The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, September 18, 1902, Image 6

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    = ; ins rise.
“Bome day, some “he murmurs,
Joy ai es = mine "up thers,
SOrTOW never enters
And all the days are fair”
His eves may never
Beyond the Bi
He goes with faith tn br
ai many a
it still
n | Dennis. 1 think on fate must have
. dropped you from the clouds!” she sald,
‘with s smile.
He looked at her and tried to hide
a | the look of admiration that had crept
ted to sin that the
b-| taily.
polit by ses water
| to his eyes. Bhe seemed more gloricus
st | Iy beautiful than ever. He made soioe
vague reply, and she went on talking
I It was Intoxication
f.}to him. He had fallen desperately In
love at first sight, and he wondered
about the yacht.
what * would all Jena 10.
»
The est ov drs casas) delight-
He had several couversations
with ber—indeed, she seemed altnost
to welcome 88 opportunity of speaking
with him. The more he saw of her, the
more convinced was be that he bad
t | made no mistake. This was po fleet
ing fancy; he was really iu love
~ Then came a ‘bitter shock of disap
run of Alexandria, and be was about
I's|to go on deck. As be raced up the
Sead will bare to get fo
Sains: fn Gibruitarr
sald. touching on
10 overhear. 1 eath.
a the figure before |
enit. She saw a tall,
: shaven man in wet,
th the ‘collar of his!
an engineer?” whe asked,
e you to Alexandria fo
t was interested.
feller, got _papers 10
i | the two together on the yachh
{ chair, studying a book.
brett’s Peerage”
| bitter,
ix | Hillmarch came on board.
peer kept out of the way until they
| with a start.
bronzed {aoe of the lieutenant of the
.| companion something white on one of
the stairs caught his attention He
n, | picked it wp and found it was & tele
gram. Glancing at It be saw that it
{ was the cable that had been sent to ber
| at Gibraltar by her father,
unconsciously he read the few words:
“Get Scud to Alexandria by 224 with.
as | ont fail-Lord Hillmarch has promised
| to come with os to England.”
Almost
He stood staring at it supidly; then,
as the meaning of the words dawned
1 npon him, a fierce wave of unreasona-
ble resentment swept over Lim, Od
Jewison had run scrozs lord Hil
{ march, and, consilering him an eligi
ble son-in-law, bad schemed to bring
The
1 old, stale srrangement— American Deir.
esses and the English aristocracy.
‘Wonld they never tire of fi?
With a frown on his face, be made
c- | his way slowly on deck, the telegram
{still In bis hand. A few yards sway
Mise Lewison was sitting in her deck
Bhe looked
up as the engineer appeared and
5 smiled. He crossed to ber and bold out
the telegram. :
“1 found this on the stairs,” he sald
shortly. He caught sight of the book |
#hie was reading, and saw
He felt
it was "De
exceedingly
He remained down In the engine
root the rest of the time-he felt al
most sulky.
The next day they anchored off Alex.
sodria and old lewisen with Lord
The engi»
went into the saloon for lunch, then be
| seized the opportunity and went ou
| deck. He leaned over the taffrail and
| gave bimself up to his thoughts.
An
other hour or so and she would have
passed out of his life forever. In Lis th
of abstraction he had not noticed a tor
pedo destroyer that was oat for prac
tice. Bbe was going at quarter speed
past the yacht.
Ruddenly a voles broke on his ers,
“Why, it's Kenyon, by Jove!
are you, old wap”
The engineer awoke from hie re verle
A few yards away the
destroyer was langhing at blm.
“Can't keep away from the sid game,
i I mee—Incky chap to be able to choose
your own fancy boat! Wil you cone
round and see us to-night”
The destroyer was some distance
away by now, and the last words came
in a shout. The engineer nodded and
waved bis hand,
Then a slight noise behing hig made
Lim swing round.
He saw Miss Fay Lewison and Lord
Hillmarch standing at the open door of
i. | the companion, The girl was watching
5 ¢ him.
ny old messmates bail me.”
11 a jerk of his finger foward the de-
| stroyer.
“He called you Kenyon,” she said,
wonderingly.
Lord Hillmarch stepped forward. He
‘was an almost middle-aged little man,
with a kindly face. He held out his
y | hand to the engineer,
“That happens to be his name, you
kpow— Dennis Kenyon,” be said, with
a smile,
: . a Lewison was still more bewil
| dered. "You know him?"
“Slightly,” he replied. “You see, his
a| estate adjoins mine at ocme.”
“But he has been our engineer!” she
There was a pause. Lord Hillmmarch
4 | shot a little alert look at Kenyon and
. | stroked his mustache. The
walting for an explanation.
girl stood
Kenyon
gave & nervous laugh,
“There isn’t really much to explain.”
{he said. “You see, before an uncle
died and left me a bothering lot of
| money and ap estate, I was an engi
neer in the navy—you just heard one of
He gave
“You know the rest. I was
idling about Gibraltar when 1 acci-
dentally on troulile About the
fnily.
poet peasety
i ROR
How |
tal.
and lumbering.”
other critically. then 8 sHght smile
crept over his Insignificant little face |
He pulled out his cigarette case.
“Supposing,” he observed, dryly, “we |
ail be delightfully frank with ong ap
other.”
The two turned to him with a start, |
I jost love frankness! sald Miss
May.
“Phen, as & beginning” he said cool
17. "Vil remark that I don't think TB |
cone to England in the yacht with you, |
I rather fancy, you Kpow, that being
| thirty eight, and somewhere about 6ve
| fest two in stature, ‘with a bald bead
into the bargain, 1 will adhere to my
old resolution and admire nothing but
my own charming self! How's that
for frankness?’
“(yigantic” said Kenyon.
The little lord smiled.
“Then Til Jeave you to do your
share.” he observed, and strolled away,
Iy: then suddenly they both langled.
“I's sil very ridiculous’ said Miss
Lewison.
Kenyon grew sober again.
“1 suppose,” be said. slowly, “1 must
be leaving the ship pow, unless"
He paused and looked at her intently,
“Unless by 8 remote chance you also
have" His voice died sway Der-
Yousily.
“What? she said, with her ey 00
the deck.
“A strain of romance somewhere In
your composition” He finished io al
mont 8 whisper.
Khe Hied her send snd saw him
Hooking at her pleading. There Wag a
vagoe something that appealed to her.
And be was undoubtedly very mach in |
love with ber,
half smile.
“I'm not certain”
Then her eves met his “Why
got give me a little time to find puts”
she sald frankly.
Her lips parted in a
He did—and eventually Ascorered |
that there was Mal Bly About Prope.
AT LE EE
Tarnips and Feats.
ing education with apy frills and | raf
fox, | Nhe opm
each of iho
OLpHEITHING
ent, (rne 1
vipat of the schol
teraad tie HIGH
oni
v5 aiways fond
pins whe WIE
Ri oe five
expressed Dar sent
fired eras,
levy § we
arn taught’ =
disregard
the Way
an With
and
she fet
of tat
that they don’t koow when they have
Aphy.
fx in Groom,
and aid that the teacher had stopped
in the middle of a singlog lesson, right
tn asi how |
in the middie of a song
many turnips were In 8 peck.”
“You mukt be mistaken” exouned
i the astonished principal.
MERE $6 33 Tie, and
aid Bessle'n niothes
“No, matan.
Bessie never
tion
with a complacency that Irritated the
aimosphers,
The teacher was sent for,
nied that she had interropted a oasie
lesson to mstisly her enriosity In re
gard to turnips and peoks. She went
back to 0 room whith vakindly ferlinge
smiling.
“1 know now what she meant,” sald
she, TI meked the obildten how many
heats were in a measure —Lippin
{ cott's Magazine,
Drawing Out the Mean Man,
Robert Carsiek, ote of the richest
bankers of Bootiand a {ow generations
ago, was as mean as be was wealthy.
Being ute day vig
Siierting &
hospital
3h hd
he sired for two guineas,
#1: the smalipess of the
“Really, I dann
disappoint inant
ainount, be ssud,
afford mon”
largest manulsciurers
cried:
af the
the city, who, on seeing the list,
“What, Carrick only two guineas?”
When informed of what the banker |
bad sald, Wilson replied:
“Wait: T will give him a lesson”
i :
Taking bis check book, be filled Ina :
check for £10000, the full amoont of |
tiis deposit at Carrick’s bank, aud sen? |
ft tor immediate payient,
Five minutes later the hanker ap
peared, breathless, and asked, “What |
{8 the matter, Wilson?’
“Nothing the matter with me" re.
plied Wilson, “but these gentlemen |
informed me that you couldn’ afford
more than two guineas for the bospl
Halla? thinks © if that's the case |
there must be something wrong, and |
I'll get my wioney out ag son A% Pos
sible”
Carrick took
erased the two guineas,
tuted fly, on which Wiser lininedds
ately tore up the check —~TitBits
pe OR AAR A A A
the sabseription list,
Primary Occupations.
Down town some time spon
examination, and sang the ques
tions propounded to the hopefuls was
the following:
“What are the five priciary occupa-
tions of man?”
The proper an? authorized
is something like this.
fishing and Lunting, mining.
But one of the small |
boys at whom the question was tired
| got off this answer:
_ “Poiitics, keeping a store, working
for the troliey sempany. apd being a
Lord Hillmarch lighted his cigar
Cette.
tring friends who own a large ranch
! about seventeen miles above Albu
Saturday the children asked permis
: f sion of their mother © go to a corral
The two stared at one another blank. |
Pand on the other side of 8 koall that
phecured the corral from view to play.
(afternoon frolic. Roon the little sisten
wearied and the sider brother proposed
Hires the younger loother. Emerson,
t older brother took kis sister to the
| Bouse,
Akad
i bin playing st the corral” said the
boy.
fhe Little fruant.
f ger came back. panting from his hur
Ee wae nol al the corral
she said, doubt |
96d there found the repwrt of her boy
i to Lis roe,
| Lat could Bind no trace of the missing
tliad taken a dipoeiay
What he should bave tabien, sod the
Sa hifiraened
Mrs 80th was not n favor of adorn aera
\ the introduction of
fe aml her
and igeist-
cial 3h prin. : i wl
bts ins GR sich shied i
, 15 no meas |
5 3 hos se ond alas
children ©
& phvinlal |
diplomacy. |
Pheir piudies five 80 jumbled together |
weary seared ov
finished with srl meth and ken op
The other day Bowle-she
you Esow-carse home ht
went on, and TE ono elie to the
: tlerer
| repeTte that were
[brought ber only added ta accenniate |
ter suffering.
followed for a distances of twelve miles
find then seemed to double upon them. |
s .. melvex and finally be
Ele de | Hut rest the searchers continu
what seamed their hopeleny gust 1°
* The thought of the poor Hottie tor belong |
LAYER Upon the dreary pis
= out shelter or fool, wandéring en with!
but three thinutes later she camt back |
Lie iy
ipangs of bunger and thirst. wae sir
Cpiy maldening
‘friends seeming so belpless to termi
tinued, and early Monday morniog Hi
father, who had been
tragedy. was wired
(Gay and added his untiring
ited by a deppiation
iptions towards 4 new
Ci
find one of the gentlemen expressing
apd substi
clase, strange-looking ™
5 Yo i ange look wii
in physical geography wis godurgring : #:BE Xp
| except that ht
Answer : i
2 hod ¥ bein at $Y § REVApRae.
“Agriculture, | sie be tracted by the sirange pte
herding |
Lost In the Desert.
"HE family of Mr. Godfrey
j« Hughes, a mewber of the
firm of assayers owning the
customs assay office, recently
went to spend the summer months vis |
querque. The family consists of the
niother, two zone and a daughter. Last
same 300 yards away from the house
Permission was granted and the}
youngsters bounded away for thelr
that they take her to the honge To
ohio was only six years old. demurred,
ae he wished to play more So the
pwn arrival there the mother:
Where ‘x brother?” “We left
The mother then sent him back for:
Shortly the mesiséhn. |
fled roreing. snd eselained that his
brother was Bowhere to he found; that
The fright.
end misiher hurried aver to the cori
She senrolwill and seatehed
¢BikL. Ar last she cane opon Hohe |
Title footprints, shaving that the ohild
srine the apposite to
ther becaine more and
‘Some the fae that Ler
nizvy
Caliouldors te his finger ends
*t lay thers
Apire: it.
for threes ies!
wee dark nee was
Bayer RER poReriens |
Vis BO As Fa
ars $
aly & Ravel Tory ry WAR SURED
od anid & eepite the oncoming of Wig
#1 out le guert of the bellies
Through that SETLONInT wight the
Umea, And the nest
trained Seriides of seventy i
tay hs
five Tedians weve impressed. and all
Gay the march
Wan
my ef the
Levon oon.
The contiiped disesnmain
from tive tO time
Wong Bed trys ing
The grief apd wn
A » allie tod firey
J wd OR
Toe tracks vould be |
With i
fo
for Fost.
ins glone, with i
the helplessness of the lout,
with frighs,
srying pos
tra nteel har the |
to the poor mother and
i
Bate the trying situation.
All of Sunday plehs the search cone
lrsnrant of
efforts to)
those of tha large parte already gut }
To think of the dreadful pathos of it)
The poor ohild was ned found un!
til Wednesday morning. 1 was then
‘found by a Mexican, who carvied the
exhausted little form
; Where the child logered
The deputation next visited Wilson,
| Ee
to hia ead
far three
hours and then passed away. The er |
The remains were taken
! back to the ranch and next day were
Interred In the cemetery of the neigh
Snake © Chased Crew. :
Captain William F. Jameson and the
erew of the towboar Juniss,
| related an exciting experience with a!
: big snake above Lock 4 on the Monon
| gahela River.
her boilers inspected a number of rive
Cerioen, including Captain James Morven,
| George W, Atkinson and others. went
Cmboard ber and it was {n explaining to
i them the condition of the vessel afr,
| which gave every evidence of having
been sublected to great heat, that the
| story was told as fol
The Juniata
ow:
had been ar work all
day towing YHarges up the river snd
en the return trip the members of the
I ETeW Were taking things easy witty fe
Laroond on the deck. Some one saw
: th 16 river LER tha
‘to have been
i similar
bo a1.
about six fest long and
in anpearaney to a rattlesnaks
Sil net herve rarities |
| The men an the fowhent commence
{ to throw stones and sticks at it. BYES
| Jocking rentile
A lump of ecal which struck very near |
| It seem to enrage the snake, and rais-
fug its head two feet out of water, it
made stra ght for the boat. It seemed |
to have a charmed life. for nobody snc. |
ceeded in hitting it. The captain says
it climbed the rudder to the rodder post |
‘and came on deck. plunging through a
Balch Wis the hola WF the bons att)
lant
strange reptiles went fa a uystery, for |
ous reptile.
fn
He arrived th pat
Do avross and managed
Log ut
deal had been beyond the little one's!
i . CNR back
Pepdurance.
i roc,
: of the
| American Steel and Wire Company. |
When the steamer came |
( to Pittsburg Tuesday afternoon to have
: ons, lacerating
Te swimming in|
It te sald,
§ the hatch was closed and a stem fer
wes morned into that part of the ves §
sel. For three bours the place was |
steamed, to make sure that the snake
wonld be kled The hear was so ine §
sense that the far of the oakom i the §
foor. was melted. When an investigs,
tion of the bold was made thers was
no trace of the strates snake The re:
pining of 8 few scalded rats were all
edd he found Whete the
fr was ihought by the crew that they
Sad ft A priscoer
Captain George W, Atkinson ways he
thinks the seake was what it known
on the lower Misslesippl River a6 nt cote
ton-monthed moccasin, a very paison |
They are seldom Heard of |
inn the waters around Fitisburg. si
though they are ksown to have been
carried Jong distances in barges mdes |
with frait
They resemble a rattle
spake very closely. Thr mouths are
large and when opesed are white
Pittsburg Times.
A Thirst That Could Met Be Suthetind. i
¥
From the story of Chief Officer Root, |
of the Rorsima, fn Leslie's Momthiy:
You resd shout that fellow dowa fo
hades looking op and asking for water,
says Chief Officer Beott, telling of the |
Joss of the Roratmn at Martiniqoe in
. Leslie's Monthly for July, well tliat Is |
alist as near as I can come to descril- |
img it, but everything that Bappened |
sticks in my mind like & nightmare, 1
i enn see pow one of the passengers &
man. lying on the foc'wle deck hill
sonsly mcarred, erying for water.
When we gave it to him be could not
: drink jt
It would not pass down his
ihrost
As soon
oes bogaly to cruwl after Bim fur
water like # dog. The man's tongue
was literally burned out of his bead
Hin srs rere erally burned from his
mosning aloud in rsortal
gory one of the natiors bappered to
pot a bucket of salt water near Lim.
The man plunged bis right arm Into it |
i 8: 1a relia Ye the sesliling pain,
hte skin bolle strafght rovod biz shoul
» got steinped off hie ave 40 It bong
Ke a lady's opera glove turned Inside
ont from the ting of his Sogets. Bat |
Cthe worst hmrng teete interns) The
fire 451 non seem 10 penetrate lothing, |
| bat burpel] the exposed flesh merci
jeasly,
Both Men Were Moroes.
Tanning over the roof of his housa,
Hghted by the fSazsen from a3 Birsing
- building next door. John Walsh, of Ch.
cage. pasas] 0 Ble wife, who clang to
[the ed ge of a window below. twp Jitte
i children whase
from the fre at the risk of lis own.
Hees he
i Another Jobin Wally, a pollvenian from |
the Chico avenge station. wax lead.
ing two <ompanions along a narrow
passage under the burning stroctors
(to where he heard what wen appar-
ently the ovieg of a woman,
The eriew vame frogs 2 fox ertder al
mort suffocated, The threes mun faced
{ death and yeseped a dog from rena.
while the dag’s owner, wha is
Walsh, waa engaged with his work of
rescue to save Ris eeighbars ehlidren
Walsh look! out spon the Barrow
eaurt separnting the two bulidings and |
SW two Hele frightened Tacey pressed
Bodine a window pase. He climbed
tir the rool of his house, This hiroaght
Bing an the side farthest from the bam
eg strmrinre. Between Bim gad the
he 3%
& to the Rms QpoYite
Pa ping ® Inston
1 the fn $3
¥
a Law hese the children were,
ve eid of the ladder ftoainst
wo cortive of his konse and the other
the window ooposite be crawled
to reach tlie wi
dow, He tenk a ¢Bikd under each are
hegoed against the
lia wife
nlew, leaning against the edge of the
dren New York Times,
Nearly Overevmne by 5 Bald Eagle.
Alfred PF. Esstman, of Tacoma, who
hax bes livin
past vedr, came pir being killed by an
immense bald eagle pear Clilkaot,
where he had been hunting ard fish
Ing. Eastman was accompanied by Ix
i Captain Isaac B, Williams and Captain
€. Stevens, Whik erosaing & monntain
divide they seared ap the eagle which |
Eastman shor
The bird fell to earth
and lay nwtloniess as if desl East
man rushed forward and teled to pick
it up when it suddenly became setive
Fir attacked Eastman with beak and tak |
bis head and tenring the
fesh on his breast and upper body.
Eastman wax in a fainting ~ondition
when Stevens rushed to Kis rescue
The latter caught the eagle ties bath
wings and pul It away br malo
force. The ¢nzle was then Eilat. gre
was found 10 menstre eight fest from
“tin to Up of Hs witgy San Fresiv'o
Clhirenlelie. Er
Had Been Used,
A bay habe arrived
in the family:
‘have preferred a lady baby
the visitor continued, “maybe you
| could exchange this one” “Ne 1
doen't think we could,” said the little
| girl, “because wv have been using it
for seven or lab days.” =thicare,
Chronicle.
{ He was crawling aroond on |
| deck om his hands and knees calling
fur water, and at last we were afraid
he would fall overboard, #0 With the
nexistance of spother man, 1 lhrought
him down to the maln deck.
4 ever he git thers he caught wight of |
Thompson with his water can and nt |
AR be
AL ance
had saved
speriled children was the peaked roel. |
made Rik way |
descended the leaning ladder with
TUngY, |
pened the window, stood |
pupen nx chair aside and, clfoging part.
boriag sillage.—El Paso (Texas) Tics 17 10 (he Wager 45d partis to the ur
ore 81 A tie Jowered the chile!
g at Skagwny daring the
at a certain |
and a visitor said to a little gird,
“Px vou like the babiy * |
The [ttle girl suid she did. hat wonld |
“Well, |
appears
raph progTess as 3 mine amp, one
German ym having recestly placed
' famaget fn 170 different mines. These
Jamie are portable and designed
turn for eight hours at one charge.
MM. Prisalix snnounond in April 1001
that young dogs meculeted with at
| tenusited cultures of a cocco lacillos
which Be has named Pasteurella conia,
| resined the Injection of the virms of
| distemper and the direc) contagion of
| Sineated animals. Fe has continued
ctperiments for a year, and has in
/ pin i more than 1200 young doge
. and bis results show that distemper
ean he prevented practically in every
cane. MM. Joseph and Marcel Lige
! glemms have experimented along similae
| ines and have arrived at similar cone
riasions.
55 Sm E
i An ingenions nse iv made of the same
pressed alr supplied to fhe workmen
i in sp East River caisson st New York
City. The enisson is being foroed
down to the bedrock through 8 thick
wtratom of sand. and it has heed found
| that the compressed air sent down 0
fhe men may readily be stilized to
Prive fhe sand up through pipes In
stead of vewioving 1 by ths tedious
gse of shovels. The sand ix pure and
Joose. and jets of walter ‘are directed
against ft at the bottom of the pipes
When the dislodged Rt passes 0p
throngh the pipes With the strong aly
| ewprmts prodoced by the compremmion
in the calsson,
In the Revie de Medecin Charles
Fere has an Interesting article on be.
man odors. He malls attention to the
fact that the skin potsrsses a certain
sdoy which varies moch in individoals,
as well 8% in races. Dogs anquestion-
1 Aly recognize persons largely by thelr
adors. Regarding the nervous origin
faze of & Woman Who always gave out
an odor of pineapple when she wax In
a temper. and anather who smelled of
C violits when sufering from ag hysteri
Lend yttack. De Fors ciles a number of
case of emotions produced by odors
reminiscent of ceriain events and
foally states Bix belief that ceriain
odors ave inherited or may even extend
to side Drese bes of the sani family.
A new process for making brick out
of sand and rement Las Leen pot IB
! pperation In Misssarl, No ovens op
Cbaniing processes are Decessary. the
hardening of the hriek heglaping ae
scab As It is taken from the mould and
iin fen days it is ready for delivery.
Daring ibe process of monhiing. a sine
gle brick wndergoes a pressure of 65.
a0 poundx. In thirty days fram the
tiger the hardening process begins the
Keirk will stand a preowire of ten tons;
in kixty days a pressure of Twenty
tons One special tes on a ninety-day
brick yielded a pressure of sixty-five
tons. The ardivary pressures reguited
for building purposes x about +ight
tons, In addition any desired color
of vuloring matter into the sand and
cement misture Wien taken from
| the mould the soft mixture must be
Baitdied with exareme care, The bricks
are then placed upon large racks halite
for that purposes, hers they are
sprayed with warer frowns an sutomatie
spripkier every four hours This Is
dome to Asxist the action of the rement
fa settling properly, The hardening
process paturally begin at the sater
snilase of the Drivk aod Coutinges =
ward
Parrot Foiled Burglar,
£nse morning duritz the past wistey
a jrweler in Berlin was swakensd at
an early hour hy his pet parrot, whe
had entered hig roots aml was voeiler
ously persmading him ia gutters! Ger.
man to “Harry op aod shoot the robe
Bers™ The tradesman hastened to act
an the advice of his feathered friend,
awd, srming himself with a recolver,
demsetded te the lower rooms. Wh
he epecuntersd a masked barg
whose operations he had apportagely
interrepted. The reiterated cries of
the parrot stricted the aftention of
thi police, sud the thief was arrested.
The grateful feweler gave a grand din.
mer in bonor of his parrot, whose timely
warning had protected his property
and probably Lis life
Peeuline Writing Paper,
Liverpool (Engi postmen have res
cently Leek un 8 Wate bordering un
distraction. Some foolish person in
that city inasgurated a new fashion
of using ping-pong balls as post carde
The balls were stamped, an address
written ander the stamp and the Wes
sage scrawled on the rest of the sur
fav, The fashion spread rapidly. and
the pillsr-boxes became full of these
i misnives, which, frosn thelr shape, gave
the unfortunate postmen and postailice
oificials an enormous amount of
tronhie, Ar last the authorities were
forced to intervene, and BB BB Dow
contrary to the regulations to use the
Hetls globes of celluluid for posial pups
poses.
Rig Price For a Pen.
Lively bidding in Vienna occurred
this other Jay at the auction of the
fale Count Falkenlhaya's relics, espe
ciglly when the pen with which the
haly alliance wax signed ob September
4%. 1815, was offered for sale. On that
pcansion the pen was used by Emperor
Francis I. Cmar Alexander 1. and
King Frederick William 111. The bide
ding started at 125 Goring and quickly
rome 10 200 Surin, at which price the
General vou Lindheim,
of theses odors Hammond cites the
may he produced by the introduction
of Couns