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Exeter Advocate., 1905-06-01, Page 7• bpord ead t ii bl Svir . r veltest - . , t nttr, eriMIP? IAt ? bt, YOU wrath* - 14 ' 'Old herr cloorwe and threw Into iigUre womas, *tending, The IMMO burst throughide 04 lilts 4;14 leept toward* n 4 whfch t h nte. Ue t , 160,15, and 4 ' But ' 1: afl1I i J0fr, t. '0 '-ti?,•0 now Jo „ but'IEbak itP0' C1 /,'Ett1t>r,'or 0. :0,,ciro;'yea 0., tho , uo..;bot :Coyer'blessin time revealetE.,;" 'this I%flUW. It. le epr. cetnnultn•CX • tea-5/0tiste oI -naturcu lifeAo. -Mt:man life and Itsdeepest, problems, }'or Ite • . .ose„who pass through the f•It 'we% ktr,A* obeli •eSteeM it as fountrare Yea. ;Om fall rain cover.' ".etbTheft la. tho sorrow hicheausea lis to weep shell be re- ,gniNxi • as a 100ntain 8010:00 -of 1040400# Ars lite gliOrt.g. as beneficent Uist onetteldng ea a. fountain, of •'Ater. The-iniSsion of sorrow and• • tri41', Of weeping end or soul storm, is the strengthettieg of our nobler WOO. for 'higher duties and respou- . / • SIene teaches us tb'4t ther• e is 4 constaitt r'efiettliFia-e--transertissimr-of • ife Irmo form to 'form and a gradui .01 development frOtre lower to.' higher life in • TUE raisicAt. •WORLD. Lgw. in tho &Veleta world r okelT;WW;titlifArtkAtittt,41torW.I Ltt e, spirituel world or in spiritual flo ftirhnhlar' Outbid OfelOinelt to . ;higher tOndltions. Our reason tells us that ,our intelligence, our wepi 1 fik,'On„ 'si41 '09#11*.t:httl't thirst for SPiritealtty chara(tr.ttzicIr I este Iv utU "Snit • esilititoU,4' ;11;6' "Y In t• Orr= us, storms may 0011r. Out if harvests of love and vet, been garnered; it the froito of ruPatli.Y*, -frieVightiv . and socrifice • Dt4ITY.,"„itNI) 11,USPONSIllILM, the fruits,,ei eartteStelese. the fruits of truthful life, haVe been gathered and stored away, to make our.. own or other ' lives, !tenni*, who **all soy that..we have lied vain? Future life is in God's hands. Ire - at life is in our hands afee, _as wo well know, Upon ° the future wo may ri .0.10 ' etiloc • , Yi*:13 . `4031104*.,li t 14P0,A, ,..t*Wrate &IU4 ,0?Y44 ' rhis' eyes os • ,thes'e tkblet,.4nntIT' 6W),, ..-to..itbt4‘.11Ptitn.g% 4ipl, eleverAltoo, • ch • • • vitie.iy:pretty..te.„./ey t.64, at 1,0411.41 "Ohees, • .certainly 'goed400kin 414100ed.- the- Un. • Partner Now P14 cliinbedthe Jii I t ol, *A rnomoiit Oted- the feet -that batt - ed into his work again, Nathaniel Crump, the junior part- ner, Wits* sixty years Of ago, Forty year before the firm of Bestow and Igrural). °music publishers, had been founded, And with Ilaototes brains and all the mew* CrninP possessed' lied grown into a paying concern. Bestow had been,- a men of power and energy, •and, • practically speak - he had been the Ann; Crump was thankful to be rrterelY a notes" sary- aitributeo and. content with his u oizig t& .cogrutu!ato to * OL :eoflra 1. am. X eanxiot'. think -why X401*.got ,(od luck -the very bs' **‘. • ';1) te,10leerge ,aef: Now ti 50011 itt,'"ib:ee"'.U4f1s.t:tal•t°144:'.410°*0‘4%r'at: 0.4P't 114, et the Cretnona.' (loodobye," ,41sn4 tit t ittti 1A'.3'i'Plt4P•As' 'ti i "A „ ",',t • 2 •, 1tial , , I q t.fand,,,, ,,,t, , 40,,l'utstAtic.,., 1,4100,17.11:01.: ' 1 V•1ON. i0.0,11. , e 1,1. "e!, ' I0V0, , '-. did , not her' ° ut , - cr.' to. .., ry well. was to marry a . liott:' n h alt N. Y401#41 'she la, t bra'firet, , if kiteiezit o f.litxt..s4 your . . • hero,,:tiore.lootstep,14•.'0U.• tha stair ' • „'• • •., breathed"..., back as held her, .autated by her .-. entitessioni' **I .would• r • •kil • •IootsLeps died eway on the P4Ved cortUhz' fen lio c1Jmr 110 - de* again aed. bent his head lower than usual ovel------Id—a--books. The senior partner' WaS 4early in tho worst. of tempers. Threes months had passed, end now, as he bounced Into the, office and tore open his let- ters savagely, it WAS eViderit that something was alUISS. • *„ "Crunapt" ho roared, like , a mad bull. "Stop that infernal Pert- •scratehing.„-Whet6a ttte„,..good-e- tending° yeu're•busy whett Yen ktiow the firm hasn't earned, a ten -Tonna oteLfor-ft--co- upler-of--ntiettho?" The Junior partner carefully blot- ted tho -last tignre he !tad made and laid. down he; pole And at times even 'forgot th,at he was tirump-pledded-away at his ledgers, pailowlvw•dined.. oinhie tson.rdppettla_vinto atross to his .partner's desk. his shoes, though a youngster fresh a partner the firm. ltI-Lsiteli-eir---Leirtining•-yeaterdayts-he c 00 w 0 r0W.11-7----Velittlf-0 Presently tieorge Xtastote walked Let us make our •present life bea,uti- lid„,,,ror_nejeeil for, others with Whom W e come in contact; Let us hare the hotote•beautiful, , the heert beantlful, our pant lifeour. daily lite, beau- tiful. Artel when we meet sorrow anti trial, when we Weep and when 4Ve-tienible'-bereettitt: the force a soma rfhattho itt I), nos re -powers Of maul e. o , -Wit, Way -there ore ;With, '-`1,relieve that these, • de- vethped by our earthly experienets, tinned in it future life. We cms *ell believe that sorrow nd ,trial,. weering and soul atom ,fountain ,of •bleesingL yee.::' that the _ tempests which scent to strip life of its beauty and glotscrejt be made, thp forerutmers of bleseings all the ssetee-bees.usso_ef_AltekLensteatt stifter44t, enr-oriserY" and ur pain; all the liarre, beauti u •e - cause of vzhat we have endure& -Agit We dObir40 Make: home. heart and 'life 14,i -reefer itMl more, heautifeVfor oureelves "and for othertr? eso 2C.t, ,The laesurrecticin,. dole den To*. L Cor. 15..20. -LESSON WORD STIPLEb. Noto-These Word Studie). for this t-atis ,XteVis ion. Events Interve,filng.-The .body ' of estut was. taken from tho crose bee ore s In -e .,tand was delivered by the noway. authorities to Joseph of Arimathea. 1,3e,„aud_icaeaceislmeelor of tbo ews and secret distiple of Jesus for burial, With •the assistance of cede/nine '"he who at Ilret eente to t*Itwitisotetrthit fitinents in laviSn a un- , ApICea 0 '-a..4-krar-arc-r WffirtardUily- par -4 t9-ther-point-O 6-Crefif--contract ttniinted and placed in a newly pre- from which Jesus gently leads her red roek-htiwn torn& biTonng t0Thatk to it reogiatiotr-ortillilildr; in'Orer el erka-than ii-tratit.'" '7 Paltneell. ,--litIV-7C0aBcfdit'S- sgratelling, and the owner, looked up open-mouthed. "Sacked I.eramingr he repeated. be whole context, a, title of tender address,* which :throws Much light on Its use by Jesus in addeessing Inotheet4„Tohn:41-4._, • tiecause they -.Since the aniteteden many have thought Illary-referred-to "the Jews": as the sPeciat 'enertties ot Jesus and his disciPleS, • This 'Mai be correct, thongh more probably. the pronourt bit used indefinitely, 'the sense biiilg.'"Sterst_mit_ has.. Askew away mw 100rd-," A. moment laterAllary . . been the gardener verse 15). 15. Whomseekest-• thou- Not vireekesi_thour4Las_th er might have inquired* -Note that Mary herself never refers to the body of Jesus as such; with her it Isijti r1" ao ye ore personal.' "My Lord." She has, not, yet brought herself -to-thinie „hint 4asr4barmuktittliz_ t=2. . .„ . "I 'met Siinpsen yesterday," laid Elastow, ia'a quieter. voice, '4and lte told.rae roidideno, that -his. . firm were mills,- to• see- us for that' -hundred--pottners.----111OLutikti-Matters In -svorse-hereAttAbeir-4-etter-th tritletos the taim of tour hun- dred, pounds miring to us is paid in,. three days.---" Oh, you know the usual rt of. thin it is no coed she might 11 n at my_ aide it*?,w. We had iskir-d-s: over US -lover of he whet had .stolen her away from me. • "That night, as X sat alone in My studyo'hereard her playing • in .11,cr room above. The Mcl-64y- hauxtt- ed mo, and X was compelled:by soot 'mystic force to go and `listen out. side her door. it was the piece X played a. moment ago. Then slowly. X opened the door and looked in. She stood there majestieallY. like a figure",* in stone, fully° dressed and with the instrument at her Shoulder, Saul that sweet smile of hers wan- _ _ -g-ac o passionate melody. And yet sh alwaia bclinirA, to th tiny of -my death that she - played that instrument in' her sleep, end. that the music was the Inspiration of of her dreas.". "Yes.., yes," broke. in CrumP4 Iiseyta he paused Ter breath,__ r-am---4---tOterabby-tuttnici ettra...dozerastatia.4..and 1$4,14‘ . ag..141a3MAALWad I in ant ti*---giVil-it-to-her 010.- n mornihg and taunt her with throwing away, such talent on a man. of lower station, who probabl did •E‘The truth Is, eitiMPthe firm is going tothe elegs and we've got to save- money somehow. Werhave---beea going downhill ever since pater shed. ybiere a' plodding old •horse, Crum). but you've no brains; Anti as for me -well, X just hate the husinees." "We -have certainly beee unlucky with our ntusic lately," agreedthe junior partner, Sensible reinark that," sneered ..yeatrforty years of experience cannot get „the km.-Init...•of_..the•Anest4s.-40tr- But Abele) littler -pieces Of . Miss Dane's hails gone rather 'Well," re- plied 'Crump; igiforing the eareasm. 'A mOtt, drop in,Ahe ocean. BO., as I.aoxid a, moment. no IV-Itse Dane Ise-elevereedeuredise eteveric-S„ will -take -some time tot' her •mu •Crump; we ;dual break." Several weeks pegged and the firm BitstOW-ttnii-et dud) ZeBI8tUCd In the 8.11,1U0 tOrPN state. Prom morn- ing till ° night thb junior partner toiled at his desk, Making fresh wor or. use In gers w en the day's business failed to provide any,end working out ing-tire---11-nn, Qcenslonaflrtba dyvrait by Visit from .Nella Dane, and thete v1dt eetneft like oases ih the , •At the suggestion of "the • ti" pfilftto ordered that a squad —7 4) at.' Ia.,. • an-gtmrd-at-t the *way by the disciples and the she might expect to Meet there at ,11..4nede by Om that he had that -early hour. risen front the dead (Matt. 27.. 62, 1. mary•-:-Iroiv- flinch cd" tenderness ) The next events ,mentionedltY- love, gentle reproach, authority, and Of the evangelists are those of comfort may not the Master have reeurrection morning.. 'Ile first put into . this one word! , • *est these veils, of Course, 'the rcsurrec- She turneth heraelf--.Na having Von 1.0414 whit* wali tinnounced by witito(1 for • the gardener's tee Kw- ot the Lord as airmuly ac- supposed) answer, she had turned '40MPliehed Just after the great earth-. again toward the* torah, lost once ',-40,(ake and the rolling away of the more in grid, without having catight *tone front the door of tile sepulcher the .deeper signiecatice of the •Iques-- 28 1-10). Overwheltned with tion, "Whont seekest thou?" but at roe .by the supernatural -1,lietatitte the epeakingof her -twee -other turns the guiirdo• were first prostrated •egain in sudden recognition- -to-; •1114_L_..,._ejty_ who had_addreseed_lter.' nd reported .whatthey had scert and ' iteard- to: the,40wisk_authoritice, Who, Xy.lkteetc.T.,A_..forer_oLedereepe__ tilted 'bribed them -to . spread • it false report by pupils in tin -caking to their teech- 'Itheut the disappearance of the, body er. 0u4Tellos trOA the toinb and to keep Which is, to say. Teacherhe text ellenee concerning...the evehti wblcii that gory at title moinent tied Just Actually did take place (Matt. • 28. this expression and spoke in /lebrew thrown a flood of tight on the whole , Ver!,e 11. If Mary .Matdalene, scene. For just 'one monteet it is frestrt • Whoin, , Jesus had driven out *; .Je.stts, her beloved teacher and friend, 1. .• INI/Orrt m she•-•-heil-foutel---ege, - Inenti,ioned ,A0rDel _. no_ relive together with certain ether Women 'who were "Minister- ing' JO !IOUS Ot substattee" (totikk-).8.). Iler devotion and loyal- nlio'illaS,ed t ne Tie - ,(1,100,12.1•,.. 49, 53; . 27. 61; ;mand to -Mary. Verb e e • Isterk Id. 4'1) and subeequ ly. (Luke implies lit the fir e •to. 24, ...Aohn'': tin.. 'That Jesu •pearett „Unto • after hi ld. 9) earinot others was in a garden, just as ,r). modern , cemetery is a • garden spot, arefulisr-Asweled-andaturedri . 17. Touch. morot-••••Iesus bad- no refifilied to lire to -renew the. 61 familiar fellowship with Ills discies pl n SASICetiM010 wt!A to in- atiorate a new fellowship, s !tr. ana place „*chair- for 'her; then, If Bestow was away. front ther °face, oie ittr-oftert7wits-Ite-daye-together; readingtiss-lett-0-throug at are weiiairg to do the junior ••partner, has face a. Tater then usual.-. "Do? That'll lett what I *sic you. If you don't think of sotnething -we mesh, that's:. the long and abort of It.'. ltol ;hat 'then?".. "Starvation for myielf and: Nellti -until X get another job." -"You mean that she will„starve?" SPleated tho junior Partners_ 'That a PUY- Yeu. are married Whelt-the firrn---;--" • litit-moritliiing Arott4t that Nur hundred pounds Ily Ia. at -the window. •going home now, for X am tired of staying liere ttd looking at stacks Of tritibie •no one shell -no N. so eosins_ down to • , • thought -of anything well" talk over.' Ie ivrtnt__out... juid_lettLart_unli: Partner alone. At first Crump fel the solitude oppressive, and, unabl to concentrate his thoughts, he he- thoughs reed rted him. There VeM, Just time for Alt, to got -be; 'yona the door; tett they might be trapped at thee gate. Ozte alone • could go free while tbe other re - =tattled to,•faco. It, out aud give. the fugitive time. Ile released his hold, and the passiag scent of violets told bin thet'she -was gone. • The door flew open and the reem was flooded 'with light. Lord Cray4 brook stood before him shaking with frenzied rage. ' "'What are you doing. here? Ahl ,i,eicove • the violin. • Ile listened tor the • .eche of a footste Without. " Meant to stea Then he swerved: The electric tight seemed to leap into. his eyes, and ' he fell headlong aoinst the corner. 01 • • tho doo*r. Da eyes -----ened on a luxurious room,- -end- aces, that. he, tiro, -tf -44:0 eu 441 ..back censcionertess, felt• that Itis head' wall on fire till a, girl's' cool hand was laid • on his forehead be the bandage. Dut-----iir"thre-reontitivelte:Ltitt She bad -dropped out of my life; •And X have never set eyea an her since!" For a moment Crump was • silent, Ks eyes tired on the set face of ;the Man .baare a • "Supposed you publialnel that song under another name? t'ossibly sin) ' might see and recegnise it and conte into Communication with the pub- lishers. Then .you might find her." Ileaverd • X never thought of left his lunch of sandwiches untouch ed and When the evening pet. in_ it 4• 1 lier4Y-In-lis-patroly-en4-going-aer to the cupboard took out, his Cre one: • uroloolt"--haLm U w 0 WO They would think it woe not g lttiv .knows;• -Lord. dred It two steers- ago, but I never thought, it would come to this." , _tro save the firtitto stria her! Ile thought of nothing .else; it Was the one desire of his "heart. And the violin could do it?" . . put ()fl his hat and toot, • and, wrapping, the- instrument in it* old plush case, stole softly out.. The eold night whul stung his fact, but, he hugt-st the violin dose in • Under t• his toaand drew away from every paseer-ht loot 'a Collision 'should in- t. ' So he trutlged 011 through tb ugh 4 e and his lunart afiegifig like that some • -great thing without counting the cost. "Send it to lituitow and- Crump. - --should like -'---to---do--Ithent- * good turn and you also," replied the lit - Ile inan qulckly. ,- Ten -minutes later be stood inythe street again._, 0_ • , • -"Thought of a Way out. Crump?" OUT-Tifro. tord raYbreelltre' Then they told jiitn all; how she . had paesed„in the.,gardett, and,heap- ing his'Confessioe, came back to save him. ' • , - "Vorgive what .1 edded Lord Craybroolc. AS the narrative ended. "If X had only known that It: was for her sake you branded yourself a thief! liut 1 wish to do eotrietiting'to show that, ••What is past ii done with. I40116 has told • * - ' . oretheleeping _partner." 'Ile words tieemed to tell an deaf ears. for tho junior partner had closed his eyes. '1, ?When' he opened them :wain they saw it wes for the hist time. 41. taint shdie; like the •• th �t oncoming spring ---floating- -- across a winter's twilight, lived for sat in the arm -chair in a. corner of was gone. .. .. his dining room at Chiswii4k and sur- "Tell liastow the ledgers are la voett-•theAtatier---pe.rtner, .whp-was er_ned the.t-4-X --sent, the- - huddled up in a chairfacing him. cheque!'" . "Well. 1 have thought of one Way, Tie paused. Then they knew that replied the junior partnercarelessly, the junior partner, had retired from one. the only treutife he po I. Such days ,passed all too (vied and h� tofind himself looking ,for- ward for -het. next' visit with suet anxiety that he was -astordshed a himself. The soft flow ot her ,voiee, the curve •of her lips, returned to blzn even hi lilt" deottiel. Anil So thelt truth came- tor'-hints-ta Per a . fortnight sheltni not been pear the, oillee, and tile senior partner . had absent for the same lengt ti -mek Yet, , day Crump - roc to grtitotiiiieWirkThliFg ar og red tk. .....snd4eniXthe„sloor,,WeSantest-epe stid Dastow„strode in: -- •,"11alloa, (rump! 'Not at work, OW 'Hoses things?" • Crump did not reply, Ws nostrils detected the Wet odor of violet" even Wore rustic) of skirt's be- trayed the fact that it woinnT was i the m roo. .name left him tips 'almost un- eristionSIY• dlui he 'cie,PPed blushing at his teinc.tity.• "You're getting, rather familia 1 IlastoW, elnpplmy h Irst 0,1)-J, MY. breibren izieg the fel, resurree-il lowship and ('1Ci1(55 c,f tave boa ; his disciples whiCh It tea continue. ecitletit.M37relber 'and vole ratiter ftip, totnb--rritei* bad A likeoesa with it alifierenee. Jest! itiutes before, eotercd. the i.nowhere Ident Ries tit a 6), titich.. erns doubtle.s lievers *lilt Ills owe. t • , PiStOnittrY, the side 30,• men nit)1 gtog-i0 aorirf flank I ecd otroaltice..yott to my Witt., iwexl . rump?" , wife?" int tor •-Ailiertner-tooff Caved to the epot. The. forelteed bulged like ,., • . l' of his 3). lo ilf,aesiae-'-elliLer kin "Wit Vi011r' 1.4 Still rTr?oct, matt (coin filie Itoly opolitig, (Az tbe SiiiF1/41' 3. 12). -"this truth is pointed Wanting in , It by etooping' it, pertien irs to ..• Once inside. it; 'was, 1101 el spt "the odand F'itther.0ot ' to A MO t‘t,,r41 'erect beside the h LoPti• JeusChri 'comp. , r_ "e ,i,r4 iNIt. i tin ,II It111.4155 Lord Craybrool. The butler gazed down the ill- elfigure of, the. an-Avlia had ask - eex-,-to-keep-io "Xri this X have no Partner," re. c. Crump, aVerting-hior nYes. Cr-tetkospotr-in-that 't7e-litera •-•,1-' .your minds.," ' . - "nave you- --brought ,your Cre- oak?", Aesikedelin.. it length, to vermilion. "N-ne, I have forgotten it. teast=-• •thit is, it's being mended."' stanurtered the junior partner, the colorerifting upward in his cheeks. "Xt .is worth et good deal of mon- ey, is it not?" alio asked. Lord-Crirybrefok offered me bundeed pounds -for it when 'he 'saw it," he replied, trying to sip= Pear' calm. -"Lord- ernybroek! Why do you mention him? Vilien did he see it?" She -had grown euddenly white, and- . . TO- WEATIXF.33. MEN. plisotteesAlsedLi • "Siacing oracsista. Weather experts front all parts of tilt at the In,- "What! begglng for Coppers. are Said. tiN 'he pace -IVO- "the vioiiii beneath•Prump's teat. - "Certainty not; 1 Wish ,tte Sae him ent .huminess, _TeiLhirn_it spirit (coMp. 1rittbe article Is origittal. signify e`riot thott •t)t tho pirit. but ^rather an t e let Stantlin acowith, ti widowed peer 0' fame Wait known far arid 'Wide 1. Artii---03. eislirixt ,) of Vio1in in the world. - ....... to know. your ant ) ' 11, • 'et., e Otri OS tt 4 "VOA ' Ot sp. ' "YOU. OtTki.r litindriel pounds for ' thisN4o1 11 ,,,„ 6 .51thirs ago," rolled' Crilrep,2•Pribduting the ' Ment# "It -la your to -night at the sante ti If :you ..wilt_lox . i o _years ego. I,_please don% lc-nny-morxr-questione;-7 I kn 40 ,,g4,1 home it _may.:11 -I- don t quite up to the mirk.. 'f-1 altgi bq glad to see this business through, stow. Good-nightl" They were conscious that he had left the room. A tnoment more and ie front door hanged. 'rho junior *tiler had gone, but. ho had/ left, behiiul him his secret locked in * Ite ked airiftly down the pave - men seircet9 kno-witg where - Itr." wa going, Wilt 111$ thou,glits, raced on ahead of Itint. The violin .bad tght linitid,,.. otie„.7i_T jot -nigh:: ' he /11 .--tte,IEVJi--AI b- tsi tt4 rlgr ad phroitunirldd'..0. . othat Lgyotit:t t v tot e. it, in tht bankItouso. . •,-1:114titite7uglIgti gnld Itis footSte Cr of meteorologicel insttuments was , #1.141 ncti.. .They admired the 200 aids - most delight. notwithstan ng - fact that nioeteen baroulaters were simultaneously , foretelling- lout -Wee- their Tho principal feature of the exhibi- tion was the great. number of self. recording instruments. 'the imoderd meteorologist .necti. never -"take a 'reading." heed hot even get itis feet wet by' going Olit to examine the rain gauge, nor is he called upon to risk his hat by exanifinng the wee- th (politely termed anent°- 0 ale of wind . trkItr Int or matte n to sleep for a week If he then find that, :clockwork, I ricity. and recording" ink , have . kept mihute record of the vagaries of the British eihnotte from &kir to • hour dering tlie whole time. .Soinetintet eyelets° and an tintf. cyclone of equai. poWer etre opposed' to ono ftitollter, for It is neeemaktry te uese, which rill outflank the other. • he professinotel prephet lif1Uttjr5t VIVc6 1110 ttatOnt 'of -the Aloubt- Simple a weals void wpuobuilitishirocto. noen,rpg.olt ecort o n totliait Oh it4, Ntlit'EgS. "lb AIMA slowly op the driVo; thvni neared. . the door, he saw lawn • was 1, n' whit *co h* Johtt ' narrats , 31; 1 he tinges Joint t wero t ' d Ofl14 deititt.)eee , Ion of 't 0 from the dad 'csii that da iiiwoVer, the. h '14 not an ,tilis tiVcouri` o ' nbetitation‘.ot tb /VI n t ' Wat�ver the Y *Christ at ibis tI 14 share, ttiat poi rent' in $tri ftiTe1tornpijtion Lon 1i1t t00flLWa „iufti - ts th ',I•AvIto vr e%amvle. ,tbe takro-bstrom capli, which alit =tat featly records "lout° fleetnations of the loaroMetti......_._ tr.7 rpt Itreieereury•-nrer nultiplied tteetily-fc,lal by the legis-' ring pen. and tho rr.soit In.qteati of the .stat 1g. ty, so :v as,sociaTf0 llaIndicator or the ine s'rrtni uumnt danring vivaelootli .ovlr and sft.to is-thaPi aililtnornitritaintc4 iii•ItiSiviShit100.70.1.701; (totgs. Mte'eto: Weetttiliniteri in It eit.brimritbr utstor down. op Ur 1 ' /liy; the 441iat0.eYil n nht. *tar ,. e mitilm t,.°tIatli:pti 144 rounder. lint With d Idit-.kn «pre.sIon retain Vera( hiral uthorLfy tbottgh'no gospel eness Of and attb the mis of ) 'mit not I et alt t notes ro *nil higher n * tmttowly of e ietneinr, leaping biglatt pitiniortate Art, the* *Ink* into santei-sileiaret *sly to -and yet, to tall Ilk* * olten