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The Exeter Times, 1889-5-2, Page 7TUB GEE4T 00E40 FOTtEST, Stanleye' Perilone Intssege Through et. The Edinburgh&oteman of slate ditto prints an interesting letter from 'Henry M. Stanley, dieted in Central Africa, Sepb. 4, 1888, and addressed to Mr. A., L. Brune, a son-in-law of Dr. Livingston, who lives in Edinburgh, ,[t adds nothieg,eseentitlliy new to the letter from Stanley reaently aent front London by oable, bub the following aeoounb of the jour. nay through the forest region to the Grand Lend will bear reprinting" " While in Eagland coneiderleg the best routes open to the Nyanza (Albert) I thought I was very liberal in allowing myselt: two weeks' march, to cross the forme) region lying between the Coeigo•and the Grass Land, but you may imagine our feelings when month After month saw us marahiug, tearinfi, plow- ing, nutting through that same continuous forest. It took. us 169 days before we could nay, 'Thank God, we are out of the darkness at last,' At one time we were all—whites and blacks ---almost 'done up.' September, October, and halt of that month of Novem- ber,1887, will not be forgotten by us.. Oa - ober will be specially memorable to us tor the sufferings we endured. gar ofiioers are heartily a[OIi of nine/ohm, but the loyal Woke, a band of 130, followed me once again tato the wild, traoklees forest, with its hundrede of inoonvenienoee, to assist their comrades of the rear column. Try and imagine some of these inconveniences. Take a think Scottish copse, drippingwith rain ; imagine this copse to be a mere undergrowth. nourished under the impenetrable shade of ancient trees ranging from 100 to I80 feet high ; briers and thorns: abundant ; lazy creeks, meandering throogh the `depths of the jangle, and eontetinieea deep effluent of a great river. Imagine this forest and jungle in all stages of deoxy and growth- old trees falling,, laanieg. perilously over, fallen proatrate ants and insects of all kinds, sizes, and colors, murmuring around ; monkeys and chimpanzees above, queer noises of birds and animals, orashee in the jungle as troops of alephaube rush away ;, dwarfs with poisoned arrows securely hidden behind some battrese or in some dark reoasa; strong, brownbodied aborigines with terri- bly sharp spears, standing poised, still as dead stumps : ram pattering down on yon every other day in the year ; an impure at- mosphere, with its dreadcloninguenoes, fever and dysentery;, gloom throughout the day, and darkness almost palpable throughout: the nicht ; and then, if you will imagine such a toreatextending the entire distance from Plymouth to Peterhead, you will have a fair idea of ache of the inconveniences en- dured by ns from June 28 to Deo. 5, 1S87, and from June 1, 1888, to the present date, to oontinue again from the present date till about Deo. 10, 1888, when I hope to pay A LAST FAREWELL to the Congo fore8b. Now that we have gone through and through, this forest region I only feel a surprise that I did not give a greater latitude to my ideas respecting its extent ; for had we thought of it, it is only what =fight havebeen deduoedfrom our knowledge of the great sourcree of moisture necessary to supply the forest with theregaisite sap and vitality. Think of the largo extent of South Atlantic Ocean, whose vapors are blown due ing nine months In the year in this direction. Think of the broad Congo, varying from one to sixteen miles wide, whish has a stretch of 1,400 miles, supplying: another immeasurable quantity of moisture to be distilled into rain, dnd mist and dew over this insatiable forest, and then another 600 miles of the Arnwimi or Ituri itself, and then you will cease to wonder that there are about one hundred and fifty days of rain every year in this re- gioa, and that the Congo Forest covers such a wide area. "Until we set Mot on the grassland, some- thing like fifty' miles ,'weal of the Albert Nyanza, wo saw nothing that looked a smile or a kind thought or amoral sensation. The aborigines are wild, utterly savage, and in- corrigibly vindictive. The dwarfs—called Wambutti—are,worse still, far worse. Ani- mal life is likewise so wild and shy " that no sport is to be enjoyed. The gloom of the for- est is perpetual. The face of the river, REFLECTING ITS BLACK WALLS of vegetation, is dark and sombre. The•aky. one-half the time every; day resembles• a wintry aky in England; the face of nature and life is fixed and joyless. If the sun charges through the black clouds, enveloping it and a kindly wind brushes the masses of vapor below the horizon and the bright light reveals our sureound igs,itisonlytotantalize ns with, a short-livedvieion of brillianoy and beauty of verdure. " Emerging from the forest finally, we all became enraptured. Like a captive un- fettered and set free, we rejoiced ab eight of thebine cope of heaven and freelybathed in the warm sunshine, and echos and gloomy thoughts and unwholesome ideas were ban. ished. You have heard how the Londoner oft, after months of devotion to businessin the gaseous atmosphere of that great city, fells into rapture at eight of greea fields and hedges, meadows and trees, and how his emotions, crowding on his dazed senses, are indescribable. Indeed I have seen a Darby day once, and I fancied, then that I only. saw mad men, for great, bearded, hoary headed fellows, though well dressed, enough, behaved in the moat idiotic fashion, amazing me quite. Well, on this 5:h of December we became soddenly SMITTEN: WITH MADNESS •• in the same manner. Had yeti seen us you would have thought we had lost .our senses, or that 'Legion'' had :intend "and taken poeseseion of as. We raoed with our loads over a wide, unfenced field, like an Engliah park for the softness ofits grass,) and herds a of buffalo, eland, roan ntelope, stood on either hand witfiipointeil'eare and wide eyes, wonderingat the Budden wave .of human beings yelling with as t issued out ohe s joy y y of the dark depbha,of the forest. "We poured out on the .plain a frantic multitude, but after an hour or two we be- came an orderly column. Into the emptied villages of the open country we proceeded to regale ourselves on' melon, rioh•flavored. bananas, and plaiatalns, and great pote full of wine. The fowls, unaware of the presence of a hungry mob, were knock- ed down plucked, roasted or broiled; the goats '*tentatively broweing or chewing the cud, etlee suddenly eefzed and decapitated; and the grateful aroma of roast meat gratin• ed our Renese. An abundance, a' prodigal abundance, of the good things ,hail awaited' our eruption into' the graselatide Every village was well`etoeked'wrtli Provisions, and even luxuries long 'denied' to us. Under snob. fare the men became; moat robust, di-.' eases healed men bee tragic., 'the weak be came strong, and there was` nota . oee.goee or a chicken heart left. Only the Bebuaos- se, near the main Rua, were tempted to re- slat the invasion." The City of Paris, Which has Talton rank ,liis as ono of the greyhounds of the ocean, is mo built that she may be used as a etuiser in time of war. The British Government in that event would take possession of her, man her with twelve Armstrong guns and send her tie soourthe teat frit ` the enemy's ',commerce. Songs Unsung. Sweet the song of the thrush at dawning, When the grass lien wet with spangled dew. Sweet the sound of the brook's low whisper 'Mid reeds and rushee wandering through; Clear end Imre is the Wesb wind's murmur, That croons in the branches all day long ; 3u1 the songs unsung arethe sweetest musio, And the dreams that die are the soul of song. The fairest hope is the one whish faded, The brightest leas is the leaf that fell; The song that leaped from the lips of sirens Dies away in an old sea ehell. Far te the heights of viewless foray The soul'e swift flight like a swallow goes, For the note unheard is the birdies best carol, And the bud unblown is the reddeat rose. Deepest thoughts are the ones unspoken, Tnat only the heart cense, listening, hears, Most great joys bring a touch of silence, Greatest grief is in unshed tears. What we hear is the fleetest echo, A song dies out, but a drevm lives on The rose red tints of the rarest morning • Are lingering yet in a distant dawn. Somewhere, dim in the days to follow, $nd far away in the life to be, Passing sweet is a song of gladness, The spirit chant of the aoul set free. °horde untovohed are the onset we wait for, That never rise from the heart •unstrung ; We turn our steps to th'e years beyond us, And listen still for the songs unsung. The Seedy r3we11. The seedy swell, I know him well, With all his false pretense, Who awaggeriag walks and loudly talk,, Without a grain of sense. He loves the shady side of King, Where kindred monkeys throng; Hischeap rattan he'll, idly awing, And hum' a silly song. He sacks the knob wibh all his might, As if some end to gain, He wears a glass to aid his sight That's feeble, like his brain. With silly smirk he lifts his tile To some fair passer ty, Who lifts him bya'wineome' smile To realms of ecstasy. He:•vainly apes the thoroughbred, The "man" of gentle birth, Of whom he has, but only read But knows not ono on earth. He is a "cad" in very deed, A snob of deepest dye, Who always smokes the vilest weed, The cheapest one oat by. The nautical he too affects, He talks afoul and fair, And ignoramuses corrects, With quite a lordly air. A flowing tie of azure hue Is soiled around his. throat, As followed by a vagrant crew He hies him to his boat. He hies to "feather," bub alas 1 His features pallid grow, And tho' the bay is smooth as glass, He must cave in, 1 trove. For to the deep he soon returns A tribute—spare the thought; His cheek soon reddens o'er and burns, To be thus meanly caught. His empty` boasts of what he's seen, Tarns outall arrant lies, Of distant climes and fairy scenes Beneabh blue cloudless; skies. PROF. G. S. LEwELLEIN, M. A., S. D. f': The Maple Leaf. BY T. ROWLEY. The maple tree, how gladly we Beneath its branches meet, To sport, and play, and merry be Oar homage to repeat. To sing a song, while we among Oar friends whom we invite, A welcome stay, to swell the throng And join in with delight. The maple tree, we love to see, It stands as proof of time And from our hearts we'll worship thee As emblem of our. slime. We take from you our motto true, Which adds not to our grief, Bab rather joy exalted high, Our heart like maple: leaf. It tells of home, we love it dear, And in our blood could ateep This emblem of our nation's pride, The dear loved maple Ieaf. Advantage of Philosophy. There is an old negro in Anatfn who claims to have studied "flosify oaten a book." Reoenbly he went into the Justice Court and said, "Judge. kin•I get 'diet• ment writ again dat wellies nigger Pete ? "What's he been doing" ? 'He's a prooraa- timator. He's been a-proorasbimatin'." "Pro- orasturating,• there'sno law ,against that." "No law again precrastienation? Dan what's de law fur 1 Ain't proeraetimation de tief of time ?" "Certainly, I:belieye,ib hasbeen so stated." • 4'Weh, den, ain't Pete a tief 1" "Yea, you might eo construe' it, but you cannot oonviob a man for stealing time." "No utwe N , b when we habitat de pried on him for ateelin' time, we hab de circumstan- tial ebldenee agin him fur stealing; Money, fur don'!b fioesifysay dab time am money 1 Got yar dar, jedge 1" And bhe old • man' went out ohuokliug to himself, Got him dar 1 Got de jedge dis time, suah ae yer a foot high!" His Opinion of Daniel. Willie is a little Scotch boy who lives in, Glasgow. He is five years old, :end has not yet learned to like "pease broiler" which is given to children to cool the blood. "Go on, Willie, you must eat it," said hitt papa, one morning at breakfast. " But I don't like it, dada," replied' the . boy. "That doesn't ;matter ; yeti must eat it. /twill do you good and make you fab like Daniel, who lived on ib when ho was a boy." " Did he ? Wee that the mart who WAS In the den of lions ?" ''Yes, that wee the man." "Well, then," replied the ladscornfully, " I don' wonder the Bone didnt eat him. Too fiabtering—Mrs. Spitfire (handing her, husband a phobotzraph)_... 't How do you like my pictures, John ?" " Who is ib ?'''Why, ine ,t Who do yen suppose it is 1 "I Wouldn't have, known it, I never saw yen look thati�way before," "What way?" "Pleasant." WRENYOUR HEAD IS OFP, Actual Sensation of a Man Who !'suds lila►. self Decapitated.. In the second part of his iutereeting vol - erne. whish treats of the ,decapitation et heinau eeinga, Dr. Loye ,aye :—" y hat passes he the head of a deoapitated hum=p being? Is there any fact in the eft,repoat ed story that the head lives for some mo- ments after it leas been separated from the body?' And in connection with this belief Dr. Leye quotes a terrible story told by M. Petitgand about an Anamite who was be- headed by the sword in 1885°at Saigon, The plane of sxeoution wee the Plain 01 the. Tombe, a vast sandy tract serving se cemetery to the Anamites and the Chinese, Four Auamitapirn.tos, taken with their arae in their hands, were to bo beheaded. The chief: of the band, a man in the prime of life —energetic, muscular, brave, .without boast ing, and firm to the last—had attracted my special attention, and I decided to make my observations on him only. Hia head foil down at the distance of about a yard and a quarter from where I stood, It did not roll in the newel way, but with the surface of the wound resting on the sand—a position bye which the hemorrh- age was aooidentallyreduoed to a minimum, At this moment I was -terror -struck at `see ing the eyes. of the doomed mau fixed frank- ly on my eyes. Not daring to believe in a conscious manifestation, I went quickly to one side of the head lying at my feet, and I feund that the eyes ;followed me. Then I returned to my first position still the eyes wont with me for a shorb distance, and then quitted me quite suddenly. The face ex- pressed at that moment a conscious agony, the agony of'a person in a state of acute as- phyxia, The mouth opened violently as if to take in a breath of air, and the head, thrown off IN equilibrium by the motion, rolled over. Thie cuntraobion of the Max - Wary muscles was the lash sign of life Since the moment of decapitation from 15 to 20 monde; had.pe.ssed, Dr, Loyealso relates the following.atrange Story, taken from the, archives of the Ane. trim police office, 'and relaying. to . an mom. tion said to have taken plane in Vienna' in. 1680 :—A well•known, bandit named Soha venburg was caught, together with four of his associates, and theywere'alt condemned to death. They were already on their knees, ready to submit to their fate, when Sohaven• burgaddressed' the judge, asking that his four companions might be ranged hi single file in front of himnat a distance of eight feet from eaoh other. "If," he said, "after I am beh'eeded 1 get up and walk to the first of my comrades, will you pardon him I" The jadge thought he was pretty safe in complying with the:'rcquest. " But if I walk up to the second, the third, and the fourth, will yon pardon those also 1" The judge replied that he would obtain their par- don from the Emperor. The partisan: was satisfied, bent his head, received themortal blow, and his heed' rolled .down ; but to the great surprise of the judge and the'epoota- tors, the body got up, walked alone, passed the first, 'second, third, and fourthof the condemned men and fell down. The rimer - renal was told to the Emperor., who pardon. ed the four criminals.—fteall Mall Gazette. Paralyzed. Many are the absurd traneaotions wbioh take placein banks, some of them showing an over -cautiousness in the care of money, and others, like the following, indicating an amusing ignorance of its valve. A Georgia paper says that a negro, the fortunate possessor of a valuable house -lot, one day sold his property for ten thousand dollars. He was given a check for that amount, which was carried in due time to one of the banks. The paying teller asked him how much of the money he wanted in cash, "1 wants all dat ar paper calls fur," re- plied the negro. "What 1 You don't want ten thousand dollara:incash 1" "Jesse, sah." ' "All right,"anewerod the man, and in five minutes lee began piling the money on the counter. As he laid the five hundred dollar pack. ages on the counter, the negro'= eyes grew larger and larger, Finally, when twenty of the packages had been placed before him, he looked intently at them for a moment, and then, with a broad grin on his face, said : "I'ee'jiat paralyzed ! Gimme a dollar rn' a half 'n' you kin keep de rest till I pall =gin." Too Mach Reading. Ib was said of someone, "His system of reading smacks of the old sohool ; Iibtle, but good—non'mtetts, sed mutton; (not many things, but much)." Mrs. Browning, who wrote verses before she was eight, and pro- duced an epic at eleven, endorses such a system, though ib contradicts her own. practice. When still a child in age, she, as she after- ward said, "gathered vistous from Plato and the dr' metists, anti • ate and' drank Greek, and made my head ache with it." She reed every book she could find and con- tinued that system of reading through life ;` bub later, when old enough to judge of the system by its effect upon her mimd, she wrote to a friend "I should be wiser,• I am persuaded, if I had nob read half as mush; should have had stronger and better -exercised faculties, and should stand higher' in my own appreoiation. A temperance story. -Once upon a time a very Good and Pious Person saw a Bibulous ttan coningg eOb'of'"a Saloon in a state of Mild and Melancholy Intoxication. "Oh' my Friend," cried the Pious Person, "I am very Sorrybo see you coming oat of such a Place." "da that act ?" replied the Bibulous Man in a Thick and Tearful Voice. " V1 ell, I will go right Book Again." And he did eo, leaving the Pions Person standing on the sidewalk in Great Amazement. Thie season has hardly opened when news tomos of a tramp being chewed by a dog, having taken refuge for the night in the porch whish the canine had preempted. There is no'fairneas in these hidden snarea for the unsuspecting trans' who , plies:- mevocation tinder ar.fl'rcienely difficultcircum• stances to justify' the placing of dogs in full view and not behind porch doors," Besides a late caller inighteiave fallen into the Elaine trap, and next morning hospitality would have been horriflee at seeing his bones strew ing the lawn. It seem id shy • case to be aoeiewhat early in tlie:mason to begin kill- ing tramps.. (the most expenaivo Dorset kept in stock at the dry -goods stores of New cork is ueually a $35 one. To spend more than that on a Dorset a woman muab hays it made to order. Thirty five dollars buys a dream in heavy satin, sprinkled with gold em broirlery", or decorated with a clever imite- tion of htenct painting. Ib is lined with heavy silk and made so that there ie not e seam or roughness of any sorb to worry the eencler flesh of the wearer, and the harsh steels whore ib fastene in front are covered with down lost they might aoeideot.clly pinoh the flesh. Stroh corsets aro made en- *else by laud in P,trie, JOHN LABATT'S Indian Pale Ale and XXX Brown Stout Highest awards and Medals Mr Purity attd Excel- lence at Oentennial' Exhibition, Philadelphia, 1876; Canada, 1876 ; Australia, 1877 ; atld Paris; France,1878• TI STIMONIALS SJLBOTR,D ; Prpi, S 1i Croft, Public Analyst, Toronto, says :-.' t find it to be perfectly sound containing no impurities or adultere Wats, and earn strongiy.recommentl it as perfectly iure'and a very superior malt liquor, John B Edwaiae, Professor of Chemistry, 'Montreal, says: "I find them to bo remarkably soun.t ales. brewed from pure malt and hops Bev. P; J, Rd, Page, Professor of Chemistry Laval lJn.vor sity;.Quebec. says ;.- Ihave analysed the Indian Paio'Alo manufactured byJohnLabatt, London, 0ntaaio, and ba e found it a light ale, containing, but little alcohol, of a deli_ cioue flavor, and df very agreeable taste and superior quality, and compares with the boat imported ales, I have also imply/10d the Porter xx.x Stout, of the same brewery, wbioh is of excellent quality; its flavor is very agreeable ; it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage- ously wi.th any imported article, ASK YOUR G•ILOOEIi~ FOR IT. MANUFACTURERS OF wte iy suare ra PI O The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion. Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use. The Heintzman Pianos are noted for: Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their Finely Regulated Delicate Touch, Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced Scale. The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Faetory:West Toronto Junotioii w a r7 kin y and Office, St. West .a„ 1: • 3esv iaa G-aBmcrt i n eTi 'Be atnce•oeen bitch fii�] 6A 6LL"sS 1 .rod goods where the people ens w them. wo will send l r^,e a one p,,oevn tunnel l'eelne, .ihe'wy bost sewing -maths a made in tits world 1 vita all the alt aliments. We will Mao send Cr*.r a complete line of our: easily and vn able art slept.. In Mina, v e •.!. :Bat you oboes what 11,• 01:11. 11 1 race who way rail Or, your lun•.nn 1 after e; months an ,1hntl Lr„nae - nm uwti property. 'r110 Trend m ,ldue is j made oiler the a•it,gi.es potents, ultict neve 111111101 It •f0 a paft1lto mucor it sold tm :'tIn It he the r#r7 'i' tF.:if: fle.,,arod 110 moocu o-. �i'lLimnrhtae 111 0111 liar'. .11t is �HNsss t• So capital regrlrad.: richt. brlef lastrustlons Rlvnn 1Lae ,,ho'1rrtie to us. at corn cat :ge- ntlest .he boot high set-maahirae is tr, world, .1,5 the Ow,,t line ot,,•ontn oth��ittffl, art stet sbowm 0,getlmr to.tmwiaa. 'opsit,: 4z Cat., L8o c 150, naaatuten, Itinitme. S93 'arado in all arts. by platting 0 a r muohinna for Infants and Children. LOaaboriaissowell adapted tochildren thatI Castorfa cures Colic. Constipation, [recommend it us superior tonny,presoription Sour Stomach, Diarrbma, Eructation. lacuna tome. R. A. sac aa , At D., Sills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di- gestion111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn i, N. Y. Without iiejtuious medication. TEs CENTAUR C oarpAMY, it Murray Street, N. Y. aetet :telefitseaseditnees lkF ipdtenefeel"311leefideet `lePts 'ireetf?'r1`iene rsdeel wleset n "bra.. eseeeeeese, e y rips G ae t� i5 t a.K• b 'ti eo 4fi.• ,G• fi a' b ate ie' • :%:: 'A d � Q ?V\ ' �` ° koi• 4G ti° e, v be. 0..e,`''-,Ve 1. bA Qy[?• Gfi Yi arae Get er es yG4 to e. ge GK., ,orb ees aee •, rr✓ g y G 1� X .'i e 4 e5 ti *7 SP �o fi .� e, 4~� arc' ems. eP Cs�" S MeS1S 4cSe, fest nee opt ^oe' a 4404 ,*`' .10. �004:§00'., .o�`s4bti m4 trot 4,4% 44,, b. p Bt 4 tl } Pte eeteq',�Qo eo Oo 4 w>> a OS' o , os0 ,t9v5 s6 eef 1' 4 �w is Gp� a Theresa only by Thoaa Holloway, 78, New Oxford Street, late 555, Oxford Street,' London. !% i T Purchasers should look to tko Label on the Boxoa and Pots' the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. Ng, s.,4 fi' Pmeo-crxs»srr sem Live Stook Association (Incorporated.) Home Office -Broom 1), Arcade, Toronto: In the life department this Association pro- vides indemnity for sickness and accident, and enbstantielaesistaneeto the relatives of de- ceased members at torme available total, Iri the live stook department two-thirds in- domnitgfoe loss of t ivo Stock of its mombcre. Appiicationbfor Arsenates invited. Send for ros ten:tee. clairnt paid, did. WILLIAM JON11S, Manaiiins DIreotter • ..,:wit, ':i:f:e..'.' rT7hen.1 say Cuttie a do not mean Merely to n the tun,tttiino, mud then have `thein rO- n i.. of tannin A RAl)W GUltIf. 1r ha,agai ve nu=de the diseabe of 'nrts.EP at.PSY 7E,A.txmca i` 1'ECIEW A. lire long ettidy. , T, waniiAztir my renelelq tG ltni the worst cases: Beeauso 01110ra have ailed I s uo r•"easoli fern et kloti'r'beeiv it a onto. Jcnd toncoi y�r a oratreatlsoktitlh,i`Itza1c13omrlttA o1 Ihet�, lei tient iristf Itit vts9 o5r. Givd P roto and rest Office. ;It costa YOU nothing lig for tr1el,,flSid it will euro you. :Address • R, Ga FOOT, 87 Yon -o 8$., S'aroute, Oa, tsar';'fUt;kr, 1`41'14N3101,PxHt •tf?l °1 4:1! How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culver. wen's Celebrated Tansy on the radicaleure of SpnaMAToal 5BA or incapacity induced by excess or early indiscretion. The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clearly dentonstratee from a thirty years' successful practise, that the alert In consequences of self- abuse may be re ticaily. oared : pointing out it mode of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what hie condition may be, may cure' himself cheaply, pri- vately and radiealil+. >t r This lecture should be in the hands of every youth and every man le the land. Sent under seal, in ,a plain envelope, to coy ad dress, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two postage stamps. samples of Steoioine free. A.ddrees THE CULYEUWELL MEDICAL CO, Anil Street 41 Ill NSW ,York tDrk e Box 450 Post O{rzo 13 !a*8tt7y THE LIGHT .,RUNNING :r i, i SE INMACHINE HAS NO, EQUAL! THE LADIES' FAVORITE. IiTHE ONLY SWING CNIN , ). THAT DIVES .--41 N 0 �1� '' IYG orlImo« � ,'tit` . tl[ItifYb 28 ONION Ullti�;N3G( n•'WILL d iA7lANtA, tlA sncto Ntenwciccaont.. By A,gellats Itveryivtlere,