REY. DR TALMAGR Che Eminent ‘Washington Divine's Sunday Sermon. Subject: “Pray for Those In Author ity." Trxr: I exhort, therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intecosssions and giving of thanks be made for all men, for kings and for all that are in authority. —I Timothy, il, 1, ‘That which London is to England, Paris to France, Berlin to Germany, Rome to Italy, Vienna to Austria, 8t. Petersburg to Russia, ‘Washington is to the United States republie, The people who live here see more of the chief men of the Nation than any who live anywhere else between Atlantic and Pacifle oceans. If a Seopator or Member of the House of Representatives or Supreme Court Justice or Secretary of the Cabinet or repre- sentative of Foreign Nation enters a public assembly in any other aity, his coming and going are remarked upon, and unusual de- farence is paid to him. In this capital there ars 50 many political ohieftains in our churches, our streets, our halls, that their coming and going make no axcitement, The Swiss seldom look up to the Matter. horn or Jungfrau or Mont Blane, because those people are used to the Alps. So we at this capital are so accustomed to walk among mountains of official and political eminence that they are not to us a great novelty, Moraing, noon and night we meet the giants But there 3 no place on earth where the importanos of the Pauline injunction to ray for those in eminent place ought to p60 better appreciated. At this time, when our publi men have before them the rescue of our Natioual Treasury from appalling de- | fleits, and the Caban question, and the arbi- tration question, and in many departments man are taking important positions which are to them new and untried, I would like to quote my text with a whole tonnage of em- phasis—words written by the scarred mis- sionary to the young theologian Timothy. “I exhort, therefors, thar, first of all, sap- plications, prayers, intercessions and giving of thanks be made for all men, for kings and for all that are in authority." If Ihave the time and do not forget some of them before [ get through, [ will give you | four or five reasons why the people of the United States ought to make earnest and continuous prayer for those in eminent place, First, because that witl put us in proper attitude toward the successful men of the not fa just the way that she hopes for I will do it in the best way, nad though she asked me for a sheet of music I will not give it to her, for I do like the music spoken of, but I will send her a dead ton house and lot, to be hers forever.” Bo God does not fn all cases answor In the wav those who sent the prayer hoped for, but He in all cases gives what is asked for or something better. Bo prayers went up from the North and the South at the time of our Civil War, and they were all answered at Gettysburg, You oan. not make me believe that God answered only the Northern prayers, for thers wers ust as devout prayers answered south of Mason and Dixon's line as north of it, and God gave what was asked for, or something as much more valuable as a house and lot are worth more than a sheet of musde. There is not a good an intelligent man bot ween the Gulf of Maxieo and the St. Lawrence River who does not believe that God did the best thing pos«ible when He mood this Nation down in 1513 a glorious unity, never to be rent until tiie waters of the Ohio and the Sa- vannah, the Hudson and the Alabama, are licked up by the long, red tongues of a world on fire. Yea, God sometimes answers pray- ars on a large scale, In worse predieamont nation never was than the Israelitish nation on the banks of the Red Bea, the rattling shields anda the clattering hoofs of an overwhelming host closs after them. An army could just as easily wade through the Atlantic Ocean from New York to Liverpool as the Israelites could have waded through the Red Sea. You need to sall on its water to realize how big itis. How was the crossing effected? By prayer. Exodus xiv., 15: **And the Lord said unto Moses: Wherefore ecriest thou unto Me? Speak unto the children of Israel, that they go forward" that is, “Stop pray- ing and take the answer.” And then the water began to be agitated and swung this way and that way, and the ripple became a billow, aad the billow climbed other billows, invisible trowsls mason them into firmness, and the walls becomes like mountains, topped and turreted and domed with erags of crys tal, and God throws an invisible chain around the feet of those mountains, so that they are obliged to stand still, and there, right before the Isrnelitish army, is a turn- pike road, with all the emerald gates swung wide open. The passing host did not even get their lect wet. They passed dry shold, the bottom of the sea as hard as the pave- ment of Pennsylvania avenue to New York's Broadway or London's Strand. Ob, what a Or I think I will change that and say, “What a God wo have!” What power puts it hands upon astron- omy in Joshua's timo and made the sua and Nation. After you have prayed for a man you will do him jnstice. There is a bad | streak in human nature that demands us to | assail those that are more successful than | ourselves, [tshows itself fo boyhood, when | the lads, all running to get their ride on the i pack of a carriage, and one gels on, those falling to gt on shout on the driver, “Cut behind!" Unsuccessful men seldom like | those who in any department are successful, The cry 1s, ‘Hs is a political nectdent,” or, | “*He bought his way up,” or, “It just hap-| sped 80," and there 1s an {impatient waiting | or him to come down more rapidly than he | went up. | The best eure for such cynicism is prayer. | After we have risen from our knees we will be wishing the oficial good instead of evil, | We will be hoplag for him benediction rather | than malediction, If he makes a mistake, | we will call it a mistake instead of malfes- sance {n office, And, oh, how much hap- pler we will be, for wishing one evil is dia- | bolic, but wishing good {a salot- ly, is angelic, 13 godlike! When the Lord drops a man foto depths beyond which | there is no lower depth, he allows him to be put om an investigating ecommittes with the | one hopo of finding something wrong. In general assemblies of the Presbyterian | church, in conferences of the Methodist | church, in conventions of the Epfseopal | church, in House of Representatives [and | Benate of the United States there are men | always giad to be appointed on the commit. tea of malodors, while theres are those who are giad to be put on the committee of eulogiums, After you have prayed, in the words of my text, for all that are in anthor- ity, you wil say, “Brethren, gentlamen, Mr. Chairman, excuse me from serving on the committes of malodors, for last night, just befors I prayed for those in eminent posi- tions, I read that of in Corinthians about charity which ‘hopeth all things’ and “thinketh noevil.""” The committee of mal- | odors is an important committee, but I bere now declare that those are important for its work who have, not in spirit of convention- alty, but in spirit of earnest importunity, | prayed for those in high position, [ cannot felp it, but I do like a St. Barnard better than a bloodhound, and I would rather be a bamming bird among honeysuckles than a crow swooping upon fleld carcasses, Another reason why we should pray for those in eminent place is because they have | such multiplied perplexitiea., This aity at | this time holds hundreds of men who are | expectant of preferment, and United States | mail bags as never befors are full of ap- | plications. Let me say I have no syrapathy with either the uttered or printed sneer at | what are called “office seekers.” If] bad | not already received appointment as minis | ter plenipotentiary from ths high court of | fisaven—as every minister of the gospel has | —and I had at my back a family for whom I wished to achieve a livelihood, there is no employer whose servies [ wou id sooner seek than city, State or United States Govern- ment. Tose Governments are the prom ptest in their payments, paying just as well in hard times as in good times and during sum- mer vacation as during winter work. Be. sides that, many of us have been paying taxes to city and State and Nation for years, | and while we are indebted for the protection | of Government the Government is indebted | to us for the honest support we have rendered it. 80 I wish success to all earnest and competent men who appeal to city or State or Nation for a place to work, But how many men in high place in city and State and Nation are at their wits’ end to know what to do, when for some places there are ten applicants and for others a hundred. Perplexities arise from the fact that citizens sign petitions without reference to the qualifications of the appli- eant for the piaces applied for. You pt the application because the applicant is your friend. People sometimes want that for which they have no qualification, as we hear people sing “I want to be an angel” when they offer the poorest material sible for angelhood. Boors waiting to sent to foreign palaces as embassadors, and men without any business qualification wanting to be consuls to foreign ports, and illicerates, capable in ore letter of wrecking all the laws of orthography and syntax, desiring to be put into positions where most of the work is done by correspondence. If divine help is needed in any place in the world, itis in those places whers patronage is distributed. In vears gone by awful mistakes have been made, Only God, who made the world out of chaos, sould out of the crowded pigeon- doles of public men develop symmetrical re. sults. For this reason pray Almighty God for all thos in ajbority. A » prayer to God for those in authority is our on'v way of being of any practical services tothem. Our personal advice would bs to them, for the most part, an ‘impertin- ence. They have all the facts as we cannot have them, and they see the sub in all its s we can be of no help to them through the supplieation that our text advises, In that way we may be inflaite ce-enforcement. The mightest ig you ean do for a man is to pray for him, { the Bible be trus—and if it is not true it has been the only imposition that sver blessed ono wer it ra i £ ge § £ dt i: moon stand still? Joshua x., 12, “Then spoke As oa giant will take two or four great globes, and in as- tounding way swing them this way or that, or hold iwo of them at arm's length, so the Omnipotent does as He will with the great orbs of worlds, with wheeling constellations and cireling galaxies, swinging easily star around star, star tossed alter star, or sun and moon held out at arm's length and per To God the largest world is a pebble, Another reason why we should obey the Pauline injunction of the text and pray for all that are {n authority is that so very mueh of our own prosperity and happiness are involved (no thelr doings, A selfish rea- son, you say. Yes, but a righteous selfish. ness, like that which leads you to take care of your own health asd preserve your Damaged government people, We all go up together, or we all go down together, When we pray for our rulers, we pray for ourselves, for our homes, for the easier gain ing of a livelihood, for better prospects for our children, for the hurling of theso hard times so far down the embankment they can Do not look at any- thing that pertains to public interest as hav. lag no relation to yourself, We are touched by all the events in our national history, by the signing of the compact {an the cabin of the Mayflower, by the small ship, Moon, sailing up the Hudson; by the treaty of William Penn, by the hand “Liberty bell” sound its first Ironsides plowing the high prosperous people, stroke, by Old sons, and, tainly by all the events of the present aay. prayer be of the right stamp and worth any- thing, has a rebound of begediction for your own body, mind and soul, Another reason for obedience to my text is that the prosperity of this country is com- ing, and we want a hand in bhelpiag on its eotaing. At any rate [ do, [It is a matter of honest satisfaction to a soldier, after some great baitle has been fought and some great viotory won, to be abletosay: “Yes, | was there, I was in the brigade that stormed those heights, I was in that bavonet charge that put the snamy to flight.” Well.the day and moral foes of this republi. will be driven back and 4riven down by the prosperities that are now on their way, but which come with slow tread and In “fatigue dress” when we want them to take “the double quick.” By our prayers wa may stand on the moun- tain top and beckon them oa and show them a shorter cut. Yea, in answer to our pray- ers the Lord God of Hosts may from the high heavens command them forward, swifter than mounted troops ever took the fleld at Eyiau or Austerlitz, That was boaatiful and appropriate at the laying of the eornarstons of the extension of the Capitol fifiy-eight years after the corner. stone of the old Capitol had been lala, Yet the cornerstone of our Republic was first laid in 1776 and at the re-establishment of our I “tional Government was laid again in 186% we 4, It are we not ready for the laying of the cornerstone of a broader and higher National life? We havens a Nation received 80 much from God. Do we not owe new consecration? Are wae not ready to become a better Sabbath-keeping, peace-loving vir- tue-honoring, God-worshiping Nation? Are we not ready for such a cornsrstons laying? Why not now let it take place? With long procession of prayers, moving from the north aud the south, the east and the west, lot the scans be made august beyond comparison. The God of nations, who hath dealt with us As with no other people, will preside at the solemuization. By the square and tha jsvel and the plumb of the everlastiog right let the corner stons be adjusted. Let that cor. nerstone be the masoaing together of the two granite tabies on which the law was written when Sinal shook with the earth. quake, aad inside that cornerstone put the sermon on ths mount and a scroll containing the names of all the men and womea who have fought and prayed and tolled for the good of this nation, from the first martyr of the American Bevolution down to the last woman who bound dp a soldier's wounds in the fleid hospital. And let soms one worthy to do so strike the stone thres times with the gospel hammer in the name of God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost, Then lat the buliding rise, one wall laved by the Pucific ocean and the other washed of the Atlantis, until its capstone shail be lald amid the shoutiog of all nations, by that time as tree as our own divinely founded, divinely constructed, and divinely protected republie, the last throne of Shpression having fallen flat into the dust and the last shackle of tyranny been hung up in museum as a relic of barbaric ages, The prayer that the great expounder wrote to bey put in fhe SSruaiUNg at the extension ot the Capitol I ejaculate as own suppll- oation, “God save the United States of worst t : *To be ren as is most due, all dominion, both now dered and asori " Crusader, was over. Potten Court aad caused GLASS BYES, HEIR MANUFACTURE 135 A CURIOUS AND PROFITABLE BUSINESS. Thousands Turned Out Every Year, Ready Made Ones Are Cheap, But the Made to Order Sort Come High. There are many curious industries in his big city, says the New York Her- ild, and one that ranks pre-eminent in he peculiar line is a glass eye factory. It may seem strange that there should be a sufficient demand for io support such a factory, 28 it employes a number workmen all the year when one learns some of the secrets of the trade all cause for wonder ishes, of skilled round, i more more ne- eye > last very often not that a glass eve does not than a year and than six months. Of course, this the purchase of new every little while by afllicted people, and the number of people who use thes is surprisingly large, judged by the yearly production of the factory Five hundred are turned out weekly, or about twenty-six thousand in 0 year. Not all these are but this percentage is small, stock that the sale department are cessitates eyes eyes gold, The of very unsold they are in of the or throughout the country ones are OVes used factory, sent to dealers as samples. i conga The prices of glass eyes vary An made ¢ $5, whi eye with the pupil colored, costs any whe erably. ordinary ready ye costs le a made to order and cornea carefully re from $10 to $30, $50, but one, Poor afford ready made number of in different brown and occasionally as much as this rare th Lie latter price is a people can only and large always kept in stock gray and ayes eve, u these are shades o common, brown the mos! then are iken come hil and Black eves has never Ophthalmic consumers of the it are a myth, and the factory make one the had a call to hospitals are largest false eye These buy juantities, and paturally get the pro rill Gras used, for part, on poor people who are ly unable to be ner of exact ct The most $ the cg are tory yes large trays, each eyes of many are in one tray, in another varieties in hi When a pur is fitted ables them ¢ the a Tex og ges the es f if irritation pre has never been a time in the artificial evea The ancient Egyptians wore lid not exist four and five thousand years ago se eyes of gold and silver, and later copper ivory It on that two patriotic Lutetians, when was in financial erously presented thei the public treasury : fai of and ju record their distress, gen golden eyes fo country During the Middle Ages porcelain su ficial eyes, and a century ago the glass ave arrived the is the lusion of all material for the ext he it others The easily described, but to beat and used to $ process of making the eye eight skilled the part of the seven workmen. Formerly Gf one finished state, but now the work is di- man performing only a fraction of the whole task. fectly transparent and fusible glass. This is placed in a crucible and exposed to great heat. The globe. maker places the enamel over a blow. pipe supplied with wind which is pump- ed by engine power into a large cyl- inder and stored under water pressfiire. Under the careful manipulation of the workman the enamel tube is form- ed into an oblong globe, just the size and shape of a human eye. Next it passes into the coloring room. A plece of colored enamel is placed on the summit of the giobe, and this is gently hested in a small flame and continuously rotated. Gradually this takes the form of the iris, and then a spot of darker enamel is added to re- present the pupil. Then this is covered by a thick layer of crystal to form the carnea At this sts ge the eye is detached from to the eutting room, from which it emerges shaped into a small hollow colors are worked in to give the core rect shade, Brown eyes of the hazel ing of yellow and gray, and some kinds blue eyes are equally difficult to fashion, There is also a great variety in the sclerotic or white, In children's eyes it Is a pale china blue, {n old peo- ple a gray, while with men who are heavy drinkers or smokers it has yellowish tinge. Of course the great art lies in ing the artificial eye an exact duplicate in expression, size and color of the liv. ing and so cleverly the work now done that few people van detect the genuine from the false. a mak- eve, is BURNT OFF HIS OWN HAND, Obeyed the Biblical Text. That a wealthy and cultivated Ameri can should burn off of his hands self punishment for a struck in of anger seems incredible Yet one of the most promising young literary critics in New ‘York Is now minus left of deliberately one as careless Aes a moment O03 his result such extrao mutilation, hand as a dinary self John Jay Chapman struck a friend with his left hand afters ward that his anger had ground- an and found out been less. the reaul he carry s he i aly and a memorial of his disloy warning not to give wav to unr ing The If thee occurred him he it And day he appeared with his arm in a sling. He held the fire until it } - fo t off n painful enough BABSON text would comply anger again familiar tony hand offend cut it oO y io with 80 one had ad bea aa Deon nave cut | wouid bit DANCEROUS PLANTS, i Some of the Wonders of Tropical Vege~ tation, Three of the most dangerous of vege tative plants in the world are the “can- | nibal tree” of Australia, the death’ or “grapple plant’ of South Africa, and the “vegetable python” of Zea land, The “cannibal tree’ grows up in the shape of a huge pineapple and attains a height of eleven feet, It has of broad, board-like leaves, growing a fringe at the apex, forcibly brings to mind a glg Central American agave: and these board-like leaves, from ten 10 twelve feet the smaller specimens and from fifteen to twenty feet in the larger, hang to the ground and are easily strong enough to bear the of a man of 140 pounds or more. In the a time this tree was worshipped by the native savages under the name of the “devil tree,”” a part of the mony being the their number brace. The vic the New a series in which antic in weight neient interesting cere sacrifice of one of to its all too-ready em- tim to be 8 leaves the apex, and the of the would driven up of instant the so-called “pistis’ mongter were touched the fly together leaves y trap, crushi he life out of truder way the tree hold sapping his ar from The herb grapple plant growing In flowers are purple foxglove South n : English rrul as for Lie y clinging to any hooks, and by is mida passer it Is conveyed where seed may fin ditions for growth. Sir John says it has been known u The “vegetab.e Harvard that thi was committed when que *l member The hand tha in anger shall not remain fiction the @l on would probably part of any one se have occasioned a good derision and chs deal of jut Chap- nan is not the others treat wit} evident to any iI8 & reine on | even at Lual ue who commands general college Was recog- acquaintances as a TIAN advisable to let alone He was one of the most promising stu- dents class, and won many the frivdn po { luring bh Of 3 sir ia N ft the univer prizes offered a is term ie in Minister o Uni of Napoleon, and his family n New York ms a Miss Simmons ARO Chat ison of Jay John 1 States at tend cour i prominent one | we | His wife, who was few weeks Hoston man a lite have recent cagion lated owing of that ior to the general scarcity game A Connecticut J atur Main, of North promoting 3 nnher o known n however SMonington, desirous of pi wholesome sport to say of the lives of imperiled turk- has Free not ave an made dom’s pet.” by sion of the House his positive opinion that “eagles gel their teeth into every thing they can lay their hands on.” and under no circumstances should a hun- | ter be subject to the unjust fine of twenty-five dollars for killing one Moreover, he had the support of a cer- | tain association who made the startling observation that the proposed law “was drafted by an able lawyer for the pur- pose of preventing New York sports- men from coming into Litchfield Coun- ty and killing eag.es for the sake of the $100 apiece they can get for the dead { birds from the metropolitan taxiler- | mists.” Despite this two-fold eloquence and wisdom which was supported by a | few other legislators who disgraced by advocating death to | eagles, the bill was carried by a com- d geese, 30 the report goes, ignment of aring A BOvers are dec in open ses we | themselves | fortable majority, and quiet and peace now reign in the eyrierg-New York Independent. Ke Saved the Baby. Holding the baby in his left arm while he grasped his sabre with his right, Captain Highuchi marched to the capture of the next fort, receiving at one time a bullet through his cap. The fort was taken in gallant style, the baby meanwhile looking on in wondering surprise at the din and up- roar of the battle, perfectly content to rest on the kind-hearted captain's shoulder. When all was over this gal- lant officer gave his tiny charge to some of hig troopers, who bore the A————— | village hard by.-Herofc Japan. . | Wedding Months, { There iz a popular idea that June is known the nat or fig | seeds of the clus pt birds ¥ y rom 10 ¥ wl the sirangie is il Vers whicl } Bh tree Lo i i A Paeuliar Trade. cago man has traded a + stamps nel a valued $35000, B name of the philatelist called him a crank), who twenly HED roreign friends Years collection of the local and began stamps He accumulated them Then came the opportunity to dispose of a portion of them for a small fortune in the person of the young son of John E. Burton, a wealthy mine owner Hurley. Mr. Burton owned the hotel, which has eighty rooms and is one of the best known in the state His son had for several years been an ardent stamp collector, and was de- sirous of going into the business for a livelihood, Ross was willing to take the hotel in exchange for a sufficient stock of stamps to set the young man up in business with. It took about 3,000,000 stamps to buy the hotel, and Mr. Burton and his son were engaged for nearly a week in counting out the $35000 worth. The stamps were piled high in an express wagon. There were in the lot stamps ranging in value from 10 cents per 1,000 to one for $1,500, Whales Are Hard to Find. The motive which has begun a new period of Antarctic exploration is very evident and definite indeed. The sup- ply of right whales has practically given out in the North, owing to the over-demand caused by the high price of whalebone. The oil, (0 be sure, is not worth nearly so much as in the palmy days of New Bedford and her sturdy whalers, by reason of the cheap production of its rival, petroleum. But the bone is sold at $5 per pound, and a right whale may have in his eapacious jaws a whole ton of the precious com- With each animal furnish- ing a small fortune for a seafaring man, it is not surprising. in these days of harpoon guns and steamships, that the Arctic Ocean has been plundered of its by the million of breadth deviation in size wil make a material difference in the fitting. Tue edges are fired and the eye al- lowed to cool slowly, this being the an- nealing or tempering process, which toughens the enamel and renders it jess liable to break. The final work is the polishing, and then it is ready for the owner. that the young woman who loves ro- mance and wishes fortune to smile upon her nuptials in every way must choose this of all months, Cold and unroman- tic fact, however, shows that the three wile wealth, So whalers are turning thelr attention to the waste of unex- right whales in 1824, but Borchgrevink and his contemporaries failed to come up with them —Seribner's. RA ARE 4H A SAA tober, November and December, Fifty years’ records show this to be true, and also demonstrate the fact that the most A baby that weighs but eight pounds at the age of eighteen months, which is a pound and a half less than it weigned when born, is the attractive center of all the gossip of the little A THE ROMAN SENATE. Ours Resembles it to a Marked Degroe. Some of the rules of the Roman sen- ate resembled our own, sald Benator No business could be transacted with- quorum. The question quorum, as familiar in that as in this, might be raised at any time, by any member. in two words addressed to the presiding officer —pumera senatum-—-count the senate, A desiring to speak sometimes addressed the chalr, but in every « his fellow members collec patres conscriptl The speeches of the senators might be and were read from manuscript, a practice which bas lasted even until this day out the presence of of a i assembly senator aABe tively, as often There was no previous question held without who gross.y without sometimes forced to or ci Debate was as to time, Those he Bhi ere abused this ri of speaking w interruption noise and clamor made by r the Occasionally these dem- officer at- once, How mem bers their fe the whole senate joined in ions The i 4 i tt oe y $ + 10 Interrupt onstrat presiding ten more than but this was not ype an obnoxious speaker plerated by the sena senator one day, In being in speaking r nd by When a certain order t ree from 8 Cod tried 10 was! 0 prevent who was then consul, a siding officer prison, but the ir feet to follow to rescind senator held the were Limes, srolonged ito the were ordered and y discouraged b new reference ‘ : « iid be passed reasonableness in our own day, mem uilding, ap except the 1 genators y make 2 Hoe] of the the yroceedings wia CONSULS 107 in the senale uty, t appear int } APP0 yrudence of the term de reniom 1 of the indian Police the Indian Agencies now pre regulated { extent to the These offi- cors are always Indians, and compose a force that for efficiency and bravery be The ordinary wmturally be dis- posed to he had an opportunit not now sO anx- fous as formerly to do so, out of a fear of a visit from a squad of police. The wrong-doer, no matter if lives on | the very outskirts of the reservation, sixty or eighty miles from the agency, knows that a t from the police is as certain that the sun will rise and set, and he knows also that he will prompt punishment fon whatever crime h committed. { He cannot elude the policemen, for they bloodhounds, and never { fail to find their man. no matter | what part of the reservation he may go. Their native cunning serves them i well in the performance of their du- ties. Indian policemen are appointed by the United States Indian agent in charge of the reservation, and subject to the approval of the Commissioner | of Indian Affairs. Captains and lieu tenants receive a salary of fifteen dol- jars permonth, and privates tem dol. lars. There is considerable rivalry for the positions, and many individuals serve for years without caring to resign at any time. A quart of oysters containg on the average about the same gnantity ot active nutritive substances as & quart of milk, or a pound of very lean bee! or a pound and a half of fresh codfish, or two-thirds of a pound of bread. Peculiar Land Marks, “In the states where there were no government sectional surveys descrip- tions of land are very pecaliar,” said a speculator. “1 bought a tract of tim- ber land in Tennessee and went down to look at it. The description read: ‘Beginning at a stump in John Smith's neighborhood road, thence east 1.000 rods to a white oak tree, thence south 1,000 rods to a creek, thence west 1.000 rods by the o.pek as it thence north 1,580 rods to an owl's nest, That of well gent the appearance due to a grea the peace, cities is excellence of cannot surpassed would n ! trout Indian, who create whenever 3 pie i y, in he visi just as un receive £ has are veritable ta | i
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