The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, November 04, 1891, Image 1
•|r-1
VOL. II.
•IF FOU THE L1BEHTY OF TILE WOltLD WE CAN DO ANYTHING.”
DAKUNGTOX, SOUTH C'AHOLIXA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1S91.
NO
1).
^TTrr»r/MTrr L'-rii i nr cnest*r uirmH or Uio i^uuen.ter rarms or
BKICKS \V ITlIOUT Si RAW ; the ancient*. Jacob’s (leHcemlanU lapidly
I uiuitiplieO.
j After awhile Egypt took u turn at fain-
; Ine, and those descendants of Jacob, the
SERMON
T.
PREACHED BY THE
DE WITT TALMAGE.
Although the Popular Divine Hu.
Preached Twenty-four Vear* In Ilrook-
lyn. Ills Audlenro* AVere Never Larger.
"The Harden of Kgypt" III* Text.
Brooklyn, Nov. 1.—The Talieruaclo was
throiiKwl its vsual this morning. The vast
edifice filled to its utmost capacity with
eager listeners shows how the popular
preacher retains his power over the people.
Although be has lieeu preaching in Brook
lyn for more than twenty-four years, his
audiences were never'so large as now, and
although the largest Protestant, church In
America has been built for liiili, there never
was u time when so many persons were
turned away for lack of room. The sub
jeetof this morning's sermon was "Bricks
Without Straw,” a continuation of the
series on the confirmation of Holy Scrip
ture which Dr. Tnlmage found in his jour
ney from the Pyramids to the Acropolis.
His text was Isaiah xlx, 1, “The burden of
Egypt."
What is ail this excitement about in tiie
streets of Cairo, Egypt, this December
morning In ISSW? Stand back! Wo bear
loud voices and see the crowds of people
retreating to the sides of Hie street. The
excitement of others becomes ourpwn cx
citeiuent. Footmen come in sight. They
have a rod in the hand and tasselcd cap on
head, and their arms and feet are bare.
Their garb is black to the waist, except as
threaded with gold, and flic rest Is white.
They are clearing the way for an ofilcial
dignitary In a chariot or carriage. They
are swift, and sometimes run thirty or
forty miles at a stretch in front of an eqnl-
page. Make way! They are the fleetest
footed men on earth, bat soon die, for the
human frame was not made for such en
durance.
I asked all around me who the man In
the carriage was, but no one seemed to
know. Yet as I fell back with the rest to
the wall I said, This Is the old custom
found all up and down the Hible, footmen
running before the rulers, demanding
obeisance, as in Genesis lietore Joseph’s
chariot the people were commanded, "Bow
the knee;” and us I see the swift feet of
the men followed by the swift feet of l lie
horses, how those old words of Jeremiah
rushed through my mind, “If thou hast
run with the footmen and they have
wearied thee, howcanst thon contend with
horses?”
UE SERVES AS A FOOTMAN.
Now, my hearers, in this course of scr
mous I am only serving you us footman,
and clearing the way for your coming into
the wonders of Egyptology, a subject that
I would have you study far beyond any
thing that can be raid in the brevity of
pulpit utterance. Two hundred and
eighty-nine times does the Bible refer to
Egypt and the Egyptians. No wonder, for
Egypt was the mother of nations. Egypt,
the mother of Greece; Greece, the mother
of Rome; Rome, the mother of England;
England, the mother of our own land. Ac
cording to that, Egypt is our great-great
grandmother.
On other Sabbaths I left you studying
what they must have been in their glory:
the Hypartyle bsll of Knrniic, the arch!
tectural miracles at Luxor, the Co.louimde
of Horembeb, the cemeteries of Memphis,
the value of a kingdom In ouc monument,
the Sphinx, which with lips of stone
speaks loud enough to lie heard across the
centuries, Heliopolis and Zoau, the counu
drum of archieologists. But all that ex
travngauce of palace and temple and mon
umeut was the cause of an oppression high
as heaven and deep as hell. The weight of
those blocks of stone, heavier than any
modern machinery could lift, came down
upon the Hebrew slaves, aud their blood
mixed the mortar for the trowels.
We saw agalu and again on and along
the Nile a boss workman roughly smite a
subordinste who did not please him. It is
*no rare occurrence to see long lines of men
under heavy burdens passing by taskmas
ters at short distances, lashing them as
they go by into greater speed, and then
these workmen, exhausted witli the blast
ing heats of tiie day, lying down upon the
bare ground, suddenly chilled with the
night air, crying out in prayer: “Ya,
Allah!” “Ya, Allah!" which means O
God I O God! But what must have bee'u
tiie olden times cruelty shown by the
Egyptians toward their Isrnelitlsh slaves
is indicated by a picture in tiie Beni
Hanuii tombs, where* man is held down
on his face by two men and another holds
up the victim's feet while the officials bant
the bare back of the victim, every stroke,
I have no doubt, fetching the blood.
HOW THEY COULD AFFORD IT.
Now yon see how the Pharaohs could af
ford to build such costly works. It cost
them nothing for wages—nothing hut the
tears and blood of the toilers, and tears and
blood are acheupdriuk fordevtl*. "Bricks
without straw" may not suggest so much
hardship until you know that the bricks
were usually mode with “crushed straw,"
straw crushed by the feet of theoxeuin
the thrashing, and, this crushed straw de
nted to the workmen, they had to pick up
here and there a piece of stubble or gather
rushes from the waterside. This story of
the Bible is confirmed by the fact that
tpany of the brick wails of Egypt have on
the lower layers brick made with straw,
bat the higlu-r layers of brick made out of
They gather tog tlier at a signal. Alex-I young tiiorcnauts, Old lawyers playing the
ander’s armies aud all the armies of oldeu 1 Pharaoh over young lawyers, old doctors
time were led by torches on high poles, playing tiie Pharaoh over young doctors,
great crests of fire; and the Lord Almighty i old artists playing tiie Pharaoh over young j
kindles a torch not held by human hands ’ artists, old ministers playing the Pharaoh
Israelites, came to a great storehouse ! >,ur, by omnipotent hand. ( over young ministers,
which Joseph hud provided, aud paid in I Not made out of si raw or oil, but kindled Let all oppressors whether in homes, til
money for com. But after awhile the! out of the atmosphere, such a lurch as the churches, in stores, in oiliees, in factories,
mouey gave out aud then they paid in cat- world never saw before and never will see -—t- 1 nr- i>* •
tie. After awhile the cattle were all in again. It reached from the earth unto the
possession of the government and then the | heaven, a pillar of lire, that pillar pruc-|
Hebrews bought com from tiie govern- j tlcolly saying "This wuyl March tins j
meut by surrendering themselves as slaves j way!" that supernatural flambeau !
ukoinnino ok slavery IN KuYlT. more than a million refugees set their i
Thou begun slavery in Egypt. Tiie gov- eyes. Moses and Aaron lead on. Thun
ernmeut owned all the Hebrews. And let , come tiie families of Israel. Then come
modern lunatics who, in America, propose the herds and flocks moving mi across the |
handing over telegraph companies and sands to what is the lieacli of waters now i
railroads and other things to ire run by called Bnhr-ol Ktilzuin, but called in the!
government see the folly of letting gov
! eminent get its hand on everything. I !
Would rather trust the lampio than any |
! government the United States ever had or
I will have. Woe worth the day when leg j
islutors and congresses and ndmfoistra- !
tk*iis get possession of anything more than j
it is necessary for them to have.
That would Ire the revival in this laud of
that old Egyptian tyranny for which God
has never hail anything but red hot thun-
! derbolts. But through such unwise pfo
| cesses Israel was enslaved in Egypt, and
the long line of agonies began all up and
down the Nile. Heavier and sharper foil
the lash, hungrier aud ghastlier grew the
workmen, louder aud longer went up the
prayer, until three millions of the en
slaved were cry ing: "Ya, Aliahl Ya, A1
IhIi!” OGodl O God!
Where was help to come from? Not the
throne. Pharaoh sat upon that. Not the |
army, Pharaoh's oifleers commanded that.
Not surrounding nations. Pharaoh’s threat
made them all tremble. Not the gods Am
mon and Osiris or the goddess Isis, for
Pharaoh built their temples out of the
groans of this diabolical servitude. But
one hot day the princess Thonoris, the
daughter of Pharaoh, while in her hflthlng
house on the hanks of the Nile, has word
brought her that there Is a baby afloat on
the river In a cradle mado out of big leaves.
Of course there is excitement all up and
down the banks, for an ordinary baby In
an ordinary cradle attracts smiling atten
tion, but an Infant In a cradle of papyrus
rocking on a river arouses not only ad
miration, but curiosity. Who made that
boat? Who made it water tight with liitu
men? Who launched it? Reckless of the
crocodiles, who lay basking themselves In
the sun, the maidens wade in mid snatch
up the child, and first one carries him and
then another carries him, and all the way
up the bank ho runs a gantlet of caresses,
till Thonoris rushes out of the bathing
house and says: “Beautiful foundling, 1
will adopt you as my own. You shall yet
wear the Egyptian crown and sit on the
Egyptian throne.”
Nol No! No! He Is to be the emanci
pator of the Hebrews. Tell It in all the
brick kilns. Tell It among all those who
are writhing under the lash, tell it among
all tiie castles of Memphis and Heliopolis
and Zoan and Thebe*. Before him a sea
will part. On a mountain top, alone, this
one will receive from the Almighty a law
that is to tie file foundation of all good I ^ wifieh
law while the world lasts. When hoi- Mediti riant:
dead, God will conic down on Nelio and
alone bury him, no man or woninn or angel
worthy to attend the obsequies.
Tbecbild grows upand goes out and stud
ics the horrors of Egyptiau oppression mid
suppresses his Indignation, jor the right
time has not come, although once fora min
ute he let fly, and when hesawu taskmaster
put the whip on the Inick of a workman
who was doing ids best, anti heard the poor
fellow cry aud saw the blood spurt, M"-,es
doubled up his fist and struck him on the
temple till the cruel villain rolled over in
the suad exanimate and never swung the
lash again. Served him right!
OOP WAS ON Ills SIDE.
But, Moses, are you going to undertake
the impossibilities? You feel that you are
going to free the Hebrews from bondage.
But where is your army? Where Is your
navy? Not » sword have you, not a spear,
I not a chariot, not a horse. Aid God was
i on his side, and he has an army of ids own.
Tiie snowstorms are on God’s side; witness
the snowbanks in which the Freucli army
of invasion were buried on their way back
from Moscow. The rain is on Ids side;
witness the 18th of June at Waterloo, when
the tempests so saturated the road that the
attack could not lie made on Wellington’s
forces until eleven o’clock, and he was
strong enough to hold out until re-enforce
meuts arrived.
Had that battle been opened at five
o’clock In the morning Instead of at eleven
the destiny of Europe would have lieen
turned the wrong way. The heavy rain
decided everything. So also are the winds
and the waves on God’s side. Witness the
Armada with one hundred and fifty ships
and twenty-six hundred and fifty guns
and eight thousand sailors and twenty
thousand soldiers sent out by Philip II of
Spain to conquer England.
What liecame of t hose men and that ship
ping? Ask tiie wind and the waves all
along the English mid Irish coasts. The
non and the ships ail wrecked or drowned
or scattered. So I expect that Moses will
lie helped In rescuing the Israelites by a
■pedal weaponry. To the Egyptians the
Nile was a deity. Its waters were then as
now very delicious. It was the finest tint
ural leverage of all tiie earth. We have
no such love for the Hudson, and Germans
have no such love for the Rhine, and Uus
siaus have ho such love for the Volga os
the Egyptians have love for the Nile
, , | But one day, when Pharaoh comes down
rough straw or rushes from tiie 11 '’■n ( to this river, Moses takes a stick and whips
bank, the truth of the Look of Exodus l (| lL . waters, and they turn Into the gore of
thus written in the brick walls discovered i ;l slaughter hou.,e, and through the sluices
by the modern exploreis. land fidironds the incarnadined liquid
That governmental outrage nos mways ; up jnta t he land and the nmiodor
been a characteristic of Egyptian ruler* whelms everything from mnd hovel to
Taxation totlie |>oint of starvation wu* I he t in-one room. Then came the frogs, with
Egyptian rule in tiie Bible times as well us
ft is In our own time. A modern traveler
gives the figures concerning tiie cultiva
tion of seventeen acres, the value of tiie
yield of the field stated in plasters-
Produce I.* t-'
Expenses
Clear produce..
Taxis
Sbli
41(1
Amount cleared by Hie farmer lib’!'*
Or, a* my authority declares, seventy per
cent, of what the Egyptian farmer makes
is paid for taxes to the government. Now,
that Is not so much taxation as —eiissiun
tiou. What think you of that, you who
groan under heavy taxui in Aynericn? I
have heard that in Egypt: the-working
people have a song ilk* this, “They starve
us, they starve us, they heat ns, they beat
tis; but there’s some one uliove, there’s
some one above, who will punish them
well, who will punish them well.” But
seventy per rvftt, of government tax in
Kgypt is a mercy as compared to what
the Hebrew slaves suffered there In Bible
times. They got nothing but food hardly
fit for a dog, and their clothing was of one
tog, sod tbelr roof a burning sky by day
and the stars of heaven by .tight.
You aay, “Why did they aland It?" Be
cause they hod to stand It. You see sioug
back In the world’s twilight there was a
famine in Canaan, and old Jacob nod hla
a<ms‘ca:nu to Egypt for bread. Tho idd
man’shoy Joseph, waaprinjemluister.and
Joseph—I luppoae the father and the broth
era called him Joe, for it does not make
horrible croak, all over everything. Then
this people, cleanly almost to fastidious
ness, were infested with insects that be
long to the filthy aud unkempt,'and the
air buzzed and buzzed with flies, and then
the distemper started cows to bellowing
und horses to neighing, and camels to
groaning, as they rolled over and expired.
And then lioils, one of which will put a
! man in wretchedness, came in clusters
from the top of the head to the solo of the
f.’Ot. And then the clouds dropped hai!
nud lightning. And then locusts came in,
; swarms of them, worse than the grass
hoppers ever were In Kansas, and then
darkness dropped for days so that
< tiie people could not see their hand before
their face, great surges of midnight cover
1 log them. And last of ail, on the night of
the 18th of April, atxmt eighteen hundred
years before Christ, the Destroying Angel
•weeps paat; and baar it all night long,
ika - flap! flap! flap! of hla wings until
Egypt rolled on a great hearse, the eldest
child dead in every Egyptian home. Tbs
eldest son of Pharaoh expired that night
In the palace and all along the streets of
Memphis end Heliopolis, and all up and
down tiie Nile there was a funeral wall
i that would have rent the told of the un
natural darkness if it had not been Ini'
I penetrable.
NOW IB ISRAEL'S CHANCE.
The IsrselHtoh homes, however, were
untouched. But these homee were full of
preparation, for now la your chance, 0
Ye wronged Hebrews! Snatch up wnst
pieces of food you can and to the desert!
Bible the Red sea. And when I dipped
my hands in its blue waters, the heroics of
the Mosaic passage rolled over me.
ON TUB RED SKA’S SHORE.
After three days’ march the Israelitisli
refugees cncumjied for the night on tiie
banks of the Rial sea. As the shadows be
gin lo fall, in tho distance is seen the hast
of Pharaoh in pursuit. There were six
hundred finest war chariots, followed by
common chariots, rolling at full speed.
And the glittering of the wheels aud the
curse of infuriated Egyptians came down
with the darkness. Hut the I/ord opened
tho crystal gates of Uuhr-cl-Kulz:tni and
the enslaved Israelites passed into liberty,
and then the crystal gates of the sea rolled
shut against the Egyptian pursuers.
It «as about two o’clock in thiftuorniug
when the interlocked axle trees of the
Egyptian chariots could not move an inch
either way. But the Rod sea unhitched
tli,’ horses and unhelmeted the warriors,
and left the proud host a wreck on tiie
Arabian sands. Thou two choruses arose,
and Muses led tile men in one, and Miriam
led the women iu tiie other, and the wom
en beat time with their feet. The record
says: “All tiie women went out after her
with timbrels aud withdauces. And Miriam
answered them, Slug ye to thu Iiord, for he
hath triumphed gloriously; the horse aud
his rider hath ho thrown Into the sea.”
Whu^a thrilling story of endurance nud
victory.
The greatest triumph of Handel’s genius
was shown in his Immortal dramatic ora
torio, “Israel iu Egypt.” Ho had given to
the world theoratori'o of “Esther aud Deb
orah,” aud Athuliah, but reserved for his
mightiest cXertiou at the full height of his
[lowers the marshaling of all musical in
struments to the description in harmony
of tho scenes on which we this morning
dwell. He gave twenty-seven days to this
production, with its twenty-eight choruses,
enthralling his own lime and all sftertimv
with his “Israel iu Egypt."
So the burden of oppression was lifted,
hut another burden of Egypt is made up of
deserts. Indeed, Africa is a great continent
for deserts, Libyan desert, Sahara desert,
deserts here and there and yonder, con
deinning vast regions of Africa to barren
ness, one of the deserts tiiree thousand
milts long and a thousand miles wide,
lint all thosi ijeserts-will yet lie flooded,
aud so made fertile. Du Laaseps say's it
can be done, and be who planned the Suez
irrles t he Red sea nud the
in, knows what lie is taking
about.
The human race is so multiplied that it
must have more cultivated land, and the
world must abolish its deserts. Eight hun
dred millions of the human race are now
living on lands not blessed w ill: rains, but
dependent on irrigation, and we want by
irrigation to make room for eight hundred
millions more. By irrigation the prophecy
will be iiiliiRed, and "the desert will blos-
sum as the rose.” to from Egy pt the bur
den of sand will be lifted.
TEE IU RDKN OK MOHAMMEDANISM.
Another burden of Egypt to lie lifted is
the burden of Mohammedanism, although
t hire are some good things about that re
ligiun. Its disciples must always wash be
fore they pray, and that is live times a
day. A commendable grace is cleanliness,
.strung drink is positively forbidden by
Mohammedanism, aud though some may
have seen adriinkeu Mohammedan, I never
saw one. It isa religion of sohriety. Then
they are not ashamed of their devotions.
When tiie call for prayers is sounded from
the minarets tiie Mohammedan immedi
ately unrolls the rug on the ground and
fulls (in ids knees, aud crowds of spectators
are to him no embarrassment—reproof to
many a Christian who omits ids prayers if
[icople are looking.
But Mohammedanism, with its poiyg
amy, blight ieverything it touches. Moiuim
incd, its founder, bud four wives, aud his
followers arc the enemies of good woman
!us<d. Muhammcdauisnr puts its curse on
all Egypt, and by setting up u sinful Arab
higher than the immaculate Christ, U an
overwhelming blasphemy. May God help
the hraveand consecrated mkisioiiurieg who
are spending their livds in combating it.
But before I forget it 1 must put more
emphasis upon Hie fact that the last out
rage Unit resulted iu the liberation of tiie
Hebrews was their lieing compelled to
make bricks without straw. That was the
last straw that broke the canftl’s back.
God would allow Hie despotism against ids
people to go no farther. Making bricks
without straw!
THE OPPRESSION STILL GOES ON.
That oppression still goej on Demand
of your wife appropriate wardrobe and
bountiful table without providing the
means necessary—bricks without straw.
Cities demanding in the public school
faithful nud successful instruction with
out giving the teachers competent liveli
hood—bricks without straw. United States
government demanding of senators aud
congressmen nt Washington full attend
ance to the interests of the people, hut on
couipeuMitiou which may have done well
enough when twenty-five cents wont us
far ns a dollar now, but in these times not
snflicient to preserve their influence and
respectability—bricks without straw.
In many parts of the laud churches de
manding of pastors vigorous sermons and
sympathetic service on starvation salary;
sanctified Ciceros ou four hundred dollars
a year. Bricks without straw. That is
one reason why there are so many poor
bricks. In all departments, bricks not
tven or bricks that crumble or bricks that
•re nirt bi1lk*-_at HIT" Work? atfsquatoly ■
[i:dd for is Wo: 111 mure ttuiu work”^ot pifld
for. More str iw mid then better bricks,
lint in all departments there are 1‘lla
raoha; sometime* Uupftul a Ibnmioh and
sometimes Labor q I'liurauli. When (Cap
ital prusjicr*, und makes large percent age
ou its Investment, and duolines to consider
the needs of thoo|icrative*, and truiit.s llieui
as so many limimn machines—their nerves
no more tivtn ihr apuds ou the factory
wheofc-then Cnfii Uttoi a Pharaoh. On the
other hand, when workmen, not regarding
the anxieties and business struggles of the
firm employing them, and at a time whon
the firm are doing their liest to meet an ho
portant contract and Deed all bund* busy
to accomplish it, at such a time to have his
employees make a strike and put their em
ployers Into extreme perplexity and severe
iniis—thya Labor becomes n Pharaoh orjUie
wurst uppressiou, and must lookout for;
the judgments of God.
THERE ARK STILL PflABAOTtn.
When In Deoemlivrof ls“!), at the Museum
at Boulac, Kgypt, I looked at the mum ,
mice of tho' old Pharaohs, the very mis I
creants who dlabolized centuries, and I
ODDS AND ENDS.
Molussps is find in Louisiana
Discontent is tiie want of soli reliance
it i.' mtlrhiity of will.
Oiiiilortim’s forty-flvo savings hauU-
iiave $114,000,0(10 deposit -
A single woman runs a lienriuoDt,
(Pa.)livory and boarding stable
Wounded vanity is generally by lar
when for the complete extinotiou of the | tile largest factor in tbe agonies of dis
Hebrews iu Kgypt lie ordered all the He- appointed love
brew boys massacred, hut be did not find purely as
it so line a tiling when his own lirst horn / , ,4.
that night of the destroying angel drop-1 & businosa speculation is liable to sink
ped di*;i!l on lho mosaic iloor «t the foot oi
What all Hoys Should Know.
SitiokiiiK Uoys.
Do not lie .sati.■;fieil with your bov'i:
education,.says School Sujipkmeiit.
or
in social life or political life, iu private life
or public life know that God hates oppres ,
hoik, aud they will all come to grief here
or hereafter. Pharaoh thought he did a
fine thing, a cunning thing, u decisive thing
ibo porphyry pillar of the palace. Let all
the Pharaohs take wanting. Some of the
worst of them are on a small eeiluln
households, as when a uiau, because his
arm is strong nud his voice loud, domi
nate* his poor wife into a domestic slavery.
There are 1 thousands of such coses where
the wife is a lifetime serf, horopiniou disre
garded, her tastes insulted, and her exist
ence a wretchedness, though tiie world
may not know it. It i.i a Pharaoh that sits j
at the head of that tattle, and a Pharaoh ,
that tyrannizes that home. There is no
more abhorrent Pharaoh than a domestic
Pharaoh. There tire thousands of women i
to whom death is passage from Kgypt to
Canaan, because they get. rid of a cruel !
taskmaster. What an accursed monster is \
that mau who keeps his wife in dread
about family expenses, mid must ho can i
tions how she introduces au articleof mil
linery or womanly w.tr.lrobe without. Im- ;
iniliatiug consultation or apology.
Who is that uiai.i umitig so? For six j
months—iu order to. win that woman’s
heart—he sent her every few days a bouquet
wound with white ribbon nud uu endear
ing couplet, aud took her to concerts aud
theaters, nud helped her into carriages as
though she were a princess, aud ran across
the room to pick up her pocket handker
chief with tho speed of an aatelopo, and on
the marriage day promised all that the
liturgy required, saying "I will!” with an
emphasis that excited the admiration of
all spectators. But now ho ‘
two cents for a postage stamp
tiers why site rides across Brooklyn bridge
when the foot passage costs nothing.
He. t hinks now she is awful plain, and ho
acts like the devil, while lie thunders out:
i'Whore did you get that new hat from?
That’s where my money goes. When
my breakfast?
Didn’t I tell you to sew ou that button?
Want to tee your mother, do you? Yon
are always going to see your mother!
What are you whimpering about! Hurry
up now and get my slippers! Where’s the
newspaper?” The tone, the look, the im
patience—the cruelty of a Pharaoh. That
is what gives so many women a cowed
down look. Pharaoh! you laid better take
your iron he 1 o!T that woman’s neck or
God will help you remove your heel.
Blie says nothing. For the sake of avoid
before reaching port.
The yoinigost traveling salesuiRii in
Illinois is iu the employ of a drug house
:il Quincy He is thirteen.
Duteli and American oysters are
tnms|s)rte<i to the English waters to
be fed six or twelve months and then
marketed
The Nebraska business men are soon
to sturt mi exhibition car through tin
eastern states to advertise the product.'
of the state.
The 48.000 oil wells in this country
produce RIO,OOrt harrels of oil a day
The cnpilal invested in tins interest
amounts to $120,000,000
Mr O. D Wakemtin, of Deposit,
N Y., owns a serviceable dog It late
ly found and walked home with a
pooketbook containing $400 in green
i tacks. -
Damages lor Flirting.
Tiie courts of St. Paul will soon have
an opportunity to pass upon a very im
portant question. For umny years
close students of social problems have
been mystified by the discrepancies
shown by various legal tribunals in Ox
tfxliiumMi History.
Every young reader who bos been
charmed by tho wonderful story of
Joseph iu Egypt must Im interested to
know how much modern science and
enterprise are doing to restore the (J rw k hook, until
scenes and objects lie looked upon, nud
the outlines of the very life of his gen j
oration. Piihotu, one of the ■‘treasure ; '' ’ itb it flood '"c
cities” in which doubtless that Hebrew j Spell all the
hero and [cittern man stored up the , p, llge>
surplus of the harvests of the "seven
years of plenty,” has been discovered j
by .Dr. Navillu and excavated from the!
sand. It is tiie city which the Greeks 1
called Ileroopolis.
Doctor Naville's explorations have
enabled him also to identify the early
camps of the Israelites, Succoth —a
district, not a city—Pi-Hahiroth, Hall
Zcphon and other places, and so trace
their journey to where they crossed the
Red sea.
H seems almost as if the localities of
Hible history were cast by design out
side of tho path of destroying time. |.. ..c, „
Climate, the enibalmer's art, and the ' ll ' I* 1 , 1
all covering sand have kept the daily j M riie RH onlinarv
world of the i’hmv.ohs, like an old hut \ Het’kon the iniciv
indelible "negative," to be brought out
in full photograph by nations thousands
of years younger tliau they.
Men like Marktte Hey, Mr. Petrie
and Dr. Nuviilc have uuenrihed and
ere still unearthing for us the very
halls and streets v.diere uM Egyptian*
bowed Hie knee to Joseph or trembled
nt the miracles of Moses and Aaron,
mid restoring to the light of day the iu
scriptiotis aud some of Hie very papyri
which they actually sr.v and read.
It is a silent language these risen
relies speak, for Hie vowels are nil gone
Science gives the following signifi
cant'facts concerning the rest! 11 s "f
allow him to handle u Latin or smoking by boys: “In un experimental
yon are sure
_fl)le hand,
words he knows
Speak and write good English.
Write a good social letter.
Write a good business letter.
Add a cdumnof figures rapidly.
Make out an ordinary account.
Deduct Ifil per cent from the
face of it.
Receipt it when paid.
Write an advertisement for (he
local paper. s
Write a notice or report of a pub-
thai observation of thirty-eight boys of all
l elas.se i of societ y, and of average
health, who had been using tobacco
how for a period ranging from two mouths
to two years, twentv showed severe
injury to the constitution and'in-
siiffie’iEUt growth;
the existence
of the heart’*’
-to imehs, coughs,
alcohol; thirteen
of the pulse, and
tion. After the'
iromisorv note.
thirty-two showed
of irregularity
action, disordered
and a craving for
had iiitermittemy
one had eonsmnp-
’ had abandoned
the use of tobacco, within six monthi’
time one-half were free flora all
their former symptom.-', aed the re
mainder had recovered by the cud of
the veur.
out of tbem; but it requires but
he begrudges "her in K a money valuation upon tiie female j imagination to bleat :io hfe and sound
stamp, and won ! heart At Grand Rapids the other day into the at«r?> ! ",~
tuna of a [mst so real and so gnui
Youth’s Companion.
of discount on
1 | it for days, mouths, or years.
Draw an ordinary bank check.
Yiike if to (he proper place in
bank to get tiie cash.
Make iie.d and correct ea.fries in
day book and ledger.
Toll the number of yards of carpel
required for your parlor.
Measure the pile of lumber in your
shed.
Tell tile number of bushels oi
bin, and the
it nienl of Hie returns
personal properly.
in
t he Columbia lu-gis’.er recentiv
published a
;.f iv,;i '■•Sale
’.ogetin r v.ilh (be poM*
ilk' value of raliroads in
L' i oi' slab-meni ihe counii-.
Ikikeley, Horry, Fpartauburg
lave
• essed
11 * l, l-ll!
amt
nty.
of
and
a Jury awarded a pretty plaintiff five
cents damages for breach of promise to
marry, while last year a wealthy man
was mulct iu the sum of $55,000 for J
Ids fickleness in fracturing the cardiac :
Do you < aU that coiTei'? j apparatus of a trusting spinster. Now
conics a Hi. Paul young man. who sues
his sweetheart for $5,000 damages for
flirting.
“This Is not a breach of promise
suit.” says Hie plaintiff, cheerfuly, “bul
a case for damages. I don’t like flirt
ing. and I am going to show peoplethat
this country is a very unhealthy one
for that kind of business. I have been
fair with the girl. I told her that I de
tested flirting, and when I commenced
I told het
that I did it with Hie intention of .mar
rying her, and 1 had every reason to
largest
little w heut in your
value at current rales.
Tell something about the great
authors and statesmen of the pre'seut ^ .j
Sumter have not been included, tho
tax diipiiciitcs. not having been re
ceived. The following is tbe assess
ed value, uceoi'ding to th;* i.'egistcT's
publieulion, of ilto countie- in this
part of th-.' state:
< ’h-stcr
-! ,o(;:i,is.H;i
lag a scamla! she keeps sileiit, but her tears
a ail wrongs have pone lata a record Umt, | u . ( .[,i nR company with her
you will have to tdeet os certainly as Pha-| t) n J j
ranh had in meet hail and Kglttnini: and "
darkness uml the death angel. God novel
rave to any rian the r:
a woman, and «lint a sneak you arc to take
advantage of the marriage vow, and be
cause she cannot help herself, and under;
the shelter of your own home out-Pharaoh ■
the Egyptian oppressor. There Is some
thing awfully wrong in a household where !
the woman Is not considered of as much
to tyrannize ; believe Hint she intended to marry me
Now sbe lias gone to flirting with other
people, and I intend to punish her for
iC’ -San Francisco Argonaut.
l!eochi»r*i» Kngagement King.
One day Mr. Heechor walked
from
importance as.the man. No room in this Amherst to Kattleboro, Yt., to glVe a
worl I for any more Pharaohs!
SIS HAS IIKKS OUR TASKMASTER. I
Bill it rolls over on me with great power
the thought that we have all been slaves ’
down in Egypt, and sin has been our task- j
temperance lecture- ills first public ad
dress. After speaking, be walked back
the entire Journey, using the money
sent lo take him there and back for
master, and again and again v.e have fi-it | books- only reserving enough to buy a
its lash. But Christ hits lie'ni our Moses <
to lend us out of bondage, and we are for- •
ever free. Tiie Red sen of n Saviour’s sac ,
rifice rolls deep and wide is tweeu us und
onr aforetime bondage, and though there
simple gold ring. The ring, worn out
by hard labor while at the west, and
mended time and time again-Hi*
mending paid for by sewing at night
maybe deserts yet for its to cross, we gre ( while others slept was, when we came
on tiie w*y to the Promised Band. 1 hanks f () Brooklyn, so thin it could only be
be unto God for this emancipating Gospell
Co.no up out of Egypt all ye who are yet | 7 l, , nl,,g ’ W!US WOnl Io " 8 aftW
•nslsvcd. What Christ did for us he will that until, after a quarter of a cen
do fur you. "Exodus!” is the word. Ex-; tury’s use, it could he no longer re
paired. Today it rests close to me as I
write -sacredly kept as the result ol
Henry Ward Beecher’s lirst earnings by
public speaking at the age of seven
teen *
1 once beard a young lady say, show
ing her engagement ring "There! I
always said 1 would never be engaged
if I could not haven diamond ring."
And then 1 thought of the old. worn
ring, so carefully treasured, which, hall
a century ago, cost eighty-five cents,
and questioned if there was on earth a
ring more precious. Mrs Henry Ward
Beecher iu Ladies' Home Journal.
odus! Instead of the brick kilns of Egypt
come into the cmpurpic-l vineyards of God,
Where one cluster of grapes is bigger than
the one that the spies brought to the Is-
ivtelili-s by the Brook Kshcol, though that
clustev was so lu ge that it was borne “be
tween two upon a st ■(!!."
Vi Irnmc all by sin oppressed,
V, .denmc lo ilia sacred rest;
N'd’iilag brougat htni from idiova,
Nolhbtg bid rtahs'iidng love.
A Cliiu'cligoini' CniHsliopper.
gome little amuseniect was created iu
one of tlio leading lYesbylcrian diuretics
of this city by the ant ics of a grasshopper,
which rotle triumphantly into church
perched upon the shoulder of a staid and
worthy member. As the gentleman sat
down tho insect, to avoid being crushed,
hopped up nearer bis coat collar, and at
once engaged the aCfintion of two little
girls who were sitting in the pew behind,
and who found the hopper infinitely more
lively than anything from the pulpit.
Several quiet but ineffectual attempts to
catch the littio fellow from the country re
sulted in making him skip t wice, once into
the lace at the back of tho neck of a spin
ster, vlio would
known it, aud once somowbero out of
sight. His reappearance was the signal for
a hearty and irrepressible giggle on the
part of the little girlfl, for he clung to the
trainers of tho elder, who took up tho col
lection, riding the whole length of the
church twice, and then sought safety in the
flowers gtouped about the pulpit.—Roches
ter Herald. •
Strangers In the House of Connmtns.
The nmubor of strangers tulmltted to
the various galierii-s .of tho house ol
commons in each session of thu present
parliament appears, from the ret unit
granted to Mr. Childers on July 21 Inst
to have been, in tho second session o,
1638, 8,22!), or a daily average of 2111.
in 1887, 32,543, or a daily average o!
203; in 1883, 35,0’3, or a daily average
of 21!); iu 1339, 25.537, or a iluiiy aver
age of 210; in IB'.lo. 29,817, or n dail)
average of 238, and in 1801, 22.882. or e.
daily average of 102.
Tiie total number of sitlhixs ol t!u
house during tiie present parliament
lias been 730, and the total number of
persons admitted to the galleries was
152,015, or at the rate of 205 per sit
ting. Ladies and distinguished strmi
gors admitted to their respective gal
leries are not included in the return,
which stated that the speaker's gallery
and tbe strangers' gallery were amal
ganmted on June 17, 1838, and defig
nated the "Members’ gallery."—Lon
don Tit-Hils.
duy*
Til! wltal r.iikoaiis
Tote! (six i,l d
tote! Ipx for p
; Riimitcr of |
lls ll-
..I
lie would t.iki
•T.V’l i
t.iiii'
of
.ill'
id
iii imtliitig :i trip from 1’oston to Stm
Fninriico.
If he can do all this und more, ii
is likely he has suflicien! education
to enable him to make his own way
in the world. If yon have more time
and money to spend upon him, all
well und good--give him higher
English, give him literature, giv,
him routlicm;',ties, give him seienee.
and i{ lie is wry, very anxious, ahonl
it, give him Latin and Greek, or
whatever the course he intends pur
suing in life demands.
Example.
total
•yd Liter.:-
iinmi-iY
nine of
'? 3. i 2
poses,
UsSi’J;
X'-if.S.te'.i.
I Y’ork.—Tnlni
I y.Ofi.tmUl: tot;
pose*, *iO:MU.v
i assessed, •!,78li;
'•r:!.! ;•.!>( i.
Kdgeiiehl lends ?’
hugest return of p;
Cliarltv.loii is the
ih i, returning only !.•;
other counties 'vhMi! :. in
Abbeville, -i,'.!-..e. A i *»
ot
rail
operty
1 pur-
polls
roads
taxaid"
ta.x foi
: : numivi
value of
properly,
all pur*
ot ;
rjl-'
: v he
Wo realtor seeds with « e irchv.' hand,
Ami dream we ne’er shall see theuimorc.
Hut for r, ibon .and years
Their fruit appears,
In weeds that mar the land.
Or healthful store.
The deed* we do, the words v.e
lukison.
Beau fold
’ I
3.!
rrte:
V,
Wlicro Iv Co ii (mi tin (t lit?
A few days since I called ou a well
known business man who, surrounded
by the sumptuous comforts aud con veil
lonces of an elegantly appointed offlee.
should be perfectly contented with Ills
lot as a workingman. However, as we
chatted of one thing and another, he
have shrieked had nbe j suddenly and emphatically remarked
‘Do yon know I’m tired of this blamed
office? Fact Is. t’m so sick of it and it*
business that it impresses me with being
Just u workshop.” And then I went
back to my plain desk and chair, witli
their single wast# basket accessory, and
congratulated myself on my own good
fortune. -Detroit Free Dress
Vnsrntefal.
A Kentucky engineer named Hughes :
lias discovered that it docs not always I i„ t0 ,[ iC sl |ji |> u . v s ? Tm [„
pay, financially, to save human life.! We count them'ever past;
The other day he saw a man named: Bit they shall lari-
Stevenson lying across the track ahead j the ^ 1u ,i‘ m , :n ; [jlcy
of his tram, the engine was stopped
within a few feet of Stevenson.- lie
appeared drunk. Hughes pulled him
off and kicked him two or three time*
Stevenson was not drunk, but in a lit
He hi si Hughes arrested and fined
$9.01, costs and flue, although in* had
saved ids hie.- Philadelphia Is-dger
And we shall meet.
I charge thee by the years gone by.
For the love’s sake of brethren dear.
Keep thou the one true way.
In work aud play,
Lest hi that world their cry
Of woe thou hear.
Gk.rendnn, L,r'.;;
V ‘*1 lOtOU, A, •
Darlington, 3,Mi.'.;
FrGiield,
Flnroi'ee. 2,592; t L
ira u, 3,87
Greenville, 5,2119;
1'"Utph.lt. 2,53^
Kershaw, 2,528;
'Igunvns, !.|!
Lexington, 3,037;
Yiarh teo, 5’.O'
Xew 1 terry, 55,(553;
(leone*, !,h:
''•raiigeburg, 5,479
; I'iekens, 1,8!
I'nion, 2,747; W illiamsburg, 2,(5!
Richland, 4,8(59.
Charleston lead.'
; them all in 1
A Merry Heart.
’Tis well to have a merry
However short we stay,
There's wisdom in a merry
Yi hate’er the world ntav
heart.
,'<>ruiy of consideration j " mire er me worm nun su
nendatiou h.r putting young j Philosophy may lift its head
jeep is of Spanish origin li j And find out many a flaw,
heart,
IV.
But
That’
. me the philosophy
i happy with a straw!
Tiie Armn of u Devil Fish A Lout Him.
The schooner James Townsend, which
arrived from Fort Bragg, brought news
of the extremely unpleasant experience
George Barnes had with a devil fish nt the
[dace named recently.
Barnes, accompanied by a fisherman,
was searching for sea eggs, nud n fine
abaloue shell partly covered by a rock
catcIllUR bis eye he determined to secure
Vie prize. Barnes, who was barefooted,
■stepped into the water la ol.taih n good
purchase on the rock, when his left ankle
was seized by one of the tcutnalos of a Mg
octopus. The surprised explorer made a
hasty effort to draw his imprisoned foot
away, bnt more deadly in tbelr grip thau
tiie nippers of n pnliccmmi are the long,
flexible feelers ol the devil fish, and soon
three or four more' teutndcs of the Mile
merged inoneter were .wrapped around
Barnes’ fool and le", while hi* hips and
waist were encircled iu the slimy ehibrace
of the devil tish.
Bsriie* used every exertion to Cither free
himself or else laud thu octopus upon the
beach, but his strength gave out and he
would soon have succumbed to tbe fish’s
An r.asy Way of SlwlrliIng.
Here* is nn idea for those who are
artistic and original It is something
new and very pretty and consist* of
providing ycur own designs for em
broidery, taking them directly from
nature. Tills is how yon can do it.
Flowers are* preserved by dipping them
in melted [uirafflne. By moistening
white paper witli Leucine it becomes
translucent, then you can easily sketch
impressions of the flowers. When tiie
paper dries it again is opaque and Hie
impression sketched remain*. - New
York Advertiser
Cures fur SI^epleH.Hmnci.
Cures foi sloeplcssiiess are very nn
tuerous, and before any man could In
them all he would be "asleep for over '
There are not a tew. however, which
have stood tiie test of time, aud are
therefore worthy of consideration
A recommendation I.
children nsle
will he found particularly suitable foi
afflicted fathers, who may sometimes
be at their wits’ end "getting baby. .
asleep.” It requires Unit the hack ; 1 ^ hte Lilt brings us happiness
from tho neck to tiie waist, lie gently \ L brings us, we are told,
rubbed * ; Whut’s hard to buy though rich ones
There is much in the Chinese theory 1 try
that sleeplessness will lie dispelled when \\ ith nil their heaps of gold,
one rtd* the mind of every thought; Then laugh nwav—let others say
whatsoever. M hute’er they will of mirth;
A musician during a severe illness | Who laughs the most may truly boas!
made his wife play the scale upand: He’s got the wealth of'earth',
down on a small organ Often ufter :
he wo* asleep lie would start slightly There’s music in a merry laugh,
the
amount of tax for a!! pui iioscs, if'.J 30,-
352.83;Greenville follow s with$10!i,-
047.78; Y’ork with 8103, 1)15.5(5;
Edgefield $84,058.59; Abbeville,
$71,901.90. Maf 1 boro}Ays le sibiin
any county in (lie State, $29,378.03,
and Oconee, $29,597.01.
uul then sing what had put him to ;
sleep
Iloraeo in his "Satires’' recommends ,
swimming flic Tiliei three times! Sii
Thomas Browne was uccustolued to re
peat some verses oi n eertain hymn.
Franklin took Ins nil bath. Sir Julin
Sinclair counted, while Sir Julin Ren
nic when engaged upon any public
works never went to shs'p uiilil hi.-
head had been combed and gently
rubbed by some soft band. -Loudon
Tit Hit*
A Frlfinl Iii4l«‘4tl.
Robert Beck, of Doblonega. wanted
to get married, but Ids finance* were so
low Hint lie eotild not parade the uece*
sary $1.5(1 Hi* bruthor-ln law. who is
thirty five years old. went out on the
public square, mounted a dry goods
vlsellke hold ami been drawn into tiie sea box. inadu such a strong appeal that
bad not bis companion noticed his sad tllt , ,, rijwd chipped | n fhe necessary
plttfht nna hastened to liia renoue. .. D i ^ A %s »
Tbe fisherman plied a hatebet and a huge mid Nancy Jnno
knife with good effect, and soon sections Higgte* were married on Saturday. -
of tentacles were severed from the devil Savannah New*.
fish and dropped In Hie tide, squirming —♦ —-—
like eels. The whole.-ale’curving cf it* Aecommodatln*.
feslera proved too much for the octopus, Anxious Traveler (to baggage smarher)
A’moral beauty, too—
It shows (lie heart's mi honest heart.
That paid each mini his due*
And. lynt u siiare of what’s lo span
Despite of wisdom’s fears;
And made the cheek of sorrows
speak,
The eye weep fewer tears.
— - -«-*s>* —■
The larges! Sunday school in th,
i world is iu Stockport, England; it
: began in lWt'4. It now contains
j 5,000 pupils and 140 teachers. It
hits registered during its existence
0,000 scholar^ and 3,500 teachers.
War Hwltoniix ul Ifvl^ohiiul.
Ilclgolander* iiave been a little |mz
tied during the [stst few week* owing ! “
lo stuue Italloou exjierlniciits wliich
<!a|itain von Forster, oi tiie (lermtui j
marine servico. ha* Iktu iimkiug on* Coihpluint has' been made to the
ami about the island. Ascents Imve i ( j ovt . nlol . that there nro numbers oi
taken place by day and night with tbe | , ...
object of bolding commui.lctiou sea ; "eneheiary cadets at the South < art.
ward with the island and for balloon linn Military Academy, whose fathers
signaling The npitonranee of tire bal are able to pav for their education.
Umuih Miimwd lbe mb.lt isqmlaHon. and j ,; ()NX , | . 1J0 ,. ’]’jH, n . ul C;l l|* { or t j, e
gave Inflnite deliglit to Hie juvenile*. | . 1 .
fora ImiIIooh l* a rare *i£lit in Itelgo !a'lo promises to hate Ihe matter m-
land
uitide on tiie Island, and the service* of
some »kllled (tenunn artisan* have 'p), c gmtt Hest known species of
b«.-i. requisitioned for tbe purpose «f | ^ ul . o rillll) . torrf1 nf lh „ bjlulo ,
For UiS’rmit Fancies.
A female engineer, Miss Ida
Hewitt, is regularly employed on the
Gairo and Kanawha Vtdley railroad
iu West Virginia.
“Woman feels where man thinks.”
Y r es, nud that’s what makes the men
prematurely bald.
“Do you believe man sprang from
'the ape? “No; but I believe woman
i springs from tho mouse—in fact,
I’ve seen her do it.”
I have had many things in my
I hands, and I have lost them all; but
whatever I have been able to place
! in God’s I still possess.—Luther.
i When home is ruled according to
j God’s word angels might be asked
, to stay a night with us, and they
would not find themselves out of
•!heir element.—Spurgeon.
Nnnol beat the world's record ou
j the Stockton trotting track, in Gali-
fornin last Tuesday, making ;i mile
in 2:081. That beat Maud S. a half
second.
1‘aiienec strengthens the spirit,
sweetens the temper, strides anger,
extinguishes envy, subdues pride;
I she bridles the tongue, refrains the
I hand, and tramples temptations.—
Horn.
A
, - . , ™.. ...... ... .uv -™..., ssw their teeth anti liatr stcl finger iinil'<
»rty tllfferonce how much « Dov - ^ are letter than the bouclage ant! th* flesh drawn tiAif over tboir thick
.n worldly »(icca»« ( tits Int.'iuru ul Droluer* ,. ou | )aye sll ^ ert , ( [ It* scorpioii* will not bones, tho B.iroophagt’ of liaise dead,
»nd sisters al ways .o*!!. hini ‘Uy th.’ same ^ jhiifply ft* tho wrongs that have monarch* side liy side, and i was. so fusel-
aatn* that he W** ott.iwi hj ».-'ll two vm , B j. ()U al | your lives. Away! The uhted 1 could only with diMtenttysway
years ohl-JoscriT "f.A ? J''' ,r ' n i mau who wh* cradled In the basket of; from the spot, I whs nut looking upon the
tiougave to his family. Who had Ju*t nr j p B))J . tu# on t j, e jjj| e w j[j [o*,! y 0Ui Up!! last of the I’haraoh*. All over the world i
^v*4, to* Hyh**t oart nf ha/vot. t..« ‘ ypjj j* tha night of xnur resou*. old uivrrUsHts playing (liv Rhoraob over
am! Its several holds on Borne*’ leg and —libolt here, my man, will you break mjr
body relaxed, and be r.tu dragged up on trunk? It’* rather heavy,
tli; us in I and allowed to recover from tiie Baggage SmXshir—Oan't promise you, i " ,n '
fright und weaknees tndncej by the un- bnt I'll try—look sharp I—Nsw York K[)och. i y pil
picosunt adventure.—San Francisco Ex- ~
young gentleman wishes to
— , . know which is proper to gav ou
Many linproynmentH have been 1 vestigated by the Hoard of \ isitors. . .
7 . 1 . J . . . .; * J ■ leaving a voung lady friend after a
call—good night or good evening?
II 1 hi I, n (inner n-trt of Hie i * 1<J K 8 UVe qllUrtei’Ctl at the IsOUdon 1 * SeU ' 1 ,l '", 11 ' l ‘ e ’ ' 0U1I ° “tell—Siiy
wstl •iukliiH In the upper part of the t> . , 1 ! good morn llg.
Zoological Gtirdeug. Ihey cotm o uiouimg.
from the southern part of Australia.' “A on 11 reniendvr, (’orney, that
and are known as “the pigmy 'logs j every glass you take is a nail in your
as he ivjmvd
place. - London News.
There are 752 penitelitinry Con
victi
. v-yv. *
.<«r
■*r
I-'V
unifier
: -■ j sir?” asked the tavern keeper of the
Ouc doliuw avr ycTr for Tut ifituim traveler. “Table d’oat.”
r*r»s*(<r-sk-, .f.-' wr*- *» ▼ ,
in this State. They are at of tbe rttlllpod,eB.” They are well.^t-'odin, ’ said the master ;
as follow*! In penitentiary j formed,' frisky and gOodri^ihircd,'; 14 of whiskey for hi; labtM’er.
31, oil eutial 133, at Gleuison J and about, Ahe of^a musk-rut. : “W ell, your Monor,’ says tdrtiev,
• 1 —• • ' ’’ • ■ 1 * u •‘■te' • utiimer in
“How wlH vou have your horse fed * 'allege 1 ■i , 5, on farms 212. Uf.thjs ■ I hey are jvql hpg^, aiqi are not to Ije j ni ‘ l ? llB V 11 ^‘ lu
•in.uber
colored.
51 arc white and- 41081 eonfotiiakd aith. guiueiitpigs, jt Inch].y o *ttd»aud yeai’d just drive another
.Ow-'* ,
-te • , > —WW
1 are a siiaeie.* of rvdeut.
1 house,”
THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER
DEFECTS WHICH MAY APPEAR ON THE FILM.