .� . � � '­ I . _h* act wa's , had been -suspicious on account"of his readi- tain death-&' he recaught one of his birds with the paper scriptures, eci I- . --� And what's the it all? Why, he -­-�.�­� - ­ � - , It of1tielf sitfficient- to prove to I - I I death - of the most horrible of - ­ ­ - - � - � ­ gives dinners to=nd royal 'ighnesses, Official statistics of the cholera epidemie r ,. 1� . I � e I � . - ppointm '-11 �4­ -: , , theJ.141isbinan that nohe of thba -present. Xlemi in sending, Yes ; undoubtedly there he nature, unless hii to its leq�a disa cut of the in being " wo, . ... .. .., 1�e,,.,�-, - � I _ - Thill-the-iian-left had been a fool. - Perha#s, by- his hate - s escape should be effected tied and don't even harsk 'is poor old- father to . 4 d I I -- ­ , ­ ­­ . - . - " .- " ., -1 I _ 118 mo-antime., ,- severest kind, for if the birds were to linger strikes" to 1, " conldri*cl his words. , i - in Germany last year, and up to its practical 11 """""- I , " , - -1 ,: I- �- . - I � . � � . �,,, - , -.2 ", -1 -V�­­ . 111apparently discussing what -was had-kst'the, -chance of libert ­% liberty. Some eTemple of Confucius for ever all had meet 'em. Ughnesses, indeed I I coald buy ­, �-.%--­;, ,- - - . himr. sti _ d - passed ere he had. been -in t1i disappearance, show that the total number which we need � ,� -- I -- .y . ��N, B�,6; - - � . I JUs W . And, what's more, . ��A- - -- � 'wbith,inight have been' of deaths from cholera was 8,510. Niae- for example, it .­ 1- , one up the Ile blessed lot. ,,��l �-,;- -- - , -t mrions thing, hisi ba&he'refused, oi&ble' been done in vain. . I , -� _ - I I, 6 .them wstrauge and , " - ' ' so - to torget the horror 61 the I wouldn't mind tellin' 'em so to their faces - . ,";��' ­19�1�1, . � 'kk-pot and waitecT be ure- before yield, moment wheir, with . tfe two inen in front for two pins -ay 1 just as soon as look at "em the city and State of Hamburg, where the I pt - - �Ifei5;31�N�­�, ,� _ "t .M,stayedamOuie"1U&th6 i eidum t�rt I I The eleventh bird was *in -some W&Y tfuths practically of this number were in we bave sic 1.1­-�� -- ,-�.',� -- I ' - ' - - - -- - 1 ­ li� .. - - � , andthf--brfish. And,at .Iast,,K6rri%-Was inj to the7ddmaual�r a ,ransom so large. of -him observing his evety act . -1- I I eyes ividleand gi ,��,, .- �n�­ � -f, . slightly hurt in ca�ture, besides being evi. _and e knows it." - , �Zz­ -­ � , , , l - - .. �­:­�,W,-�­,,- - - - . - � , , � - Amd now he faced the weary.expeotancy. .tc, I - ,he had been dentlyyoung, and to.Norris's dismay " P , -:. U� exone-truly- I . total number of deaths was 7,611, 1.292 pet -tils, .-i --�­ , alone, for his 01irdian I . I � reed to destroy, whilst he acted a hideous. - it again. Soon at -- �,- ­­ I I . . — ­�1-7��.tl­��' the -of an imprwournew - hich-ndght never !:rt, the only living tie - hi . I us that we tie.- ,�- S­g---­--- -, �, Z� cco, nal t)16-cifhers, thr�wgh � .b * - a . )a � . , - between mikf proved unable to -fly freely, settling -upon - cent. of the whole population. The statis- At -f-i�� ��,;i­--�,­ - . , I - ­­�w,v " 'd,-,qr�ray, -th �and end, unless ' e - , ' .;� - d ­-MtW�-,­-­- - . d( moia2s, to b er ­­ ,.-,---,. I I dy - -d I_ - those 'beyond the wallsf -aud'ui �, ' A bridegroord at Hammond, Ind., thought - F2 -- - �, -�.� - , o ,, whick - had thor closi i4thi by- what .the rOcf of the e the d ties show that tile cholera spread up thg � 41 - - I � I anyj , the day's labor .1 .1�1, - -- - , . � � ­ - -, . 4.,�t�RM-,,;'t--- 4k� -, - " ' it,prudent to begin married life economical. - " %­­ ­­­­, . - is � � - I Cleiarly. they y galue � -t2��­, , ­ - - �, - . . had, no lear of hi A&R ,'- - d, 66il alirm pc�ulii kuow.. should ,--- 11 -e I lol touch the The sun was t a 'ple 'a ar a '8 ge� he rive trikes a �Z�� I I .1. � larro& � . � � inany hours had sped tre heoou I . read ad n - rs from the centre around Hamburg 6 �- � . - .. . ­ - ­ ly. He gave fifty cents to the clergyman I . - - . -_ . . jft�&Z. .- - - � �. �. Z - - � I -pla � �-. ­ -- wo-Tiondslivos - R me '1y bq, set him free. -0 - -1--� I �.; . � _ _ - 4;� - i" , -- e _ y v 0 ng la t with diminishing virulence. -t-;- I ` t Nave - heavens, , w . - ��- bee, i - find h kne that 'shortly t z-�­mtE,,� � � � Xt � I food ced, at'regiiIar inter"Is bef6i i he lines, teachi I -�t 1 , , as 0, 4- ­ v . I -Aim. �- 'T, " -,�:, - - ' 'a -z. him -from viol - . . 1 ­�� -- -, �--'­� � -�- U W­,� '111a w w-positiorcia wh16h Norris%xiow' � - A coiipie -of rough skins haid,been thrown - 5 first justallm nt of fo who performcd the ceremony, and then had � uncheons, ,= " , *A Eiiw ,' iAd 6 I , as � I might ekpeeCh e od The'Court of Schleswig-Holstein published . I � -��'­ im �- - , 11 -- P. k tb - -,-- :�,,5�-;t7- -� ,!I.'-- �, -, 7 - - ,t th. �;--- , I -1 . , the audacity to demand a receipt. �7 �-T ­ -12�.' ­-�. �,­- �� ,�'. -10-44- -�,�-A-Cllha w�-Owr:borm - -Wi7himsewh6l -for it- i�' almost upon -the ground the, tree liy for-the-day,to arrive. : ., the following notice:. "At the request of this regula , . - - 7�0 -, - � -1 -.* wo e , - I ­' I . . fdu ., 6plaeed,; ' It i he -foot --of - ­�­­ -��­ I -1 �. - , it, . , ­ ­ - . ­� �; , ­�­-,�.,- � .- ­­­ ­ . � . , - * --- ii C1. thil - --- Uldut­ 0 , - and-, - -t e - ' I . - Y XE- - �,, ,�, , , - -11 -& e -e ux ­, -4 - orro thout - , ----- � � lu 9- : S - ws are visitors that come wi - -��-� � --'1;f- ,-, ft reqW8 � ,9, ,v needless to Aa�j;,thiit ho�dk ' I hiour, bue.vUhis Chinese- vaptors,'15a It 'day bol -T He.hud -spent a long time the morning i� it,tion; but complaining -a of Altona, the sea- times. It ­­��t�-­ �-- �.�,�,� ��, 0 w4a, -.,- � - ­ ' _ _ - � , - _, on Herr Peter Lohmann, � �P�� -1 - - � I - - � . f6U6*ed , , I � � . . - ­� - -1 . ffik dh; -thrif on-whidh he ha& . � on, minds ­,3;��Wt nV�,� -�, �,� 1�i iunds� -- Lielfatt 1 A - J cqeedQ*y�-� *­ -tth6 fulfillment- lowigi nv . send . ��,-,.��,�Z�.,����--�ik-L-�,�:-itl"e�)R,o�-,6"--,--"Rtdm , P7,54 - -thd-leis- -in 4uissti before finally succeeding in man Dietrich Lohmann, who was born in I membered. - 7'. a ut .--- . I qthou� I 11 I sign ',� 4 ,,�- ­., .- - -1 1.1-4z - - ­­- � . . " 1. - ­ ­rii .­ ; - ".' 5 I . ­ � I -I- -- `- - I - -- ­ -- � -- � 4jiz, - re-- . - Its ­��,&Z - " . I 1, 11 , - disap- - - , - , - ­-­�-- -___� -I,,- - ­ _-iv- ,, , � -if, thit ,a t1lij, -!--au iii m-Unn, -�r capturing one of Qe birds,' and the encourage 0 . . � �,Z��- - - .,-- - Nl�"". 11 - -unIch licatdllimi-�� -bring their trouble home in. I . . I li.�Z` YQJM186�wfide"14 -161M � Kirchmoor in November, 1848, and was le I ,r- - �� *Z - �a -- k . , I .ter iiq�&A � wagon to -, -; - i,.Ze-�:� � -fk I ,a rw - ,, - f 0 _ - --:� -�­ -- F- -i;--- I _, i --- -,I own . � -. - - , - I Wk , - . - I -- . � � ho :�polntmenf.. on fi id, 'th t I - -z -�- , ­�� ��-�z ­­­-,�-nE j- - - aw- -* - - ` �` . u ` �- E1191 - -that -Alihottgk - � d. of,about LOW � � , 1,� , A colony ane4e is, to drowned on the journey �&or ' till, ­­ �,,,­ =,71,tg Vitt_ -or&i- - - - � . ',�----:� . , ,- ­ IRV .verrer - a- _ 06-W-111 � JAP ----, .�, -7 �"- j��W-ip �1­11'-W­ lw­,��­ � - . - ihw� - . . , a it -could 'With . I - �- -0- 'I -F-6--, ­ .; � ­�. � 1�.. - � -,,!. .. ., '- ­� ­- I I I -­­.. �� '­�% - WK I - - -- " �­ Was It e-1 . ,, ,- -,�� -,-,�-m � ­ - � - - -1 . 111-tr established i - ';- --'�3,'7'��- -� - - t�­ -,&- -- � -, ­ - i �, 01- . � I � � ,, �- . , .. - n Ing at thes , 'v ��VU *U,44fi: - " -;, -: - �,-.. z,, -, � I -�- ��O � . 'J� - - '- - - ,� �4� , - -�4� , ., -- � ­ -- I - - 'M , - � 7 - - ­ - - . " � . aifficulty-fly-M . i Stockton to I - -, .* ., ­ � � ."­ �� � - nk , , . -0, o -v - -- , ­,�,�­­­-,,_­­- ot to b � I b n Sinaloa, Mexico. I Hamburg while sailing in the ship Bertlo � taking aw wmsll , -ow - -1 4. ­ . . . , , .- - . rag indef(I severe. - .In his pres. e - -,;Z, �g,� -.,�P� .Z� , - A- -; � � �­- ,- " "., . ­­d­1d1i4­- --- - ; ­ �, � - . �. - .i. ,-. ­ -, - .- '. �w --X-�--- - - - ­ - �� ", - -.;� ',�,�- 11�t, " M� 4'. � - I . , ­ �, 0 - - - - W -1 ­­ - �U I � 677 ­ � - 01 lud� - ­ , a 1%, . ­ V - 'Jz��t ­-­.-; - -,­­­ ­ . J 1. -_,,, ,, - �4 - -hit --b dayl ,stmte . � in -Men are not in this world rewarded &a. Jenny, is hereby called ukon to appew DW ��!� ­­­ ' ` � - � -` -thiii,'�`7 - W � '31or a- ... _ , �, 0 " , ­� - ,W. -�, � � ��4� - ­ , -�L, - I'- , � � - . . ­- -��-Z­-L--lzW-F*��,�­ ­ -� - ­ - .1 � .� -- gA U4, ent -of mi it -see ed to him that the I � I �- . - -d- - wii in I' t�L­ i - -4 -- - � - �- 1� � - - � qreadein�r. ,.. lhtts4as 0i . . . --1L -- . �­ ­ - , ­ '- .. I I ,--- - � -z �� ­­ ­­ , ;Z�A**z=z" - ,... , �,- ­ - ,�­ -,�,-�j�,� - I . -wso­ 0,11 � 0 - v "Was 'coriling to what they know, but accordin -md report himself, an or bw - ' - --- 1. � . � I I ­­ I �w men i ..� � - t -,,-- 1-111. , ­ -1A1-1.-.--- � ­­ - � . � ­ Mu, :p)V � . - -- � I - - ­ - - --d J -J ­ :g- � I -- I . � -, -, -.��-��-L-I,Aoiwa - -�Nmw -, " I - -V' ­ ; 'ine" 'fabd 4h(Vp0U #FN "INgIfteir; ` 510 �#Iolv S. --A0i in he nfOrning to what thev can - thihk they fore Friday, Jan. 20th, 1893, at Tl'o'al ­ --��Z,��-%�' - -. -- -47- - -ti-50MY-4 :, - - - . ­ �.. - ­ - Owl .1 iN#diL - t .. make othe.ra g fore this Court .* , , � , " - �9-6f th0WA116W- n the'ro6f` -t �----, E fter1vz- - mew . -, -,, -- 0i � -0"A - ' - - fr' ii ,- le -, --t''hiW- � '' 1�-Z ­- � 3' -:� U& ,'-,�-, - -0 -: �,V@ ­� - - - ­ - ow W ftm � -, - -� _6 k �� ­�-W�� - -, if � - ­ I ", " , - - -1 -­ -i , ,, �-M - , Oka upo , - - INK' � �1-- ­ - - W, Y 14 ,-j I iplapebf-', lf­�E�MNJT-445:�g - ­7-771­,P­,-fR�� .. I ­ �A 1i � - - , , , -� � -- � -J� q - -- �- � if- �Act %� T , ­ --�� - ­,-n:-�%F-'- 5- X -R -A 0 A 0 ft M -� - � �� ­­ � - V vwg KIVAIF � - -1. - .- - . W, -- . - - �d � . 00 I . ----j- Z, - -1 -1 ' -A I ­ - ­ I �-, -4 � - - ,-� ,,� �N- W, ---, I - - F I -# - RVF @fa:��q " "Id' - Aboli - - ' -a o- -,Pi - 1 f - kno, -v-m., under ­paiin od being deolm# AswL - � -, � "o `�' -- �� ---,- P - ,,� * 0� A � � , , � , , - 1 -10C ­: 11 1, 4 � ...., �- - - t re e" he . �7 - ­,�- �� .1 I - � ­ � ­75� 1 ­ ­-­�­- 't. -k , , ­,- . ­'�:­-­­ %­��­,�. -.,. , ... " I . . " I . , " - L VM -0 ­­ 11 - - - ,gh it*o�hp t ini , - - * OWN A -- - * _,�,���­­ iE�-Fn ­ -, ­ � ­ -­- I . I -­ ,0, -­-,-E­-:1;s�--- 04�� , . - ­­ ­23�n-­,��-,Z ,,!­:"3�� z', --,-r,- ­­­- 4" � ­ -,. -,--7 ­ ,,.- � , � � ­ . - ­ - - �,7,--K�-,'�ic-� ". 1-1-- � ": 6 - -!: .. � - - , ", I ­ I � � �­ - I 1�1� �,�Z ­ . -- - - -,, 1 �X� � -JN =:�w �­ � - , .Z;I- ­­­ '� - -, -t��--��­ ­ - - ,;­, - --g, - � -. " " . - -,'.. - - ,. ­ �,� :,--- ,z �r -, , � , �� . -v - , ,; . . , 7�� - , ,- ­7t,�s4zi2 t'o, - -- - -­­ ­ ­ � - �� � .1, �K I -- -�: ­., -'� . , - �� -�, .e,� -- Q1:1- 1�041 g, ­ � U!�Ii�-�Ij--5�zt� �-- - . - - ��V' -11 --�,W. I'�w Npi.11 & -Ilk", , � �e��, � : - �� � -'., ­ 11-1- � , -, -t- ` -, ,�'- ---�,-".-, --�---','] J. - � -� . - . �.. -- - --- ­­ I -,-�T4 ��, �­zr­ - - - ­ - �,- - -� - . , - -,1 --;1z;1.- ­ -, -..-,, -_% - , r�l I �� ­ - I �- - - I ­­� A 7` " *F -; - S -- - -igat- -0-K - 1�� -.. - - - �­�7�,­­; 1-F1 -_-­,�� z , I , -�­­ ; - �� -::, - , �', ­ ; --- �, - ` - '., -- -,, - . � . . .1 . � - . , -- - I � ­,,--��­,V�,-�45�7- �� �3 N W NN ­ ­ � ­­ .17 -� - --�It�­;,��, :�­��,­.­,­��:,-, ­ . --,-­:�7j�­�� - - , ---, ­�,;, - ­ � -. - I - . - 1 ,`�4�­�4:��- � S - i -- ­ - � - ­ - - ­ A ,201 -1 � ,3 — ­12�,4,�, -- ­ -- - -- - , ­ ... . .. I �`:­�41-11� - m:�� -�, ".", - � - - - ­ � - . I I - I ': �­, M:N� � ­ ­ -1�1 - �� - A - I-- � � - e-�� I.- � 1 , , ­:�' !1,--7 ,; -1, "-� , - - , - , 7 , - - - ": , - '�' , - --" - I-— ­ - -- � - - --- - - - --- - - - - , . , . � I I �A---­­-��..-- , � , - ,� � 4� 1 ��- Re� ;� , - � " ­tg�,;,--- Z - , mt�r. ��L -�' 1, � � - , ,* � � r� I -- ­,'s� I . , -, -* g,��, 4--� -- ­­ -, - , , �--, ---;�p�j�, �6 ­­, ­ , .� � -��,­ I ­� I . . , � � . ,� M=r- ----11F1 -----,5Z ­�� ­., ��'4­�� - ­­,�. - - ­, ­' I , . ----. ''.. - � I � : � , - - �'2 - ­ I � I - ­�,�- ­ ."j-",�A�t ­­ - -Z'�� ­ -:�,��,'� ­� - -- . � �, .- - . ,r�-�,�:7zg ��--,�� -- ,; "�� - , -, ,-;�-�-�-�-,-,--.;-,4;f�-�-5�--�� �--:R �­,-�;;�­,� �­-­­ -45: �1�,� - � - - - - -­ . — ­ ­ . � 11.­­­­�X�., ­ - I - ­;�, � , .- , � --- � ­­ -�:� ­, .. � I.. � I � ­ � ­­ , - - , . - ­ , - - . -­��_-q� 14 i � ­ � -- - �t�­!L- ., ," -�- . .. ­­­-, I � 11 . - ­ - ­ ­ . ,��'_ L - I - ­he�� - I gk-R - a��--'��--O�­-�M,�- I if- :--� r,-_� ; -, -U ­­-­­­�C� �­­ . I I �,�-­ , �-4717 ­-�-�-­ Z � ­ -1- ­­ . I � ", . - '­ - I . t� �­­­- -- -S -- I ­ " ---111- ".� � I -, . I I - - r . IL --- ­ - 1 ?�V�� - . i --��, - in K".--le-IF-2 I M�­� I -�N -UA- - - - . - I I ­ -- - - I ­ .- .��S, r �-',�-:� ��-FA m,�� -�z�----,,gi- A' �ii:51 MEN �A : . -- r� -,".`­., - , ­ -­­,­­-�-,;­ -�­, I . ­, m ,­�­, ­j��:�-�-31Z�`­,Y19T, - - ­­ ai� , - I I- ­, . - ­­.T�-- -1 ,. � . --7 ­ '. ­-�--;g- �­z----­ -, p ­ lr - � -------11--- now= -R-10 �0� �-�-- ; _"" ��'-_ - . k ; . , � � , ­ - 11 , 5-- �-� - -� 3�1 .- �..- -1 , - .- 1. :::::­...- �Z . %5-- -".,-I:,- ­ � , -� ., , ­ ��'_ _, ,7 ­ _ _ , -- . .- � 'I ­- -- , , � , !0 j� �. � - � i w- � , W - - - t . - , ­ ­� - - R -i�­­ - --- M: , �:: 4 - -�R-­­ - ­- -� rp� 1�g;­:-1-_-,,.�!-' ,7�7 ­­���,,� -- - �� .- � -� 7��,WWK - ­ �- �� 11 -V2 ,%��V7-�� ��-- ffl- � - - � '11, ­­­�?,­--Qt� ,k-��--! ,± . -- -:� -- .1, " . , - � -- - -- --- ­ . �� i - Ow ­ - - I I, I�E I I .. - - -- I -- - I - . - -­.. - � - ­ . Q I . � .­­ ­ � - , 1,11;��,, MM W -� - � . -- ­ �� -- ,- , ­ , , - ­ - ­­­ - -* , --� - ��­�� 11 , ; - , . Z-, �­;��--,:­-z, .. .- I - � - .. -e, f- �,�­- -1 ��-- � . ,� I - �-�- ­-� - - - -, - - - - ­ %Z �-- - --- -­-, , ­ - ­ _QL �'- -__ ­­Ak ­ � �,�� . - �1� , - - - --��­ - , -- ---- ` - I WK, ,�-.-��,- ­�� - -� � . . . . . � , �;.­ -- - . � . I EA2 ,.I-- - ­ ­ - " , -� - I ­ 't - -11 - -- -- , - - - -