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BflBflBv ?- , - C5Tf " " " " '" y""l " ' p wi' * .i JSflffj - *3 ' a " * H'V - . <
* ** "
flflflflf / .- - "v v - "if5- I t i. T *rfflfl Btf I-
.HHHHB.
*. = * , .V '? ' x * V
. Ji5sr-afll
--HBflflfffC - - s -
w* h"* V-W - *
',v ' " -
5 ;. -
H rhaggard "oteTfl-
sjP-xH I .He Revels In the Sunny Nort-hH
-
I west Climat-
e.H
.
I I P1111 Hunting Near Winnipeg Afri *
1 I 'Can PrevErication Laid Bare LionH | gSboota * Exposed The TrainH i * ** Brute Again Steals Nye'sHlf Overshoes and Disappear-
sll-
' / Wearing an Old Lady'sflf] - Eye on the End ofHi His Umbrel-
la.Hfl
.
TnTtheexfiilirating Northwest , 188D-
.H.
f The cold of Minnesota has boonHi f greatly exaggerated by rival states ,
tl *n(* though times the thermometer low-if
-crs * n tue estimation of society , the
f co is of such a dry, bracing character11 -as to seem almost oppressively hot to-
sf those who are not accustomed to it.L Hs 'Th ? J° sParkles , tho step is > elastic
B and rich blood mantles to tlio nose , as9 the airy caparisoned droska speedsB blithely through the palmetto grovesI -of the thrifty Occident.
HS Many southern people come to St.Jl Paul and Minneapolis , it is said , in or-
MS-
der to escape the rigors of their own-B winter. The * banana belt extendingS from Duluth to Winnipeg reminds on-ea of tropical Africa. Lastweek Mr. RileyH Haggard and 1 started out for a little ,
j 'quiet olephant shooting in the country.B Bidding farewell to the concierge atJH the hotel , we packed our heavy expressI rifles and smooth bore elephant guns ,
1 penetrated as far as tho sleeping car' could convey us , and bidding farewell
J to our faithful Wan Wonga. who ca-
J-
ressed us both with a whisk broom toJ thg value of twenty scudi , we hired anJ elephant apeico and began to permeateJ tho jungle , preceded by our trustedJ -bird dog.
I W . J 4 lfl Nl'E AS A LION TAMER-.B
.At tho kraal or livery stable , where-
KB we engaged our elephants , we were toldHfl ;hat game was very plenty about thirtyKB niles across the dinglelow and that inHfl a small forest of jingsnag trees andKB aoola bushes quite a covey ot quagga
B und elephants had been scared up by aBfl Boer who had penetrated this jungleBfl Accompanied by his brakje or dog.BB The first night we camped beneathBfl ilie shade of a Vienna bread fruit tree
B on the borders of the Karroo , and , pre-Bfl
-
renting the escape of our trusty ele-Hfl
-
phants by attaching their trunks , weHB iiegan to prepare our evening meal. IBfl read the directions from a book of Af-Hfl
-
rican travel and my verv faithful com-fl
--ade , Mr. Riley Haggard , did the cook-
Bfl
-
Pirst refreshing ourselves with a longBfl iraught from a gourd of spoopju from
fl Peoria , marked 1843 , so called becaus-eHI A. is placed on the market eighte-
enI
m fours aud forty-two miDutes after it is-
uade , our faithful gun-bearer , YlangLiang, began to carve tho bultong ,Jleiboss , and jerked muskrat for the-jveningI meal. Making a bright fire of-
carroo bushes and fresh train figs , a-
.vad. of mealies was soon simmering-ver> the coals , while the odor of- Cin-
Jl-
iinnati bultong pervaded the tropical-HJ 'orest.-HJ
.
l'la"g Ylang , our faithful Talet , who-HJ has made his name a household wor-dH Decause of his search after Schwatka-HJ tnd One Kight Stanlej' , said that a-cH
-
:ording to tho books on African explo-HJ
-
ition it was now time to bed down the-slephants. . After doing this ho returned-
HJ'' md proceeded with the cuisine.-
HJ.
Wo had hardlj swallowed our su-pH
-
3er , when Mr. 'Riley Haggard wa-sH .
'ibout to climb a date palm to secure a-
HJ "ew luscious lecture dates , when ou-rH sars were sr.luted by a most unearthlyH ind ear-piercing roar from the heart of-
HJ .he jungle. At this moment our faith-H
-"ul Ylaug Ylang eamo with eyes stick-
H-
jig out like a sore thumb to announce-HJ S .hat our bird dog had flushed a large-HJ I .bvsinian lion-.HI
.Hurriedly putting a little Mayonais-
eI dressing on our faithful Ylang YlangHI ve sent him out to parley with the lion-
H > vhile Ave put on our telegraph climbers ,
H ind filling our pockets with bultong we-H .(scended a Duluth palm tree.
BbBb
H "A HUNTING WE WILL GO. "H We had not long to wait ! The wangHj • vanga bushes parted and a low, heavyBJ let , performing lion crept softly into-H 'he open Karroo , preceded at a dis-
ance-
H ,- of about three-quarters of an inch
H ' ty our faithful Ylang Ylang. As the-H ' ioor fellow jumped alowKirdish bush ,
B v heard , a crunching sound such as I-
iopeH - never to hear again , and tunred-Hi away my head rather than see our-B' trusty gun-bearer in the act of backingB' . into a Hon-.B
.
As aoon as I could regain my courag-eB &y a small nip of spoopjn , I looked-
back at the sickening spectacle. All7 was still save the distant song of the! red-breasted blim blam in the Koojoo-ft bushes.% . Suddenly remembering how I had$ once seen a lion tamer make a lion
" quail , I descended from the tree , an-
dI
taking a small ri. ing-whip with me , I-
said , "Hil" and whipping him across-the forelegs , in the meantime frequent-ly
¬
making the remark "bi ," I drove-him away from there. Out of the kraal ,
down the slootor drv water-course and-
across the Karoo lands ho sped and so-
on back tc Winnipeg , where he joined-
his congress of rare wild beasts , as II ; . afterward learned.< " '
- ' Hastily saddling our elephants and-t • sinching them tightly , so that the how-
dah-
could not slip around under the-II- stomach of the nob e baust, lve mount-
by-
: ' ,& way of freight car standing near-
ri
f -
Ll' - * ii..r..i.m
. " - > ' ' "
BTdT *
V * ? , " - * • • • "r Mr. * -t : „ ,
" ' * * ** '* : '* - Y " - - * < Sf
, a \ * J. * . . * . . * , /5 jgsji J.
" " * f" mill II „
by and returned across tho rran8vaa-whatever \that is , and hiring a dili-gence.
¬
. , wo pacl ed our remaining sup ¬
ply of bultong , olephant tuskes , spoop ¬
ju , penmican , elephant blubber , sacred-cow meat , dried yak , Krooliejanv Mil-waukee'
¬
Heidsick and a glossary * ofhard words from Rider Haggard , and-took tho cars atStanloy Pool , resolvingto penetrate still further into tho trop ¬
ical depths of tho Northwost.I had been told by tho real estate-
men both at St. Paul and Minneapolisthat tho winter hero was ver-r muchlike that of Singapore , but I would nothave believed it even then if I had not-personally tried it. *
Yesterday I associated for some time-with the champion bete noir. As abete noir he could givo a selfmade-moral leper thirty points , and still sail-out of the game in a blaze of red lire-and. . a cyclone of applause. Ho was-tolerable stout , and when he sat down-on my valise and crushed a bottle ofEdenia , presented to mo by an admirerin Kentucky , I reproached him in-measured and well-chosen terms , buthe just trotted his embonpoint on tho-other knee a little while .and watched-the ever-changing kaleidoscope as it-sped past tho window.
$fe_ - \DINNER A LA CART-
EWhen the conductor came into the-car tho bete noir had no ticket , so he-tendered tho regular fare. Tho con-ductor
¬
was sorry , but would have to-trouble him for ten cents more , as it-
wa3 paid on tho train. The bete noir-called me to witness that he tendered-the regular fare , and that he would be-eternally ostracised , embalmed and-fricaseed in the southeast corner of-Satan's hottest precinct before ho-would yield any more. The conductor-was a pale , blonde man , who only gets-mad every four years , but little hectic-spots broke out behind his ears , and a-
sirango light came into his gentle blueeyes-
."Come.
over hero a moment , Shorty , "he said to tho rear brakeman. "Go and-tell Skinney White , on the second day-coach , to come back here with you-.We've
.
got a large Suffolk in Section II ,that wp will have to put into a corn-field
¬
, I gii3S. Tell him to bring the ice-tongs out of the baggage car. "
Then the bote noir tied his legs-around the car seat and the train stood-still , the engine bell ringing , but two-hundred people waiting tho motion of-a man who refused to pay ten cents ex-tra
¬
because he had failed to get his-ticket at the station.-
Shorty.
and Skinny both came back-with a look of >determination and-gloves that had the fingers cut off-.Each
.
spat on his hands and took hold-of the dead bete noir. They lifted him-a little and Shorty fell over into my lap-with a small wisp of the fat man's lin-gerie
¬
in each handThey both grabbed-at him again and took out little hand-fulls
-of bristles as one does who tries toa reluctant shoat from a scalding-
arrel on butchering day. At last they-lifted him and expedited him along the-isle , from seat to seat , as he took little-mementos from the features of law-abiding
-passengers , who wero all get-
ting¬
farther and farther behind time-and losing connections because the bete-noir wouldn't pay bjs ten cents.-
One.
man said , "Herel I'll pay the ten-cents. . Great heavens ! I've got to lec-ture
¬
at Tailholt , Indiana , to-morrow ,and if I don't get there I lose $8 and my-expenses. ."
But the passengers said , "No , he-must pay it hi uself. We will |assist in-
hanging him to a dried apple tree , but-we will not allow anybody to pay his-ten cents for him."
Ju3t as he was falling off the plat-form
¬
into a cattle guard , the bete noir-paid his ten cents and remained. The-heavy train , twenty minutes late and-liable to lose its rights on the road ,
tried to start up grade. The bete noir-with his bristles down h s spine column-and his wealth of viscera trembling like-
a jelly roll , stole my paper and took aseat.That night he snored like th6 sough-of a bath tub , ehewed invisible food , .
put a stoccato inilammatus atthe end of '
each snore and scared two little moth-erless
- j
children awake with his stentori-ous
- !
recitals. He received a slight tes-
timonial¬
ever and anon , until morning ,
when his Tierth looked like a boot and-shoe store. In the morning he bathed-for over an hour , while the rest of the-people stood around with draped sus-
penders¬
, saying things which would •
look sadly out of place in a pure , nice |
paper like this. He bathed his con-
caved- i
mug and sozzled and spattered-and blew and bellowed till he got his-
nose to bleeding. Then' he got wild-and decorated that whole end of the-
car till it looked like the battle of Get-
tysburg.¬
. "Finally peace was declared ,
and just as he left the. field we drew in-
to¬
St. Louis. Twenty exasperated men-unkempt and unwashed , went out of-
the car and slunk away to find a hotel. •
I was one of them. But I could not-slink away until I found my overshoes-.They
.
were gone ! I reached under my-
seat and burned myself on tho heat-pipes , almost burst my head open try-
ing¬
to look under the other seats , and-then the porter said that "De pussy-gentleman in number leven , sah , took-those obah shoes , I reckon. He looked-kind of doubtless when he lit out , like-he expected he be shot befo' he got-home. ."
"Well , which way did he go ?" I in ¬
quired.-"Well
., sah , he went up toads de-
stock yahds , sah , and when I saw him .
lasht he was a wearin' the eye of a gen'-tie old lady from Shakerag , 111. , on do-
end of hi1? umbrella , sah."
I can imagine such a man in his-home life. Ho plays the poor sick papa-a t when ha gets home and eats up all-
the jam , anil digs the tenderloin out of-
a steak , and the poor old thoughtful-hen comes and contributes to poor sick j
papa her latest and best work. His j
poor, meek wife wishes that Heaven '
had made her a better assignment , and-his children run and conceal themselves-when he comes home-
.When.
the excitement incident to the-
resurreetion has died away,>l shall bo-
surprised if thfcF patientsad-eyed , wtfe. p-
and the scared children on tho parlor-floor of heaven , do notreceive, a note-by messenger bov from "Poor , sick-Papa ," asking them , if they can con-
sistently¬
do so, to use theirinfluencetoward getting the Celestial House Co. . •
No. 1 to play for a few hours in the-overheated apartments of p Sik-Papa. ." BiuNrT
. t
. * "
--.iV Vs '< - S-rrrJJ- *" ,
r--ii. iir- -I, ir . .niiri-.iii-i.ir.- 1. . f lu '
* * *< * ' - - />*>"*">.* * • ' * * - * ' "
, _ .* ''* *• ft-
.THE CHILETS STORY.-
One
.
© upon a time, a good many-years afro , tljere was a traveler , and-
he set out upon a journey. It was a-
magic journey , and was to seem very-long when lie began it, and very-short when he got halfway through.-Ho
.
traveled along a very dark path-for some little time without meeting-anything , until at last he came to a-
beautiful child. "What do you do-
hero ?," and tho child said : "lam al-
ways¬
at play. Como and play with-me !"
So , he played with that child the-whole day long , they wore very mer-ry.
¬
. The sky was so bl tie, the sun was-so bright , the water was so sparkling ,
the leaves wero so green , the flowers-were so lovely , and they heard such-
singing birds and saw so many but-terflies
¬
that everything was-beautiful. . This was fine weath-er.
¬
. When it rained , they-loved to watch the falling-'drops and to smell the fresh scents.-When
.
it blew , it was delightful to-
listen to the wind and fancy what it-
said , as it came rushing from its-home where was that they won-dered
¬
! whistling and howling , driv-ing
¬
the clouds before it bending the-trees , rumbling in the chimneys ,
shaking the house , and making tho-
sea roar in fury. But , when it snowed ,
that was the best of all ; for they-liked nothing so well as to look up-
at the white flakes falling * fast and-thick , like down from the breasts of-
millions of white birds, and to see-
how smooth and deep the drift was ,
and to listen to the hush upon the-
paths and roads.-
They.
had plenty of the finest toys-in the world and the most astonish-ing
¬
picture books ; all about scim-itars
¬
and slippers and turbans , and-dwarfs and giants and genii and fair-
ies¬
, and bluebeards and bean stalks ,
and riches and caves and forests and-Valentines and Orsons , and all new-
and all true-.But
.
one day , of a sudden , the-traveler lost the child. He called to-him over and over again , but got no-answer. . So he went upon his road ,and went on for a little while with-out
-meeting anything , until at last-
he came to a handsome boy. So he-said to the boy : "What do you do-here ?" And the boy said : "I amalways learning. Come and learn-with "me.
So he learned with that boy about-Jupiter and Juno , and the Greeksand the Romans , and I don't know-what , and learned more than I could ;
tell or he either , for he soon forgot ;
a deal of it. But. they were not j
always learning : They had the mer-riest
- ]
games that ever were played. '
They rowed upon tho river in sum-mer
-
and skated on the ice in winter :
they were active afoot and active on I
horseback ; at cricket and all games i
of ball; prisoner's base, hare and-hounds , follow my leader, and more i
sports than I can think of; nobody-could beat them. Theyhad holidays , ii-
too , and Twelfth cakes , and parties j-
where they danced till midnight , and II-
real theaters, where they saw palaces II-
of real gold and silver rise out of the-real
<
earth , and saw all the wonders II-
of the Avorld at once. As to friends , ;
they had such dear friends and so ii-
many of them that I want the time i-
to reckon them up. They were all i-
young like the handsome boy , and (
were never to be strange to one an-other
- 1
all their lives-.Still
., one day in tho midst of all 11-
these pleasures , the traveler lost the-bo3's as he lost the child , and after-calling for them in vain weno on tin s-
journey. . So he went on for a little-while without seeing anything , until II-
at last he came to a youngman. So ,he said to the young man , ' 'What-do you do here ? "
And the young man said , "I am f-
always in love. Come and love with tt-
me. ." c-
So he went away with that young-man , and presently they cameto one-of the prettiest girls that was ever-seen just like Fanny in the corner e-
there and she had eyes like Fanny , tt-
and hair like Fanny, and dimples-like Fanny's , and she laughed and-colored just as Fanny does while I r-
am talking about her. So the young jj-man fell in love just as Somebody I E-
won't mention , the first ximehecame jhere, did with Fanny. Well ! he was-teased sometimes just as Somebody-ased
<
to be by Fanny, and they quar-reled
¬
sometimes , just as Somebody {
and Fannyised to quarrel , j-
and they made it up; and sat in the jdark , and wrote letters every day r-
and never were happy asunder , and |were always looking out for one-another and pretended not to , and a-
were engaged at Christmas time , andsat close to one another by the fire ,and were going to be married very-soon all exactly like Somebody I-
won't mention and Fanny.-But
.
the traveler lost them one day t-
as he had lost the rest of his friends ,and after calling to them to coihe-back which they never did , went on-upon
°
his journey. So he went on for r-
a little while without seeing anything , e-
until at last he came to a middle-aged
- 1
gentleman. • So he said to the *
gentleman , "What are you doing 1-
here?" And his answer was , "I am c-
always busy. Come and bo busy r-
with me ! " t-
So he began to be very busy with t-
that gentleman , and they went on a-
through the wood together. The s-
whole journey was through a wood , 1-
only it had been open and green at 3-
first , like a wood in spring , and t-
now began to be thick and dark , like c-
wood in summer ; some of the d-
little trees that had come out p-
earliest werejwen turning brown , c-
The entleman was notalone ,; but rl-
had a lady of about the ' same age-with him , who\vas his wife ; and they-had children , who were with them gtoo. So they all went on together ,through the wood , cutting down the *
tree9 , and making a path through s-
the branches and the fallen leaves , t-
and carrying burdens , and working f-
bard.. f#
i•
\
mwiB-M nTiimniim-riiumi 11 1111 nn mill in
* ' & *%r *rr* r* *** "iv * -*** j ; f i
" - - is s J . jr ?" " ,- Y \ * - '
Sometimes thoy camo to a long-green avenue that opened into deeper-woods. . Then they would hear a verylittlo distant voice crying. "Father ,father , I am another child ! Stopfor mel" And presently they would-see a very little figure , growinglarger as it came along , running to-join them. When it came up , they-all crowded arouud it, and-kissed and welcomed it, and then-they all went together.-
Sometimes.
they came to several-avenues at once , and then they all-stood still , and one of the children-said , "Father I am going to sea ,"and another said , "Father I am go-ing
¬
to India ," and another , "Father ,I am going to seek my fortune where-lean ," and another , "Father I am-going to Heaven ! " So. with many-tears at parting, they wont , solitary,down those avenues , each child upon-its way ; and the child who went to-Heaven rose into the clouds and.vau-ished-
.Whenever.
these partings happened-the traveler looked atthegentlemnu ,
',
and saw him glance up at the skyabovo the trees , where the day was j
beginning to decline and the sunset |
to como on. He saw , too , that his-hair was turning gray. But they-never could rest long , for thej' had-their journey to perlorm , and it was-necessary for them to be always busy-
.At.
last there had been so many-partings that there were no children-left , and only the traveler , the gen-tleman
¬
and the lady went upon tlinir-way in company. And now the wood-was yellow , and now brown , and the-leaves , even of the forest trees , began-to fall.-
So.
they came to an avenue that-was darker than the rest, and were-pressing forward on their journey-without looking down it when the-lady stopped.-
"My.
husband ," said the lady , "I-am called. "
They listened , and they heard a-
voice a long way down the avenue-say , "Mother , mother !"
It was tho voice of the first child-who had said , "I am going to Heav-en
- '
! " and the father said , "I pray not-yet. ."
But the voice cried. "Mother , moth-er
¬
!" without minding him , thoughl-iis hair was now quite white and ,
tears were on his face-.Then
.
the mother who was already |
clrawn into the shade of the dark ave-tiue
- •
and moving away , with her arms '
3till round his neck kissed him and-said. . "My dearest , I am summoned ,and I go ! " And she was gone. And-bhe traveler and he wereleft aloneto-jether.
-t
.
And they went on and on together-until they came to very near the end-of the wood so near that they could-3ee the sunsetshiningred before them-bhrough the trees.-
Yet.
, once more , while he broke his-svay among the branches , 'thetrnvel-jr
-
lost his friend. He called and called ,but there was no reply, and when he-passed out of the wood and saw the-peaceful sun going down upon awide-purple prospect , he came to an old-nan sitting on a fallen tree. So he-
said to the ol& man , "wluit do you-lo here? " And the old man said with-i calm smile ,* f'I am always remem-Dering.
-. Come' and remember with-
ne !"So the traveler sat down by the-
side of that old man , face to face ,fvith the serene sunset , and all his-riends came softly back and stood-iround him. The beautilul child , the-mndsome boy , the young man in-
ove , the father , mother and children ;
(very one of them was there , and he-
lad lost nothing. So he loved them .
ill , and was kind and forbearing with •
hem all, and was always pleased to-vatch them all , and they all honored-ind loved him. Andlthinkthetrave-lt
-must be yourself , dear grandfathpr ,
)ecause that is what you do to us ,md what we do to you. Charlesi-ckens.) .
A Home Thrust ,
"Yes ," she said , in answer to some-
ihing
-
he had said , "the old songs are ,
'erv beautiful." . i
"Beautiful'
! " he exclaimed , entlnisi-istically
-
"beautiful hardly describes .'
hem. They are they are well ,
ompared with them , thesong3 i-
oday are trash , the veriest trash. '"I agree with you , yet the old •
ongs sometimes contain sentiment-shat one cannot wholly approve-."I
.
think you are mistaken.""I will give you an illustration ,
["here is JohnHoward Paine's Home ,iweet Home , for instance. Youurel3 * do not agree with all the sen-
iments-
it contains ?""Why not? " he asked , warmly;
[why not?""Because ," she said glancing at-
ho clock , which was marking the ,
iouV of eleven , "because there is a-
ine in that song which says 'There 's10 place like home. ' You do notl-
elievo that , do you?" ;
Then he coughed a hollow cough-nd arose and went silently out into ,
he night. Boston Courier-.c
.- c-
A' < "
Kew Danger.The introduction of leprosy into-
he United States must be stopped-nd the terrible disease stamped out •
t once, or it will be the most un-
lanageable- |
J
of all epidemics thatver visited our land. There is no ,
anger any question of its being com-
aunicable.- i
. The lepers have invaded-Jritish Columbia , and had such free j
ccess to the Indians that the whole l
ace of red men is infected. The an-
agonism- 5
to Chinese immigration \
rill be more widespread that ever , j
nd will be based on something be-
ides- j
race prejudice. Itwould be far '
letter to stop quarantining against ii-
ellow fever and smallpox , for while (
he latter kill more quickly , leprosy •
ovours its victims with a living ii-
eath. . When will our authorities-et; well aroused to appreciate the *
anger that is coming upon us? St. ]
iouis GloberDemocrat. , tf „'
m , M
A dark carpet often looks dusty so-
oon after it has been swept thatyou i-
now it does notneed sweeping again , \
o wet a cloth or sponge , wring it al-
aost- !
dry and wipe off the dust. A ]
jw drops of ammonia in the water i-
rill brighten the colors. jj-
t-
! 5iSSnr! ! BaBB3E55SSSiBBBSK-
Of
iiiiw t > i>
- - * -V''s - - *, --5 * -
J * . C"u.. r * * r*
• a ' • * .
MY APPROPRIATE-
Passages aro Dwelt Upon by tho-Rev. . Talmagre That Fit Snugly.
""*
Herod Was a Lover of Croat-Architecture , Savs the Dlvlno.-
"Tho
.
Literature of tho Dust" His Text.. . _ II. .
Uhooktvx , Feb. 17. Dr. Talmago preach-ed
¬
this morning in tho Brooklyn Tabernacle-on tho subject, "Tho Literature of the-
Dust. ." After explaining appropriaio pass-ages
¬
of Scripture concerning Christ he-gave out the hymn :
Oh. could I speak the matcllc. 8 worth.-Oh
., could I sound the g.orlcs firth-
Which In my Sirlour Rhin-e.Text
.
: John viii , 0 : "Jesus stooped doivn-and wrote on the ground. "
A Mohammedan mosque stands now-where once stood Herod's temple , tho sceno-of my text. Solomon's tcmplo had stood-thoro , but Nebuchaduczzar thundered it-
down. . Zorobabol's tcmplo liad stood there ,
but that had been prostrated. Now wo take-our places in a tcmplo that Herod built be-
cause¬
ho was fond of great architecture and-he wanted tho preceding temples to seem-insignificant. . Put oight or ten modern-cathedrals together and thoy would not-equal that structure. It covered nineteen-acres. . There wero marble pillars support-ing
¬
roofs of cedar and silver tables on which-stood golden cups , and there were carvings-exquisito and inscriptions resplendent , glit-tering
¬
, balustrades and ornamontca gato-ways.
-. Tho building of this temple kept ten-
thousand workmen busy for forty-six ycais.-In
.that stupendous pile of nomp and roaRni-
Jficence-
sat Christ , and a listening throng-stood about him , then a wild disturbance-took place. A croup of men are pulling and-pushing along a woman who had committed-the ivorst crime against society. When thoyhave brought her in front of Christ , they-ask that he sentence her to death by-stoning.. They aro u critical , merciless ,disingenuous crowd. They want to get-Christ into controversy aud public repre-hension.
¬
. If ho say "Let her die ," thoy will-charge him with cruelty. If ho let her go ,they will charge him with being in com-plicity
¬
with wickedness. Whichever wayhe does , they would howl at him. Then-occurs a scene which has not been sufficient-ly
¬
regarded. Ha leaves the lounge or bench-on which he was sitting and goes down on-one knee , or both knees , and with the fore-linger
-of his right hand ho begins to write-
in the dust of the iloor , word after word-.But
.they were not to be diverted or hindere-
d.¬
. They kept on demanding that he settle-this case of transgression until he looked up-and told them that they might themselves-begin tho woman's assassination , if tho-complainant who had never done anything-wrong himself would open the fire. "Go-ahead , but be suro the man who flings the-first missile is immaculate. " Then he re-sumed
¬
writing with his linger in the dust of-the floor, word after word. Instead of-looking over his shoulder lo see what he-had written the scoundi els skulked away-.Finally
., the whole place is clear of pur-
suers¬
, antagonists and plaintiffs , and when-Christ has finished this strange chirographyin the dust , ho looks up and finds the-woman all alone. The prisoner is the only-one of tho court room left , the judges , tho-police , the prosecuting attorneys havingcleared out. Christ is victor , and he says-to the woman : " \\ here are the prosecutors-in this case ? Are they all gone ? Then I-
discharge you ; go and sin no more. "I have always wondered what Christ
wrote on the ground. For do j-ou realize-that is the only time he ever wrote at alH i
I know that Eusebius says that Christ once-wrote a letter to Abgariis , the king of Edes-sa.
-. but there is no good evidence of such a-
correspondence. . The wisest being the i
world ever saw and the one who had more ;
to say than any one who ever lived , neverwriting a book or a chapter , or a page or a-
paragraph , or a word on parchment. Noth1mg but this literature of the dust , and one-sweep of a brush or one breath of a wind !
obliterated that forever. Among all therolls of the volumes of tho first libraryfounded at Thebes there was not one scroll '.of Christ. Among the soven hundred thou-sand
-books of the Alexandrian library ,
which by the infamous decree of Caliph i
Omar were used as fuel to heat the four 1
thousand baths of the city, not one sentence (
had Christ penned. Among all the infinitude i
of volumes now standing in the libraries of i
Edinburgh , the British museum , or Berlin-or Vienna , or the learned repositories of all 1
nations , not one word written directly by i-
the linger of Christ. All he worte he wrotein dust , uncertain , shifting , vanishing dust. ;
My text says he stooped down and wrote ii-
Dn the ground. Standing straight up a man i-
might write on the cround with a staff, but 1
if with his fingers he would write in the {
lust , he must bend clear over. Aye , hemust get at least on one knee or he cannot t-
write on the ground. Be not surprised thathe stooped down. Stooping down from *
castle to barn. Stooping down from celes-tial
- (homage to mobocralie jeer. From resi-
lenco- 1
above tho stars to where a star had to i-
fall to designate his landing place. From a-
heaven's front door to the world's b-ick gate , t-
From writing in round and silvered letters J:> f constellation and galaxy on the blue scroll 1-
of heaven , to writing on the ground in the-lust , which the feet of the crowd had left in s-
Herod's temple. If in .lanuary you have t-
3ver stepped out of a prince's conservatory c-
that had Mexican cactus and magnolias in j-
ull[ bloom , into the outside air 10 degs. beJlow zero , you may get some idea of Christ's f-
change of atmosphere from celestial to tor-restial.
- ' t. How many heavens there are I :
know not , but there are at least three , for J 'Paul was • 'cauchtup into the third heaven. " | 'Christ came down from the highest heaven ' r-
to the second heaven , and down from second 1-
lieaven to first neaven. down swifter than ' i-
meteors fell , down amidst stellar splendors 'c-
that himself eclipsed , down through clouds , ! i-
through atmospheres , through appalling ' t-
space, down to where there was no lower . r-
depth. . From being waited on at the bantt i-
luet of the skies to the broiling of fish for j t-
tiis own breakfast on the banks of the lake. I-
Prom emblazoned chariots of eternity to the j t-
saddle of a mule's back. The homage cher-Libic
-, seraphic , archangclic. to the paying 1-
Df sixty-two and a half cents of tax to Casar. r-
From the deathless country to n tomb built t-
to hide human dissolution. The uplifted I-
wave of Galilee was high.buthe had to come t-
down , beforcwith his feet he could touch it , • i-
ind the whirlwind that rose above the bilr'low was higher yet.but he had to come down t-
before , with his lip , he could kiss it into 1-
ijuiet. . Bethelhem a stooping down. Naz-ireth
- ca stooping down. Death between two
,t-
irarglars a stooping down. Yes it was in '-
Jconsonance with humiliations that had gone a-
before and with abnegations that came af'J;er, when on that memorable day in Herod's d-
temple he stooped and wrote on the ground-.Whether
.the words he was writing were ' s-
in Greek, or Latin , or Hebrew , t cannot' g-
ay; , for he knew all those languases. But v-
ic is still stooping down and with his finger n-
writing on the ground : in the winter in lotjj J-
crs of crystals , in the spring in letie : & of i "-
Vlowers , in summer in golden letters of haro|.-est , in autumn in letters of fire on fallen c-
eaves. . How it would sweeten up and entl'ich and emblazon this world could we see d-
Dhrist's caligraphy all over it. This world h-
was not flung out into space thousands of ji-
rears ago and then left to look out for itself, c-
t[ is still under the divine care. Christ nevh:r for a half second takes his hand off of it , v-
r> it would soon be a shipwrecked world , a v-
lefunct world , an obsolete world , an aban-loneded
- aworld , a dead world.Let there I-
je light' ' was said in the beginning. And v-
Christ stands under the wintry skies and c-
ays , Let there be snowflakes to enrich the t;
arth ; and under the clouds of spring and 1-
csays , Come ye blossoms and make redolent n-
he orchards ; and in September, dips the cjranches into the vat of beautiful colors "-nmd swings them in the hazy air. No whim jjAf mine is this. "Without him was not any j tl-
hing made that was made. " Christ writii b-
ng on the ground. If we could see his hand a-
n all the passing seasons , how it woula u-
Uumine the world ! All verdure and foliage n-
vould be allegoric , and again we would n-
lear him say as of old , "Consider the liliesAf the field , t ow they grow ;" and we would is-
lot hear the whistle of a quail or the cawSng of a raven or the roundelay of a brownI I si-
hresher , without saying, "Behold the aowls of the air , they gather not into barns , , g-
ret your Heavenly Father feedeth them ;" vi-
md a Dominic hen of the barnyard could d-
lot cluck for her brood , yet we would hear d-
3hrist saying as of old , "How often would h-
have* gathored thychildren togethercvcn n-
is a hen gathered her chickens under her si-
vings ;" and through the redolent hedges , It-
ve would hear Christ saying, "I am the L-
oseof Sharon ;" wo could not diu the sea- o-
iioning from the salt cellar without thinking-if the divine suggestion , "Ye are the salt of h-
ho earth , but if the salt have lost its savor, n-
t is fit for nothing but to be cat out and d-
redden under foot of men. " Let us wako qip from our stupidity and take the whole ii-
vorld as a parable. Then if with gun and h-
mck of hounds wo start off before dawn and d-
4Jr
&®& " S
v.
_________________sco the morning coming down off tho hllU-to meet us , wc would cry out with tho evan-gelist, "Tho day upring from on high hath-visited usn or caught in a snow storm ,whllo struggljng homo, oyobrows and beard-and apparel all covered with tho whirling-Hakes wo would cry out with David ,"Wash mo und I shall bo whiter-than snow. " In a plcturo gallery-of Kuropo , thoro Is on tho celling-un csquisito fresco, but pooplo having-to look straight up, it wearied and-dizzied J.hem , and bent their nocks almost-beyond endurance, so a great looking-glass was put nenr tho floor and nou-visitors only need to look easily' down intt-this mirror and thoy see tho fresco at-
their feet And so much of all tho heaven-of God's truth is rcilectcd in this world as in-a mirror , and the things that aro above arc-copied by things all around us. What right-have wo to throw away ono of God's Bibles ,ayethe first Bible ho ever gavo tho rseo !Wo talk about tho Old Testament and the-Now Testameut , but tho oldest Testament-contains tho lessons of tho natural world.-Somo
.peoplo liko tho New Testament so-
well they discard tho Old Testament Shall-wo liko tho New Testament and the Old-Testament so well as to depreciate tho old-est
¬
; namely , that which was written before-Moses was put alloat on tho boat of leaves-which was calked with asphaltum ; or re-ject
¬
tho Genesis and tho Hovelation that-wore written centuries beforo Adam lost a-
rib and gained a wifel No , no ;when Doity stoops down and writes on the-ground , lot us read it. I would havo ncless appreciation of tho Bible on paper that-comes out of tho paper mill , but I would-urge appreciation of the Biblo in tho grass ,the Biblo in tho sand hill , tho Biblo in the-geranium , tho Biblo in tho asphodel , the Bi-blo
¬
in the dust. Some one asked an ancient-king whether ho had seen tho eclipso of the-sun. . "No ," snid ho , "I havo so much to do-on earth , I havo no timo to look at heaven. "And if our faculties wore all awake in the-study of God , we would not havo time to go-much further than the lirst grass blade. J-
havo no fear that natural religion will evet-contradict what wo call revealed religion.1 have no sympathy with tho followers ol-Aristotle , who after tho telescope was in-vented , would not look through it, lest it-
contradict some of tho theories of their great-master. . I shall bo glad to put against one-lid of tho tho Bible tho microseoie] , and-against tho other lid of tho Bible thetelescope-
.But.
when Christ stooped clown and wrote-ou tho ground , what did ho write J The-Pharisees did not stop to examine. The-cowards , whipped of their own consciences ,fled pell mell. .Nothing will flay a man like-an aroused conscience. Dr. Stevens , in his-"History of Methodism ," says that whenRev. Benjamin Abbott of olden times was-preaching, ho exclaimed : "For aught I-
know there may be a murderer in this-house ," and a man rose in tho assemblage-and started for the door and bawled aloud ,confessing to a murder he had committed-fifteen years before. And no wonder these-Pharasees. . reminded of their sins , took their-heels. . But what did Christ write on tho-srround ? The Bible does not state. Yet , as-Christ never wrote anything except that-ance , you canuot blame us for wanting to-know what he really did write. But 1 am-certain he wrote nothing trivial , or nothing-unimportant. . And will you allow mo to say-that 1 think I know what lu wrote on tho-rouud? * 1 judge from the circumstances ,
tic might have written other things , but-kneeling there in tho temple , surrounded-tt>y a pack.of hypocrites who were a self-ippointed constabulary , and having in-tiis presence a persecuted woman who-jvidently was very penitent for her-sins , I am sure ho wrote two words,both of them graphic and tremend-ms
-and rcverbratiug. And the one-
word was Hypocrisy and the other word was-Forgiveness. . From the way these Phari-ices
-and Scribes vacated tho promises and-
jot out into fresh air , jis Christ , with just-me ironical sentence , unmasked them , I-
know they were first class hypocrites. It-was then as it is now. The more faults and-inconsistencies people havo of their ownho more sovero and censorious are they-ibout the faults of others. Here they arc-twenty stout men arresting and arraigning-mo weak woman. Magnificent business to-jc engaged in. They wanted the fun of sec-ng
-
her faint away under a heavy judicial-sentence from Christ and then after she-lad been taken outside the city and fasten-d
-at the foot of a precipice , the Scribes and-
Pharisees wanted the satisfaction of-ach; coming and dropping a big stone on her-lead , for that was the style of capital pun-shment
-that they asked for. Some jieople-
lave taken the responsibility of saying that-Dhrist never laugned. But I think as he-saw those men drop everything , chagrined-nortified , exposed , and go out quick-sr
-
than they came in , ho must-lave laughed. At any rate , it makes-nc laugh to read of it. All of-hese libertines , dramatizing indignation-igainst impurity. Blind bats lectur-ng
-on optics. A flock of crows on their-
vay up from a carcass , denouncing carrion ,fes , I think that one word written on the-ground that day by the finger of Christ was-ho awful word Hypocrisy. But I am sure-here was another word in that dust. From-ter entire manner I am sure that arraigned-voman was repentant. She made no apol-gy
-, and Christ in no wise belittled her sin-
.iut.
her supplicatory behavior and her tearsn-oved" him , and when he stooped down to-vrite ou the ground , he wrote that mighty |hat imperial word Forgiveness. When 6n-5inai God wrote the law, he wrote it with-inger of lightning on tables of stone , each-vord cut as by a chisel into the hard jrranito-urface.. But when he writes the offense of-his woman he writes it in dust so that it-an be easily rubbed out , aud when she re-lents
¬
of it , oh , he was a merciful Christ !
was reading of a lezend that is told in tho-ar east about him. He was walking through-he streets of a city and he saw a crowd-round a dead dog. And one man said :'What a loathsome object is that dog ! ' "
• Yes. " said another, ' • his ears arc mauled-nd bleeding. " "Yes ,
* ' said another "even-lis hide would not be of any use to the tan-icr.Yes ," said another , "the odor of his-arcass is dreadful. " Then Christ , stand-ng
-t ere , said : "But pearls cannot equal-
he whiteness of his teeth. * ' Then the peo-ile
-, moved by the idea thiit any one cculd-
ind anything pleasant concerning a dead-og, said : "Uhy , this must bo Jesus of-fazareth. .
* ' Kcprovcd and convicted they-rent away. Surely this legend of Christ is-ood enough to be true. Kindness in all-lis words and ways and habits. Forgiven-ess.
¬
. \\ ord of e'eveu letters , and some of-hem thrones , and some of th"m palmi-ranches. . Better have Christ write close-o our names that one word , though he write-t in dust, than to have our name cut into-lonumental granite with the letters that-he storms of a thousand years cannot ob-literate.
¬
. Bishop Babington had a i.ook of-nly tirce leaves. The first leaf was black ,he second leaf red , the third leaf white ,
'he black leaf suggested sin : the red leaf-tenement : the white leaf purification ,"hat is the whole story. Gcd will abua-antly
-pardon-
.I.
must not forget to say that as Christ ,looping down , with his linger wrote on the-round , it is evident that his sympathies are-rith this penitent woman , and that he has i
o sympathy with her hypocritical pursuers , j
ust opposite to that is the world s habit. I
lrhy didn't these unclean Pharisees bring j
ae of their own number to Christ for ex-sriation
- '
and capital punishment' No.no ;icy overlook that in a man which they 1
amnate in a woman. And so the world has jj-ad for offending women scourges and ob-irgation
-
, and for just one offense she be-
jmes- 1
an outcast , while for men whose lives J-
ave been sorlomic for twenty years , the ',orld swings open its doors of bril iant jj-elcome, and they may sit in le ? isiature3-ad senates and parliaments or on thrones. I
nlike the Christ of my text the world I
rites a man's misdemeanor in;
dust , but i
lisels a woman's offense with great capi-ds
- -
upon ineffaceable marble. For foreign-rds and princes , whoso names caniot even be meniione.1 in respectaolo -
rcles abroad because they aro *
alking lazarettos of abomination , our-merican princesses of fortune wait, and at .le first beck sail out with ihe-n iu'o the i-
lackness of darkness forever. And in what 1-
re called higher circles of society there is *
aw not only the eniitation of fore 'gn man-2rs
- \, but an imitation of foriegn dissolutej
2ss. I like an Englishman and I like an-merican , hut the sickest crcat re on earth r-
an American playing tho Englishman , c-
ociety needs to be reconstructed on this s-
lbject. . Treat them alike , masculine crime a-
id feminie crime. If you cut the one in-
rani'e , cut them both in granite. If you-rite the one in dust , write the othr in f-
list No , no, says the world , let woman go c-
wn) and let man go up. What is that I „;ar splashing into the East river at mid-ight
- °, and then tfiero-is a gnrg c as of-
rangulation=
, and all is still. Never mind ** '
, is only a woman too discouraged to live, c-
et the mills of the cruol world grind righti-.. l-
.But while I speak of Christ of the text , l-
is stooping down writing in the dust, do-
jt think I underrate tho 'litcrat re of tho-ust.. It is the most solemn and tremen Jous 3' all literature. It is the groat-st of all , .
br Ties. When Layard exhumed Nlnevan2 was only opening tho door of its mightv s-
ust.. Tho excavations of Pompeii havo c
* -- *"- •* . . . . v?' ",**_ / b
- " * It i nii ititttii -nr ifj ]t- . .-- *
only been tho uuclaaplni ? rf 'M* *?* •?'..30-
volamoof Admir l a-
Fanstruta nation' * dust Wand his friends , a iW ye i* H* % Jfcv-
lBited that rrarorrected city , to "fw5 ?- "jgBalbo , who had been quo of iw * C tl- v||zons in its prosporouR days. w a ope ed RHd. ift"*a tublo wns spread in that'faowe which JBe-
ighteen hundred and tan year * mL jKg-been burled by volcanto eruption , tjnd-Farragut nitd his gucsta walked oyer-tho exquisite mosaics and under j
boautlful fresco, and it almost seemed liko . „ ,
boing entertained by thoeo who f" " %centuries ago had turned to duet.Oh ,
mighty literature of tho dust. WBero are A.-
the.
remains of Sennacherib and AttUa a nd-
Epamiuondas and Tamorlano and TroJ *" •
and Philip of Maccdon and Julius Cwsarl Ai-Dust .
! Whoro aro tho heroes who fought .j-
on both sides at Clueronoa , at Hastings , at. -1
Marathon , at Cressy , of tho 110.000 men . |who fought at Arincourt , o tho OOOiaoi-
iwho faced death nt Jena , of-tho 400.0W -
whoso armor glittered in tho win at Wag-ram
- j, of tho 1,000,000 men undor Dariua at-
Arhella , of tho 2,041,000 men under Xerxes i
atThennopyhni Dustt-Whero aro the'guests who danced tho j
floors of tho Alhambia. or tho Persian pal-
acesof- j
AhasuorusJ Dust ! Whero aro tho J-
muslciaus who pluyed and the orators who I-
spoko. . und tho sculptors who chiseled , ana ; ll-
the architects who built in all tho centuries ,
except our own t Dust ! Tho greatest libra-ry
]
of tho world , that which has tho widest |shelves and tho longest aisles and tho most I-
multitudinous volumes und tho vastest I-
wealth , is tho underground library. It is I-
tho royal library , tho continental library , I-
tho hemisphericlibrary , tho planetarylibra-ry
- I, the library of tho dust. And all these I-
library eases will bo opened , and all theso I-
scrolls unrolled and oil these volumes un-
clasped- „ *- 1
and as easily as ia your libra-ry
- Ior mine wo tako up a book. I-
blow tho dust off of it. aadr turn. J-over its pages , so easily will tho Lorn of tho 1-
Resurrection pick up out of this library ot ,1-
dust everv volume of human lifo and open. '|it and read it and display It. And the vol-umo
- Iwill be rebound , to bo sot in tho royaL .j
library of tho self destroyed. Oh, this 1-
mighty literature of tho dust ! It to not so |wonderful after all that Christ choso, in-
stead- J
of an inkstand , tho impressionable- il-
sand on the floor of an ancient temple, and I-
instead of aliardnon , put forth his foro- jl-
finger with the same Kind of norve and 1-
muscle, and bono , and flesh , as that which . |makes up-our own forefinger, and wrote the-awful
-
doom of hypocrlcy and full and. com-plete
- |forgiveness for repentant sinners , '1-
even tho worst. I-And now I can believe that which t read,
how that a mother kept burning a cnndlo in-
.the.
windowovery night for ten years , and-one night very Into a poor waif of tho street ,
entered. The aged woman , said to herr "Sit-down by the ilro ," aud tho stranger said,"Whv do you keep that lfght in tho win-dow
-?" The aged womon said : .'"Tbatis to-
light ipy wayward daughter when she re-turns.
-. Sinco she went away ton years ago ,
my hair has turned white. Folks blame mo-
for worrying about her, but you seeI am ,
her mother and sometimes , half a dozen fl-times a night , I open tho door and look out-into the darkness and cry , 'Lizzio I' 'Lizzie lr-
But I must not tell you any moreabout flj-my trouble, for I gucs3 , from the way you '
cry, you have trouble enough of youro-wn.. Why, how cold and sick you seem I-
Oil, my ! can it be ? Yes , you aro Lizzie , my .
own lost child. Thank God that you aro-home
- Magain !" And what a timo of rojoic-
ing-
there was in that houso that night ! And-Christ stooped down , and in the ashesof-that hearth , now lighted up not more by tho-great blazing logs than by tho joy of a roun-itcd
-household , wrote tho sarao liberating ;
words that he had written more than oigh-teen
-hundred years ago in tho dust of tho-
Jerusalem temple. Forgiveness ! A word-broad enough and high enough tolet pass-through it all the armia of heaven , a mill-ion
-abreast , on white horses* nostril to-
nostril , flank to flank-
.Horses
.
Vcrus Whisky-.I
.have retired from tho turf per- fl-
manently , and have sold out the thirty- fl-nine horses that made up the Melflbourne stables. In tho five years I fl-have been racingthoroughbreds I have fl-made money. I got §151,000 for my fls-
table , and in addition to * that I had a H-yearling: sale two years ago that netted fl-me 13000. My sole reason for leaving-the
- Htrack was that I either had to give fl-
up my whisky business or my horses. fl-The whisky business I considered the 'fls-
afest investment of tho two. "When I ,fl-went on the turf five years ago I had fl-but live horses , headed by Blue "Wing.Gradually the number inerettsed on mo flu-
ntil I found that the stable demanded. S-all of my time. The risk wis too great. !H-The chance of great losses is in the Sp-
urchase *of yearlings. Last year tho |Dwyers invested §70,000 in yearlings , Ha-
nd did not get a race horse out of the / |lot. In my live years I developed four-teen
- |stake winners , but I might havo M-
not got two out of the lot. It was simply fl-
my luck. There are but two classes of |people who can stay on the turf. One M-
is made millionaires , like tho Cali- tHf-ornians
|, who race horses for pastime ' |and can afford it. Tho other is made- ctJ-
up of men like Green Morris , Jimmy Afl-
Williams and Ed Corrigan , men who ' M-
live with and train their own horses , M-
knowing them as they know them-selves.
- M. There is no medium line. Either |a man must be indifferent to losses or M-
be unable to stand them. 1 think that M-
the sport is the noblest of all. Not being flfl-i; millionaire , I could not run horses for nfla-
musement and , having a good whisky tfl-
business that I could not afford to lose , fl-I could not afford to sleep with my ' Hl-
iorses. . Will Barnes , in St. Loni3 H-GlobeDemocrat. . fl-
i * i fl |A Lost Opportunity. M-
"I don 't want anything more to do j fl-with Jim ," he said .in a determined j H-voice as they stood on tho platform of a ' H-uiatiot avenue car. '
"What's the matter ?" asked the oth-
"He
- H
' *7 fl-
"He
s n. g. i
was drunk and I wa3 trying to > H-net him home. He broke away and. N Hf-
ell into a basemen j and got badly H-
"That ain't agin him , is it?" j H-"Not that , but an officer came along -tflfll-
md sent him off to tho cooler. I went ' Hi-long to see what Jim would say. " j fl
"Well ?" f fl-"Well , ho went and said he fell Hl-
own , and I was right there to testify H-hat I saw the officer club him. Just ' H-he best chance in the world to down a |)eeler , and Jim wasn't the man to take * Hi-dvantage of it. He can 't .run with ' H-his chicken no more. " Detroit Free ''i-ess. ij H-
The Holmes Library. i HD-
r.01iverWendellHolmesin ' Hpresent-ng
-his splendid medicall library of '
learly 1,000 volumes to the Boston | Hil-
edical Society , said : l |"It has grown by a slow process of I H.c-
cretion.. . The first volume of It wasflfl'
Jell's -Anatomy , ' and the last was | HElements of Pharmacy. ' The oldest !
ook was written in 14lKand tho latest H-a 18R7 , so it can be seen that the libraIflflfl/y covers the four centuries. Most jflflflf the volumes have been bought, but J - i Home wtre presented to me by friends 1
nd in some cases the authors. ,l |"These books are dear to mo ; a twin- l |rom some one of my nerves runsto every ' •
ne of them , and they m rk the pro-ress
- !
of my study and the stepiQf \.r Ht-ones of.my professional life. If any flflflf them can bo to otners hs they gkye He-on to me , I am willing to part with
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.ven the most ab'scnrmlndel man gener'flflfllUy rcmemters to stop short of the division tflflfllne oetween his own and his ncfohbor's iflflfllidewalk when he is shoveling- snow.Somflflfll!rville Journal flflfll-
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