Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 29 Jan 1885, p. 2

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 MIRIAM. CHAFTBS V. The plan that Miriaa fomed daring ttat long wakefol n^lit of aypiding â- â€¢-farther iiitercoune with Mr. Keene oa that, his la t day, at Eartwich hf f d^^iing fllneaa.and keeping to h^ oini tot^b^ was frastnited by an orgeat Kqgfrt, reoeiTed hj the mondng's pott from M n. As^ier^ tot her to go at once to the Bectoty, and execute certain eqayoisBiona there which were cald to be important, and wblch mmst^ performed vithobt deliay. The departure to Lady Hick's.. Iwother was making, all undeaired by him, asood d«al of disturbance in Ihst affectionate honsa- hold, therefore it was tbat Miriam's heavy eyes asd anosually pallid face ex- cite little comment when she, having received her letter in her room, pat in a tardy appearance at the breakfast- table. 'A drive will do yon gooci, dear," was all her hostess said. "Smce yon maet go to the Rectory, I will take yon in Ella's pony-carriage* Sir B(^rt wishes himself to drive Kingstoa to the station." "Imagine the mother taniing whip," yonsg Ro'o observed, with a laugh. **Better walk down with Ella and me, Mrs. King â€" safer, I assure you." But EUa ha*^ noted the tearfulness of her mother's eyes as she spoke of her brother's departure, and she thought that the proposed drive might be beneficial to BOTe than Mrs. King. "Why, mother can manage the ponies beautifully 1" she said. 'Although one •f them used to be restive in single har- ness, he is the v^ri 'st dear when he runs with the other, Bob. Mother could man- age them taaily if she were twice as nervous." 'And I am thinkinjr," Lady Hicks went on, 'that, while Mrs K'ng is engaged at the Bectory, I can come on to the station to see the last of you, Kingston." Kmgston assented perforce to this plan, having a man's horror of tearful aiieux on a public platform. He looked at his sister very kindly the tears were run- nin? down her face. "Why, A^tba, cheer up," he caid gmtly ' 'tian't for the first time that we are to be parted. lb will be no worse for you than it has been before." 'It is your going just nowâ€" just at Christiuaa â€" that mother feels," Ella re- marked. "Next week we shall be having tile h' use full of other people who belong tons." "All Hicl8es, " Agatha said, with a sob, "You are the only one of my people left to me, Kingston, and you " '•Good .Heavens Net all Hickses snreiy " cried Rob, who had no sympathy with his mother's melting mood, and he proceeded to rattle on about t/he commg of some friends •f Ira own, whj at any rate were mot blickpes. And BO, when the pony carriage drew up at the door, ithrtppened^asthtv were all gl'd to remt-mb»-r in the afcer-timeâ€" that the whole family came into thi hall to see the ladies start. Miriam was al- ready oeatei, the rugs wr^tpped by Rob carefully about her, when Mr. Kttne, having said hia few last words to bia lis- ter, brought her down the steps. He helped her to her seat, pulled the furs aroun' her, gave her the reins with hands that Miriam bated to Fee were trembling. She gave but one glance at his paJe set face, and dotermintd to look no more "That isthelastTahallsfenfmyhuaband for ever, 'she told heiself, and pressed her lips tight'y together as she averted her eyes. "You will not see Mrs. King at the atation," Lidy Hicki »avd, with a sudden thonij^'t. "Y'ju must bav sjood bye to her now, Kingston." But the poniej ware chafin? to he off, and ?.Iiriam'.« hands were euveloped in her furs, and Mr Keeun oidy s'ig^^tly rai^od hia Int ill hirpweil, and they were ciff; aud the Hot lof-k fcii sister sought frou- him WHS gi-veo to her companion's averted f.ice, ^nd it vas a*, her leeaening form he looked to yearningly, standing bare- headed on the gravel sweep, when they thought he was stTaining hia ejes to oatch the last glticpse of his sister; for a pioQs fraud had been practised at the rnstanco of Rob the unaanti- menral. "A)l thai about saying 'good-bye' at the Stat on is a nuisance, you know, tir," he sv.d to tis uncle. "A man doesn't care to have his woman weeping and wail- iag ai ound him in public. That was why 1 cave the wrong tip abou*! the train. When she gets to the station it will have be^'Ti ^on^ half an hoar." Mr. Keeue pullt,d himFelf together as the vouug man addressed him. "You be good to your mother al- ways DJy boy," he said. "There are very few such women in the world, lovi' g and ttnder- hearted and â€" for- givii g." In a few minutes, oi^ed on by a restlessness he could not control, Mr. Kseae had set out alone to walk to the station. 'I shall meet your father," he said koEIl% a^ he bade her good-bye; "if mot I will look in upon him at the clnb. You will see that my things are sent." 'Yon will be sure to fall in .with aether and Mrs. King again," EUa z«plied. "They call at severad places in the town bfif(n« Miriam goes to the Rectory." ^.^ "That Mcs.^ King^yoKlike htKf' ii« aaked gravel j.(v â- â- â- .' «I love W,i:Ld«»ai!»d^BJm jrilfcd offnsion. **Dear litUe ED*â€" good lifcUe gnzl I Al- vsm be troe to yoar frmidi*" ha nid, Old stocked and killed her vidi ao fervour tliak tiw torn came inllMbe «f«. fe-, 3^ morning was bfq;hi af^ trat/tj; and Mr. KMne» keenag jgUSpilXbi tee^ tonntt of «koq|^ iAittt«iP^^^ JU* twain, mSk^vpiiMf ever the nJ^i lail roada. past the itoit^Vmi^nf^lMig/n â- p«kling jn theaan^jpaatie iMy, Jhdf- conpletM hiuliuiga-«^t aatMMl (^^i* mandagr^^heie rae mburb af^BreacBid thetown,;pasf^Hie {nblielioaaa at the comer â€" hia stood and looked at it for a the en- trance to that gloomy sloppy lane wlere he and she had hdd tiiear first oonverser' after so many years. The lane was sloppy to-day, bat was beanSfied out of his recollection by the rime frost and tha sunshine. He turned and walked down it for a few puces. Fome red berries, half eaten by the jungly birds, still hung on the straggling hedge. He broke ff a couple with their stems and fastened them in the button-ho'e of his onat. A f qrther walk of ten minutes brought him intb the town. He rrmembered what Ella had said about the chancb of seeing hia sister and Miriam again. Already he was feverishly ahxionsto do this â€" joss to see them go by. He thocght that then he would be more at rest. Making his way to the market-place, he stood at the entrance to the principal hotel. Sooner or lat«r th^ must pus that way he knew. As be waited there, there came along the broad pavement, past the hotel, a posse of men acd boys. They were talk- ing loudly together, and s )me portion of what they said Euddenly struck upon his careless ear, and wakened him to ter- rified attention. "Women am't no bisness to drive," one respectable middle-aged man was saying. "The groom, ye see," another explained, e were oatâ€" a gone in somewherea with a message, when they started c ff. 'Twere that orgin a atrikin' up as did it, andâ€"" The spealer' stopped suddenly and turned round, feeling a hand upon his shoulder. "Of what accident are you speaking " Kingston a»ked, addressing the group "Be quick some of you and tell me I" "Ladies thrown out of a pheay ton," the first speaker replied. "Some o' the Hiiks's fumily, we don't know which." "Anybody hurt " Kingston questioned anxibusly, his face, which had been a bronze not oiten seen in Newton, turned to a ghastly pallor. 'One on 'em," was the reply. " "Where are they 1' "I'll show ye, sir," said the mid- aged man. "Come along o' me idif InHeaTwi'a aeandung f or tiieml her afluuied tlio ' utMwwsi Ipii head. **TiM WaA win core tba htti iil^^ "You gerr Mk dan- tiiat she if'^^B Keene deiaiapi^edy fiesB^; -,^, '**tin^aathat'|he is dying," retarned other iialmly. 'I mean that she may moment â€" from which the men had reeled Iaslfo»)Rw|«4mt that she will nover wake who had frightened Miriam onUiat dark evening cot lo loog ign. "'«= die sir.' During their five minutes' walk aide by side, the man glanced of ten into the ashen face of hi) c mpanion, and with the in- stinct ef a gentleman remained silent. But he told afterwardi to his wife, and to the knot of idlers who gathered about his door as he ate his dinner, how, when the gentleman passed .through the crowd around the door of the house to which he was led, he moved his hands in front of him, as if grouping in blindness. It was into a chemist's shop that Mr. Keene passed in that blind uncon- scious way, which shop was full of people. '-{She 13 carried through there, sir, into the room," a woman said pityinjfly. At the same moment the glass door at the end of the shop opened, and there stood, pale ond ghastly, but breathing, moving, living â€" his wife "It IS not you, then," he said hoarsely '•I th»i.k Heaven " Miriam ;^me a s'ep forward. She saw nothiDg of that crowd of people around her, nothing even of her husband, but only p^of Agatha's brother, onTy the man whom that poor woman lying in the ad- joii-irg room had devotedly loved. !She put her hand on his arm. "You have ome at last," she said, as thou£;h she had been confidently expect- ing hiai. ';lt may not be the very worst â€" we don't know â€" the doctor does not know. She ia uaconzcions â€" come!" She half drew him to him to tha glass door and closed it behind her. "You are safe V he questioned, taking her.hands in his. "liot hurt at all I thank Heaven " "Do not think of roe," she groaned. "What do I matter 1 Oh, that it had been me He, the doctor, will not say if there is hopn but I know â€" I know that there is none " A minnte more and they were in the little sitticgroonu Lady Hicks lay on the sola. She iras in her out-door dress, except that herconnet was removed she was very pal?, her eyes half-closed, and she was breathing with a noise that seemed to fill the room. The doctor knelt by the side cf her couch, looking, it appetted, intently into her ryes; the master of the shop stood by looking at tha doc- tor. "Where b she hurt I" Mr. Keene whispered, leaning over the uneonecious form. 'It is her head," the doctor answered aloud. "Thme is no need to whis- per she \Ml not hear," he added gravely. "Is there nothing to be done t" Itbr. Keene asked, impatiently regarding him. "Let as have farther medical aid,. For Heaven's lake, set about doing some- tmng." â-  ' "AH the doeton in tiie world taaH do in autM^? the ethor ew rfM eii J deehked.. ;- ?»'" ' ' â-  -^- i'.*tf fromtlBkC^eeiw' Miriam, with a low ory of .terror and grief, flung heBeIflnt^ (be arm'icha|r hj the fir^^ereVhe lay and IsbbDed con- not, voh.ively. -Mjb'Keenfrirtfteiied-a^fvKliar "sound, bat stood and looked with ap- paroit calai'-iKt the «011 form -uni the coach, listettiog to the painful breatl^g. The chemist, wheeled forward ojhair to where' h^ stood. Meohanically:' he dropped into' it^ looking, and listening, still "SirRobert!" he said presently. "Some one sbou d go to him." "A messenger has.been sent, sir. The yoaoglady t^i]^ht of everything befeiie she broke down." Mr. Keene .turned and looked ait 'the young lady," who was sobbing pasiion- ately. "How did it happen do yon know " be queritd, turhing back to the chemist. "Some music â€" a brass band or some- thingâ€" struck, up suddenly and frightened the ponies. â-  The groom was in a shop Lady Hicks appears to :have lost her nerre, and, although the young lady im-- plored her to keep quiet, she threw her- self out. The young lady caught at the reins, buti she had no control over the ponies, and the carriage turned over at the first comer. 'Tis wonderful how she herself escaped with so little hurt." "Is she hurt at all " Mr. Keene asked qaickly. "Are you sure that she is not hurt?" The doctor was standing over Miriam, holding a glass with some sal-volatile. She sat up after a minute and took it; from him mto her shaking hand. One of them noticed that it was her left hand, and the other hung helpless at her side. The doctor lifted it, and she gave a little cry of pain. "Does that hurt you 7" he asked quietly. "Let me look, please." 'It is nothing," Miriam answered; "it is my wrist â€" oh, what does it matter ' "Are yon sure that is all 7" her husband asked, getting up from his chair and cross- ing over to her, while the doctor, having removed her jacket and cut open her dress sleeve, quickly bound herarm. "You feel no other pain, Miriam V "Noâ€" oh, no " 'Thea what is this 7" Mr Keene asked, touching with his fingers a drop of blood or ziog from under the dark hair on her tt mples. He gently lifted the loose hair at her forehead and exposed a sufficiently ugly cut. "A nasty flesh cut, no more," the doc- tor said, having exairined it then, while he pu led a bit of lint t^) pieces to staunch the blood, he CDt^tinued, "You have been saved from serious injury almost by a miracle. You have very much to be grateful for " Miriam took no heed of his words, but looked appealingly at Mr. Keene. "I tried to save her," she said. "Even in that awful moment I thought of her husband and children â€" and you, who all loved her. I begged. 1 implored her to sit Etill I c.uld npt hold her, because it took both my hands for the reins. 'Oh, do you think if 1 had let them go and held her â€" held her with all my force â€" oh, do you think she might have been saved 7 Haik " â€" shrinking back iu her chair, and hiding her face on its cushions. "There is Sir Robert " All this was at noon -tide. At evenfall Lady Hicks still lay nnccnEC'ous on that U'ltami.iiir couch. There was hardly a sound to be heard but that painful breath- ing in the room. Now and then a half- stifled sub would come frcm Ella as she lay with htr face buri* d in Mirbm's lap, or Kingston Keene would leave his placo by his sister's side and silently pi^c^i the room, or Sir Bobert, almost' stupeSed wish grief, holding his wife's hand in one of his, would with the other take ont his watch, the seals jingling noisily as he did so. Pour Bob, ail unusf d to grief, and ashamed of the emotion he could not control, would not stay in the room, but miseraHIy paced the pavement in front of the shop. At midnieht one of thiem noticed a change. Mr. Keene bent over to the girls huddled together by the fire. "Y'ou and Ella go to hed,""h,e said to Miriam, "yon cando no good, yon are both worn cat. Go at once " 'I cannot, I cannot, " Ella moaned. Her uncle stooped and lifted her in his arms. "You must think of Miriam," he said, pronouncing his wife's name unnoticed in the general excitement. "Remember that she has had much to bear and is tired. Look at her, dear, and yoa will see." Ella looked into her frknd's face as hidden. "I am selfish to keep yoa. Yoa go Miriam," she said. Bttt Msriam would not leave; her. Mid meiebtly patting her arm aboot the girl'i waist ihe led her om the room. .- •â-  â-  ' 1 .• â-  On the itEaige hed of the «heinirt*i W^ro«oH«l»^t^iiy do%n, dwiMtf â- â€¢ â„¢^ *«e^*i etBh bther'a Iniii. and ihej* ^»wlittlȣtjta* Bl^ y~gfff^.SP^ oti, the aqaoh beilde _^ itMlf vividly iiea|s?y-*iBUrlltfDert«Bd E^ his Iteinpldigkf and.iom«iriat tjis%aifi( '•^^^^^^ W^S talked pfier ill spite of herself nor coald^e for- get that word of thanksgiving wMui bad baxst from his white Ups when he had â- fas t b ecD iB e CCTHin of the lafety of his wife., 4^ thabV Heaven that it is not yoa," I^ iiad said, and yet the aUernative he had%nowa mast be so terrible â€" his sis- ter, his only sister, the only person on earth perhaps who really .loved him. Miriam B heart almost stood still at the •hock of a sudden recollectioa which itrock her with peculiar force. "He will be alone," she thQughtâ€" "as much aloiie as 1 1" In an hour's time, unable to find slep, she gently disepgaged herself from Ella's arms and stole down-stairs to the door of the sick-room. Instead of the heavy breathing, a sound of painful sobbing broke upon her ear. With trembling hand she pushed the door farther open. Bab had come in he was standing in the furthest comer of the room, his poor youn? grief-stricken face hidden against the Will his father was on his knees by the side of the couch on which that solemn rm, now for ever silent, lay, and it was ftom him that the sobs and the broken wailing words came. IViiriam leant against the door-pcst, trembling and h€arc-sick with grief and pity. She did not see her husband at first but presently helcame for- ^ritia^iraoiif libei 90* right it. «;'fNSe.watr%an»in treal4i hath aiiii Intgaef. *« •^ man 'happjr aa a king" i. two \\ ibf^ tnlfiid ii irarth patl^' â- ^-"fv// • '^^Thephmtof happiness cannot thtivi without the air of oheerfolness. *It destroys the thread o: life if oata are ipwed with it. *It is a long road paved with ho betbween what-yoa-expect and whai-vo|.| get. ' "The silence of the wise is but the utterances of a fool is br^s. *Oae little trouble, like an only sm- will soon rale the man who nursas it. ♦There sho Id be harmony in il| trades â€" even the barber desires h^ money. ' ♦The cup of life is filled with puadi. Youth turniahes the spirits, mid4i| age the sugar, and old age the add.! Ice is furnished by the men who endonil notes. ♦Pleasure is a silken cord, compoaaii of exquisite cobwebs, and floods cf riokl sunlignc give ic a baautifui hue. Datjl is a golden rope, which oucu throtri over our necks, leads uj, uo willingly,^ where pleasure u obliged to follow, ward and put a hand on ir Bubert's shoulder. "Be a man, Bobert," he said, in a voice broken and husky and all unlike his own. "Youâ€" you have your children, remeoi- ber, and o'^hers left to comfort and care for you, while I â€" ^^she was the only one- lam quite alone." Then Miriam could bear no more but, stifling the sob that roaa in her tbroa*., she turned and fled np-stairs and took poor unconscious Ella in her pitying arms again â€" poor motherless Ella, who would learn when she awoke what an empty, sorrowful place was the world which fur her had been so complete and jojful. ^M^i^Martl Thataxa^ ii there ai^tMi^ itfirib^iiuittea m tiu wrong with It that it liea in' that pbii- ti«Hir "ItiihRikeD,aiz^"nid •*Bothbw the "J Mr. Keene again deferred his departure from Eastwick, spending the best part of a week there, awaiting' his sister's fun- eral. His companionship, alchongh often a silent one, was of great benefit to Sir Bobert â€" a common loss, a common grief for one both had loved bringing them into greater sympathy than one of them at least had deemed posaible. Bob too, tired, boy-like, of grief, was g'ad to try to forget it in the presence of the on(y person about him who seemed anxious to dispel iustead of to encourage the general mournf ulness. Miriam, worn out with giief and excitement of various kinds, was too languid i^p persist in her antagonism, and seemed to take Mr. Keene's const mt kindness and attention as EUa too ac cepted it, as something of her due, and as a matter of course. To the latter, indeisd, during the eternity of that dark week of gloom and silence, he was an angel of light. Miriam was a consolation, she was something to oliog to, to cry against, to trust in but her uncle was the person who really helped her to live through and to rise alcove her childish unreasoning grief. She would lie for hours, her head in Miriam's lap, and' their hands locked together, listening to h«s pleasant voice as he talked or re«d. Ic s emed a relief to, her to talk of her mother, and she questioned Mr. Keene minutely about their "early lifa together. Perhaps not without pain to himself he would talk to her of that distant time when life had been all before him, when he bad been full of hope and faith in himself, and his sis- ter had been more than happy in her perfect confidence in and dependence oh him. (to BB CONTEfTJED.) â-  â- * -~ â€" â€" A Cure for Drankeness. Thtjre is a prescription m uae m Eng- land for the care of drunkenness, by wh^ch thouba^ds are said to have been enabled t) recover themselves. The receipe came into notoriety by the efforts of Mr. John Vine Hall, commander of the Great Eastern steamship. He had fallen ittte such habitual drunkenness that his most earnest efforts to reclaim him-elf proved nnavailicg ai last he sought the advice of an eminent physi- cian, which he followed faithfully for several months, and at the end of that time he had lost all desire for liqaorâ€" although he had been for many years led captive by a most debasing appetite. The receipe, which he afterwards pablishod, and% which so many other drunkards have been assisted to reform, is as fol- lows Stilphate of iron, twemy grains magnera, forty grains peppermint, forty-four drachma spirits of nntmeg, four drachms. Dose, one tiblespoonful twice a day. â€" n I ifc i II â€" The Snsar Beet fsL Ejeypt. There u much dutec^on at present in Bkjgland as to the use to which the a«^adan can be put after Khartoum reheved. It " IS ia laid the country b pre- Mimently luitab' for the caltivation of thejngar heet. Tiiese learned men are DOTT attempting to teach the British SJK3?^ i?^P^*^^J^ cpttiyittecthe ^^Deet.^ Jjb 19 epaier to;groii, aeuj and, if Ghwaon laaliact^ • to 'timi ^eÂ¥-» lease of ShartMm to BbgkMid. 4^.allieeaan^jggjjg^^ Pttienead with all their ori^l pain and mtutt7 a»« leMationi of the her tkoog^adwelt with ileesleM nmLfaJZ ott^fha dyjqg in tha jraom helov J.f^iSSlJwr'"" la one of our ladiaa lammao^ *^^n ga« the MiMiat«tte»d--«kiS^ â-  -----^â- =ai ^^^^^^"^^ A Priiiter*s Error. Sweet are the uses of advertity^ tki printer's c jpy siid, but; he set ic up, sweet are the uses of advertising. S we«, indeed, to those who iu sickness and ssf- feriug have seen the advertisement •( some sovereign remedy, which upon trial has brought them from deaths door. "The best thing I ever saw in my papa was the adverd^ement of Dr. Pieivei 'Golden Medical Disc ivery' " u again and again the testimony of those who haw been healed by it of lung disease, bron- chial affections, tumors, ulcers, liver ooa- plaints and the ills to which flesh is hek. A hatter sees one of his debtors paa him by in the street without any reoogDi tion of his existence and straightway be- comes as mad asâ€" as a hatter. "Ourte the fellow l"he siys, "he might, when I bowed to him, have at lejust had the de- cency to lift my hat." • • • Loss of power in either sex, however induced, speedily, thoroughk and psrmanently cured. Address, w^ three letcer state pi for rf ply and book particulars, Wona'd Dupeusary M!dicai As^ocidtion, 663 Main iScreet, BcCdg. N.Y. It is said that bleeding apartially-bliiMl horde ac the nose will restore hia t« sight. So much fur the horse. To op«a a man's eyes yoa must bleed him ia cA« pocket. 'Nip'tintbeBadr Sad to say, many a good thing attaiaa to Boching more than atair beginumg. On the other hand is is a matter tor congratu- lation that the growth of some evil thisgi may be also promptly frustrated. A lu^e proportion of the cases of the wiae-.;pr«ad and fatal of diseases sumption haye their inception in catarrh. Dr. Sage's Catatrh Remedy b pleasint, soothing and iffactaal. Try it. It has 001 ed thousands. All druggists. It is true that bonnets do nos cost ve^ much at whulestde, bat milliners ate obliged to buy boxei t3 put them ill and paper on which to make oat the bill*. The Testimony Of hundreds of draggist» bear here witneea to the efficacy of Poison's NsKviura as the most potent pain remedy in the worM for all kinds of pams. Nerviliue is con- posed of ne wly discovered ingredients, and ia equally goodf or internal or external ase. Purchase a ten cent sample bottle, atoA test it once. T. B. MelvUle, Preaoott, writes My customers who have used Ner- yiline speak highly of it, and I am satisfied It will cake a leading place in the markei before long. " Try Polaon's Nerviline for pains. Sold by druggisig and cjuntiy dealers everywhere. "There are good and bad points aboirt this coffee," Siiid the boarder in a jsdi- ctal tone. "The good point is that there 18 nochiccory init; the bid that thurs is no coffee in it." Dr. Canon's PaimoDMy Coach Drop! Aotfd be uaei J-inost e'er* t»niily in C'ioa.ta it u cue at Me b(« Jf^*f»» •«»««» "â- edio^knawB. In Iint^o koMtoT? "Are you turning over a new leaff asked Jingle of Biilsbee last Thursday. •'Oh, ho r was the reply, "ita the okl one that contains your unpiid acoonnt.' Jingle IS sorry now that he tried to b« funny. The room in which a number of friends pass the evening smoking either cigars or Wfenor tobacco will have an unpleasaat odor next morning. Let the same friend* smoke only the "Myrtle Navy" and thw will find qmte a difference in the room next mormng. If it is reasonably weU ventilat- ed, as with a fire-place, for instance, ao \m- pleasajitness whatever wiU be found. Ths punty and fine quality of the leaf used ii the reason of this. French maidens the subject had fal- len nn wed«iing tQftrs. "I'd go to Switser- ^*^V "l'i8'» to Italy.-' "For mj part^ said Mlie. Tata, "I shouldn't mind where we wienl so long as there wer» plenty of tuzmela." us OWI The od we lood oi poke I leen 10 he rivi wept a "Wa !)e cb )ne. "Yei add in." "Thi the i: saeral "Yei Id, for [y goo le way utfes I XBL^ I •ate." "Sho itLau "Hei ledam If dog. Gea. •adied «his id not le touc yfol ci sold I 8 hand easan luam MKyrei itftbn "J^it fOaha •oitto: shiiiid dhfesi Just a tdUttli miwii teirfol â- JS^fav «»o twrnce Bin, and utiaa at tbe GjUJi» • J«^.;|«l»7ii«. Smith. "Yes, I'vs I![S? °*^**** tobacca; 1 shall smoke Ai2?!ii £S35* ^*ay wrtaiB todnaaAt of ttm •aes Ow towtlB n fcoMtaattta! A..,,^.,t^M '^^â- â- ' â- â-  '-tfiTiiifTiiiilirli

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