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Durham Chronicle (1867), 13 Aug 1903, p. 6

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Standald Bank of Eanada. HEAD OFFICE. TOBOIHO. 0.9.3311), â€" .â€" MANAGER A general Banking business trans- acted. Drafts issued and collections nude on all pninta. Deposits re- ceived and interest allowed at cur- rent rates. “mics in all principal points in On- tario, Quebec, Manitoba, United Staten and England. Interesc allowed posits of 51 and tttomion and cv customers living Furniture . . . Cnpiul Authorized . . . 82,000,000 Paid Up ....... . ..... 1,000,000 Bourve Fund ........ 850.000 arms In Anya muons pm JABOB KRESS. DBERIXG Binalvrs. Mowmv, Ra'tw: and Twines. Wilkinson’s levs. Land Rollers and Diamond Smooth- ing Harrows. McGiH Turnip Sowwrs. Dowsell’s Chums. Washers and “'riugers, U. S. Cream Separators. Cameron Dunn Hay Forkq. Snowbui Palmm's Also Uri DURHAM AGENCY. DURHAM. Wool . . Wanted Wagans, Buggies, Etc. Farm 5. . . Machinery Custom Carqing‘ aqd Spin Yarns. Blankets and Flannels el~ we” in stock. Ready-made Cloth. lag of the latest design kept i9 stock. Fresh Groceries always in ‘- ‘â€"A-‘ D-:n.- . P. SAUNDERS JOHN CLARK THE SAVINGS BANK. That is; sure to please can always be purchased here. stantl P L 0 W ‘. .- Cv v- “I. Also a Fth Class Hearse always in connection. Em- buhning u speciaity. .1. KELLY, Agent. a Number of Horses for Sale. NB 0 Machine Uil, Harness ()il, Axle Grease and Hoof Ointment, go to The highest. price in Cash or Trade for any quantity. Iv--- ' ___ 11in}: promptly Rtended t6 and sahshction guaranteed. stock at ved on Savings Bank de- and upwards. Prompt (every facility afforded ing at a distance. 3‘. fl POINTS and a full general repairs con. kept. ‘on hand here. u £2165 The Harnessmaker. mtham szom as and Democrats .London. on hand the Lowest Prices. DURHAM. ONT. DU RH AM 0ND. ONTARIO was “'llll filCuLv "‘“"'r"'- t pagianles rmryued into the toune of Abuyle the V111 day of Octolwr by the Dolphin. which receyucd her with greate honor. She was apm-arcilled in cloth of siluor. her horse was trapped in gold- smythes work very rychly. After her fol- lowed xxxvi ladics all thcr pall‘reys trap- pml with crymsyn vcluet. cmhraudored: aftv-r the folowud 02w charyott. of cluth 0t tyumw. the Sucondn clothv of g0th and the third (.‘l‘ymsyn vvluot (-mbruudorod with the kyngors armr-s lat-rs. full of roses. After thwm foluwml a great nom- bvr of archers :md thvn wzzrxons hulnn with their smf. jreatc- was the rivhcs in ‘ ' â€"- â€" ,_- 6111‘. t1 the same 1 Mary in t bothe appa After the? When we met the ki'.‘"; about a league this side of Ahheville, and when Mary beheld him with the shadow of death upon his brow. she took hope, for she knew he would be but putty in her hands, so manifestly weak was he, mentally and physically. As he came up she whipped her horse and rode by him at a gallop. sending me back with word that he must not he so ardent; that he frightened her, poor, timid lit- tle thing, so afraid ofâ€"nothing in the world! This shocked the French court- . lens, and one would think would have i offended Louis, but he simply grinned l from ear to ear. showing his yellow 1N fangs, and said whimperingly: “Oh, the game is worth the trouble. Tell her majesty I wait at Abbeville.” The old king had ridden a horse to meet his bride in order that he might appear more gallant before her. but a litter was waiting to take him‘back to Abbeville by a shorter route, and they were married again in person. Agaln' a quotation from Hall is sub. stunted: Mondays the .v1 dayo ot Noueber, the! the saydo queue was receyued into the cyteo 3t P_a_r_ys after tho order that tolow- -_--_ -A AL- -â€"“AA n.-. ‘- V- v- “-iw â€"-â€"-__ :t'h. Fix-gt the sat-do ‘6: the cytea met her with cute Barnett: Denys; £1.11! c0819! 91 md highly ( 9 vaosdaye lzuly y in: ame Hi .Yllb‘ Jar n J _____ he groan: vhurch of Abuyle, ruled in golds-smythes woorke. magma was done that was a kc: and fest and the ladyes of uhlv outrmoyncd. uf. Greatv was money. and ha: brought into F r the (laye of Say hly outrmoyncu. (layer lwy'lg the x daye of ‘ u Englishmen vxvept a It “Hm-rs with the snydo (111' mm] whicho was a great {5 3m, for some had somed- hope of profermvnt and sc nest mnms left them 10 so. m' they wor out of séru I) vwml a grunt nomo‘ hen wwmns hula!) :- was the rivhcs in M] hangynges that nto Framw‘. The of Suym-tn Denyce, 3 mariml 1h...- lady :0. Was a great 80r- mc had scrum} her refermvnt and some : )vft them .to scum for out. of séruice, take thought in so way returning, and nor 'us no remedy. rdcs had done 1hvr h kynge wyllml Um tyne so gum: to (13 yo 0! OC- goxosmymea woorxa ‘wun smppea gyn,‘ AL ‘kn n-nufn- : and after them mett her at the presto: i and religious whiche were estemed to be i .iiiM. The queue was in a chyre coured ] about (but not her ouer person) in white . clothe of golde, the horses that drewe it _ couered in clothe of golde, on her bed a g coronal], al of greate perles, her necke‘ and breast full of Iuels, before her wente a. i. garde of Almaynes after ther fascion. and ' after them :11 nobleman. as the Dolphyn, '_ the Duke of Durbon, Carynalles. and a? greate nomber of estates. Aboute her: person rode the kynge's garde the which . “or Scottes. On the morowe bega the“ tastes. and the queue stode so that al '. men might see her, and wonder at her beautie, and the kynge was teble and lay ; on a couche for weakenes. So Mary was twice married to Louis. and. although she was his queen fast and sure enough. she was not his wife. You may say what you will, but I like a fighting woman. one with a touch of the savage in her when the occasion arises. one who can fight for what she loves as well as against what she hates. She usually loves as she fightsâ€"with all her heart. So Mary was crowned and. was now a queen and hedged about by the tin- seled divinity that hedgeth royalty. It seemed that she was climbing higher and higher all the time from Brandon, but in her heart every day she was brought nearer tO‘him. ”‘0‘; vv “-1 w--. "t." _ There was one thing that troubled her greatly, and all the time. llenry had given his Word that Brandon should be liberated as soon as Mary had left the shores of v.‘ngland. but we had heard nothing of this matter, although we had received severe‘ letters from home. A doubt of her brother. in whom she had little faith at best. made ‘ an ache. at her heart which seemed at l l i l l 5. I l times likely to breakâ€"so she said.' One night she dreamed that she had 1 witnessed Brandon’s execution, her brother standing by in excellent hu- mor at the prank he was playing her. and it so worked upon her waking hours that by evening she was ill. At last I received a letter from Brandon, which had been delayed along the road, eontaining one for Mary. It told of his full pardon and restoration to favor, greater even than before, and her joy was so sweet and quiet and yet so softly delirious that I tell you plain- ly it, brought tears to my eyes. and l ("mld not lmitl ilzt‘in bank. The marriage, when onee determined ugmn. had not east lzer down nearly so deep as I Z:::(l e:-t1:eeted. and mum she rm; to he quit:- ebeerl'ul and happy. 'L'Ezls. tilled um \'.'iill regret. for I ilnmygbt ez' how lil':“!'?".\.‘. “inst suffer. and fell :lmi lll‘l‘ incur} \'..-‘.\‘ :1 pnnr, iiilllsy thing. I) l'oz' l‘.:'.;?:.‘.'~" i.:';;l" iiml in run-h :1 will- flil. (':.;;’.';<';:"1ii‘ ('l"-r".il"“ :15 Mary." “Sir [Div-(in (':i."\i{mi~.‘;i. you hot-(1 not take 13w H0113)?” I» speak 21) MW at 1111 win“ you ran llrw izzhulmzrn more 1‘0- s~‘,;><‘<'1l'ni (-(mi‘m‘niti: li'jl iiiz-Uroszsz. 'l'lle _ Gilll'V'll krows What she l.‘~‘ about. lmt it ' ' alumna-4 that you (“:Hmot set-”ii. I 300 it plaivly though. although No word 11:19. ever been ?~"!\"k('ii to me on the sub. jm't‘. As to Brandon living tied to her, it seems to me she is tied to him and ' that he holds the reins. lie eould drive her into the mouth of purgatory.” “Do you think so?" “I klxow it.” I remained in thought a moment or tWo and eoueluiled that She was right. In truth, the time had come. to me when I believed that Jane, with her good sense and acute discernment, could not be wrong in anything. and l . think so yet. So I took comfort on; faith from her and asked, “Do you re- 1 member what you said should happen before we return to England?" : Jane hung her head. “I remember.” . “Well?” . She then put her hand in mine and i murmured, “I am ready any time you Wish.” Great heaven! I thought I should go out of my senses. She should have . told me gradually. I had to do some- ‘3 thing to express my exultation, so I i walked over to a bronze statue ot' Bacchus, about my sizeâ€"that is, height ~nut my hat, which I had been carry- ing under my arm, on his. head, cut a few capers in an entirely new and equally antic step. and then drew back and knocked that Bacchus down. Jane thought I had gone stark mad, and her eyes grew big with wonder. but I walked proudly back to her after my victory over Bacchus and reassured herâ€"with a few of Mary’s message° that I had still left over, if the truth must be told. ‘Then‘ we made arrange- ments that resulted in our marriage next morning. Accordingly Queen Mary and one or two others went with us down to a lit tle church, where, as fortune would have it, there was a little priest ready t0 Join together in the holy bonds of wedlock little Jane and little mercur- erything so appropriate, you see. I 8nPpoaile in the whole world we couldn‘t have found another set of conditions so harmonious. Mary laughed and cried and laughed again, and clapped her hands over and over, and said it was -L- “Inlet a play wedding,” and. as kisses! J. 3,991.4 quietly unnamed om- Iz'uulpiv so ligltfly. wivnv :tlmut 1'. MW She only .‘xlzln' is all right ’ said ShC‘. :H' 3111': v.1" \\ :11 turn revt I um think. mumps. You ..:1i:. manages to hmo l)‘ in HA! mzd." lm'w any comfort to give, , Jam». ”on! most keenly ‘\ I‘nrel'? ”Dd ND 24110)] fil Will- ! We were barely settled at court in ‘. Paris when Mary began to put her 3 plans in motion and unsettle things g generally. I could not but recall Hen- need a beautiful diamond necklace that was worth tull {lunarâ€"aside. that is. from the millions of actual value be- cause it came‘ from Mary. "A play wedding" it was. and a may life it has been ever since. Jane thought I had gone stark mad. ry’s sympathy toward Louis, for the young queen soon took it upon herself to make life a burden to “the Father of His People,” and in that particular line I suppose she had no equal in all the length and breadth of Christendom. I heartily detested King Louis, large- ly, I think. because of prejudice ab. sorbed from Mary. but he was. in fact. a fairly good old man. and at times I could but pity him. He was always soft in heart and softer in head. espe- cially where women were concerned. Take his crazy attempt to seize the (‘ountess of (‘roy while he was yet Duke of Orleans. and his infatuation for the Italian woman. for whom he built the elaborate burial vault-~umch it must have comforted, her! Then his marriage to (lietaterial little Anne of Brittany. for whom he had induced l’ope Alexander to divorce lillll i'rou '__ . v‘lw â€"vâ€"' the poor little cripplmi owlot Joan. In consideration of this divorce he had put Caesar Borgia. Pope Alexander’s son, on his foot, financially and polit- ically. I think he must have wanted the owlvt lmck again bt‘fOl‘t' he was done with Anne, hvt'nnso Anne was a tormugant and ruled him with the heaviest rod of iron she could lift. But this last passion, the flickering, sputtering flame 01' his (lotaxgo. was tho worst of all. hoth snhjt-utiwly and ohjoctively. both as to his senile fond- ):vss {or the English print-0:523 and her impish tornu-nting of him. From the first. he (whim-ti tho most \‘ioiont delight in Mary. who rl-gmid it by holding him oft? and o titling him in :l mamwr so rool. nnduvimrs and admit tlm it stzzmpml hvr (mom) of till the arts t‘cnl- inim» and .ivmouizw. l’nrtlon mo, 1:1- (““8. if I t-ouplo thuw tflm) arts. but you mmr mlmit tho"; are at timvs :aomv- What comp havo perm win! perhaps riding with some of :zidvd and :11): they could. I? in pum’mit of would uxpuxmlutu «'mlld catch her. :1 Iiku :1 man who is t 12ml joke of which Iikn :1 man who is the V1 timl jnko of which he ( vnjoy the point. 011 suc’ mmm laugh in his {a : x'gz'yâ€"«whivh was so on: - and. I grieve to sa’y. w alhzzmt .swmr at him h man the [)101156 thoug‘ 11 11ml dmnonizut. l'nruon if 1 mmplc flux-:0 two arts. admit the? are at tinn akin. Soon she oludvd ulvtvlj. that 101' daffl he V’ :2 of the court gallant“, W110 l abetted her in «way way .1. 110 became almost frantic t n1“ lzix‘ elusive ili'lllt‘. and [ruzémluio with her, wlwu 110 ch her. and smile um‘aslly. 1) who is the victim of a prac- of which he (loos not ave or point. On such (mansions,- she 11in in his raw. than gruw hit-h was so easy for her to do HP“) to sa’y. would smxmtinios .’.'(*:ll' at liLm in :1 mzmnvr to for 1131:,“ of 1101'. ‘ w: lking ‘(ould ll 1 so nut nsry would often pout for days hr [other and pretend illness. Upon ono occasion she kept the king waiting at her door all the morning. While she. having slipped through the window. was riding with some of the young peo- ple in the forest. When she neturned -â€"through the window -â€"-she went to the door and scolded the [)0 3r old king for keeping her waiting penned up in her room all the morning. And he apol- She changed the dinner hour to noon in accordance with the English cus- tom, and had a heavy supper at night. when she would make the king gorge himself with uiihmlthtul food and coax him "to drink as much as Brother Henry.” which invariably resulted in Louis de Valois hiding lodgment under the table. This amused the whole court except a few old cronies and physicians, who. of course, were scan- dalized beyond measure. She took the king on long rid '3 with her on cold days. and would jolt him almost to death and freeze him until the cold tears streamed dm'n his poor pinched nose, making him feel like a half ani- mated icicle. nnd wish that he. were one, in fact. At night she would have her balls and keep him up till morning. drinking and dancing. or trying to dance. with her until his poor old heels. and his head, too, for that nmiier. Were like to fall off; then she would Slip away from him and lock herself in her room. December. say 1. let May alone; she certainly will kill you. liesl‘iite which sound advice, I doubt not December will go on coveting May up to the end of the chapter, each ohl i‘ellmvâ€"--heing such a fine man for his age. )‘u‘ll under- standâ€"fondly believing himself an ex- ception. Age in :1 fool is (lzminnhle. Mary was killing Louis :is certainly and deliberately as if she were feeding him Slow poison. lie was Very weak and decrepit at best. beingr compelled frequently upon puhiic occasions. such. for example, as the, mronntion tourna- ment of which I have spoken, to lie upon a couch. I --A Mary's eonduet was really cruel. hut t‘ then. remember the provocation. and I that she was acting in self defense. ‘ All this was easier for her than you 1 might suppose. for the king’s grasp of ' power, never very strong, was hegin- 1 ning to relax even what little grip it . had. All faces were turned toward the rising sun. young Franeis. duke of . Angouleme. the lqing's dista it eousin. who would soon be king in LotSis‘ place. As this young rising sun. himself vast- ly smitten with Mary. openly eneour- aged her in what she did. .‘he eonrtiers of course followed suit. and the old king found himself surrounded by a court only too ready to be amused by his lively young queen at his expense. This condition of affairs Mary wil- comed with her whole soul. and to aeeent it and nail assuranee. 1 fear. played ever so lightly and eoyly upon the. heartstrings of the young duke. whit-h responded all too loudly to her \'el\‘el tough and almost frightened her to d -ath with their volume of sound later on. This Francis d'-\n:.~'ouleme, the dauphin, had fallen desperately in love with Mary at iirst sight. something against which the tart that he. x'as married to Claude. d:iu:hter of Louis, in no way militated. lie was a very distant. n.4atiw- of Louis. going: away haul; to St. Louis {or his heirshlp to the French erown. The king: had daughters in plenty. hut. as you know, the gallant Front-lime}: say. aeeording to their law salic. “'l‘he realm of Franee is so great and glorious a heri- tage that it may not he taken by I woman." Too great and glorious to be taken by a woman. foi'moth! Fraziee - Wnllltl have lawn vastly heter 011' had .|.. 1“..." H'an'nl'llt‘tl luv a woman now distant. relative of Louis back 10 St. Luuis for h the French (:x'mvu. '1‘] daughters in plenty. but. the gallant Frmn-lnuvu : to their law salic. “'1 France is so great and _:2 tame that it may not Ii woman." Too grout 21ml takvu Ivy a woman. :‘mw would have lmvu Vastly she lwon gm'vruml by : and thou. for a country pars under a «nu-0n. , _ slu- lN‘t‘ll gm’ornw! in: a \dllllztu in... and tho-n, for :1 muntry always pros- [it‘l'S lilltlt‘!‘ :i «itlvvit. Frauds lzml i‘nt‘ many years lth‘d ill court as the rm'vanicml l: ir. and. as the. t‘iltziulil \x'asi (-aiiui his distant cous- “l'nvlv” Louis in in Louis “l'nvhu” "('v Urns Garcon," turn called i“l';|ilt'i.\‘ and Qlit‘t‘ll Mary milled lzitu. “Bitnisienr. mun hean ills." in :1 nun-I; inotherly' manner that Was \‘i‘l'j.’ laMlialvln. .\ mother of (‘ltl‘lilt‘t‘ll to a "good boy" of ‘l‘A’t'llly-h‘fn: [lanai-rolls relationship! Anvi dangerous indeed it would have. been for Mary had she not been as; pure. and true as she was willful and I inmetuous. “Mon beau iils” allowed? neither his wife no: the respect he: owed the king: to stand in the. Way of! his \‘t‘l'y marked attention to the (ween. ‘ His position as heir and his long resi- dence at court. almost as son to Louis, ' gave him ampleopportunities for press. ! ing his unseemly suit. lie was the 3 first to see Mary at th.- meeting place itliis side of Ahheville. and was the l king's representative on all occasions. l “Beau his” was rather a handsome . fellow, but thought himself vastly i handsomer than he was. and had some ‘ I talents. which he was likewise careful : to estimate at their full valhe. to say l the least. He was very well liked by women. and in turn considered himself |{irresistihle. He was Very impression. ' able to feminine charms. was at head l a libertine, and. as he grew older. be came a debauchee whose memory will *‘ taint France for centuries to come. ‘ Mary saw his weakness more clearly ‘ than his wickedness. being blinded to 1 the latter by the veil of her own inno- ‘ cence. She laughed at and with him. ; and permitted herself a great deal of i his companyâ€"so much. in tact. that I I grew a little jealous for Brandon’s i sake, and. if the truth must be told. for g the first time began to have doubt of i her. I seriously feared that When i Louis should die Brandon might and a much more dangerous rival in the new king. who. although married. would probably try to keep Mary at his court even should he be driven to it the extreme of divorcing Claude as UOuuu\ w--- _ I believed’ln case Mary should vol- untarily pmve false and remain in France either as the wlfc or the mic- tress of Francis. that Brandon would quietly bntgurely gptrlec come means many yours lived at )u‘nitcvd h'ir, and, al iliml his distant cous- " “Fm-iv" Louis in is “(in (:ms Garcon," milled 11in. “Monsieur, in :1 limtk muthorly U (the ht lite. and l hood ho ml. [mummy vitamin». shoutths queen's conduct. snd sha unslly sdmit- Mthstshedidnotllhsit.” I. unsble to mmsin silent sny longer. determined to put Mary on her mum. and for thst pnmosespoiteveutroelytoheronthe subject. “Oh. you goose!” she said langhtngly. “He is slinost as guest a tool as non. ry." Then the tests came to her eyes. and half angrily. half hysterically. shaking me by the arm. she continued: “Do you not know? Can you not see that I would give this hand or my eyes. almost my life. just to fall upon my face in front of Charles Brandon at this moment? Do you not know that a woman with a love in hor heart such as I have for him is safe from every one and everything; that it is hm' shoot anchor, euro and fast? llaw you not .Wlt enough to knmv that?" “Yes. I have,” I responded, for the time completely silenced. With her (I- vorite tactics she had. as usual. put me In the wrong, though I soon came again to the attack. 7‘But he is so base that I grieve to use you with him." “I suppose he ls not very good.” she responded, “but it seems to be the way of these people among whom I have fallen. and he cannot harm me." “Oh. but he can! One (loos not go near smallpox. and there is a moral contagion quite as dangerous, it not so perceptible. and equally to be avoid- ed. It must be a wonderfully healthy moral nature, pure and chaste to the core. that will be entirely contagion proof and safe from it." She ’hung her head in thought and then lifted her eyes appoallngly to 1110. “Am i not that. Edwin? Tell me! Tell me frankly; am I not? it is the one thing of good i have always strive!) for. 1 an: so full of other faults that if I have not that there ls no good in me." Her «yes and voice were full of tears. and i knew in my heart that I stood before as pure :1 soul as ever came from the hand of God. ”You are. your majesty: never doubt." I answered. “It is. pro-omi- nontly the can thing in womanhood to which all mankind knot-ls." And I fell upon my luwv and klssml hor hand with a snow of neveronco. faith and trust that has nvyor loft Inc from that day to this. As to my estimate» of how l-‘z'aza-‘zs Would not when Louis should din. yntl will sue that l was right. Not 'Imig after this Lady Cilh'kfldi‘n and i won- given permission to return to England. and izmnmiiatoly pi't-parvd for ntll‘ lmnw‘.‘.':il'tl jntll'llt‘y. As m- lut'I. Mary plzu-ml in my hands a initrr for Brandon. whoa» hulk wad so l't‘:l.‘4\‘l!l'lllf.f limit I knvw lav lltltl iwvor lit-“n out of ll"? 13 ”lights. I 100de alt tlu- lunar a nmmvlt and said. in all u-whnmum: "Your maivsty. had i not coodby!" So we loft Mary. fair. sweet girl queen. all alone among those tor- riblu strangers. Alone with mm little English maiden. seven years of age. Anne Boleyn. of a death M three fm't of this play at 1110. time. Lynn: in “N a bush lmsioh'y. worried I and thinking of the an which ho had lwvn warm :m'm'u of the prosvnvo Mu of this playful athlor ls rapid and pam- PMS. and thn Prvnvhman I‘m-ul'tlml aft- (-l'\'ard his rvflm-tiun that it was hot- tor perhaps to die that way than by gout or rhmunatlsm. Artur an lmur of agony. howovor. ho slippml out of loud. struck a light and wont alumt lho mum searching for tho. walking silvk ho had carrled espm-lally for dvfonm- against reptiles. Aftor a weary and m-rmuI hunt he found it at last among the dis- ordered bedclothos. Early Rising Not Alwan a Virtue. Thousands of neople lmvv nc- c'llu. e whntmer nbout their hour of ram: in the lnorning. Later or «:ir}; r'. Hut. hour is fixed for them by the “quire- metals of the ofliee. the slum «.z' the classroom, by the time table or me mil- road. by the arbitration of their em- ployers or the necessities of their oin- ployees. llut in the mm manifold where personal liberty is enjoyed it should not be thoughtlessly restrieted simply because of the domestic tradi- tion that early rising deserves praise and late rising blame. Breakfast may often be a movable feast without materially disturbing the routine or an orderly housekeeping day. Invalids. mothers whose rest has been broken by teething babies and. above all. rapidly growing children. should have their sleep out. Nature demand: this. and violence is done to her when Wt; need to repeat it over and over to our hurrying. anxious. toiling Amer- ican men and womvn: ltost. rvst and again rest. [)0 not think time iii spent that is spent in repairing the ravages of our well nigh incessant activity. Dnrin First American Peel-“c. It is recorded in a history at the United States that an Indian clue! named Mante. utter baptism. was made a peer. necelving the rank of baron and assuming the title of Lord of Roanoke, so far back as the year 1587. Somewhat later. In 1009. the title of Lord Delaware was granted by James I. to the new governor of “mink. Later um. 1n 1033.th L; unonc his coronuflon hone“. con- térrea tie we of Viscount upon 81: Wimun Alena“. DH Slnx O'R ho BE t ””31le H‘dl‘l‘. as :lung. I 13111! addt mouwlzt and sum. m an “.‘om' mujos had I not 1' an 0x! ':1 box fur it?" ”Mums little laugh. and 'Rell‘l Adder. mr through AI . «loath was om ll. as it 800nm] H mus s it 05' as she \' tlwro : \\' lth [it'll snzlkt «me Hi lw low-ame side of him 0. pmlmhly unly nlmut nu the bite ml mud pain- »mmlml aft- It was hot- mus ml to him no night in Austrulh ('luse x" ‘1‘,

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