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Durham Review (1897), 9 Aug 1900, p. 3

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es tTogethor er of _ picked loreign Minisâ€" i as they deâ€" the terms of > statement th and tha® oss box a% 1 give to lt sugh notesd he ind N ANGRY, 3LOF Y Pld‘pu- salet7, to deal x the k. "*Beyr «h umillt »AIN, P ople th@e visâ€" Dr D le * Iâ€"I told you this morning that my son was not living," Mr. Heatherton resumed, flushing in spite of his natâ€" rnral arrogance, beneath her steady gaze, "but he has appeared very unâ€" expectedly to me; andâ€"and it seems, from his account, that you knew of his existence." * Yes; be seated, if you please," he returned, motioning her to a chair. "‘Thank you," Mirlam responded, with a quiet politeness, " but I will listen to you here," and she laid. her hband upon the back of a chair near her, thus indicating her dctermination Rot to sit in their presence. He paused a moment as if waiting for some reply, but Miriam simply acâ€" knowledged the truth of his observaâ€" tlons by a cold bow, and he continued : sue? dii not deign to recognize Richâ€" ard Heatherton, by so much as a look, after that one first brief glance, and the man felt the intentional slight more than he would have been willâ€" Ing to acknowledge ; for, never in her youthful days, had she seemed so beaunâ€" tiful as now, in the ripeness and maturity of her perfect womanhood. * You wished to see me here, 1 beâ€" Meve," she remarked, addressing th» elder gontloman with a directness and composure which somewhat disconâ€" certed him also. H« **This denouement changes someâ€" forees and n a@gainst ber ; b best for Ned, i back ; if he d she myst die o then to hber it who had Benjan While she lay SorT She firmly believed that Richard Heatherton had entered the house, broken open the safe, and stolen the T A t« scarikt recede calling riced he she lapsed again into her musings. n hour later a servant tt r recreant husband, rienced can be readâ€" swoept up t d, leaving her all her will 1 rsel{ for the 1 ir later a servant h a message from to her trying h« "You are extremely obdurate, but I think that the law will conâ€" vince you that you have not quite so much power as you " And upon the strength of what you assert Mr. Lawson told you, do you propose to lay claim to the whole of his fortune?" demanded her inâ€" terlocutor. "Not exactly," Miriam answered, "but I shall at least make provision for my own future to such an extent as 1 may." _ z0 you mean to insinuate that I have not acted in good faith, in the examination of the papers belonging to my brotherâ€"inâ€"law ¢" hotly _ deâ€" manded Mr. Heatherton. "Not at all, sir," said Miriam, calmâ€" ly, "for 1 am confident that the exâ€" amination was honorably conducted. Inafiiitrtetndvlst stt ABBL 1 s 2i3 4 4 c i2 d The will was probably stolen at the time the safe was blown open and rifled of whatever of value it conâ€" tained." L "It has been ;E;I‘gl;,"’ was the brief reply. " We have therefore concluded," he said, "to offer you aâ€"the sum of ten thousand dollars if: you will renounce your right of dower, provided that you will also agree never toâ€"to claim any further connection withâ€"with the family. Iâ€"I trust, madam, that you will acknowledge the advisability of such an argument, both for yourself what the aspect of affaire concarning which we conversed this morning, and lIâ€"ahâ€"that is, my son thought we might, perbapsâ€"umâ€"that we might come to some mutual agrepment reâ€" garding the disposition of the proâ€" perty of my late brotherâ€"inâ€"law." n He is the thief * (, "he is the bun s house and for 1 hunt him down n ; I will sign no them." U8 me, come, Miriamâ€"b> reasonatble, cecd» to the terms my father has sed ; it will be for your interest so, for you wound stand: no e in a fight against us," Richard erton _ here interposed, in a â€"be conciliatory tone. woman‘s white lips quivered y at the sound of his voice, but other sign did ‘she betray that ard a word uttered. bent hor head in thought a moâ€" when he ceased speaking, then ted her eyes again to the face so much power as you & ~" she said to herâ€" burglar who entered forced the safe! I wnâ€"I will not spare no papers for either ze myseil o obscurâ€" ir Arrogant pride. hy ?" and with this ‘led suddenly about hless man whom she y worshiped, while cemed to penetrateo s of his soul. I esire, and you z littl»> fortuns iny trouble or through the . I shall sign all not relinâ€" m as a legal myself from f to obsenrâ€" with emed t into th to She held the paper out to him as she spoke, and his hand trembled so that it rattled in her grasp. The manis face clouded. "My darling, I did not mean that you should see it," he said, regretâ€" fully ; "I intended to destroy every paper until you were well away {rom Boston. .But, Gertrude, I am afralg. shat it is something far more " Ned accused of such _ a: dreadful crime!" she cried, with blazing eyes. " Ned a thiefâ€"a midnight burglar! Never! Papa," springing toward Mr. Langmaid, who at that moment enâ€" tered the room, " what is this horriâ€" ble rumor? What does it mean ?" All this came upon Gertrude Langâ€" maid like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky, when the evening paper was thrown in at the door, and she was the first to open it and read the appalling headlines, She stood rooted to the spot, readâ€" ing on and on, as if fascinated by the horrible tale, and feeling as if the blow must kill her. Her heart almost ceased to beat ; a Jeeling of _ suffocation oppressed her, her ears rang, and *A terrible numbness rendered her temporarily powerless, f â€"Then a feeling of deep wrath su perseded every other emotion. manner, the robbery of the â€"â€"â€" Bank. and the suspicions regarding Ned‘s agency in the bold crime, toâ€" gether with the fact of his mysteriâ€" ous disappearance. Gerturde and the friend, Mrs. Page, with whom she was to spend the sumâ€" mer, were to accompany them to New York on Friday night, see them start on their voyage and then proâ€" ceed to Halifax, going up the Hudson River to Albany, then to Niagara, down Lake Ontario and the St. Lawâ€" rence, and thence to their destinaâ€" tion. It has been stated, in a previous chapter that Mr. and Mrs. Langmaid were booked for a trip to Europe, and were to leave on that very Saturday when so much was happening to our turned, and white heavens! why c known the truth miserable marriage been annulled, and Yera, would have â€" terrible blight." With men, i anyth regar W W and bribe s i prope in this way." "Mr. Heatherton, I am a woman who for more than twenty years had to struggle against the tide, and was almost crushed by the burden of a great wrong," Miriam responded, in a low, grave tone. " I am alone and friendless, my hbeart is nearly broken with griel and garding a will, for when he had seen her previous to her departure for Nantasket, she had appeared to have no thought of reaping any pecuniâ€" ary benetit from the man who had beâ€" friended ber, and in bhis heart he cursed him for bhaving told her of it. "Isn‘t ten thousami enough? What will you take to sign off ?" he demandâ€" ed, in a sullen tone. She turned and regarded him thoughtfully for a moment, then with tense lips and waning color she ansâ€" As for Richard Heatherton, bhe was no less anxious to avoid all publicity in the settlement of his uncle‘s afâ€" fairs, on account of Vera, for he beâ€" lieved it would be almost a deathâ€" blow to his idolized child if she should discover the stigma that rested upon her birth. Yet be was in great n2ed of money, and if he could but get posâ€" session of the handsome property Mr. Lawson had left, he would then quit the country again, anmd thus Vera need never learn the truth. He had been taken wholly by surâ€" prise by what Miriam had stated reâ€" Mr. Heatherton, in his purseâ€"proud arrogance, could not endure the thought of having the facts of his son‘s early marriage, with all its disâ€" gracelful circumstances, aired before the public, as it would of necessity be, if they were driven to a lawsuit ; while, on the other hand, Benjamin Lawson‘s fortune was a fat plum worth struggling for, and he did not mean to yield it, if by any possible means he could secure it. During the interview with his fathâ€" er, previous to Miriam‘s appearance, they had arranged every thing â€" satâ€" isfactorily to their own minds, â€" and imagined that they could easily inâ€" duce her to accede to whatever terms they might choose to offer. But they now learned that the apâ€" parently frail little woman possessed a& spirit and determination that could not be easily overcome. _ She â€" had them in ber power and knew it, and meant to use it to the utmost. ‘"You can call the law to your aid if you choose, Mr. Heatherton," she resolutely returned ; "I shall be ready to meet you with your own weapons at any tirBe." He had not dreamed that they would meet such determined opposiâ€" tion to their plans. imagine," angrily retorted the bafâ€" fled man, while in his heart his reâ€" spect for the indomitable pluck of the woman increased a hundred fold. An angry oath broke from Richard Heatherton at this. rcs q Nt ng ins CHAPTER XXXYVIHI h, unti my left not r b rht ith regarding _ that ‘lage? It could have and then my child, my ive been saved from a M bow to the gentleâ€" cluded, she turned the room, without 16 offé of i her One of our readers informs us that, having seen a statement in _ some English medical journal to the effect that eulphur, taken internally, would protect a person against flea bites, it occurred to him to try it as a preâ€" ventative of mosquito bites, says the Medical Journal. Accordingly he beâ€" gan taking effervescing tablets of tartarâ€"lithine and sulphur, four daily. He provided hbhimsel{ with several lively mosquitoes, and. having put them into a wideâ€"mouthed botâ€" tle, inverted _ the bottle, _ and pressed its mou‘th upon his bare arm. The mosquito@s# settled on his skin, but showed no inclination to bite him. If this gen‘twn's experience should be borne out by {further trials it might be well for persons who are particuâ€" larly sonsitive to mosquito bites to take a course of sulphur dnrlawthe mosquito season, especially in of tho growing opinion that the .mosâ€" quito is the common vehicle of the plasmodium malarlae, ; ;. _ . .. ; . After describing the Highlander as wearing a garment which "from the waist downwards was a kind of loin cloth that exposed half â€" his thigh," the El Telegrafo censures the town council for allowing any one to appear in such guise. "Girls turned their heads away on seeing him pass," says the El "leâ€" grafo and Las Palmas, "and screamâ€" ed as if they had seen a poisonous reptile. We noticed that certain ones amused themselves with an inâ€" sane curiosity as to his Seotch stockings." He had landed from the transport Lake Erie, and on .the promenade and in the hotels the unusual sight of a "manâ€"petticoat" caused a flutâ€" ter among the local ladies, OfMficer of Highland Regiment Creates a Sensation. The correspondent of the London Daily Mail at Las Palmas, Grand Canary, reports that an officer of a Highland regiment arrayed in a kilt created a sensation in Las Palâ€" mas recently, ,.and narrowly escapâ€" ed arrest for being improperly atâ€" tired. "Oh, papa, you are cruel to doubt Ned," Gertrude cried, vehemently. "I know that he would not do a dishonest thingâ€"he is truth and honor itself, and I will have faith in him though all the world believe him false." ‘"Gertrudé, this is all folly," hop Inther returned, sternly, "and you must cease from this moâ€" ment to regard him as anything to you. He will doubtless be arrested and . brought _ to justice and our name must not be associated in any way with that of a‘ criminal." Gertrude flushed a vivid crimson at these severe words. Then every atom of color slowly faded from her face. She did not reply for a moment or two, but stood with bent head an? clasped hands, as if thoughtfully pop dering some questions of vital im portance. "I know that it must be very hard for you to accept the fact of his guilt, my dear," her father gently returned : ‘"but no one could have plotted to ruin him in this way without having first learned that he had been entrusted with those precious keys, and no one could have known that fact without being told." A ‘"Tell me what you mean, papa ; 1 will know," Gertrude parsisted, with resolute firmness, as he did not anâ€" swer her, and he saw that it would be useless to try to keep the truth from her ; accordingly he told her the whole story. She listened in silence, not once interrupting him â€" during the recital. But when he concluded, she said quiâ€" etly, but positively : "I do not believe one word of it. 1 have the utmost confidence in Ned, and nothing but his ow n confession of guilt shall ever make me distrust him. That man must have drugged him on the way from Albany, for I am sure that he would never appropriate a penny which did not belong to him. And, papa, perhaps you will think me imaginative, but something forces the conviction upon me that the same man is also at the bottom of this dreadâ€" ful affair" "It is very kind and charitable of you, Gertrude, and natural, also, 1 suppose, for you to wish to shield him," Mr. Langmaid gravely returned: ‘"but to me and others it looks very much as if Ned was an accompliceâ€"â€"" "I do not believe itâ€"I will not beâ€" lieve it ; it is only a plot to ruin him," the‘ young girl burst forth passionâ€" ately. But now, after readinz an account of what had occurred during the last fortyâ€"eight hours, his faith in the young man was sadly shaken, and the suspicion that he was in some guilty way mixed up in the affair had taken possession of him. He had always liked Ned; had beâ€" lieved him to be a noble young man In every respect, and hoped that he was going to make the darling of his heart a kind and worthy husband. When he had learned of that first robbery his sympathies had all been with Ned ; and he believed, with Mr. Lawson, that he had been made the v.lg.\tim of a bolid and dastardly plot. "The first time he went wrong !" Gertrude interposed, with pale lips, while her thoughts reverted instantly to what Bill Bunting had told her only a few days previous. "What do you mean ?" It had been a terrible blow to him when he had read, on his way home from his place of business, the startâ€" ling announcement of the bold robâ€" bery of theâ€"Bank. Mr. Langmaid flushed. He had spoken thoughtlessly, forgetting entirely, in his grief and anger over Ned‘s supâ€" posed recent rascality, for he was a heavy loser by the plunder of the bank, that Gertrude had been kept In ignorance of the Albany affair, and even now he hesitated to wound her more deeply by revealing the truth regarding the treachery and worthâ€" lessness of her lover. "I am afraid I must," her fathér sadly replied. "The first time ‘he went wromg I gave him the benefit of the doubt : butâ€"â€"* "Papa, you never can believe that Ned could commit such a crime ; that he could be so false to truth, honor, and every principle of right ?" 7 Yerlous than a mere rumor." ‘"What! do you believe it, papa ?" the young girl sharply demanded. "I am obliged to confess that matâ€" ters look rather bad for young Heathâ€" erton," he reluctantly admitted. Gertrude drew hersell up to her full height, her slender figure straight as an arrow, her head proudly poised, her eyes almost aflame from the in. tensity of her emotions. sSHOCKED AT THE KILT. PA didt Foils the Mosquito. (To jbe Continued.) it t Mr. W. D. Ketchison, dailiff, Frankâ€" ford, Hastings County, Ont., writes: "I was troubled for thirty years with itching pile: and eczansa. I could not gleep at nights and when I got warm the itching was terrible. Eczema covâ€" ered my legs down to the knees â€" perfectly raw. (A‘ftrled every â€"preâ€" paration I roui®hear of. Seeing Dr. Chase‘s Ointment advertised, 1 proâ€" cu'redte% box and iess than one boxr affec a complete cure." Dyspepsia. Mr. W. W. Hodges, Holland Landâ€" ing, York County, @tates: "I take the liberty of writing to you regardâ€" ing my experience with Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pilis, and the wonderâ€" ful cure for dyspepsia of 18 years‘ etanding effected by them with three bnutlnnuwe&uw!ms apd am a man o‘ years of age. Experience teaches slowly and at great cost. If you would profit by the experiences of others, put an end to experimenting, and cure yourself thoroughly and permanently by usâ€" ing Dr. Chase‘s Remedies. They have stood the test. . Scientific men are just like other peoâ€" ple and hate just as much to have to say : ‘I don‘t know,‘ to a plain quesâ€" tion, They have learned that ‘it is esâ€" The Writers of These Letters That When All Else Fails They Can Rely Absolutely on the Remedies of Dr. A. W. Chase. ‘"BRowever, it is well to point out that the saving clause, ‘it is estiâ€" mated,‘ corrects the two millions. Scientific men are just like other peoâ€" Flies Live About Two Weeks Says This Naturalist "Owing to the natural diffidence of flies, not much is known of their famâ€" lly arrangements or how long they live after they get to be old enough to vot?. lt is estimated, though, that if papa and mamma of the early spring could hold out to attend a family reunion of their offspring â€" held in the latter part of Augast, up wards of two millions of their own blood and kin would come to the picâ€" nic, not counting maggots in arms. Fortunately for them, papa and mamâ€" ma do not live much more than _ a fortnight. Even a fly‘s perseverâ€" ance would be unequal to the task of keeping track of two millions of descendants. As Artemus Ward says, ‘This is 2 mu‘tch.‘ "Fortunately for us, flies do not live much longer than a fortnight, for if they werefong-llved and preserved their fecundity, man would soon be foreed to look for some place where things were not quite so crowded and the real estate advertising columns would be full of, "Why Fight Flies? Secure a Planet of Your Own on Easy Monthly Payments.‘ Experience Y Khanghal is the lar, important treaty port from the mouth of the Pekin, the capital of population of more th: Canton, 1,600,000. Tenâ€"Tsin is a treaty niver kin. ID¢, rnavigation, iric science and pean professors. Good newspa;« treaty ports of | gide doings by gossip. $ The Chinese boy‘s ambition is to become a civil magistrate. Even serâ€" vants save money to educate their sons with this aim. ‘English bankers in China give naâ€" tive commercial men a name for str‘ct business honesty. If a Chinese criminal is a fuzgitive the police arrest his father, grandâ€" father, mother, uncle or aunt. Famâ€" "Jy aTfection speedily brings the man wanted to the relle{f of his relatives. Anative priest says of the Chinâ€" ese art‘cles of religion: "The men believe them. The women don‘t. There is no religion in China." Resources of the Natives. y Chipa could raise an army of 1,700,â€" 000 men, but it would be andiscipâ€" lined and only oneâ€"third equipped. Eight million cartrijges were taken Light million cartriige to Lekin two years ago . additions have been mad The Chinese posscss M ABJ Nordeufeldt, Hotâ€"hkiâ€" Lo become a sAder is a humiliation in China. The magistrates outrank the military socially. The population of China is nearly 400,000,000 â€"more than the comâ€" bined population of Great Britain, France, Russia, Germany and Japan. People in the interior of China seiâ€" dom _ read ‘newspapers. They get the‘r‘ideas of foreigners and outâ€" mm mm ; maii ifi in mm Aiiarmean Ars) ‘ _ Just pnow, when the news from | three in number at the mouth of the Chima is of such absorbing interest, | Peiâ€"Ho River. everyone feels the need of a knowâ€" Newâ€"Chang is a treaty port of the ledge of the country, its people and | British concession in Manchuria, 190 government, the cities, rivers and | mil» north of Port Arthur. sesports as well as something about We Hai Wei (Liunkuntao), British those who occupy places of authority. | base of operations. A garrisoned port There are no books of handy referâ€" | with a large, safe anchorage. ence‘ to which recourse may be had Peiâ€"Ho (north river) rises beyond for.enlirghtenment on many points reâ€" | the great, wall, flows past Pekin and lative to which there may be a pasâ€" | Tien Tsin to Gull of Liaoâ€"Tung. Naviâ€" sing interest, and hence the subjoinâ€" | gable from mouth to Pekin, 100 miles. ed compend:um will prove valuable. Hoangâ€"Ho, river of northorn China, emptying into Gull of Peâ€"ChseLee. s ':l'he People and the Army. Yangâ€"tse, river in the KiangBo> , Chinese soldiers range from 16 to province, on which the port of Nankin 20 years of age. | is situated. To become a §A or is a hnmiliatian | Taku fc 1| ver & tre OO Eczema and Piles. THE FLY FAMILY mouth of the Yangâ€"tseâ€"Kiang pulation. 586.000. Cities and it y urk D |» t] an OW W Rivers destroved, were Â¥y port on niles from China, has in a millic LT | is a fugitive ather, grandâ€" or aunt. Famâ€" rings the man his relatives. _ of the Chinâ€" n : "The men n don‘t. There tung â€" penin the best cli and most welve miles re taken constant |_ Chang Chi Tung, viceroy at Hanâ€" rly | Kow, a man of much influence with omâ€" | the people, and a believer in China ain, | for the Chinese. an. Chang Yi, director of mines and selâ€" | assistant director of northern â€"railâ€" get | ways. Favorite of th> Dowager Emâ€" Jutâ€" | press. A rising man, much in touch with foreigners. Has Taught (> 0 | _ Hus Ch‘ng Ch‘en, Viceâ€"President of â€" | Board of Works, exâ€"Minister to Rusâ€" r |slia and Germany, President of Chinâ€" | ese Eastern Railway. â€"| _ Kang Yo, a Manchu, antiâ€"foreign, r | President of the Board of War. | Kang Yu Wei, exiled leader of the e ! reform party. Imitatore of Dr. Cimase‘s remedies do not dare to reproduce his portrai% and signature, which . are to boe found on every box of his ne reâ€" medies. _ At all dealers, Edmnnso®, Bates & Comnany, ToroAtm ._ â€" _ "As she was growing weaker and weaker, I became> alarmed, and obâ€" tained a box of Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food, She used this treatment for several weeks, apd Y‘rom the first we noticed a decided improvement. Her appetite became better, she gained in weight, titecolor came back to ber {nce, nnddmg‘ndully beâ€" came strong and well I cannot say too much in favor of th‘s wonderful treatment, since it has proved such a blessing to my daughter." Nerves Unstrung. Mre. E. McLaughlin, 95 Parliament street, Toronto, states : "My daughâ€" ter wase pale, weak, languid and very nervous. Her appetite was poor and changeable. Ske could scarcely drag hersel{ about the house, and her nerves were completely unstrung. She could not slsep fi>r more than hal an hour at a time without starting up and crying out in excitement. simply another case of a Ny‘s perâ€" severance. _ He does not know, â€" he cannot understand, that it is mockâ€" ing his failure with the cry of : ‘Aâ€"aâ€"a= aâ€"ar! Did you ever get left " "â€"Bar vey Sutherland in Ainslee‘s. timated‘ acts on the same principle as a boy‘s ‘over the left, and authorâ€" izes them to tell with impunity the most jawâ€"dropping, eyeâ€"buiging whopâ€" rers, causing the public to wag hoads and cluck ‘"Tehk! Look at that now I There‘s learning for you " "There is a good deal of the ‘it is estimated‘ about the life history of the fly for the reason that the beast is hard to rear, Other insects will live, move and have their being in a box with a gauz> over it and let in the air and light. All they ask is board and lodging, and, like the eurios it a dime museum, they will answer any and all proper questions, photoâ€" graphs for sale for their own beneâ€" it Tut fit up the most ux urious quarters for fliecs, well aired and lightâ€" od, stocked with all the delicacies of the stable and the garbage ‘box, and the inmates incontinently turn up their toes and diec. While the entoâ€" mologist wonders what for, a fly buzzes past his ear. He chases it away. It comes back. He slaps at it. It dodP. buzzing gleefully, and alights agein, H* flutters his hand and shoos it from him,. H> thinks it is Every one carriee his destiny in his own bosom. Fate is but the deepest current of one‘s nature.â€"Dr. Bellegarde. Tael, a coin of silver, worth from 64.4 cents to 71.8 cents, according to province. Soucere, general torm of extortion. Kiang, or ho, a river ; hu, a lake,. Pel, north ; nan, outh ; tung, east; sl, west. &han, a meuntain : sheng, a proâ€" vince; cheng, a town :; hiang, a vilâ€" lage ; hsien, a dJistrict ; ling, a hill ; peak or pass, Fu, a prefectare. Futai, the Governor of a Province. Godown, a place for storing goods, Halkwan, Chinese maritime cu stoms. Li, a Chinese mile, oneâ€"third of a British mile. Yamen, an official residence. Tael. a ooin of siivar umrth | Fanus Prince Sheng, administrator of tele graphs and railways, head of the Imperial Bank and of the China Merâ€" chants‘ Steamship Company, a man of great power, always to be reckonâ€" ed with. Tsungâ€"Liâ€"Yamen, â€" Council of ten members acting on foreign affair«. Prince Tuan, father of Pu_ _ Chun, heir apparent, and now leading the antiâ€"foreign revolt. Tze Hsi, the Dowager Emprew. Yung Lu, the Empress factotum, generalissimo of the army. Generals Tung Fu, Niech and Kang Su. antiforeign leaders in the reâ€" Kwangsu, th> present Emperor, sou of Prince Chun. Lin Kun Yi, Viceroy at XNankin, trusted ally ol the Dowager Empress. Li Hung Chang, acting YVicmory of Cunton, trusted friend of the Dowager Empress. Prince Ching, reported dead, was lord chamberlain of the court and commander of th> Pekin field force. Prince Li, senior member of the Cablâ€" net, much trusted in the Imperial family. Peiâ€"Ho (north river) rises beyond the great, wall, flows past Pekin and Tien Tsin to Gull of Liaoâ€"Tung. Naviâ€" gable from mouth to Pekin, 100 miles. Words in Common Use. The Ruling Classes. aAdministrator of tele iIways, head of the and of the China Mer hip Company, a mar , always to be reckon the same principle e left,‘ and authorâ€" with impunity the » P_y&bulging whopâ€" While the entoâ€" what for, a fly He chases it away. of the court and Pekin field force. member of the Cablâ€" 1 in the Imperial teleâ€" the Merâ€" man

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