Downers Grove Reporter, 25 Mar 1897, p. 7

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fic mt u lodoc lowered the «mar along the front of Prlm Palm five Inches. but will (In no relIef to levees and property below the mouth of the Arknnna River, sat-he watcr from the crevasse VIII find It: 'u back Into the mm:- of Water: through the White and AtIll-l Rlven, sten- Ing those stream- m above the dun- ger line. The river continues to run a I.“ point: south of Vicksburg. Rub rout] communlmtlon between Nashville and um city In entirely cut 0!. The‘ Iron loumln truck. on the vent due an Inn above water. and all min on- Tie Kann- Moe It.) reported Menu lower down. but they are pro!» ably of protectloa tenet. The ollcers of the mm any that the scenes along an m o! the river from Memphis tout! everywhere thou (he general anxiety. 14th“ are lining along the levee. and guard: and mentor: m math. every Incl: of the tel-mom The water will run Into White River very fut, and will mm in way back into the Mini-I’M in a day or two. Levee man my the elect will be men. ly temporary. but toâ€"dny n decline is reported of from one to four inches don; the Mom County [Mississippi] levee. when the strunie mum «it high filter has been no: desperate. Tho madman 0! he «not: south of Myth ls about the use an on :93- terdly. A dim! h from \‘k‘kshnrx any: that the med «cum at Mo- doc, Ark. mr Helen. is confirm"! by one": o! the steamer sun- at Kansas. which pound than! Inn evening. and by dimer»: «mind at Vicksburg. The levee at Modor' has been consid- ered II n We” condition for several dug through Hue opening an be hard for lines Thm “Alum! brain, 1!! Ion Sans Sam-l, are "none! to-dly. and the snflemng ol the people in But- cn Arkansas will surety In grnuy Imagined. ”INN ASD INCIDEXTS OF THE .\RK.\.\'S\§<TE.\‘.\’F£§FZE moons Tho but! at Sun flour! in widen- tu and the and will or «be water. n- Ialut ”bu-uh... The following duo-uh bu 1m! In" mind from Montana. Tenn; sun-aflo- Ind lmlh. Slat-mum stalks abroad In many of the noml~stricken dlstrlrts. The L'nlted Stales ramium have been vallml out to sue-cor '12:? hungry. Many companies a! stun Moons are also aiding ln the work of rescue. Accordlns lo dispatch- es received 1mm the strlrlwn palms Inch s'lfl'erlnxs wuc never known. Huudn-ds of women and chlldron, who left thmr homes to the mercy of tha floods are slwltorlm In the mountain; 0! Tonnesm and Ariana: and little children and lhelr women are rr.\'- in; for bread. Any uld mil lo (In: .mlâ€" lcrln; should be addreuod to the Gov- ernorl of the slum named. Tenan- Ice and Arknunn are the worn antler- en. TIM Governor of Arkanuu In a! Llulo Ruck. Th» (humor of Tonna- uc h J! Ito-mph“. (.‘onlrlbullon- (orl ion-Isa mlulolury work would b. "upended fur the mount Ind all the ad pounlblo would be given lo llol needy a' home. Terrible Sufi-flu; In Tennum Ind Ark-nun The spring floods this year have proved more destructive than any pre- vious x’isitalion ol the same nature since 1883. All the southwestern and central western valleys are more or less submergud and million: 01 dollars' worth at property, lncludlng .resl- dences, live stock and other nmtnhlea. are being awopt away. The loss of Ills Is and to be very grant, especially In Tennessee, Kentucky and the lower commit-3 at Indiana. and Ohio. Prob. ably one hundred lh‘es lune already been mu'rlflred. Dubuquo, 1m, Special: Cooler weather he stopped the me In the 11's. ;shllpp! hem. Chnrla City mom I ‘rim 0! four feet in Cedar River, while at Cedar Fall; I largo force of men And teams wot-Rad all night and 00â€"day building-dikes to arm me people on the Iow‘landn from the united floods of (‘edar and Shellrock rhea. wum than I.- 'IM. Reports received from various: pm» non of Wisconsin Indicate (but the loan: by the flood- ot the pan than gnu wm not be Ian M ”.000. TI. The flood: In this :eetlon are am on. save a 3km! 1‘"; Menu-h. The bridge: are already gone, however. end e runh-r rise 0! the "mute an do “(He harm. The Missouri In high. but not nvor Ha hanks near here. The cone stem rise of the water has prevented mrdn; and H the in All runs out he- fore e ran begins «here is lime probe- Mlhy n! ”‘0“th III Sioux (‘fly the flood has returned to Its rhenuel and many families who were driven out by lhe flood ere mumlng home, The Biz Sioux. higher than ever before kno'n. j is mun-nay mm. Much etoch n he. Ling drowned and hen to fer-lea in the valley will he lunenee. Sole-done] } minor. ere current here of mu Ms ‘ whole on the file-mm River. (I which great decree was done to farm prop- erty and live uteri. Ae the reported chengee occurred 1: point- fluent In. any unis. It is dime"! ho "rm fie rut-on. Raver-en my the teen-nee m unsteady “We. The Lu- ne 3m: in reported as dole. greet annexe neu- Correwoevllle ad om. this county. Kuhn of the We are moving to the hills. 0. the 313 Sioux severe! car loede of «we were lost um evening. rem in n» Forte) nan-r Riv" nt Jarkm. Team; ”Mr hoot In svampml um 31-}:qu was dru'nad. Furl mun-NI to the shore alter arm- Ing some dlflalce. In North Alumna. Iron upon- a.- nls'od. nllmd munnlmiol In um badly dlwulud. lmh 5»).qu o! Allol. "L. I“ Al- twn Flu-k of SI. lack. an “hon-t Ira-I'm, ten- club! In A III"- cur- situation at Union. Over in Arkansas the town of Mao riou is in a bad condition. All the houses are surrounded by water, and the whole race at the earth in sub- merged except here and there a small indlun mound that in nbove water. There are many breaks in the levee or at least many places where the water is running over the levee like a mill race. The water is also pouring over the Ram sac City Railway at three places in the town 0: Marion and possibly at more. At these places the current is exceed- ingly rapid. and the waves roll and dash elgln and ten feet high. No oth- 1 er loss oi life is reported 10-day. Cuubormd I‘ll!- at Nulnillo. ‘ Nuhville. Tenn. Special: The Cum- ‘ berlnnd River marks tony-night met, on the gauge, and in inilinx rapidly, the tall bring now over a. fool. since 8 o'clock this morning. it will he nov- i'l'lll days before the mills and mu- luctoriu on the out side will be able to maniac (mentions, even if there ll no more ruin. but the relation of the rise uveu the lumber yard). which were greatly ondnn‘crod. On two or three street» car trnvol in still nurpcndod. but io-mormvt can will be nblo to "v uume openumu on some areas. The alum dam in thin city in chi-fly in. hurl llifl'. uni it in not thought that than in: been any (mt locus to un- Iifiu'utrin‘ plum. along the rinr. lhnu‘h may hard that down. terms the city from that direction are moving passenger trains over the Iron Mountain trucks. Church and “do. While the sen-nu“ of church and "no I: u flan-imam pflnclplo In Amerlm chlnuon every mar-oi person know. an we mm dim our initial Hf. nun our rolls-I- h- am «out m not: m boon workln; u the let. which I!- mined use. Then a clerk In I. m uncured : name And “tor (an; to the cellu- and pounding upwuu a tow mlnnzn loosened the Hub. 1'» Ian adjusted m- 191 and moved on, voting to sue thd property owner. and the strap- thu hold the la. van removed. A policeman, who bl 1n Voodo- M... (1-1» In no hoe-out. Stunning down Marie! are“. re- mnlly was a middle-aged man who. right leg Ind been replaced with an old-style wooden peg, sun the mm- dolphls Record. Ha had «vim-nu! boon drlnklng, for he “me along slag. in; and staggerlag {mm slde to side; Below llth sum he was ma to pm nuddpnly forwnrd. Than followed an awful struggle to 39'. up. Seven! pastors-by «no to hla assistance and‘ It was than than. M: quéer poultlon m‘ explnlned. Ono of the round m (ht! II" In the 91leth avg- the can" ‘whlch extended under the pave-alt wu mum and having W In no hole with his one Is; m. and the accldent. Aftermath.“ not-Int» gluon tho nu gate-Med to m. liolegudthdr-mnodahfll hue when he found be m tuck (all. Some men the: lald hold and unneâ€" mm mm to true Mn, that tho vlwmsmnedwlthmuhew- pulled am! trifle! M Philly it. Lyon. rm... Spark}: Lona cm. in ovarflowed ll! huh uni is d..- ulna a me a.) o! hay. mum awn are watching the bflulgu Inn-en he" and Fender. nun; for run! Mn. but hu Ila! u to. "1'1 rum, and u 5 cm Illa nor-In Ibo Norfolk In vital. In Mo" lo "I!“ 900,30. no I." all!“ rem" nook and an um proovny fro- m “our of lo“. The than. 8!. Paul. mambo". Ind 01qu Inck In IIII my I. sum-truce no! In pbm m undo I: wanted guy. Poll-n on "u not“ “in at Mal. am. In flooded and tutor I- out In the. pouring our Mal- umt. which In on n Ive-frat trad». Tn mun-1 mum at an "IMF-v! Marin Is and" water, no to Ibo In!" hull-5 up no. Ibe ml. flnr. Norm and mu an be!" r.- .oval to higher mnld no u no“ at hop were Iron-d. The run here In sun rial... In: reports rm‘ north Indicate that It '0! m m\ In m. This but: a" notion: N'I um llarh. Omaha. Non. Mill: The mum- rl "at m- llm lulu lu-dny all gnu qua-mm at In I" maul-c. TM urn-n I- m 1.1"“! o! 1|. m Ila-cu! .- tbo “up... ‘ Ynukton. B. D., Spool-cl: The 170 me- In the Missouri River here no firm «Hunt. The mt above In on- lly seen from the Hun um the Ice ll plied huh. but an on below an dly I. probably In on or the big band- and bu not but: exactly located. Tho whol- Ioruvou la wmrbound and m nllmdu An All In had that. Tim mud. m In 50!. ad the only on hula; calm run out“ tale in m Ill-whoa. nu In con- poIId to un- tru-hr boots .0. Ver- nlllon and Mom City. After the Ina! «bun It In 0.0qu an It I"! «no ton dun to "one. 00 lamina. Donn-notion In Hunt-k. Allen, 1",, Special: The danger of flood and famine in this portion of 11' llnois and Missouri from the overflow of the three great rivers from the cen- tral basin seems more imminent than ever. in tact. nothing short or I su- son of several weeks of dry weather. lasting well into April, can prevent n disastrous overflow tint may rival the great inundation or 1892. The river has advanced without intermission since last Wednesday. and the gauge stands thirteen tee: above low water mll‘k. At this rate of advance it will go over the banks by Tuesday night and damage will then begin. River men agree that the rains and floods reported (mm above make a further adVance of from ‘ (our to six feet inevitable in any event ‘ and yet many of the tenants 0! low land plantation insist on staying by their cherished crop. until the water drives them out. For this reason warn- lugs are of little avail and the rush of water: will many cause In greet; distress in if it had all come in I lin~ I gin night. I grams! damage was sustained at. Fond ‘du Lac. where the loss is animated at j8100.000. A! that place the Fond du Lac Malt. and Grain Company wan the heaviest loser. The Iowa at vmoul point: an estimated as follows: Fond du Lac. $100,000; Port Wmlnmon. $25,000: Sheboygan. 830.000; Milwau- kee and surrounding districts. 320.000: Wuukesha. $2.000; La Crosse. $3,000: Oshkosh. $2.000: Janesvili'e, $1,000: Eh my. $2,000; Brodhead. $3.000; Rim. $4.000; Trompealenn and vicinity. $10,- 000. Losses are also reponed (Mm Markeaan. Lndl, Sheboym Falls. Brandon, Abnapee. Mayviile. Black River Falls, Prairie due Chlen. Green Buy and Depere. HIS LEO STUCK FAST DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER. There were no "frills" aim": his in- augural address. no unnecessary ex- clnniveneee in any part of his share of the dey'e doings, and when he bee-me master of the White House its door. were thrown open. and day after do] throngs of people from every section nnd state hue been received by hill. The surviving lie-hers of his old regi- ment, the Twenty-third Ohio, who upon hit: the day following his inan- nmion. no not for many nor- have the wells of the White Home echoed ‘ mil ringing rheen In those with which ‘they greeted their old mnn‘ade ad eon-monitor. The day‘s work over. this antennae and 1min American citizen donned its int and overcoat. and im- the am tltne in many yenre there was witnessed the spectacle of a President 0! the United Stntee walking unattend- ed through the street: of Wnshington. This habit, which was chmcterintic of General Grunt, he: been revived by tint other Ohio soldier. Ilajor Melinâ€" iey. and strollers on Pennsylvanie'eveâ€" nuo now don their hot- tothe Pie-idem o! the United Stoke- ne he wnih by. and ii! returnroeelve e plea-nut uln- ulel fm his. President McKinley has «howl: ima- sell a plain Amnrk'an c-hlzen In the first week 0! Ms ormpam-y M the Prep. Mental one-1. I'm ind." loop-04M:- lov ll. Ap- Mob... The Ropnbllntm la tho- uni rol- I"- no [ulna to unlu- nn mom to art halt to the unto-n a! plum. the no- mum lull:- In tho ind: ot one col-Nut TM fm mam Iho got coltrol o! "mum who. tlrovu (fl-”mm! Inn run mm tln Whm Hons. dlntrllmml th- nmowlntlon lull. to - hall-don» multtm In or- der tn mu Ihm nut at I» hand:- at Proton-Mount Sun Raul-ll um u the mac tl-a Imm- thorrmghly mmml the hour lh tutor at tlw rm trmk plans They men-«ltd. lnth ln dlxtrllmtlnu tn .nmmuon blllu and In Mull thetr true tmlo urm u-t. 1‘» "an of the dlstfltmtlnn ol thv appropria- tlo- hllls tn In onormmu lnrmu. In upendlmm and thn mum at the nu- nt. of the low urtll I" was an nor um deem ol vha- m-niptn. Result: An Immune In n-tlmnl lad-Moan». In tho lut four year: nun-naming In 232 mllllun dnllnrx. Thu- vauhllcm "fly, now that It trauma: control, must first than», tho systems whlrh preamp threw "ll vaults and than go to work and my the MM: whk-h the Demons“! pllml up, To do this they will first ruin" oandltnnn hy plat-- lug the appmprlatlon hills In the hand: of one rnmmlttoe: mad, Immune the rn-wipts lay a pron-«Irv tarll MM general business m-tlvlty. and then re- Iumv "IF tank whlrh they «mm on mmesslully for many ynrs of mylng all publlc lndohtarlness. 0m! "mall: km number "Mono. 0! Ibo dlurcu 0! Iron undo II a. u- m c! on 0! Im- chudnn. Ant mu; New South Wak- mu: n- w um I now "mint-t In low lull at! m: mun Man has nun-a «am A- I.rll| "port o! In New Booth Wflo- (‘bunhrr M llllIlfldIf- on slow. «I» aim-c o! Ibn low ufll lo M" be"! "Mm-Hon ll tam. wort-Ion dluharxdl. Iron-kn via-ed and luau“. andunOd walrh had “In "pendulum at any nur- ol clan and In. “MIN lo aflubllnh.” TM- I. vary Inch like out mm "mm I“. '0' Ilrifl. The prolertlve mm! Idea lg gnlnlns I foothold permanently In ovary puny. Sen-Inn McEnery, Cullen, Smllll, Ind several others on the Denim-rule all. of the senate an llkely to support the Republlcan ml! manure. Populllln Kyle. Heltfeld ud one or two cum at am parly no, It la understood. llkcly to veto (or prolmtlml. 0! [In Illvor Republk-uu. punk-ll] all m In prllclple plotocllonlfilx. Tim- the nut. pflnclplr 0! ll»- llrpuhllrnl party, that 'luch hu lawn the lead!" thought I. ll. doclunllou llm la ell-tom. In cumin; lo In gradually man“ and nut-«mod by ale-hen at all 9mm 1 (Washington Correspondence.) Senator Wolcott's return, and the favorable report which he made In his talk with President McKinley regard- ing the prospects for international bl- metolllsm, has alarmed the silver lead- ers. They begin to tear that they are going to lose their occupation. They have talked themselves into public prominence and public positions on the silver question and they are now seared lest who proposed international silver conference will take that subject out or politics. They recognize the [not that i! the bimetallic conference agrees ‘upon a plan and it is adopted by the various nations, the silver question will go out of politics in the United ‘ States and they will be out 0! 9. 10h. They also reoognlze the tact that ii the nations fail to agree upon a system for an increased use of silver, it would be lolly (or the United States alone to undertake it. hence, they would he un- der those circumslnnr-es, out of o Job. So, it is not surprising that such men As Duiiois, Teller, Stewart and other ”198ml friends of silver sneer at the proposed bimetallic roulerpnce and are doing all in their power to prevent its success, or even its consideration. Pro-[dent McKIIIlcy Clplum the Pao- plo of (In C-le-I curâ€"wm PM. Its Tun-Ill lull and TM- no Bout-â€" “A Pull- numeric-n Cuban." SILVER MEN ALARMED INTERNATIONAL BIMETALLISM WILL SPO". THEIR JOBS. “A Phl- A-tflran Churn." PM“. “II-ll. Ground. G. K; "LEM”. Kr. Glenn-rd" up! in «all. III Democrltlc “polices. mm: cover ll too obviously pom-an (o‘b'u mm Alflfllflng "III. the publlé m vonld be promated by. metal mea- cllly I" the govern-mi am under clvll “mm ruin, than I. '01.!- ly no fair-e- In permitting i m wflhmo‘ouvfihh’hm m an; an gel!» «to. m Mi! lu- Allnld doen nor-an to must. an the Tina-Henldfi cm m-m‘ "do move," «a (In thymine. ll- cmm In seven! mm 0! the "I“. He also per-intently rotate. to m. that the full vote 0! mm '- not cut In 1892. A. long I. the n- mvernor prefers to grape m In‘ such darkness I: ln-mnhu (0‘ am to convince Mm at che'mor of in VIYI: The election 0! Mn)" chlnley III I popular uprlnlnl o! the halt clone-ta o! Ametlcan cltlunalp; Bach I In?” percentage of the ma! voter- ol I" the flue: wu never polled before II the history of our polltlcm “no em III! also no on record a the cloud. falmt. moot honorably conducted at any content In our pollflcnl nun. When the mm aim-(ion In on! of the way, with the certainty lint for font years at least there will he no chug. ‘in eroaomlr poliry, busine- m M help but grow Inner. end ‘rlth the in- provemt will mme the diminution 0! questions whirh have been to disturb- ing to the plibiil' mind. General Sir-kin. who has been II poor health share his exefllonl durin- uw late presidential nmpdn, Inn: “My hineml dlsenpoinlment II that I must give up my cherished project to form u legion of Union and Confeder- ate veterans to escort Meier IcKllley In the lawman! parade fro. the cap- nol to the white hon-e." 1 An 2 "neutral hunt-en ml at an: experience. Mr. llnnnl. an tho Nov York Tribune, In sure to be I Id Imam! member of the new. not though Innaâ€"danced In the ruin. The ova-lactating Men m about by the Wilson can! um I. ml- ing no end or trouble I. every city, vil- lage Ind hamlet II m. all-try. m and bacon” A III. the In! neg I'm In lo III-oi" canon-n. Tim I- no other lam-hum had-m for It In mu up or (ll-run. The tan! b a. only nut-r 0! Mn. [upon-act But I law (an! Ml! with congr- I- m will hardly bring Ibo“ m parity. Every landmâ€" Interest 'm In! um I! nan-ton uul Conan-I.“ In In mm bone» Instâ€"Id o! In With mama. We now! um um hm hm: udly. bu we need the rut cm Aha In! I. In" WN'N. Y. Advertiser. I'm-Iboflllludmlm Plume-l Iclflnhy‘n In duty In to Inna. not upon a. truly. but no. a um um that um um ammo m- enu. lot morn-nu] um and also .In prop-r pmoclloa to the II- du-um Inna-u at no min I“ Ibo Auction voting-u. W... In has little this clan lo 0M noel-l m non. and no Dinghy N" in but The signers of this call for the or- ganization o! a "Sliver Republican party" are all conspicuously known In malmntents and decorum. Benton Teller. Duboll, Mantle nod Canon luvs vlolcmly opposed Rnpubllcnn measures In congress and muted In defeating them. They and Senator l'eulgrnw formally bound the Repub- lican union-l convention and nu mom or loan active «poor! to Brynn In last wumn’u Pmldenml cal- pugn. Count-alum Charle- A. Towno o! Illnuuou. who I- put locâ€" wnrd u the churn-n o! the not my, run dank-d n mutation - you I30 197 hll nonhum- coummu l» can. of ll. nun-e ullnr no... and. (II-III. u an Inducible. null»! a. uni-:- undid-to In his Muriel. III «(and u the Dolls. quduuamlocwum‘ mu 0! While-u I. M bank um. To ul luau ud m they no Do-ocnu Ind Pauli-u. I" of that. The] Mid he to... m (0 show (hair that colonâ€"Boo- lo. Journal. As it is o truism oi history that no Iii-red nation ins ever been great. it ioliowa that. in the matter at food consumption the American people are well provided with a physical basis for greatness as a nation, and for Intel- } lectual superiority among its individual people. our per capltn consumption of meat. and grain is considerably more than twice the average per copitn oi all Europe. Each American nVernxec twice as much grain consumed per your. and 3 little more meat. than the average Englishman: and the latter stands at. the head of all European consumero.»1‘olcdo Blade. France.... Germany ..... . . . . . . Belgium ....... . . . . . Great Britain ..... . . . . Russia...... .... Spain. . . . ....... . . . Austria ............ Sweden and Norway. Italy ........ ... Europe ...... ...... .. United Salem... .... Herewith in given a table uhowinl the flange annual food consumption per inhabitant among the leading conn- iriea of Europe. as compared wlth the United States: 1M Pollard Inn, *0 Auction-I AM Wall M ml n “lo'ubllnn " v. .u..-. .0... ‘...-. u... .... Winn”... .~.. .~- ml Norway. . . . Grain. Mast. Bushels. Pounds. . . .2102 81.88 . . .23.?! 84.5! . . . 22.84 57.10 . . £0.03 “9.10 . . .1737 54.05 . . . 17.68 25.04 . . . 13.67 56.03 . . . 12.05 51.10 . . . 9.62 20.80 . .1166 . .4036 67.50 120.00 Our W nun «at; Q H4 has not. II more than (In An doctor- on avid-.1: II the. there I. not a on. [In his a. Hum ll 45 yard of; «I I nut-1mm In I mm ehlldron. Rh win "I tht to larch MMW_ Miami. IMO-hf“- lover has nine: to “‘5 Maul! an nun to m Ilctlol after a. Decide-l. MI ham '0- un” to II. n I! by undo. Ii. MI I. had one tum deal. 110 ml Ion- tng loam-Mm“ harm-84b- u-ccly. ll- bu to: but «out... shout Im hearing um. VIII. I. its daily mourns tro- ll. can he ,nrkl nll (hoe nonl- th M In um lull". It":- nflu I. I“ n- nlud Mo lama be via ninth to run a "Nubia. The tram '- muuued, no about Duet-luv I It vole. Mar-N to Na. Th0. m. an» (to dun ”at II Ml ocu- ‘veruuon VIII M. Mud- nd uh- llvu, "cl-u 'u tell u III. a “I am day um la us much- can u- nlnn. Three “yo 4 «tom! (I... were lollowod by (In. an which he find tho me 0! ill vol“ his condition in hon om Illa. VI" comm with II. [floods on "cling. m to bed. in Irina (I. nor-In; unable to non! I slush spoken by II. the previous "-1“ m mm m pry-m.- "m In at Icon up the (mt-alt, but u M I has Ind no elect on the m «Inna In MI lynch. He in not: and tron the par-mic stroke In" mi 1! ' Duo and can on micro. 80m. day- ho can mt; noun day- he cannot. Such In tho undies-oat of Theodore Helm, I railroad nylon In Amati-w. Ma. when on. I. on at the ulna-u: lint in our coin II- dor the notice 0! the medial m “on to: non. “no. Nolan's Mouth. menu-ed tmnuroluolunlnb, MMAmrm.ln11-uwlyu cn wk plainly on can. can. on out" da- lu I- u Mb I. onm, thodoctoumullo-u 53% 5% is g .gfu‘ HEEi jolnmtarlnuoon-uu' In Arman. vh- h In all.” and um mu all out a. hot. H. (on blob-I: to 00 M ml In“ W urn tolle- m 0 In nmm. but It in bud an “mum-pot. urn-W. too. an It could but Ill mom to II: has. III tho nun: WI. Dr. Barn. in mud. Tho pt: I all ll“ m III par-Dyna I- ll. 6m Ind (bu ho had “In“ M)- I I“ our ll. body. M tho “I. u- dad ad «.8. Ion!" t In» no. an tho luv“ In "at. all n (or loath- 0M tho une- ho In m- to wt noel u‘ luring Ion viggiilis 5 1:1 be n flawleu diamond o! the Durst. water And worth $186,000. The no“ Is now owned by the Countes- a! BM- ley. It: discovery um “th uri- oua atwntlon to the South African dil- mond new. A Info-fl In In (tn-Mo.“ n. m I'd"! an m, ' " am I- “I. lunch Atria-"z The non-la- comma VIM. V cover: or the various m ._ field: at tha world no a“! til: 4 , ram-mic intereat. Portu- m "mark-bio 0! then roll"; to‘ =.:‘ , South African hold. For many an the rumor of a magnificent .. ., aid to he In the nonunion of a mu- Iway tribe of huh/on. hid been cur" rent. May had (one In lurch at It, but In mu. About um tlmo. In an a Dutch tamer. named Van Nata-k. so: on the tack. Ho wander-d tron ;» tribe to "lbwâ€"from VIII-‘0 to "th - ‘ one any hopeful of success Ind tho next despondont. At length he VIII m- .. j reeled to a certain witch doctor. n- aidlnz In a Kalllr VIII-lo. M. an" I good den! or pal-var Ind plenty, of sum to drink. dlwovorod him to I» .;_',.~ mound of a put. white stone at 09' traordlnlry flu and lunar. Tho witch doctor, however. In. unwfllihi tn ”8 with u. and would not [In It up maul the Dutchman screed to my on: all M- oxen, hi: tent. wagon, and about everything one he Ind. The oler lul- ly brought the witch doctor to tom and VIII Nelltork curl-lad oil the "I. It was I good Datum. (or It proud :0 WOO!!! mm INTERMIT‘I‘ENT BPIICH. DIAMOND

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