West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 4 Jun 1896, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

to be steadily growing, &nd â€" wnen choice fruit is shipped in prime condiâ€" tion the returns are usually satisfaeâ€" tory. There is no present danger of our overdoing orchard planting, as foreign shipments grow fir;at“' and greater. Apples are a real ury in many parts of the world. P i y _ There is .such a thing as cluttering up a dooryard with things of beauty d’. want flowers about the home, and Where room is scarce one may often combine the useful and the ornamentâ€" al. A handsome grape arbor is not out of place upon a lawn, and a row of ecurrants may be used to edge a pathâ€" way. A dwarf pear tree is as much of an ‘"ornamental" as many of the shrubs which are used especially for erv ~ burpose. .â€" * /s _ "~ * The usual cause of trouole in tryinfi to grow quinces is that not enoug trouble is taken in growing the trees. To plant them is not enough ; they must have good soil, rich cultivation and careful pruning. The fruit can alâ€" ways be grown with a good profit, for there is ever a demand. time is to apply it in the spring, soon after the blossoms have fallen, and lyon will then kill the bark lice as well as the horers. FOOLS. Whitewash is not so effective in getâ€" ting rid of the borers upon the apPIe trees as is soft soap. Boil one gallon of soap in two of water, and then add freely of crude carbolic acid. The best Keep the new strawberry bed per-'v';';.t.l;:n;.tm; fectly clean from weeds ; keep the ruu-' I have ners turned so that they will occupy 't_htlflguglfi each alternate space, leaving the inâ€" | typeâ€"are tervening ones for a path in which to of wasps, walk while cultivating or picking, and in this way they are in better shape for covering should a sudden frost overâ€" take them in May. as lar down as the pith is eaten out, and burned at once. The egg is laid about June 1 and as soon as hatched the young borer eats its way into the eane and remains until the following kgeason. HORTICULTURAL NOTES. The quality and size of fruit on old bushes is much improved by severe pruning, or thinning of fruit, and this epplies equally well to all tree fruits. The demand of the times is for quality in everything, rather than quantity,and this certainly applies to fruit growing. When currants and gooseberries have been injured by the borer, as soon as the leaves start the defective canes are easily discovered and should be cut out as far down as the pith is eaten out, Years azo I used to pasture clover a good deal and never had any bloat when I followed the plan I have describ ed, but for some years past I have not gaaturod it much for the reason that y cuiting it and feeding in the stable I could keep more than twice as much ®rtock as I could by pasturing it off. times a day to eat of the hay. A stack of straw, even, will be a great help in « clover pasture. I will remember the a«tonishment depicted on a man‘s face when he saw his cattle leave the fresh rank clover, as he said, " up to their e#e:15 and eat out of that straw stack like it was something awful good. ‘Pears like clover ain‘t â€" good pasture when they eat straw instead.‘ The truth is, nature prompts cattle, in such a case at l.tust. to take what is good for them. i TEA | â€"bAA 2. TD CEITU ads another feed of grain. If the weather is warm they are turned out agzain for the nizht without any fear that the dew on the clover will cause bloat. This is the way it goes on every day with the exception that the young cattle and dry cows have no grain after a few days. If one will practice this way there is positively no danger of " clover Meoat." A stack of clover hayy or, for that matter, any other hay in the pasâ€" ture, fixed so the cattle can eat of Jt without tramplinz on and wasting it, ls a good thing. Tt is almost a sure preâ€" ventive of bloat. The cattle will be seen leaving the green clover several li.mvs a day to eat of the hay. A stack Nee & JP dn Â¥ The foreizan Warke? for apples seem lirst, but they are not hungry. They take up the time duringz the (i:y explorâ€" ing the field eating now and then a litâ€" tle. At night they are put in the nuM:- again and given hay and have mover. At night six of them died. The attle were so hungry they ate too much. My way of doing is this: I keep my caitle always on full feed. In the morning, before they are turned out the first time in the spring, they have bad all the good hay and ensilage they will eat, amf have also had their reguâ€" lar feed of zrain. When they go onto the clover they eat a few mouthfuls at hr:t, but they are not hungry. They lalra mee 6ls ablc . 2l s 14 TURNING CATTLE ON CLOYVER. The time of turning cattle out to pasâ€" ture is at band, and soon, in the disâ€" tricts where they have clover pasture, we will hear complaints of caitle dyâ€" Ing with "clover bloat." Some men will tell you that it is the water on the clover that causes it and if they are kept off the clover when it is wet with dew or rain there will be no trouble of the kind. This may help in a measure, but the man who pins his faith on that means of prevention alone may wake up some day from his noonday nap and feeling of security to find his cattle sufâ€" fering or dying of bloat, writes Mr. C. P. Goodrich. One of my neighbors, a young farmer was careful to obâ€" serve this rule, kept his cattle in the yard without anything to eat till the dew was off (about the middle of the forencon) then turned them on the rank slover. At night six of them died. The attle were so hungry they ate too much. My way aP dAninw In Whic . . W Kex oo C TAE FARM. of zrain. If the weather I keep _ _It took the united endeavors of old Mr. O‘Rourke and Mrs. O‘Rourke to overcome the resolution of Jim to inâ€" flict summary vengeance on â€" young Patsey for the insult, in sa!mg as he supposed that he was covered with ver, min. k y L x lt _ Sympathetic Motherâ€""Yes, I _ noâ€" ticed the poor dear. I‘m afraid bher busâ€" band snores." Stop right here, ye blayg‘ard! yelled Jim, rising in furious wrath and leapâ€" ing upon the astonished Patsey; ye think beca‘se ye have an iddication and go to school wid the nobs ye can insult a poor working‘man af yer own kin like mesilf; but T‘ll show there‘s pride yit in the blook o‘ the O‘Rourkes! Anxious Fatherâ€""I saw our darling daughter in the street toâ€"day, and she looked very unbhappyâ€"miserable, in fact; only married a month, too." Why, said hbe, addressing his entirely general remarks apparently to big Jim, you have microbes all through you and about you; they‘re in your clothes, they‘re in your boidy, they‘re in yourâ€" A Patsey was discoursing of the presâ€" ence of infusorial life in all natural sub> stances. Education sometimes is a souree of trouble and _ danger to its possessor. \'oungi1 Patsey O’fi(ourke, who goes to the high schoo! and bhas mastered, or thinks he bas mastered, the first princiâ€" ples of bacteriology, was the centre of an admiring group at his Uncle Michâ€" ael‘s house one evening lately. His big cousin Jim, who hbas not enjoyed the advantages of a liberal education was present. a While on my way from Sydney in the fall of last year business compelled me tocall at Singapore for a short time, where i met a Cingalese who could, by applying rosin to both his forefingâ€" ers, produce music very similar to a violin, and, indeed almost as distinet, ‘"God Save the Queen" being his favorâ€" ite tune. He could also change | the tone so as to resemble a mandolin. t bad a slight acquaintance _ some years ago with a man who possessed the extraordinary faculity of being able to turn up his eyelids with a backward toss of the head. It was only on rare occasions that he would show his power in this direction, and the effect was most uncanny and startling. Strange to say, he had to use his fingers to turn them down again. _ I recently made the acquaintance of a gentleman who is possessed of a very feruliar Pow»r. He seems to have in his ead a duplicate set of thinking machâ€" inery, which in some cases enables him to accomplish the work of two ordinary persons at the same time. Numerous are the difficult things I have seen him do, such as adding up two columns of figures or writing two letters on enâ€" tirely different subjects at the same time, using both lef’t and right hands; but perhaps THE MOST ASTONISHING of all was a feat I saw him perform reâ€" cently, when two gentlemen, one sitâ€" ting on each side ofghim, read two difâ€" ferent paragraphs from a paper at the same time, and he correctly took them both down in shorthand with his right and left hands. \When examined afterâ€" ward the transcripts were found to be without a mistake. I hbave a strange facult{ which I think is most uncomomn. My hands â€"though soft, and of a very ordinary typeâ€"are quite impervious to the stings of wasps, though not of bees, and many can testify to the accuracy of the folâ€" lowing: T can sit over a strong wasps‘ nest, with my legs tailor fashion, enâ€" circling the hole, and catch and â€" kill with the bare hands every wasp that either goes out or comes in even directâ€" ly after having my hands washed in warm water, and _ without anything whatever rubbed over them. L "Oihine?? adlitaths ass 8. Ti t ts c doa n id d td 04 9 â€"known locally as "Fireâ€"Eater Jack" â€"would take live coals out of the grate with his fingers and thumb, one at a time, until he had filled his mouth ; then would commence to grind them up between his teeth, and often swalâ€" low the ‘"toothsome â€" morsels." You could hear the hot cinders seething in his mouth. He died between the ages of 50 and 60. The writer has seen him do this repeatedly. Although I never heard a man "whisâ€" tle a duet," I knew one ai (‘amhridfie who could do something like it. e could whistle an air and hum the acâ€" companiment in perfect tune. The piece 1 especially remember was ‘"Adeste Fideles," where the accompaniment in the fifth line (in contrary motion) and the imitative phrases at the end were faultlessly rendered. llig sls ane s Snss ind techa I know a man who never learned to read or write, and yet if you give him a directed envelope and tell him to write another like it he is able to do so, and imitate the style of writing to a nicety although he would not be able to read it when finished. and eat freshâ€"made mustard by the teaâ€" cupful without experiencing any disâ€" comfort ; yet, strange to say, when he eats an ice the perspiration rolls from hif 't:orohe:ul in large drops.. i six. The race for prestige and prowess commences at school, but it is safe to say, that in most cases at least, it does not end this side of the grave. Some of us were born to excel others in some particular fieldâ€"favored either by naâ€" ture or training to come out winners in the race. The following instances, showin? how partial nature is toward some ol her children are found in an Enghsp periodical. A friend of mine, a mechanic, possessâ€" es the remarkable and unusual faculty of being able to produce a continual current of air from an ordinary blowâ€" [npe _ such as used by watchmakers for razing and soldering. Although it seems incredible, it is nevertheless a fact that he can inflat and at the same time expel air from his lungs. The writer has known him to blow for a space of several minutes apparently without exertion, without _once _ stopâ€" ping to take breath. This is really reâ€" markable when we consider the exertion necessary to blow for half a minute. I have a friend who can Whercin a Few Favored Mortals Show superiority Over Their Fellows. We can all remember with what enâ€" vy we looked on that schoolmate of ours who could throw every other boy in the school, or with what difference and reâ€" spect we treated the urchin who could stand back five paces and hit the "coma‘" in the "bull ring" five times out of plenty of them, but they should be in their proper place. Avoid planting them in quantities at the expense of the lawn. A wide expanse of green grass is the first essential for handsome zrounds. navyry in a own in Worcestershire HIS PRIDE TOUCHED. DRINK BOILING WATER REMARKABLE FEATS. A SAD FATE. who never learned to who captured one of Gen Havelock‘s Adjutants with several followers were so f)leased at the defiant conduct of an lrish trooper that they set him free; a ponâ€"commissioned officer also gained When Perey Sandoval led a detachâ€" ment of sixty troopers against the savâ€" age. Arancanos of Southern Chili, he rode into an ambush, and after a desâ€" perate resistance the survivors of his command were captured by the savages. They were marched off towards the Sierra, and at the first bhalting place the young braves of the victors amusâ€" ed themselves with shooting arrows at the bearts of their prisoners, and thus killed about a dozen, till a jsuperior chieftain appeared on the scene and inâ€" terfered with a vehemence of disapproâ€" bation that misled the Spaniards to {laitter themselves with the hope that their lives would be spared. To their dismay, however, they soon realized the fact that the savage â€" Cabo merely objected _ to the presumption _ of the sharpshooters who had acted without orders and allowed a number of the paleâ€"faces to die so easily. Under his personal supervision the prisoners were seized one by one &nd divested of their calcones, or leather moccasins. _ An asâ€" sistant then chopped their toes off, and thus mutilated, the unfortunates were forced to dance, while the barbarians capered around with shouts of exultaâ€" tion. Taking advantage of the general uproar, Sandoval and three of his comâ€" anions managed to free their fettered . rmnds and, suddenly leaping upon their horses, %alloped awag at breakneck speed, followed by a shower of arrows. . Two of the fugitives reached the Spanâ€" ish fort a few miles abead of their purâ€" suers and were safe for the time being, but had no doubt that their less forâ€" tunate comrades were killed by inches | â€"perhafe with their own swords, as the | chief of the Araucanos was osrobablyi unacquainted with the method of our | North â€" American redskins, who proâ€" ; tect the heads and hearts of their capâ€" | tives and then use them for living tarâ€" | gets from a distance sufficient to guar- antee the protraction of the sport. I worked by horseâ€"power, and made his men rip up the British prisoners head forward, or truncate them, to vary the sport, and it is equally certain that Chieftain Joubert, of the San Domingo insurgents, excoriated some â€" of his captives; ie., flayed them, or halfâ€"flayed them, alive, and then tied them t » trees to die at their leisure. mome of the anecdotes of that masâ€" sacre pass all belie{; but there seems no doubt that one of the lieutenants of Nenna Sahib rigged up a sort of But the brutal passions of savages become altogether devilish when their vindicliveness has been stimulated by the overbearing conduct of the suâ€" perior race, as in the case of the superâ€" cilious Roman colonists of _ Western Asia. In the presence of the invincâ€" ible legions, the resentment of the oppressed populace manifests itself onâ€" ly in sullen looks,. but at the first fair chance of success the pentâ€"up rage exploded with destructive fury, and the partisans of King Mithridates stood aghast at the violence of the storm they had evoked by their promise of assistance. Eightyâ€"live thousand â€"acâ€" cording to other accounts more than 100,000 â€" of the obnoxious foreigners were butchered in a single week; the flames of revolt spread like a prairieâ€" fire, and barbarous aborigines rusbed down from the highlands of Mount Taurus and from the wild interior of Cappadocia to enjoy a share of the fun. The hatred of superior culture is, inâ€" deed, a trait of nature that makes all savages kin. When Simon de Montfort enlisted volunteers _ for _ a crusade against the beretical Albigenses, his recruiting agents met with a success that astonished their own employer, and the investigation of the subsequent massacres proved that the perpetrators of some of the most zstrocious were semiâ€"savages from the French Pyrâ€" enees, Moorish refugees many of them, and who could© have had no possible sympathy with the religious motives of the invaders, but welcomed the opporâ€" tunity to demolish the fine dwellings of the accomplished and wellâ€"dressed gentlemen in the garden lands of Lanâ€" guedoc. « ALL THE WHITE COLONISTS of a large district. "Oh, did you exâ€" pect I would get myself killed to make things easy for you?" sneered the chiefâ€" tain; "there is not a man in my tribe who has not a thousand times longed for a chance to get a whack at those fellows who ride in palanquins and grudge us the crumbs of their feast." turned, And hell no fury like a woman spurned. but the frenzy of jealousy and fanâ€" alicism is a mere trifle compared with the passion of a savage when the gorâ€" illa in his nature awakens to revenge himself upon his more civilized brethâ€" ren in Darwin. "Why did you not use your influence to prevent those atâ€" rocities?" the Wetherland Commissionâ€" ers asked Pulo Niang, the leader of the Malay rebels who had massacred The history of international war has strikingly illustrated the significance of that remark. Bigotry deadens the feelâ€" ing of pity, and it may be true that in momentary emotions. Ekrth has no rage like love to hatred *Yes, it is," replied the President. "It concerns all civilized mankind to preâ€" vent the triumph of savages, because one knows how they abuse their opâ€" portunities for revenge." "I am afraid they will disregard our request," said the commander of the Cape militia, becausce it is not any conâ€" cern of their own." Cecil Rhodes‘ Remark on Kaffir Warfareâ€" Memorable Massacres in Wars of Reâ€" vengeâ€"Furies â€" Uncbainedâ€"How _ say» ages Gratify Their Matred of Civilizâ€" ation. In the first campaign against the same tribe of Kaf{ir desperadoes who are besieging Buluwayo, Sir Cecil Rhodes, the President of the South Afâ€" rican Company, appealed to the aid of the Transvaal Republic, some 200 miles from the seat of war. THE HORRIBLE DEVILTRY OF VICâ€" TORIOUS BARBARIANS. THE PASSION OF A SAVAGE, THE SAVAGE ROHILLAS CIRCULAR SAW, The curative property of the treatâ€" ment is based on the fact that‘ the tube which is contained in each single bair is severed in the process, and the brain "bleeds," as the barbers say, thereby opening a safety valve for the congestâ€" ed cranium. A commentator in the London society press, in referring to this cure, says: _ j iss ‘"‘Try the cure when next attacked by headache, and, if the result be not satâ€" isfactory, rest assured that it is not the fault of the prcsvrigtion. but that the head is so wooden that it wouldn‘t act." In each case, he says, after the paâ€" tient had laid bare a long tale of woeâ€" of sleepless nights and miserable daysâ€" he prescribed, briefly, a simple hair cut. It is not necessary that the hair should be cropped off short, after the fashion of convicts. The latest "cure" suggested for the relief of headache is a hair cut. A certain physician in London has met with great success lately in his treatment of perâ€" sistent cases of "nervous" headaches, and he has finally disclosed the secret. London Physician Recommends Cutting the Hair as a Remedy. In that sense of the word ev?r,v civâ€" ilized man is a wizardâ€"literally a wiseâ€" ard . or knower, who can not expect to be forgiven if he should fall into the hands of savages. PnE it Dob lattrant ciatat, ts d aintat Ahircantbichint ~Lncasdascasacd as black art, and kept under the ban of the millions who had â€"surrendered their right of free inquiry. The dread of the unknownâ€""the invisible world of Satan"â€"may have bhad something to do with rousing the fury of the witchâ€" hunters, but the jeering mobs that gathered about the flames of the stake often included hundreds whom the exâ€" perience _ of many years must have taught to regard the victims as pracâ€" tically harmljess rprsons, whose real ofâ€" fense, with or without the assistance of evi. spirits, consisted in knowing a gu'r.)d ‘(‘leal more than their neighhbors. 9n Veqane on vadimines â€"Amare vhes.â€" ns\ disted the dark side of human nature. There was a time when all secular science, all true science, in fact, was stigmatized se n ica s s u V 2 i 2 T " and abuse of confidence. He contrived to let one of his relatives fall into the hands of the island Prince, who hbad established a reputation for his clemâ€" ency to prisoners of war, and then went anlo ecstasies at the success of his apâ€" peal for mercy. He sent a special enyoy to Samos to thank his generous foeâ€" man, and not only proposed a defensive and offensive treaty of alliance, but also invited the benefactor of his nephew to visit him at the capital of his province, and thus enable him to requite his kindness. Polycrates had learned by sad experience to be on his guard agâ€" ainst treachery, but be went into that peculiar trap. On his arrival at the Government seat of his alleged new friend he was at once seized and cruciâ€" fied, though he offered a ransom of a ton of gold, and protested with rare eloquence â€" _perhaps in the pathetic words of the Moorish Emir, whom Peter the Cruel had trapped in a similar manâ€" ner, "O Pedro, Pedro, que hecha por un cabellero!"â€""Oh, Peter, Peter, what a deed for a cavalier!" Polycrates was the wealthiest Prince of his age, but gold could not ransom a man who had been guilty of making his contemporaries reâ€" ahge their intellectual poverty. â€" A i emeepioe fektrrvprtabesceociiie d d acne AP Perhaps the savage prosecution of wizards may have been due to similar character traits lurking in disguise on sw ylu3! 14 L2E s l . The reputation of intellectual superâ€" iority also proved the ruin of an oldâ€" time philosopher, the island King Polyâ€" crates. He was a "tyrant," in the anâ€" cient sense of absolutism, but also a protector of learning, and, like King Frederic, an habitual scoffer at the religious superstitions of his contemâ€" poraries. Many worse despots than he had been permitted to die of old age and enjoy the post moartem honors of demigods; but the neighbhors of the ruler of Samos combined again â€"and again for his ruin, and one of chem, the Governor of a Persian colony, at l:}sti lzllccomplished his purpose by an act o e ADFE that £1. 30 Jif C000 , i00ye . AMPCE AACOOERE out that the leader of their adversaries was a philosopher, skeptic, poet and could not resist the temptation to make him ascertain the occasional superiorâ€" ity of brute force to genius. him in the face, and left him for dead â€"aAs good as killed, in fact, for he died a few hours after his removal to a hosâ€" pital. As a rule, the Moscovite boors are a rather kindhearted sort of halfâ€" barbarians, and in several wars with their _ Western neighbors refrained from the plunder of nonâ€"combatants, but in all the campaigns against the Great Frederick they behaved worse than Turks. Of the political quarrels of the two countries they understood next to mothing, but they had found T PÂ¥ t unc h ... . tb cA ad lbtashatms iess Mhsowedactnn of clothing, merely to destroy them, and then maltreated him in every conâ€" celvable way, kicked him about, struck t NOVEL HEADACHE CURE. BASEST INHOSPITALITY miges. Indeed, the ordinary > | man recognized this pri le ! long ago. _ Evéryone knows that | let disease or injury affect this part of | the human system and daath is almost ‘ certain. Injure the spinal cord, which In the matter of good health temporâ€" ising measures, while possibly successâ€" ful for the moment, ean never be lastâ€" ng. Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they amre using is simply a passing Incident in their exâ€" perience, bracing them up for the day, or somethln: that is getting at x. seat of the disease and is surely and permanently restoring. The eyes of the world are literally fixed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it n.s & nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" der, but critical an xperienced men have been studying trl!l medicine for vkars, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities carrot be rlmta. The great discoverer of this medicine was posseased of the knowledge that the seat of all disease is the nerve centres, situated at the base of the brain. Ip this belief he had the best sctentists and medical men of the WORA wHEN EVERT OTEER EELPRR BJ FALD it MRB Are Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. TKE EfES OF TXE WORL k. / ~y9MS$8 2 = r/ 2 4 ".‘..'_ 7 ; ‘4‘6\ 2X T ' 2.‘. fi /.'f: ’."'7,',,’,;,’. & \\: "g’:f' \\\‘\n {és .fa"'““ ",:- ‘,, > R‘ 1 v 5A . F on Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. th&’. Renders Failure Impossible. k & * nnd it “\\\\l ‘ AMERICAN . > NERVINE & {ble with medical treatment unr ally, and with nearly all medicines, is | that they aim simply to treat the ofgan | that may be disessed. Bouth American Nervine passes by the organs, and fimâ€" mediately applies its ourative powers |to the nerve centres, from which the organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fuid. The nerve . centres healed, and of necessity the orgar which has shown the outward evidence ‘only of derangement is healed. 1ng;â€" #estion, nervousness, impoverishtd , blood, liver complaint, all owe their origin to a derangement of the nerve centres. Thouseands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have become so desperate as to bame the -kl?? of the most eminent physicians, because :outh American Nervine has gone to quarters cured there. | ’g. oloo dm world have not been ’dllm. in the lnqullz Into the suoâ€" tess of South American Nervine. P:s_ Agents for Durham and Vicinit y. , At is true, at its wond CONG) (CANNMBAL STRANGE FEASTS OF THE Ci@ GENTLEMEKN, Amazons Killed in Ba to Furnish Food For Tablesâ€"A French Tra an the Congo. The cannibal kings ®till adhere to their h Dongo "I kn« and Don enough {mm'ia rhat 1 Receivin most finished. Will the g man state his errand t" most powerful chiefs along and uf&d by conquest m::y amny princess ol the she vgeer my bheart i and hber virtues wil When hunger of ti Dongo he will but of his queen and th flee away. Great power in battle and wisdom in council.‘ *"**Then,‘ said I, pointing : those things suspended from of the but are the remai wife t "*The white man has sai *"‘And you are smoking serve it ?" "*With gnyers and | i which you have interrupte the King. ‘Had it been a his death would have been : his presumption. But the â€" THE CANNIBALS®‘ BE "I promptly stated it. As ad Dongo wznt. into the b down the portions of smoke bmc::tdout the box in body been placed to cons the scene of battle, nnd.h fou King Dongo may to this da N his courage by an acca by“nd smoked yuc.y *"*‘Cheer upâ€"cheer up "l’bigfi’s may not be so bad * *Things are very bad it the monarch ; ‘but, since so much, I will not lose he I eat of her flesh hber cou some my courage ; she wa all the warriors of the L eat of her flesh her wis scome my wisdom ; she ww so inhospitably for shutting yourself i nthese unmaniy of the great war "‘Alas, mo,‘ replied the is all for this woman. Unb that I am, I gave nearly h to buy herhg'um lho-x' lriil»e. very power and may de iVG’{ tusks and ostrich much cattle for her death. all. She was the chief w household. _ Never â€" were farms as those she superint ber bhalf my revenue is a« _in the min interior 1 saw ed from the r legs and bead for a hbreath of sullenly follows woman‘s. in the cer waood fire was . smo strange odor that h appro«chmn£ U times intensifi King in his n M DVe 1y n )y "Certain it is he became 1€ n D The fo wait n oraliz A STRANG 8 sMC W h nd r|x ivier mvey 1 im t e vill n i they w 1 been | he minu at is A HORR x0 d iowing | ) longer nz imy bi Do )2 w m NC D »ad of In the iP"® imt h n in Te Ln n n RID h 1 T® n 11 m 1 her n n Lt 3

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy