Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 25 Dec 1884, p. 6

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

 wmimw^i^- 'a wonderful clock. The astronomical clock in the cathedral t Ttnâ€"nrnn wwthe rival of the celebsra- ted Strasabare clock until both were out- done by the one at Beauvais, completed in 1876. That at Beauvais ia moat ataAing in its performance, for it is in- tended to convey to the carelesa a warn- ing of the frightful conBtquenceaof the miaase of time, and at a certain hour an opening diacloaea the lost in torment and flames. The religions idea of the Besan- con clock, however, is more comforting. It is meant to teach this lesson "Having, through »in, lost a happy eternity, through our Lord's death and reanrrecticn we regain the same by a good employment of our time and so the spiritual idea of the horloge is not death, which is the end of man's time, but the Saviour who restores it to him." Our walk to the cathedral was full of interest. We passed the house where Victor Hugo was born, the archbishop's palace, the Roman columns, the Porte Noire, dating from the days of Marcus Aiurelius, and so into the church, where we rang an eleccric bell to summon the attendant. A voice high above us called down, " "Who is there " " Two straDgera to see the horloge." " Pass through the door to the right and ascend. " So we mounted the stairs till we reached a landing where we were met by a neat-lookiDg woman, who civilly invi ted us to enter a' Email room in the tower. She had a little wand in her hand to point with, and she began her deecription in a rapid way, which proved that she had said it often and knew it by beart. " This remarkable horloge," she began, " is in the Renaissance style. The entire time taken fer its construction was three years, and there are thirty thousand pieces of steel and copper in the machin- ery, and seventy-three dials. The height is six yards, the breadth two yards and twenty-four inches, the depth one yard. "There are seventeen dials arranged around this central one," she continued, pointing with her little baton to the dials below a large clock face. "The middle ones gives the days of the month and the month of the year. Eight small dials, you observe, surround this. The top one indicates the equation of time this one at the left shows the length of the days that at the right the length of the nights; below this the left-hand one gives the four seasons the right, the twelve signs of the zodiac this one, the days of the week the other the signs of the planets from which their names are taken, and the lowest one gives the date of the year. " The eight larger dials show first the seconds then here on the left the time the sun rises for every day in the year there on the right, the hour that it sets. The others give the ecclesiastic reckon- ing. The first on the left gives the gol- den number the second the Solar Cycle; the third the Epact the fourth the Dominical Letter, and the fifth the Ro- man Indiction. " On the right and left we see above four dials larger than the sixteen below them. Two »how the periodical eclipses of the sun and moon, and two the com- mon and bissextile years, the common fcenturies. The sixteen smaller dials show the time at Paris, Rome, Vienna, St. Petersburg, New York, Algiers. Lor- don, B^tavia, Jerusalem, Pekin. Taiti, Cayenne, Madrid, Constantinople,' and Calcutta. The New York dial had a home look. "We took advantage of a short silence, during which the woman paused to take breath, to compare the time with that of Besancon. We found the New York time nearly five hours earlier, and felt amused to thick that while we stood there at high noon, some of our friends at New York were not yet awake I " The large central dial surmounting all shows the time at Besancon," resumed the cicerone, "and the twelve apostles are enclosed in the little alcoves â€" six in each. At every hour two retire and two others take their places to sound the hour on little bells, which they strike with the instrument of their martyrdom or the symbol of their rank. ' St. Michael and St. Gabriel, standing above, strike the quarters. " The three other figures above the Besancon clock face represent Faith, Hope, and Charity. When the apostles change places, Hope and Charity turn toward Faith, who turns toward each, extending a chalice, and then they renew their positions. ' The sepulchre of our Lord is repre- sented above this, two armed soldiers mounting guard. Twelve o'clock is a- bout to strike, so watch the clock, if you please." The woman stopped as the hands reached noon. Our eyes were widely attentive. As the hour sounded, the two Apostles retired and two advanced Hope and Charity turned toward Faith, St. Mary lowered her sceptre, the armed soldiers fell prostrate, and a figure of the Saviour rose from the tomb, while sweet music sounded from a musical box at- tached to the machinery. The last stroke of twelve died away, and all was as before, 'excepting that the figure of our Lord remained visible. " At three o'clock," resumed the guide, " the Saviour returns to the tomb„ the atone rolls over him, the soldiers once more stand guard, and the music is no longer glad, but mournful. "But this Is not all at the tddea we see various seaports. Here are Havre, Dieppe, Mont St. Michel, St. Helena, Cayeime, Port Lonis, and the harbor of Brest. Observe that the waves are con- stantiy in motion, and that one Bees storms gathering and passing, clouds CO ing an g, the fides flowing in and out. The idea rise and fall ezMstly it they do at tlie placea represented, and the floiod-tidea alao jost aa they occur at the porta. The other dials demonstrate astronomical facts. I "Outside on the cathedral tower are four very large dials, which give the hou» and minutes, the days of the month, the days of the week, .nd the phases of the moon. An electric attachment operating every twenty seconds, transmita the time to four other dials one in the church, another in the cloister, the thud m the court of the citadel, the fourth in the arch- bishop's palace. "One hundred and twenty-two indica- tions are given, from a second of timo to ten thousand years. And that ia all, continued the woman, "except about the working of the machinery, which 1 do not explain." i. After going behind the clock and look- ing well at the working, we gave the wo- man her fee and left, feeling solemnly impressed with the value of time, the wonders of science, and the beauty of the Psalmist's prayer "So teach us to num- ber tur days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisaom." dlJEER HAPPENINCS. A Bloomaburg, N. J., "o^*?' ^^^ ,„• bom dumb, bejian to laugh Jo»^ be- foSKeath. and laughed cmtmuously until she breathed her last. As some workmen were bnrnirg^bruh on the battlefield of Missionary Rid^e re^ ^ntly, a stump suddenly blazed up and ^btowninto^manyvieces. Inv-tiga- tion showed that three shex's had been embedded in it. A husband of Dead wood b-i. pat up m Post Office the folloTkiD^ n.aic^: tih" my lauube promptly cu*! short a „, „.. congestion of tiieJ throat, .r rheu'uatiam, " ^otN 'r.'X„T,lii.pa,«^*h. in hot or the "My wife S»rah h»» â€" When I didn't Do thing Too hur an 1 want it distinctly Understood that any man That takes h.r in and keew for her Un my account Wil get himseV pumped so Full of lead that Som tenderfoot locate him for a mineral clame. A to the wise is sufficient, an orttr on fools. P. Smith." Two cows went to a neighbor's gate during the sultry weather last summer will woid work Wonders of Astronomical Inven- tions. Astronomers formerly knew nothing of the constituent elements of the heavenly bodies. Had La Grange been told of the wonderful achievements of the times later than his own, he would have pronounced them impoeaible. Think of Herschel, as he sat through those wintry nights, with the laithful Caroline at his side, recording the results of his observations. How lit- tle could he have dreamed that the actual gases of the faraway planets which he was studying would one day be presented for analyeia. The "Origin of Species" was presented to the world in 1859, and it was soon after this that a gigantic stride was made in asronsomical science in the ser- es of spectroscopic, discover ifp, Tyo's crude machine did noble work. It was nof a telescope at all, bub the suggestion of what was to come.. The inventor of this crudity so stimulated his scholars that much was accomplished, and one of them became such an enthusiast that he could not be diverted from his close ob- servation of a star by the alarming tidings that his house was on fire. "I will conde to the house when this more important matter in determined." Reflecting tele- scopes are much larger than refracting telescopes, because it is difficult to get glass which is pure enough for the making of large object glasies. The earliest of the colossal instruments ever turned upon the heavens was Herschel'a monster 40- foot refle:!tor. A reflecting telf scope is a great funnel catching all ttie rays or light in Its compass, and Cvmcentrating them iri- to one ray small enough to enter the pnpil of the eye. This telescope was erected in the clear atmosphere of the Island of Malta. The wonderful reflectors of Lord Rosse'a had a mirror six feet in diameter, with a tuba sixty feet long. When the telescope was in a horizontal position a man could walk inside from one end to the other. The mirror in a reflecting tele- scope is metallic, being composed of two parts of copper to one of tin. Bat the greater part of the work of astronomers is performed by smaller and refracting in- struments. The "meridian circle" is the most practical of the telescopes in the great work of science. By the -use of these instrument, a foundation is laid for mathematical researches of the most ex- alted character. Practical astronomy is thus brought into immediate contact with the affairs of daily life. In most large cities there are astronomical observatories and these are generally connected by el- ectricity with the clocks of the city. Un- iform time is thus secured. Air Navigation Again. The Tissandier brothers, who a yearago tested a navigable balloon in Paris with some success, have repeated the same ex- periment with the same balloon this year, the only difference was in getting additional power of movement by increasing tha size of the zinc plates used in the battery that furnished energy to the electric motor. With this help a force of one and-a-half horses was claim- ed and the propelling screw was driven at the rate of one hundred and ninety turns a minute. The balloon was allow- ed to ascend to a height of thirteen hun- dred feet above the earth, and found at that point a breeze blowing from the northwest at the rate of about seven miles an hour. The motor was then set in operation, and drove the balloon at the rate of nearly teii miles an hour, so that it was rapidly steered through a complete circle, and then moved against the wind as far as Grenelle. The ascent was made late in the afternoon, and, as it was get- ting dark, the aeronauts allowed the bal- loon to float away to the suburb of Var- retme, where they descended safely. Al- though the voyage smade by the Tissandier and Ranard balloons seem to us absurdly short, they indicate, nevertheless, that the time is not far distant when balloons of a force much superior to them aa that of a steamship is to the weak struggling of a dory, will navigate the air to some practical purpose. No attempts at doing this have ever yet been really made, but the evolutions of the ingenious toys which the French engineers have devised will soon point the way for applying the principles which they discover to air- ships made with serious purpose. and the man, suspecting their desire, took a pail -of water to them. They drank with great eagerness and then sauntered contentedly away. In half an hour they returned with three other cows, ihese too were liberally treated, after which they marched c ff. T he next morr.ipg the first couple again visited their bei.afacior, bringing another stranger with them. Their visits became regular, and aiu.f st every time a strange cow or twoacsouipa nied them. Nature tells cf a canary that had been greatly annoyed by the hardness of the bits of cracker thrown into its cage. One day it lifted a piece of cracker and, tak- ing it to the water trough, dropped it in and then stirred it about with its beak until it was in condition to be eateri. It now puts every hard substance which it deems eatable into the water. It endea. vored to soften sweets in the same way, but finding that the sweet became gradually smaller and smaller, it hastily abstracted it, and has never since put anything of that nature into the water. While a protracted meeting was being held in Resaca, Ga., a number of minis- ters stopped with Mrs. J. W. Davis, and she was sorely perplexed as to the means of getting Bometlung good for them to eat She had tried in vain to get a ham in the placeâ€" all having been consumed by the large crowd in attendance â€" and but one small chicken could be found. While she was busy in the kitchen preparing the chicken, and wondering how she could provide for her guests, a covey of partridges flew into the dining room. The doors were closed, a number of birds caught, and the ministers fared sumptuously. A drove of over 1,000 sheep was being driven on a road in Indiana. At a de- pression in the road water was found to cover it from fence to fence, but little more than the waggon track being bare. Just as the leader of the flock reached this spot a large black water snake crossed the track. The leading wether stopped -short, and the entire space was soon blocked full. In a moment a dog came bouncing over the backs of the sheep, and dropping down between the water holes took the leading wether by the ear, giving him a gentle pull. He sprang into the air, clearing the narrow space between the water holes, ffUowed by the entire flock, the dog not leaving the track till the whole drove had passed. ~p£i; of contbn bAtting dipped wJ^r, and kept applied t^^f^"F^\^^ new, cu'B, brui»-«, or spraina, is tue Srelment now generally -^oPj^^^.^^^^Jf- nitals. I have ^et^n a sprained ankle ?ured in hu hour by sho«enng i^ ^^th hot wa,^r. poured f^om a height ot cnree ' Tepid water acts promptly as -u eme- t-c »..d bur. water t*keu txeely half an b..ur before bed time is the best ut c».h- arwca in ca«es of constipation, wl,i e it ha. » mott soothing effect, on the stomach and bowels. Tdis treatment continued for a few months, ^ith proper attention t.. the diet, will cure any curable case of "^^BTche almost always yields to the simultaneous application of hot water to the feet and the back of the neck. It is an excellent plan to record Jacts like these in a note book, which should be always be at hand when wanted. In the anxiety caused by accidents or sudden illness in the family, one becomes con- f osed and is not apt to remember quickly what should be done hence there rnay be prolonged and unneccessary puffering before proper rem«die3 are applied. [Hall's Journal of Health. Cremation in Italy. Aa the figures quoted below will cremation has made the ereato.*. P^**'*. in Italy, wher^, m 1876, Mil^n .^^ firfttcityto revive th-'s n.ethod f 1- posiog of the dead. From that h1 1*" little .emple built m the cm^^^'t Mdceidchmi has Kradaally beojme! institution. Tdb example of M;f ""^^ soon fi.llo.ed byLodi, ^her^'SlT bnt perfec? apparatus was erected • 1877, and lasr. year a temple was e,!/^ at Cremona. Rome followed with a g li cemetery of Onr Teeth. At dinner ittthe restaurant: 'Have an- other glass of Burgundy, old fellow?" "No, thanks; it's too expensive." "Too expen- sive; I don't understand." '-Yes, it cost me on an average a hundred and fifty francs for repairs to my carriage every time I drink it." It ain't fur de lumbo' money dat some pursona work. It ia 'caae dat when da had ter do it da got so uae ter ' de 'aooia- tion dat at las' da fin's it de bea* 'panion. Er puaaon kian own a diaagreeable dog tiU he seta to naed ter hea waya dat airter awhile ne leama ter Uke him. They decay. Hence unseemly mouths, bad breath, imperfect mastication. Ev- erybody regrets it. What is the cause 1 I reply, want of cleanliness. A clean tooth never decays "The mouth is a warm place, 98 degrees. Particles of meat between the teeth soon decompose. Gums and teeth must suffer. Perfect cleanliness will preserve the testh to old age. How shall it be se- cured? Use a quill pick and rinse the mouth after eating brush and castile soap every morning the brush with simple water on going to bed. Bestow this trifling care upon your preciout teeth and you wUl keep (hem and ruin the den- tists. Neglect it, and you will be sorry all your lives. Children forget. Watch them. The first teeth determine the cha- racter of the second set. Give them equal care. Sugar, acid, saleratus and hot things are nothing compared with food decom- position between the teeth. Mercurial- ization may loosen the teeth, long -use wear them out, bnt keep them clean and they wiU never decay. This advice is worth thousands of dollars to every boy and girl. Books have been written on the subject. This brief article contains all that is essential. Never have a tooth taken out if it be poB..ible to have it filled. The loss of a single jaw-tooth will not only give the cheek a sunken appearance, but it will prevent the proper mastication of the food, and this ia a long step toward dys- pepsia, with its train of evils. â€" [Selected. A Simple Remedy. There is no remedy of auch general application, and none so easily attainable as water and yet nine persons in ten will pasa by it in an emei^ency to seek for somethmg of far leas efficiency. There are but few cases of illness where water should not occupy the highest place aa a remedial agent. A atrip of flannel or a napkin folded lengthwise, and dipped in hot water and wrung out, and then applied around the neck of a child that haa croup, will uaually bring relief in ten minntea. ' A towel folded aeversl timea, and dipped in hot water and quiokfy wrung and applied over the aeat of the pain in toothache or neuralgia. wtQ generally afford prompt relief. Thia treatment in oolio worka almoat Uke magic. I have een caaea that hare renated otiier treat- ment for hooxa yUijk to this in ton minntea. Thace ia nothing that wiU ao TJie Panama Canal. An impression prevails in certain quar ters that, the great enterprise of conmct ing the Pacific Oceafl with the txult Mexico will eventually faU, owing to the engineering difficulties in the way but Lieut. Henry H. Gorring, late of the American navy, who understands the sit- uation thoroughly, has no doubt but that De Lessep'a greatest work wiU be finished and in working order by 1890. He recalls the fact that eminent English engineers predicted the failure of the Suez Canal but tha knowledge gainsd in that enter- prise, insures, he thinks, the success of fhe Panama Canal. He says ' The substitution of mechamcal appU- ancea for manual labor is the real solution of the problem. The cutting of the Suez Canal dragged along for eight years, dur ing which only 22,000,000 cubic metres were removed. During this time the pro- phecies of failure, notably by eminent Englishmen, were as persistent and as positive as the prophecies of failure to c-mplete the Panama Canal are to-day by Englishmen and Americans. During the eighth year machinery was substituted for human labor, the remaining 55,000,000 cubic metres were removed in the two fol- lowing years, and the canal was opened in the tenth year. The French engineers start on the American Isthmus with the experience gained on the other work. They have taken three years to study their needs and to prepare mechanical appli- ances, and the work is now progressing rapidly. Americanswouldmuchperferthat the American canal should be the work of Americans. I use the word in its broad- est sense. Evidently Americans had neither the courage nor the means to un- dertake it. The Frenchmen had they have gone quickly to work; they ask us for nothing, not even for subscriptioiis to the capital stock; they are spending their own money in their own way, and a very considerable part of the money they spend reaches the country in exchange for machinery, materials, and food- The Frenchmen are engaged in a work that will beneat American commerce, and es- pecially benefit the commercial marine of the UnitedStates, quite as much nsBritiah commerce and theBritish commercial mar- ine were benefitted by their work at Suez. It is a matter of no consequence to the United States who cuts the canal, provid- ed it is cut. When it is completed, if it becomes necessary or even important to our national welfare and safety that we should control it, there is no doubt that we shall take possession of the canal and the country through which it passes, with as little hesitation and trouble as the British recently took possession of Egypt and the Suez Canal, and without the slight- est consideration as to who built the can- al or who operates it." This is a very hopeful view to take of the matter, for Americana have not felt disposed to aid this enterprise, as they feared to lose the freight and travel be- tween Europe and Asia which now makes use of our railways between the Atlantic and Pacific bnt the French engineers are not fools, and they undoubtedly ly will succeeded in opening up an avenue between the two continents by way of the Isthmua of Panama. temple on the declivi'y of the in Camp Verano. in which the mortll®^ mains of many illustrious patriots hlv already been c )D8umed. At Varese elegant temple has been builtonthe hieh* est point of the new and beautiful cemp tery, dominating all the valley below Plans are now being exaainei at Novara, Venice, Florence Pi., Leghorn, and Turin for new temnlea of cremation to be ertc^^d next year while that at Spezia is only awaiting qd' ening. Since the body of Albtrc Keller a well-known philanthr' r.isf,, -was burned at Milan inl87G, the Lites of the crema- tive apparatus have been lit in that city no less than 3G2 times. At Lodi the op. oration has been perfornid 2G times • at Cremona, 12; at. Udine, 2: at Rorae. 35 • at BreFcia, 24; at Padua R, whik a*, the same time associations or â-  remaTion have been constituted not oinv in the above- named cities, but alao t Domodisaola Como,- Bologi^a, Modena P^via, Codogno' Venice. Piacenza, Leghojn, Novara, 4n- cona, Genoa, Florence, Turin, I'arma Verona, Pisa, Carpi, Asti, Piatoja, In' tra, and ' San Remo, counting together more than 6,000 members, not a fevr of whom are women. This rapid spread of thj system of cremation has taken place among the Italians in advance of any governmental provision, and indeed the legislation may be said to be the only obstacle in the way. From a technical point of view thg problem has been com- pletely solved by the apparatus at Jlilan, which satisfies all sanitary and economi- cal exigencies. The system does not ex- clude religious ceremonies. â€" [Naples Let- ter to the London Daily News. A Bird Catching Tree. Among the transactions of the New Zealand Institute Mr. R. H. Govett gives some startling facts as to the bird-killing powers of Fisonia brnnoniana or P. sin- clairii. A sticky gum is secreted by the carpels when they attain their full size, but is nearly as plentiful in their unripe as iri their ripe condition. Possibly at- tracted by the flies which embalm them- selves in these sticky seed vessels, birds alight on the tranches, and on one oc- casion twoBilvar-eyes(Zosteropos) and an English sparrow were found with their wings ao glued that they were unable to flutter. Mr. Govett's sister, thinking to do a merciful act, collected all the fruit- bearing branches that were within reach and threw them ori a dust-heap. Next day about a dozen silver-eyes were found glued to them, four or five pods to each bird. She writes "Looking at the tree, one sees tufts of feathers and legs where the birds have died, and I don't think the birds could possibly get away with- out help. The black cat just lives under the tree, a good many of the b'lrd^ falling to her shfte, but a good many pods get into her fur, and she has to come and get them dragged out." In a note Mr. T Kirk says that Pisonw umhdlifera, Seeman P. sindairii, Hook, f.. is found in several localities north ot Whangerei, both on the east and west coasts, also on the Taranga Islands, Arid Island. Little Barrier Island, and on the East Cape, possibly in the last locality planted by the Maoris. The fruitin5 per- icarp is remarkable for its viscidity, which is usually retained for a consider- able period after the fruit is fully matur- ed. It can be readily imagined that smau birds tempted to feed on the seeds migM easily become glued to a cluster of frui-s. Legally Dead, bnt Alive. Physically A man who was legally dead, and whose estate had been administered upon has come to life. In 1874 William J. Trailer, of Monmouth, 111., lufihome for the West, and his relatives hearing no- thing of him for years, regarded him as dead. His father was Thomas Trailer, who was murdered in 1867, leaving 160 acres of land and $10,000 to be divided among three children. Diligent aearch was made for William^ but it was fruit- less, and in May, 1883, Judge Porter, of Chicaga, was appointed by the County Court aa administrator of hu estate, and preparations were being made to diatri- bnte his patrimony among the legal heir. Bat Willlum now tuma up in the fleah, and protests and petidona the Probate Court to re-eatablidi him in hia righta, aa- aerting that he ia "not dead," and never waa, and he is now here in hia own prop- er peraon to make hia 'petition. Hia two undea. Maj. Bond, and J. yr. Bond, identified him, and the lettera of admin- iatratioii on hia eatate were revoked, and he ia placed in fall control of hia proper- ty aa completely aa if he he had been dead and xeaorreoted. Hhi only eznUin- at^on of hia aOaiaee if. that it did not oo- oorjto hhn to write home. TSic Corman Trawp From time immemorial the Wander- iahre .have been recognized as a d» period in the life of the German banai- craftsman, and almost as a necessa^ part of bis education. As soon as his ap- prenticeship was over it used to be con sidered a matter of course that he Ehprnu shoulder his knapsack and go out inâ„¢ the world to seek employment, it nai » fortune. Unless he had very pressing reasons for doing bo, the youtli.,^""' at home was censidered a m"'^^°P "j... worthy of the freedom that ^as noj T by right. With a few thalers m his pocK et,- and all his other possessions upon nis shoulders, the yonng tailor, smitn, o watehmaker started on his tra^«^- /^-j hia money lasted he led a plf «f^* S careless life in the open air and the ui^ inna frequented by persons of ^J^ff When it reached a low ebb, h« nought for work in some neighboring town. long he remained in his new P'^^'^^met pended upon circumstances, -^o 5* (^ tt waa seldom longer than enabled him w earn money enough to resume bis ^s^ rant life. When Autumn canae h^ critical as to the character of t^e m"^^ full enquiry of his comF aa to the mistress's liberality witnj critical as to the cnaraccei v. "^nanions and made full enquiry of ^U comp^^ aa to the mistress's liberah*y^*if^t to diet, before he apphed for work^ r would have been ^^V^f^"y:„nv Two turn out again « Je i^eanj sjow^ ^^^ or three years would ha passea ui ^^^^^ and then th wanderer would faui^ j„ and either return home or settle a the place in which he happened to [The Saturday Review^ "Say, miBBua, dye warn. cleaned " ^^" ' "No,bubby,IgueB8not. " Waal, I guess yer better. "Whyl" â-  ,.,,,, giip downon •* Gauae ef yer don 1 1 U Bup j^^W it an' break my leg a° ^^^^^^tter W ' fur $10,000. I guess you ^\ deaaed." Many^M Dort, in *^ paistedfdx jng diriwtiy .,ras the home aeldorf and The neit Ijy one Jb profession, tiring in his ion was a po roni. No oil previous histj joMoa Deseld ter. For Be] cf the whole bride. About this exhibition to city of Antwe the finest repl and Sufteringj in the cathedi( great value. Jacques Ll the pnze. Cl the task, bu^ one bringing i came almost been able countenance to our Savior.] from his proj by his side sat gazing beautiful eyes ing on each sil muily sweetnl she suddenly a model?" Quickly Jad the unf ortuna| "Why did I fell back motionless. After that 1 moment to sei not to come U finished; for him from his He daily gi wild dark eye All avoided hi one more boh one night, cro led by curioit issue from wit Poor Paul I Jacques offere one who wouli headed by He the adj acent f river, but four boy's silk hand near the river Bertha, in watched his s!: Finally, one visit to her, ar ill she venture and, entering to his studio d full of human then immediat a wild laugh ar claiming "Th3 very more such ai plete!" Cautiously knees, and pee A moment th shriek, she fell Jacques cii pressed en Iiis the door behin home and laic derly he watch ed her eyes; bi scions. On the tent! same night ca Lambert's triu derful picture, it wilh awe anc It was the Blood was str hands and fe; by the cruel i turned toward patient eufferi; that they drei beholders. One singula bitants of Dor seeenied fami' could teil whe one like it. S was whisperec the greatest e ly quiet villa^ A mob was house of the a open, the apa and what was open a closet behold the Et boy fall the r( literally beei nailed to a ri tenance wear that of the bt No trace c He had fled The indignar to the grounc What Bespectinf ought to pat ed by want a ia necessary completely 3 However, fe have need tc though freqi telligent sec i^reah, heal which digesl Iigaation is Btiwaach foi iteactioii of i •tttaiaangol Mid ifthe •ooBfcituted, â- Mih. «*sti S^^"Mi -.:-*v:.-^--. tmtm iMiMlMiiiliiiaaiiii

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy