Illinois News Index

Downers Grove Reporter, 19 Mar 1896, p. 3

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int-tun. so many broken window. In". so In!!! defective mt- thnt am an now. (‘ml and wood Ind fin- not no thick out no hotter for m- Mupmchaphathmmnd (he-Ml! o! the Industries at on a” an employed In battling "clemency of the weather. The furs o! the north. the canon of the mutt, the flux at out an hm, the wool of our own loch. ll. cal Inn our own mines. the wood from our own tom, all employ-n in battling than Inclement-Jen. and um my winter. with blue "pi and chat- mm teal. men: "Non. of an on ‘ stand before his cold." Now till but one) n cold world. God sends out lulu- nccl to wtrm It. I am glad that the Guatnonouhmaoaotmnm; tilt the God of the snow It the God of no white Momma; um the God ethn- ury h the God of June. The queutlon u to how sh" we warm this world up II n «nation of Immediate and all-an- mpnflng practicality. In this one and rather there no no In! mains ror whlrh has appalled hlotory won proof to all am that it is a vain think for any t-nrthly power to lrt‘ep! the chailengo oi my text: "Who could ntami heioro hie cold." in the middle oi December. 1777. at Valley Forge. eleven thousand troops were.‘ with ire-ted eur- nmi irootmi hands and flute: feet. without ohm. with- out blankets. lyinx on the while pillow oi the snow haul. A- during our clril war the cry woe: “On to Richmond!" when the "none were not really to march. so In the revolution-r! war there 'II I demand ior wintry mun-tun until Washington loot hie equilibrium amt wrote emohstlrslly: “1 non those gentlemen it in easy enmtxh rented by n good Imiilo and in eonionable homea to draw out um- value for the Amerlsao army: but i tell theta it in not so en" to lie on I bleak hillside. withont blanket. nml without chew" on. the (rigid horror: ' that gathered mood the American army in the winter of 1771? Valley Forge mu one of the ingedien oi the: realms. Benito-bed. homeless. «tend! "who can etnnd before his void?” "Kat we.” say the tmen line of an John 3‘ Franklin and his men. dying in Arsile '1 exploration. "Not we." annwnr- ' Behwhtlta and his men. tolling back' from the fortress: oi lee which ihov t had tried in rain to capture. "Not we." i say the abandoned and crushed tier-ha 3 i of the intropld. the lionlsiance and the . t Jeannette. "Not we." say thrv nrocea‘ it olon oi Amerlmn martyrs returned a bone for American ”allure. Do Lon: ’ n and hie. men. The highest pillar! oi: 1 the earth are pillars of ice; ilont mane. 1 Jungfrau. the. Matterhorn. The large,“ a pilgrim oi the world are galleriesoiice. :- Some oi the mighty rirern much of tho o yenr are in captivity of ice. The nent‘ rt est unlptnrsoithe new are theglsoiers, m with Arm and hand and chisel and ham h mer oi ire. The cold to imperial and to ho a crown of glittering crystal and is ‘ ht heated on a throne of ice. with foototnol l “t of ice and "enter oi ire. Who can tell «' so the summing! of the winter of H33, ' Tl when all tho birds of Germany por- :it Med? Or the winter oi ms n- En- ' u gland. when the rinse. rolled on the it Thames, and temwnfr houses of Iner- X< ehndtse were built on the ice? Or the hi winter of mi in America, when New let Tori: harbor was frozen over and the wt heaviest teams crooner! on the. ice to yo Staten inland? Then come down to our yo own wintem when there have been no wt [any wrapping themselves in turn, or an gathering themselves around tires, or m: threshing their arms about thorn to re- we rive circulation~the millions of the l-‘r (apex-lie and the arctic zones who prl m compelled to mine. "None at no an: on stand before hie cold." or: he must sometimes have been cut by the sharp weather. in this chapter he speaks of tilt» snow like wool, and frost like mixes. the hailstoncs like marbles. and describes the congesliment of lowâ€" est temperature. We have all studied the power of the heat. flow few of us have studied the power of the frost? “Who can stzmd before his cold?" This chaiien’ge of the text has many times been accented. October 1911:. 18l2. Na- poleon’s great army began its retreat. from Most‘ow. One hundred and flttyi thonrand men. fifteen thousand horses. six hundred pieces of cannon. to'ty thousand strngzlers. it was bright weather when they: started from Mon- cow, but soon something wrathier than the Cossacks swooped upon their flanks. An army of arctic blasts. with int-lea for buyouts“; and hailstonea for shot, and commanded by voice of tempest” marched after them. The flying artil- i let-y oi the heavens in pursuit. The troops at.nightfnll would gather into circles and huddle themselves together for wnrmth: but when the day broke th , rose not. {or they wm dead. and the rah-n5 came for their morning meal of corp-set. Tin- way was Itrewn with the rich stuff: of the, rust. brought no booty from the Russian capital. An lnvi-lbio power wind one hundred thousand men and hurled them dead into the snow-drifts. nail on the turd surface: of the chill rlron. and Into tho man of Wm dogs that had followed them {mm Moscow. The lrminx hor- . l t l J t t i i Go“.- To": "no Ira-tech torch III- '100 “to Moi-Our: “he (in stun-l lio- 1m Illa Cnhl?"-flulflll 1‘7: ‘7‘”.- llverml humbly. liar-3h M. TALMAGE’S SERMON ‘BIble- and O f gnu... o. t.‘ .FOm-BDM EmmFCJ HIP :de03 “I... El<>w O... 302.. that winter is ended and spring has come. but the winds, and the trusts. and the therâ€" momets’r. in some places flown to zero. dony H. The Psalmist Hverl in it more genial'cllmnre than this. and yet almanac says t winter is d and spring come. but the Is, and the It in Ms stroll: sympathy that nought Christ from A warm ham to a cold world. The land when no dwelt Ind a me my. balsam“: ntmosphee. uoplcul luminance. No normâ€"blust- ln heaven. No chlll tmtalns. On a cold December nlghl Christ flopped out of I warn heaven into the world's M3- ldlty. The thermometer ln file-tine ' was sinking. Some one unit]: "Are you not willing to make a sacrifice far your kins?" end a majority of those who were in the bout leaped overhaul and drowned to save their king. Haw many men llke that would it take to warm up thin cold world? Elisabeth Pry went into the horrors of Newnte vrlmn. and she turned the imprecntlon nnd the obncenity and the filth into payer nnd repentance and n reformed life. The Sister: 0! Cherlty. in 1883. on northern Ind anthem httieflelde, came to boys in Mae and my while they were bleeding to «teeth. The {black bonnet with the tides pinned back and the white hndnge on the Draw, my not have nnswered am the demand- of elegant tute but you eanlrl not per-nude that eoldler dying n then- nnd Ilflel from none that it was any- thing but nn angel tnet looked Inn in the (no. on, with cheery look, with helpful word nith kind notion. try to mate the world m! count that my lot: than low descending Inn View: tron: thy bend no gem action ! Rmoutly In unfilmr in the mill- wnt. on n Immotlve. saw a train rom- ina with whlch he mmi mllide. He ’ "min-d to nami at lulu post and slow tip the train until the that minute. for i there were masons": brand. The em glam said to the ilmnnl. "Jump! «to 9 man Is cncngh on thln mine! Jump!" :Tho fir-man jump"! and was and The trash can. The engineer rllml at hls post. How many mnn like that nnglntor would It tnhe lo tum ihln colt! world up? A vessel struck on .1 rocky island. The gammy-r- and the new wm wlthom loml. am! a sailor 1haul a shell-fish under hla mat. He ms sot-lug it for his laai monel. He heard a little child my to her mother, "0h. mother. l'm so hungry. give Incl something to eatâ€"4 am so hungry?“ Tho sailor took the lheiMlslt from unâ€" del- his com nnd said. "Here. this that". How many mn like that sailor wmtlcl' it take- io warm the mid world up? Xerxes fining from his mm, m on , board a heat. A great many Potting ' leaped into the same boat and the boat It». and the lCIBDOflll! Inlo tho troom. It h the powerful heat". It I. the [Io- rloul furnace o! (‘hrlunu sympathy. The qumlou ought to ho. Inund 0! how much heat can to ahaorh? how much but an n throu- out? Thor!- are am: who to throuuh tho world float- lng labor”. They (run everybody with their forbid-Ila; loch. Th0 hand with which Ihey nhnkn your: I- n cold .- the put of n poi-r hour. It may non! Into a religion. muting. the un- ocrnlm drop- I‘ro- 0|:th thou to ten drama holow uro. Then an Melon hanging from their new“ ‘ 1"th non Into A rullgumu mun and they rhlll onrylhlu with their lore- mlndm (‘old prayers. cold noun. com urn-flap. cold mmou. (‘hrMhnIly on Ire! The church 1: (ml «trunn- tor ('hrmunn [one Into 'lnlor quar- lm. "thorn-lion! 0n the other hand. the" are people «he no lhrounh (ha warm "kn rho hmih of n or!“ morn- ing. Warm lnfllnn. turn [or-yon. "rm mum, warm Christan Inflmncr. Then- am such port-on; Wu- Mr- 00:! for (hr-m We mick-o In Ihelr col-pan. Ionnblp. In more respect.- thln ope. and I on here to consult with you n to the best way 0! warming up the world. I van: to have I amt heater Introduced Into all your churches and all your hon-m throughout the world. It II I healer of dlvlne patent. l! bu many pipe: In“: which to conduct bent: and It bu l door In whichdo throw the fuel. 0n» get this hum Introduced. and It. VIII hm: um nmlc mo Into the louver- J iBIbleo and cumin: Kindle that llro ’ where it in: gone out. Wrap nome- ithing around those shivering limbs. w- ‘ Shoe t o bare feet. Hot thot bare head. Colt that burn back. Sleeve 6 that bore nun. Nearly all the pictures 1 of Martha Walhington represent her in. '- courtiy dreu as bowed to by foreign‘ '- ambassadors: but Mn. Kirkland. in her v- intereotin: book. gives n more inspir- ing portrait of Martha Washington. Sim comes forth from her husband's hut in the encampment. the hut sixteen feet f long by fourteen feet wideâ€"~she comes j forth from that hut to nurse the sick,‘ ! to sew the patched garments. to muscle ‘ i the soidloro dying of the cold. That is . a better picture of Martha Washington. , Hundreds of garments. hundreds of ' tons of coal. hundreds of glaziera at, : broken window-sashes. hundreds at f { whole-5011190 men and women. are nec- t’Ssu'u'y to warm the wintry weather. What are we doing to alleviate the con- , ciition of those not so fortunate as we? Know ye not. my friends. there are 1 hundreds of thousands ofipmpie who‘g Ioannot stand before his cold? it is usrloss to preach to bare feet. and to Omnlv stomachs. and to gaunt visages. Christ. gave the world it lesson in comâ€" mon sense when. before preaching the Gospel to the multitude in the wilder- ‘fm'sn. he gave them 11 good dinner. i When i was a ind I remember seeing two rough woodcuts, but they made more linpressimyupon me than any pic- tures that I have ever seen. They were on opposite pages. The one woodcut represented the coming of the snow In Iwinter. and a lad looking out at the [ door of a great mansion. and he was all ‘wrnpped in turn and his cheeks were ruddy. and with glowing countennnoe he shouted: “it snows! lt snows!" 0n the next page was a miserable tene- ment. and the door was open. and a child. Inn and sick. and rugged and wretched. was looking out. and be said: “Oh! My God. it snows!" The winter. of gisdnen or of grief: according to our circumstances. But, my friends. there Law-lotus la mare than one any 0! warming up this cold world. for u I: n cold world no Haas! I'll. Women can can the mom evll by mm»!!! upon the rot-ahead a! (In an the line band of infant Nth which they condemn IIII victim-Rev. 0. l'. Henry. no 1-- ram. We “a within to- nn- e! the ho when the Chi-mm mi mm ions of this country will mm i am! strug- gin with the mmaalilng m1. and it in now time to me for tho m mule. ~41". Dr. lentil“. II. '3- lhuly (and. A Lewlstou Ole.) ml borrowed a neighbor‘s bum for (rum: at his rheumnhu. M!" be had been cred by application of the buttery In lb- covered that he had never turned a: the cum“ once. Re m simply uk- en tom of the handle: and filth did (to roe-Pb! tango-u... ‘ ll any man should mp: temptation It will not be because he in strong. hit boot-Joe he is weak. There are mtum so shallow and thin II to be below temptation. The tempest which mines the Milan of the Atlantic doe not make a ripple on a street pool. and the mm which strive with the when Into harvest II the deep. rich loom would winner on the stony soil. Pharisees and min are not tempted. and there- fore, they must Always be len- nan men-«In Madam. My friends. nm In the wly the com world In going to be warmed up. by the great (Impel nrvplnce. All nation. rm come In and sit down It the banquet. While I was musing. the In burnet‘. "Colm- ln out of (be cold. come In out o! the cold!” " hour room In the house. norm on. 1° brought in 5 gm! backlog will: (roll ”‘ strain and put Ii down on lino but 0! if the hearth. Then the lighter wood m 3 put on. ”mini alter Irmiul. Then I ‘ shovel oi min In taken from “0er ' mom and put under line dry nllo. lull " the Manila: man. and line crukllnc, ' and it me mull ll hoe-ma a marl-l '- flamo. whlch filled all lilo room with ’- uni-lily and was "Mod iron lb. '- iunlly picture. on nu will. no. the ' «Isak-or: nun In two by In. Thy ' I not down. their hm lo the iln. which P am and non wu stirred «fill: (up - 'Ind readjust“ on (In IIMMI. ad I lhm um men um or rule rout-in. I Inc nary-tolling. and mirth a (In | blur «on and "l. blind "II-tor um ‘ drum“ of. Inn-Ill. m um. cu Mn Inn“. and In lair win Ibo doll: i Ind on 'clcn Iu ill. mum. liq glisâ€" ’ in and [mun ln our Ilm (0-day. Anti than the but inn-y oi act-rd Ind inrmnrl m round and mar“ tor m “bin. to no“ the unallo- Ilurponod by (in cold rldo. all I, "was. (in Church of Jun- Christ In lino world's Irwin“. and lie Ioodn no (mm the cedar- ol Leia-Ion. ud the firm in Iron at low. and will tho I"- ~rr loan or the all" '0 air an I... and lite "all In Named iron I" m lamlly pmum on m wlliâ€" mix-mm at those who wen born and In an. new. Oil! come up close lo the Implant. lino your worn he. lnnnllgurrd II the "5M. PM your cold loci. war, d We journey. clone up to the Men-ed enn- nngrnuon. Chilled "non-gin will: mu- ‘ bin and amnpolnlmenl. come close um am" you can get warm trim? lbronuh. Enhance experience. tall: our live inr- ‘ res“ gathered. (all nil the Gospel new: Nona-while the table In belng are“. On it. mad at Me. On It. mun u Eahnl. 0- ll. nmr wine from lilo hingdnm. 0:: ll. 1: limnsnnd luxuries celestial. llnrlu. as n wounded had rape nn line lahle. and a lender who comes through mylnx: "r'ome. for all things am now roady. Eat. on. friends! drink. yea, drink shundnntly. on, he- loves!" IS:M:¢--â€" Notwithstanding oi! lho modern in- vention: for heating. I tell you than in nothing so mu oi ceninlity and social- ity as the ald-fnohionul country un- plnce. The neighbors were to come in (or I winter evening of nocioiity. In the middle of the afternoon. in (no Oh it was this Christ who warmed the chilled disciples when they had no food by giving them plenty to eat. and I who in the tomb of Lazarus shattered the shackles until the broken links of the chain of death rattled into the darli- est crypt of the mausoleum. In his genial presence the girl who had fallen into the tire and water is healed or the catalepsy, and the withered arm takes muscular. healthy action. and the ear that could not hear an avalanche catches a heat": rustle. and the tongue that could nct articulate trlllu u quat- ‘ rain, and the blind eye was relumed. and Christ. instead of staying three days and three nights in the sepulchre. as was supposed. as soon as the worldly curtain of observation was dropped heâ€" san the exploration of all the under- ground passages of earth and sea. wherever n Christian's grave may alter awhile be. and started a light of Chrlfl- tlln hope, resurrection hope. which shall not no out until the last ceremeot is taken off and the lust mausoleum hrea ks open. nover drops below nro. but Dumber la a. chooriou month. and the natural. is very poor on the hilltops. marl-t stepped out of a worm heaven into the cold world that cold December night. The world's mention was cold. The our! oi lie-normed Galileo was cold. Joseph'a oepulohro was cold. Chris: come. the great warmer. to warm the north. and all Christendom io~day feels ‘ the slow. He will keep on warming the earth until the Tropic will drive away the Arctic and the Antartic. He gave an imitation of what he woe going to do when he broke up the funeral at the Rate of Nam and turned it into a reunion festival. and when with his warm lips he melted the Galilean hurri. cone and stood on the (loci: and stamped his foot, crying. “Silence!" and the waves crouchéd and the iempests folded thnir wings. n on in’dili’h‘mu.’ ' m can It. I“ hm l an ”IQ. l Puke: (s. 9.) mm, which "mums mt gemlenan'n he sense of the :2- ae- o! things. Ir. Bouts, previous to the ”at which one “acted than great m, hat I: m happily I thing of the M m . 41mm; diamond and. mmmmndnen ulna Med brown In replaced the gel with n m ml. expat-In; wmmmmntubhume ml also run in In". A: m:â€" m m m an no parched earth M :- mm 3 M of mu. when can bid! ted the m Move ‘hmmauoqoludmmrcm from. It Mane-l and W n the Inn In : woolen am. mama; that he was m m sup-rel h the con- dnon a! the mm “as the henâ€" m W In: lpfllg «d Bonn D: m" It!“ were green min and her Mmmlldnmhmnm ma, team. he uld It was of It ”mm.“ should bein a. nineâ€"Ila: any (fan) mm... ID Miss Beihmann is iniiy pwpnrrd for the “lien um any be. exmied of her. The qualifications required by "I: M 1m: school board guarantee: this. Be» fore n icncler'n certificate was granted 1"” naihmlnn the panned the ordinary teacher‘s examination and in addition ‘ was required in an" in! no m urnâ€"i ‘ flcini in the undies of mother-pity and 1 nursery mp, Pmebei‘n nynieu oi ‘ sales. 3m: Ind omnpniions. ciny modeling and drawing. harbors and amber: nnnlber and tom system. uni plan: and natural me. The rules aim required iirnt the In I gratin-in. of a normal school, either mute or city a! Bunion. or mu have aunt who»! one your Iner graduating from some col- icn or an infliction at a hub a grade. Md I elm of any chlldren between the nmdmndsyeam She has always undo I W with her mum- nrlca work. She bu n pin-Ila per- cons-flu um! a mural kindly I”. track seem Io draw the cMMrm Inward her and Inspire them with eminence. She Is ”out 25 years at Ilse. of mm: height and figure. with German can of futures. dark conple'xlon and black‘ hair. loan mu no. Her daughter. mu ”loan. who 1m bun no manly bou- ond by President Cleveland. was born lu Mon. And ll of autumn cur-won. Blue In educated In the publlc schools. and alter manual from the .lrII' huh uhool loot | special eonm 0! ll.- dunne- work under lbs mud Ill- dart-noun. mu Lucy u. Symon“. h "u "an. school Ill- nah-nu am «mu-ma lsllidei'nnonlu m pesto. u I philanthropic ”more clu- Miss Bethmann began teaching eight 3'03?! an II III mutant to her mother. but she in now a principal Instructor. having charge of the kindergarten de< partment of the Thomas N. Hart whoa! in the South Boston district. sm- coma oi In excellent hmlly. which. pnviom to rover-en. was wealthy and well connoctod. Mn. Bethmnn um one of tha ill-It teachers whom In. Quincy A. 8h:- employed when lhfl F. Bethmann. In one of the foremost klnaergartenm in the country. and has been employed In the schools of Boston ever atnce the Inception or the system. Mrs. Clevellnd In very much wrapped up In kindergarten work. and has taken much interest In and greatly assisted the New York klndergartencrs. Among public school officials and edu- catom gen‘ernlly Miss Bothmnnn is re‘ garded as one of Hm brightest kinder- garten teachers In Boston. She has had every advantage (or mh'nnor'mem In her work, as her mother. Mrs. Emma ues which will he. required Ki h}; {rid also because of the friondshlp which has existed between her mother and the president's family. ' lSS FRIEDA M. - Bethmmm, who ha» been selected by Mrs. Grover Cleve- land as tutor at the president's chil- dren, Ruth and San ther, ls omé of mo most elm-lent kln- den-gartenora in the state of Massachuj sens. Up to the present time the children have been wholly under their mother’s care, and Miss Bethmanu‘s solectlon was made. her friends say. because of the high quallficatlons she possesses for the (In- WOMAN SELECTED 3V ,Mfl'. CLEVELAND FOR THE WORK. RUTH’S NEW TUTOR. FRIBDA I. BKTIIMANN. in. â€"- lid-cum In tho (maul-in~ Moo!- C! ”out“. ' mi 01 Mad- fl. nun-nnn. Who Ill! Inl- l'mldonc Olav-land's (‘hlk mmutmh limb-my“ ' Ana... with mu, III... A mime New York III! In- chIII. villa Ibo-II; I Putnam Mad Ibonl New York on m coca-III It in IIuer'I Int rill! to (II ”(WIS tool alummupumummnm- cu buildup :- IDII I“ who“ M to II- III «In! ohm d lIlIv-l thtcouldhmannlhlulm Inn- ?“ rm Ill not II III IIIIuMMdtIIth III M hold mind our all.“ db. i “In“ (I MI Mom! In]: (III III III! IIIIIIIIII‘ mm to It. mlluumudnr. NIIIIOIHIO IIIIO and a. ham”. CIIIr and mum II III III III VIII. day. Nov Yuri III "III I“ III! III III mun ”I.“ m II III “I" III "In: mm I! III '0“. than no mole-l II no! annual «unrul- IIMI. New Venom In. III. I and, I! III uni-mu It «I! I“ My nInkImdbolemlII-d out o! M with lie but am III such. The W III"! I! 10.00.... (III 0! «(Indie cell II m m "'7 van: II New You III! IIII II Iot It In mun-rum um I! II mattered to ‘ 'hIl In extent the III of an! cum Into the "de1 "to It the mph. The coal duh-n of New Yorl In lo- m Ind lie Incl-«I MI me u nun-cum proportions? The one “(I 'Mcl ml «I be shipped II New York and IMO.“ In order (I m It to the my»! will the lean mum Inn. mm In mtrlhuml to I grant mum to the mere." which New York eon merchants Inn unload. mnmfilmtuMl Ilsa SOME". lmdon to set her medical education. Her IMO! II In: Cornell: man. an III-It [m graduate 0! return India. Tho hum- In: It Oxford no! lo" 030. TIN "ILLION TONI 0' GOAL- Mme. nor-Mi. who in widely known in western indiu [or her many educational charities. Her earlier education Will obtained at the Poona Victoria high luchooi. and from this institution she ' was matriculated at the age or 15. 8M ~ nplmared nineteenth in a list oi candi- dates drawn from the whole of the , Bombay presidency. She entered Wil- y son collagen: Bombay, and there stud- ’ied for her degree. All through her course 3M displayed a peculiar aptl- turle (or science. and attrarted the moat favorable attention from her masters. . in the examination for her degree, through which she passed at the close a! last year, she was the only woman candidate and obtained more marks than any of the other candidates. com- ing nm in the order or merit. Miss Sal-ab” now hopes to study medicine with a View of being of some sunrise to lndian ladies who are denied the aid of it man physician. She will go to a. Inc-fly '0- Cu Don-o. .1 Inch IOI‘ a! lulu-no llolm II Mll- In" fllu All“ Hinds 8011M! tn the but Sun to win the demo at mum at nuance In all India. She II the daughter 0! the late Rev. Bar-b1! Khnrlodjl. o: the Church Mlulowy society. and o! 0-- mum um '///////2//”/ .flw’W’ A IWI IONA-ill- Amltlhmlmm “I Wail-mismatch“ I. 11.. mm. m n'lilmld“. “00" Mbdmuqu mums-annul- unknown-an W" Minmgn90_mm "Ha. n. II!" but“ 0.. lily. lemon-n Trina. no and up no“ County. mu but “any. -m. In. In!“ In W. ‘m uy Meta ’0. no na. » nil only an. ‘0. Iain." CHAN". mm hunt (Damn um "2".“thth in. nu. am." a on lulu, - puma-mucus...” Ila!" CHAP'I'II w. um no amu- -u m b M mm’u "In. ‘ m.mn.mumvu u. I» and might. now. I in. u muouueummH-quubi “malt. mogul-um!!- mummm'uuuwéâ€"i “W 0- 40". M de- Ill'l .f' 2...!“ Ifio nun-u". A)!” "any. simple. nEHVMâ€"‘m. -g-_-- CHAPTER III. "finally. gentlemen." laid to. O‘- uuurodly. "you olluou “I’m .8 I won't looking for on suds-no m out hm: 'dood I won't. lot I I. planed. much-n. not. an M Your vory loot- dooou your um no on human! ml b mud I like to moot. All Joule hon, It would to lingo-IMO In yourooool lhhddootthom and u.» hon 1'. sun to out dob-on: to not. In. W. -_‘ n_. _ 7 - e? :3 In CHAPTER 1!. Another step Ind Dick Hour '0'. luvo beén a and man. Pox-hum. "me up yer Inn's.” Dick Hovcy'l hand. won 11'. Al they did no A dozen mm m.- from their concealment and Intro-l- ed him. Elevate your named coma”: Raina your room mum the I”; V For next "mum-'5 style of will” wm be over three teat huh. Room is what the wouivnilfilek. Room to move and turn mum! In: For the bustle'n comm. back, ' “Halt!" «um I. a cum calm” A blun- Novels“- CHAPTER I. Widen carnal â€" “not! ._ sidewall: '- »

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