Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Millbrook Reporter (1856), 13 Jul 1893, p. 7

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fl ' 3 UGANDA. "are ants talks lest Soldier- days ago that on Cbmpflmy hauled a, and Sir Geffil‘l ,e of the British e union lack and protectorate over riot afford to dam- lonizing Power by angry, onreover, n a material sense thouszh ll" coun~ .o be a: drain “Po“ great elements of mi who have been completion of the it may be male a i negotiatiops With as the British Govâ€" to the rights which y from the King‘s'nd British East Africa king in Uganda. is sreaty making with Uganda is not quite long enjoyed anniâ€" e King and chiefs - the nature of a hey consider nothing t is written down. to write. When . with the British ‘ery clause was dis- gs, words were al- n were astonished d by the natives in which every stipula- L eir country and its ich the whites have Uganda, are a mat- y the King’s mark, ‘ cannon Wigte, and rinci al c refs. 1d whigh confronted e hoisted the union be done with the danese troops, t’” an element of dan- made the employees nt. Two years ago ~ Soudanese near the He induced them th to Torn, where he lbert Lake and Lake my he installed in d, with their wom- S,000 souls. He - protect the north- a from the inroads ‘ powerful ruler or ing this border he ubjects of Kabarega ‘ shores of Albert -d been capturing und the Soudanese gainst the hostile He decided to orthern forts and the other strong- all the Soudanese itish Government, 0 form the protec- Uganda frontier. : Soudanese have pala, where they ers of the British nng enough to inâ€" (1 his councxllors ' resistance to the British rule in ove a blessing to es are divided into ' heathen parties, n so wrought upon ‘ that they are al- wouid requireonly or power new con- the country into war and anarchy. of Uganda has . g will remain on nts tobe awilling he British. The he country since beth has been de- Mwanga, the last king in little more he and his advis- took with fire and ropean influences id in their coun- that the mission- - merely the open- days of Uganda’8 bered unless the . Circumstances and, in spite of bat raged against native converts, rs has constantly da is a mere de- e more and more foreigners. ped Convicts . bed in the Rus- that name, gives reatment of Russ ‘ of Onora. The e into the charge ruelty preferred chief labor over- resulted in that arrest. This f originally sent perpetrated such the unfortunate that twenty of sin a dreadful -mselves from the 7:1 miscreant. A their escape into red indescribable sickness. A re- Taiga had in his human flesh, and scaped prisoners sically weaker of is stated, been iscoveries. .ermany is that 1 urth, which was , ten years after ll on the SWOR- a handsome divi- It is worked very . can easily Rapid Breathing as a Remedy- About fifteen ‘years ago Major Genera.l Drayson of theTBritish army often sufi‘ered ”Peeially at night, from a severe pain in he region of the heart. He believed he W33 doomed to die soon of heart disease. About that time certain of his experiences lo the mountains of India led him to think that his‘heart pain might be due to insuf- ficent oxygenation of the blood. He there- fore tried to relieve it by breathing rapid- lYâ€"at the rate of about forty breaths a minute. In a few seconds the pain ceased and did not return that night. After that, he says he always resorted to the same expedient, and invariably with success. As time went on the pain became ; not only less frequent but less severe, and now, if there is the slightest indication of 'it, rapid breathing prevents its arrival at maturity. He thereupon brings forward many in- stances in support of his belief that some i of the advantages of moderate exercise are . to be gained by simply breathing rapidly. Rapid breathing is an effect of exercise, and ,_ this is beneficial because the rapid breath- ing gives the blood plenty of oxygen. Invalids or others who cannot take exer- cise can obtain some of its good effects by deliberately passing much pure air through the lungs. Rapid breathing is particularly helpful in cases of sleeplessness and restless- ness. The air must of course be pure, else rapid breathing can have no good effects. Hundreds of thousands attribute disease to themselves when nothing is wrong except their habit of breathing air impure from tobacco smoke, gas-burning, or simply from a lack of ventilation. Impure air makes impure blood and im- pure flesh. Thus those who consume such ;air fall quickly into and before disease. “They cannot endure an open window or door because they feel cold, this sense of coldness being in many cases Simply a symptom that the blood has been vitiated by the breathing of poisonous air. . To breathe air laden with human exhala- tions is not a whit more sensible, as General Drayson observes, than to drink liquid sewage for a. beverage. USine Ice in Summer- The use of ice in summer should be regu- lated by good common sense based upon a knowledge of the laws of health, and then the annual amount of sickness and possible death from the free use of ice would be greatly reduced. It may not be generally known that we can be used in such a way as to. give better results than drugs, and that in many instances it is one of the best anti-cholera medicines that we have. t is not likely that there will be an extra con- sumption of ice this summer on account of , this Asiatic disease, but it is really a well- established fact that cracked ice is of great service in cholera and general summer com- plaints. But on the other hand injudiciously taken into the stomach there is nothing that s so likely to bring on summer complaints as me, nor nothing so good as ice to bring the system into such a. condition that cholera take possession. The simple remedy is to adopt a. constant diet of cracked ice, and place hot poultices on the stomach, and hot water bottles at the feet. More cases of cholera, cholera morbus, and other kindred complaints have been cured in this way than by drugs. Cracked ice taken internally is very difi'erent from drinking ice water. A little cracked ice stimulates the nerves of the mouth and throat, and often sharpens a poor appetite, and it does not flood nor chill the stomach with cold water. A bag of cracked ice placed at the base of the brain or upon the feverish brow on a warm day, will fre- quently relieve a. headache that nothing else seems to touch. Tempt the appetite, on a hot day by sprinkling little bits of cracked ice on the broiled chicken, meats, salads, and such food. It will do no harm, and possibly great good will be accomplish- ed by stimulating the appetite. ' â€"â€"._ Modern Beating Inventions- Of late years numerous inventions for heating rooms without the use of chimneys and stove pipes have been placed upon the market, and many are deluded into the be- \ . ' 1 ~. I I ‘ 4” é? %W/ ALASKA. THE BEHRING SEA QUESTION~THE VILLAGE OF S. PAUL’SrSrPA‘UL ISL- AND, ALASKA. In the'foreground are seen the seals which have been knocked on the head lying on the beach. after a. heavy shower, it is really more threatening to our health than .before Before the rain the multitude of bacteria. were floating high up in the air, and many of them were beyond the reach of our lungs. So, too, often, a heavy wind will make the air more poisonous than a. quiet one. The upward and downward movement of the air mixes the layers up, and often drives the germs toward the earth to escape the wind. Other germs that are lying on or close to the earth will be swept up and mixed in the air we breathe. Most pols. onous germs rise from the ground in the morning, and remain at a high altitude until night begins to approach, and then, they descend. The most dangerous air; then, is the very early morning, evening: and night air, while that of midday is; tolerably clear of all poisonous germs. l A RBMARKABLE RIDE. l‘ Little Willle Burns' Adventure. Willie Burns, aged eight years, was l brought to the Central Police Station, Mon- treal, the other morning, to be interviewed by the Chief of Police, who was not glad to see him. \Viliie was footsore and hungry. His bare feet were covered with mud. When the police heard Willie’s story, they gath- ered around and gazed at him curiously. Am. THE WAY FROM Bosrox. Think of a boy seven years old travelling nearly all the way from Boston to Montreal 1 in a. box car. That’s what \Villie did. He got tired staying at home and decided to come to Canada. It took money to come to Canada. He had none. inuch,however. He had an idea and he carried to Montreal. the yard it was dark, but the Weather was lief that this can be an accomplished fact nice and warm, 80 Willie felt happy in the without giving any injury to the occupants roomy box car which was loaded with Inn of the room. In the summer time many of these oil, gas, and carbonite stoves can be ‘ utilized very well for cooking purposes.for the doors and windows are generally left open. They are on hot days inventions of value, for they cause less heat than wood or coal stoves, and they are so portable that they .an be easily carried out of the house. But for heating purposes all of these inven- tions should be rigidly condemned by law. Combustion of any sort, whether it be of gas, coal, wood, oil, or any other substance, natural or artificial, must produce dangerous gases and that unless there is a place for them to escape they will soon fill the rooms and injure those who breathe them. This cannot be avoided ex- cept by having stoves with chimneys and fines through which these gases escape. \Vhile the newly-invented stoves may give out some heat, and appear to be very con- venient, it must be remembered that they -are dangerous enemies that we are intro- . ducing into the house. They can only be used in a room where the window is partly up so that the gases can constantly escape, and fresh air can be circulating in. All that one has to do to commit suicide is to light one of these stoves in the bedroom, close doors and windows, and then go to bed. By morning he wil need no stove for l warming purposes. 0 The Hygiene of the Air- That the air is full of poisonous germs and microbes is evidenced by the analysis of rain and snow that have been collected as soon as it dropped to the earth. In its passage through the air it collected the impurities contained therein. The air is the purest right after a heavy snowstorm, or a severe thunder storm, when the rain has fallen in torrents The germs are then beaten down to the earth, and it takes some time for them to rise again. But why, it is often asked, is it bad for those susceptible to malaria to go out into the damp air shortly after a storm in warm weather? It is simply because the germs are beaten down to t e earth, and as they begin‘to rise im- mediately again they fill the lower layers boxes. HE BEGAN TO GET HUNGRY. 0n and on went the train. Willie began to get lonely and by-and-by he had a very empty feeling in the region of his waist- coat. He thought of his barreâ€"how he wished he was back again! The train stopped at some Station and some one wrcnched open the door of the car and looked in. With beating heart W'illie hid behind a. box. When the man left the venturesome traveller watched his chance and jumped out. He thought he was at Montreal, but it was St. Lambert. He had made up his mind to come to Montreal and either by h ok or by crook meant to get here. At o’clock in the morning the ven- turesome Willie was deposited at the Bona- venture Station. He had hidden on a passenger train. He was exceedingly hun- gry and his feet were cold. He hated to do it, but he could not starve; he went and asked a policeman to lend him a quar- ter. Such a request from such a source of course was begging. The officer took him to the Chief of Police who told the boy he would have to return him to Boston at once as Montreal had lots of poor boys Without importing them. He instructed the oficer to go to the G. T. R. and C. P. R depot and see if he could not persuade these corporations to take Willie back free to Boston. The oficer failed in his mission. They had been beaten out of one ride by the young adventurer and could not see why they should now give him another free ride. They really could not sympathize with such depravity. What is to be done with Willie? That’s the question that the Chief wants some one to answer. Answered l A visitor inspecting a. poor school in Staf- fordshire, the following answer was elicited from a little Irish boy named Tommy : Q.-â€"“What is a lake ‘3” A. â€"-(Little Tommy well up in geogra- hy) : “A lake ; a lake. A lake is a tin kittle with a haul in the bottom of it l” ‘ More mushrooms are raised in the vicin- of air for the first few hours._ There- ity of Paris than in any other place in the fore, while the air in general is purer right world. ‘ . l l ‘.‘ TRYING TO PREVENT AILSTOBMS. A French Scientist’s Plan for Uslng Kites and Electric Currents. Colonel Baudouin, the well-known French meteorologist, announces that he has made an important discovery in connection with the formation of hailstones, and also a method of preventing the phenomena. from which they arise. “Since the origin of meteorology,” says Colonel Baudouin, “var- ious theories have been advanced as to the formation of hail, and even now experts are far from being unanimous in their opin- ions on that subject. The difficulty has been to explain why, during fine weather and occasionally on the hottest days, hail- stones sometimes fell in considerable quan- tities. Another question which has never been satisfactorily settled is as to whether they are formed in the upper strata of the atmosphere or near the earth. My re- searches have been based on Ampere’s max- im that ‘currents going in the same direc- tion attract, and those going in opposite directions repel, each other.’ In our at~ mospliere it frequently occurs that winds blowing in contrary direct-ions are super- posed, and that clouds travelling with the wind pass over each other. If the temper- ature is at all high the liwer cloud tends to rise, naturally forcing the upper one to rise also. Several clouds sailing in different directions may thus be superposed, each one driving the other up higher until the uppermost one attains an elevation where the cold is such that it is congealed. The ice then falls by reason of its weight. Each particle of ice in falling through a. Tags did not trouble him llower cloud is condensed and dampened. lPart of the water covering it evaporates, it out. He waited around the station yard land the rest forms a. new lay 91' 0f ice, the watching the freight trains being made up, llPI‘OCBSS being repeated 8} the hailstone rill finally he found onethat was coming itraverses each successive cloud. This fact \Vhen the train moved out of “ 1 l can be demonstrated by cutting a. hailstone {in two, when the layers of ice of which it is formed can be seen by the aid of a'magni- g ‘fying glass. Each layer of ice represents a. cloud through which the hailstone has passed beforereaching the earth, From this theory I conclude that by suppressing one or two of the intermediary clouds the upper- most one would not be forced to such a height as to experience the cold necasary to change it into ice. A cloud can be sup- pressed by depriving it of its electricity, thereby causing it to fall in the shape of rain. To obtain this result I (mploya large tailless kite carrying an elch-xic ap- paratus. My experiments have bl 01 most successful, and I expect very shortly to submit a full report to the Academy of bcience, and subsequently to put my in- vention into practical use.” “ Getting Into a. Scrape ” The red and fallow deer which formerly roamed through the English forests had a habit of scraping up the earth with their forefeet to the depth of several inches, sometimes even of half a. yard. The stranger passing through these u code was frequent- ly exposed to the’danger of tumbling into one of these hollows, when he might, be said truly to be “in a scrape.” The college stu- dents of Cambridge, in their little perplexi- ties, picked up and applied the phrase to other perplexing matters which had brought a man morally into a fix. Dissatisfied. A country fellow, anxious to see the Queen, left his native village, and went to London to gratify his curiosity. Upon his return his wife asked him what the Queen was like. “ Like 1” cried Hodge. “ Why, I was ne’er so cheated in all my loife. What dost think, Margaret? Her arms are loike thine an’ mcine, although I had heard scores 0’ 7 times her arms were a lion and a unicorn.” Advertisements first appeared in news- papers in 1652. The microscopists say that a mosquito has twenty-two teeth. Dials were spoken of by Isaiah 700 years before the Christian era. ' W ,. Silver is so plentiful that it is being more and more used for decoration. Windows A Successful Canadian Business Extended to England. Although But a Short Time in That Conn- try the Press Prouounces the Success Phenomenal We have much pleasure in reproducing the following article from the Montreal Witness, relative to the success in Great Britain of a well known Canadian firm. We have done business with the firm in ques- tion for a number of years and can heartily endorse what the Witness says concerning their honorable business methods, and the care exercised in the publication of the arti- cles appearing in the press relative to their I preparation. These cases are always writ. ten up by influential newspapers in the 10- calities in which they occur, after a full and thorough investigation that leaves no doubt of their impartiality and truthful character. We are quite certain that the confidence reposed in the firm and their preparation is not misplaced :â€" The phrase “British pluck ” has become an adage, and not without good reason, for wherever enterprise, courage or “bull-dog tenacity ”is required to sweep away or sur- mount opposing obstacles in order that the pinnacle of success may be reached, your true Briton never flinches, and facing all obstacles works until success has been achieved. This same “British pluck ” is a characteristic of the native born Canadian, and there are very few walks in life in which it does not bring success as the" re- ward. This much by way of prelude to what bears every indication of being a successful venture on the part of a well- known Canadian house. When it was an- nounced a few months ago that the Dr. Williams’ Medicine (30., of Brockville, in- tended establishing a branch of their busi- ness in the motherland,there were notafew who were inclined to be skeptical as to the success of the venture; While some boldly predicted failure. “There would be an ab- jection,” they urged, “to taking up a. colonial remedy,” “their business methods differed from those prevailing in Canada ;” “The field was already crowded with proprietary remedies long established, and well advertised. ” These and many other objections were urged as reasons why the venture was a. doubtful one. But the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co. was not to be deterred by any objections that might be raised. They had unbounded confidence in the merit of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People,land the pluck to back up their confidence with their cash. This latter is well known to Canadian news- paper men, who know that less than three years ago the company first put upon the market in the form of Pink Pills a. pre- scription which had previously only been used in private practice, and with a skill and audacity that has not been surpassed in the annals of Canadian advertising, pushed it in the van of all competitors. Of course the remedy had to have merit, or this could not have been done, and it was the com- pany’s sincere belief in the merit of their remedy that endowed them with the pluck to place their capital behind it. It was this same conviction that merit, skillfully ad- vocated, will command success that induced them to venture into competitiofi with the long-established remedies of the mother- land. And we are glad to knowâ€"indeed we believe that all Canadians will be glad to learn~that short as is the time the Dr. Williams’ Company has been in that field their success has been rapid and ever increasing. As an instance of this success the “ Chemist and druggist,” the leading drug journal of the worldâ€"and probably the most conservativeâ€"in a recent issue states that the success of Dr. William’s Pink Pills in Great Britain has been unprecedent- ed aud phenomenal. While, no doubt, it is the advertising that has brought this remedy into such rapid prominence in Eng- land, it is the merit of the preparation that l keeps it there and makes it popular with the people. There are few newspaper read- ers in Canada. who have not read of the cures, that to say the least, border on the marvellous, brought about by the use of Dr. 'Williams’ Pink Pills, and already we see by‘ the English papers that the same results are achieved there. Is it any wonder then that Pink Pills are popular wherever intro- duced ‘2 We have done business with this firm for a number of years. We have found them honorable and reliable, and worthy of credence in all that they claim for their remedy. â€" We cannot close this article better than by giving in condensed form the particulars of a. striking cure in Nottingham, England, by the use of Dr. William’s Pink Pills. The l cure is vouched for by the Nottingham Daily Express, the leading journal of the Midland Counties. “The picturesque suburb of Old Basford, some three miles from the marketplace of Nottingham, has just been the scene of an I occurrence which has excited considerable l attention among the local residents, and of ‘- which rumors have reached Nottingham itself. The circumstances affect M r. Arthur 1 \Vatsou, of Old Bastard, formerly an { employee in the bleach yard at Messrs. H. i Ashwell Co.’s hosiery factory, in New! Basford, and afterwards employed at the} Bestwood Coal and Iron Co. ’s factory, near l Nottingham. In consequence of the gossip, i which has been in circulation with regardi v to this case, a local reporter called upona Mr. VVatSon, at his bright little house, l situated at No. 19 Mountpleasant, White- l moor road, Old Basford, and made inquir- l ies as to the curious circumstances alleged. l The visitor was met by Mrs. Watson, but 5 I Mr. Watson himself immediately after- ’ Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are wards entered the room, looking very little ! like the victim of sudden paralysxs. He: told the story of his life she ilth as follows: f In boyhood he was prostratcd by a severe at- ‘ tack of rheumatic fever, which, after hisslow ; recovery, left behind it a permanent weak- ; ness, and uncertainty of action of the heart 3 and he had always been debilitated andl more or less feeble. On giving up his work l at Mr. Ashwell’s bleach factory, hel sought change of employment and un-l dertook the work of attending to furn- aces at kilns at the Bestwood Coal and Iron Co.’s Works, being at the time an out-patient at the General Hospital, Not- tingham, where he was treated for weak- ness of the heart. The circumstances of his work at the furnaces were somewhat\ peculiar. Exposed on one side to the ex-l treme heat of the furnace, he was attacked l on the other by the chilling winds whichl proved so distressing to many people lastl October, and one day in that month be personal aspect of the man. l organic life. â€"â€" which had all the appearance of permanent paralysis, and was pronounced, such by the doctOrs who attended‘h‘im. "The contact)! the stroke appears to have been down the entire right side. His leg was entirely powerless, and he was unable to stand. He could not lift his right arm from his side or from any position in which he was ‘ placed. His face was horribly distorted, and the organs of speech completely para- lyzed, so that he was able neither to stand nor speak. His condition is described by those acquainted with him as being most pitiable. He lay in this condition for more than three months suffering intermittently considerable pain, but more -afiiicted by his utter helplessness than by sufferings of any other kind. His wishes were indicat- ed by signs and feeble mumblings. The distortion of his face was rendered the more apparent by the ghastly pailor of his features, and he lay in bed, anticpating nothing better than that death should eventually relieve him of his helplessness. The Rev. Walter Cooper, Wesleyan Methodist minister, whose flock have their spiritual habitation in a substantial build- ing in High street, Old Basford, took a pastor’s interest in the case of this unfor- tunate man, and is acquainted with the cirv cumstances from almost first to last. A week or two ago Mr. \Vai-son began to astonish all his neighbors by the sudden im- provement in his appearance and capacity. He is able to walk about, and his right arm, which was formerly perfectly incapable of motion, is now moved almost as readily as the other, though the fingers have not yet recovered their usual delicate touch. Per- haps the most striking circumstance, how- ever, is the great improvement in the The deformity of feature caused by the paralysis is entirely removed. His speech is restored, and the right leg, the displacement of which kept him to his bed or chair, has now recovered its function so completely that he is about to take some out-door work in Basford and Nottingham. Questioned as to the cause of this remark- ableimprovement in a case universally re- garded as incurable by the medical profes- sion, Mrs. Watson, wife of the patient, unhesitatingly attributed her husband’s miraculous recovery to the use of a medicine celled Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and brought into considerable pro- minence by the publication of some remarks able cures affected by their means in Canada; and elsewhere. “ Since I have taken EDr. Williams’ Pink Pills,” said Mr. Watson, “ I have unquestionably been better not only than I was before thestroke of paralysis seized me, but than I have been at any time since my boyhood,” a statement confirmed by Mrs. Watson, who said the appearance of her husband now was proof of the enorâ€" mous improvement in his health. “ The Pills,” she said, “ seem not only to have cured the paralysis of the face and leg, but to have effected a most remarkable change in his general health." Mr. \Vatson was always remarkably pal- lid and of a. sickly appearance, but the ruddy glow of the patient’s face confirmed Mrs. Watson’s words. “ I assure you,” said she, “ we can speak in the highest possible terms of Dr \Villiams’ Pink Pills. Nothing either at the General Hospital or from the doctors, who have attended my husband at different times, has done any- thing like the good which the few boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pills he has taken have ef- fected, and, under Providence, we feel he owes his life and his restoration to work- and usefulness to this wonderful medicine." Mr. Charles Leavesly, Insurance agent, at Cowley street Old Basford, has among other neighbors been deeply moved by the sufferings of Mr. Watson, and profoundly impressed by his miraculous restoration to health. The case has, in fact, been a topic of conversation in the entire neighborhood. Attention is drawn to the circumstance that every fact'in the above remarkable history is vouched for by independent evi- dence, which it would be morally impos- sible to doubt. It is shown by conclusive- ly attested evidence that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are not a patent medicine in the ordinary sense, but a. scieno tific preparation, from a formula long used iii regular practice. They are shown to positively and unfailingly cure all diseases arising from impoverished blood, such as pale and sallow complexion, general mus- cular weakness, loss of appetite, depression. of spirits, anaemia, green sickness, palpita- tion of the heart, shortness of breath. pain in the back, nervous headache, dizzmess, loss of memory, early decay, all forms of female weakness, hysteria, paralysis, loco- motor ataxia, rheumatism, sciatica, all diseases depending on vitiated humors in the blood, causing scrofula, rickets, hip joint disease, chronic erysipelas, catarrh, consumption of the bowels and lungs, and also invigorates the blood and system when broken do am by overwork, worry, disc use. These pills are not a purgative medicine. They contain nothing that could injure the most delicate system. They act directly on the blood, supplying to the blood its life-giving qualities, by assisting it to ab- sorb oxygen, that great supporter of all In this way the blood becom- ing “built up” and being supplied with its lacking constitutents, becomes rich and red, nourishes the various organs, stimu- lates them to activity in the performance of their functions, and thus to eliminate disease from the system. These Pills are manufactured by the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company,of 42 Holborn Viaduct, London. England, (and of Brock- ville, Ont, and Schenectady, N. Y.) and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm’s trade mark and wrappers at 25 9d a box, or six boxes for 13s 9d. Pamphlet free by post on application. Bear in mind that Dr. never sold in bulk or by the dozen or hun- dred and any dealer who offers substitutes in this form is trying to defraud you and should be avoided. Dr Williams’ Pink Pills may be had of all chemists or direct bypostfrom the Dr. Will- iams’ Medicine Co. from the above address. The price at which these pills are sold makes a course of treatment comparatively inexpensive as compared with other reme- dies or medical treatment. Willine: to Wait- “ Augustus,” said Angelina. to her lover, “You know that father has recently in- vested in a silver mine, and is going there at once, and I cannot leave mother alone. So I ask you, dear Augustus, how long would you wait for me ?” “ Wait for you, my darling?” exclaimed Augustus, “ I will wait for you until we ' .. was suddenly prostrated with a stroke ' learn how the silver mine turns out.” .l” 3;- .,,"“~ xx ' i" 1 1, .¢ m}.- , y .' . . s . #sz i "1 ’ i5 ‘ g 1 V5“ a -«.-~ ,~ 2»4~,W- o...>..m..a~.» n ,I‘ -“ <v .‘Hi'fl’u-‘a :6 IT I J» 36.31;.is I} i 1 g. ‘ ‘ ‘n‘Om...sp'-aéafi - as x!» . 7 a a "i ‘ l . l

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