Star of the Cape, 25 June 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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STAR OF THE CAPE.

5S3SHL'

YOL. V.

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1873.

Th« potatoe famine m Inlrad where felt non eererelT thin • in thet pert of the eonutay whore the foUowing

etoy ie told ae e tree Ule.

Is e emellnllue mi one of the i Jjerren dintriote of the went of Ire! Ured e rery poor widow w sole ioheritenoe from her litmbaad were two healthy children, girt* of the renwetiTeaaee of three and Are. Painfnllr and by “re utmost effort she had thrown her upon her aick bod, and death, is pity, remored her in a fow daya and witliont great oufforing ‘ her rerthly trouble*. The porei the whole pariah waa so great that fog could be done for the poor orphan*. All the neighbor* with the utmost do-

constantly chained. No one dared to fissslassriffs e most eentMns m saner. In the first omant the man thought of nothing out the fearful danger in wkien the children ware, and walking quickly toward them, ha exclaimed: ‘■Don't yon aee the dog 7 He will tear you to pieces l" Bat suddenly he stopped, ss if rooted to-, the ground; the dog had got up again and gone quite near the children, then he looked at bis master and wagged his tail. It seemed as if h* wished to aay: • Don't driro my gnests away I" It that sight a great change came r the man ; the speetaola before him —ad like an electric shock, and feelings anch aa he nererhad before seemed ■ > stir within him. The children had risen terrified at the call of the man, with downcaat eyes, fearful of pnniahment for haring eaten,

: to eat, ana aa muen aa you d then taking them by the led them into the honae, callbo aerrant, “Biddy, «t id and milk, and be quick,

l*T AOTBOSITT.} LAWS OF Nh,W JERSEY

SwISor ms (aWossr uMawb^SaSSaiaSaM lor IS. eteagaPor. la oar ir"~-dlaa lob* 0*4 U

he dog had ahamed hia master—the 5^Sr S'JK'S’dSS

le had ahaiwdtbe man. Toached

Sag

here," repUed another, “and I they will be no better off there.” ,r It cannot bo poaaihly worse than there, for nothlng bnt atarration stare them in the face. If we send them to their relations we hare done our dnty. We cannot possibly keep them here." So a carrier, who waa going near to Xilbnrn, aa an aet of ehaiity, took the two girl*—Liaaie was aeren now, and Mary waa fire—in hit cart with him. The timid children kept rery quiet and eloae together. Toward* noon they reached the spot where the cart would tarn oft The man lifted them out, and ■bowed them the read to the left, and Ude them go straight forward, and if they did not tarn from the high-road thay would in about two hours come to the place. Be then drore off The children aokbed out “ good-bye," and STS SSSasftBsfsfteS they both began to cry. Liaaie ceased her crying flnt; she took hold of her little aiater'a hand, who had sealed herself on Uu. graaa, and said, “ Get up, Maryl we must not ■bay here, if we wish to get to Kilbam. We cannot atop here on tha road." “I am so hungry," sobbed Mary. "We hare had nothing to eat all day." And again both began to cry; for Ua-

E

brute had ahamed the man. Touch by what he had seen, the farmer w anxious to make amends for what h conscience showed him to bo a gro sin. Be aeated the childSW at the table, aat down by them, and kindly |

asked their names.

“ My name ia Inode,” said thesldsst,

and my slater ia called Mary."

•' Bare yoor parents been dead longt" “Our father haa been deed two years, rat our mother only died last week." At th* thought* oi their recent loss:

•oth children began to weep.

" Don’t cry, children." said the far»er, kindly. “God will in one way or nothsr iaueare of you. Bat tell me

ow, where do yea come from?"

•' Prom Longhrea," replied the child. “From Longhrea?' - asked the man, 'from Longhrea? That la strange I" Be begin to suspect the truth, and

-ked hesitatingly:

" What waa yoor fsthar’s name?" "Martin SuUiran," replied Lisrie. “What—Martin—Martin SnlUranT.

he exelaitned, jumping op at the same a

time, and oaating a piercing look at tha children, thoroughly frightening them. Bia face grew red—then team came into his eyes—at last he sobbed aloud. Bo took the youngest child in hia anna, pressed her to hia heart and kissed her. The child struggled and called to her sister for help; she could not think what the man meant Then he put down the little one, end did the same to Liixie, who took it more quietly, a* abe bad seen that the man did not hnrt her sister. At last, becoming more composed, he dried Ida lean, and aaid : " Do yon know my name, children ?"

■plied Liaaie.

lappeoed it then, that yon to me?" he asked. Haa any

sfcasasbasTBar'

SKSUSaSiKSSS

iSdsafitSsm-JS *eto law, *urta*r^aiw^xsiecwvana*m:

Ura £

dinnw, eSTauSSTiS m*? Miaii^S>?!?aw i. n* it rr,c4*i by ia* an*ti IE, vnaw, b* bald la IraA arjaa aaTtHd to *ar rwrcu ■* Ow Ma 0« cSS^3sStta= SffiiSESi **x— — ■nan, tar aMwnal-rtwaata. aa«naeridlwUia ao rairlAU

Bs^jaggasa

g&ftBgsjga _ 2 v5t!5e£S

n Liasie opened lOdren entered. A in an arm-chair by the

fine ssia bo, sal (I mo lannor. 0ui what will you do if thia hard-hearted doee not reoeire yon f" Then wo shall hare to starre," an-

•ed Lireie.

No, no 1" exclaimed th* man qniok- " It shall nercr come to that—.url Dry yonr tears. The merciful God has had pity on your helplessness, and has made use of a fierce brute to the heart of your unde, and ire he will never foreake yon— xuw children looked at tha man in utter bewilderment; did not under•hia words and hi* strange to them. Thia he loan peroeired, for ho added : “ Yon era going to Kilbnrn to Patriok Sullivan ; you are already there' 1 am your nncle and now that I know yon are the children of my brother Martin, I make yon welcome.” ie children* tear* quickly tamed smiles, and the me*X which Kddy then put on tha table for them e them forget their gi Iren had taken thia year before. A kind providence had directed the child-mi's step* to him ; if the dog had not taught him a .—-on of kindness, who knows what might after all become of the poor orphan a. Bnt Ba who ia the Father of

^irs-u-srajss rtsrihs larDUiaaap ttaltamiv tardaaaaaareadtalmil I*, Iirr—.il aaBSwor taweiaaiiwtu Ie a ptaa

sisrSSs -■gasB.-astrtgq'b-a ■ ■amor tti*. Uanmad

-'Zf&tisrsti

^ At Crockett a young lady f

”11

s £*i~S?JS3SSS: T^rassssara!—

■SSSi—*—

U0«< ***a Solla

a on* iboomnd weal hvoilrod mia ~TOIj-l»o. be bed »ad eoamuod lo ippli t*

* B *r^oTad April <

The Walworth-Cue. mng Walworth, who in New York ana killed hia father, made the following statement before the jury of in-

Tno Historical Figures.

The following pathetio story ia translated from the Gormim journal, Sceptre

i.' "Sire," said the wife of _ to Napoleoe, with heartfelt

but geutlo voice, " pardon the wife who ■peaks for the honor and life of her husband. If I, in my zk*b have allow-

ed myself to be m

I am guilty Hy father treated my elly for yean. Incensed against Us own father for putting Ua little shore of the property in trust ft that wg^gotaar and the family got wnHng letters to my motTier foil of im-’ precations against his father. He wrote to her among other things, “ I will kill yonr boys and defeat the scoundrel in his grave, and cut off his name forever." He also threatened my mother’s life, and spoke of shot* being suddenly heard from his resentment.

iging to a conain of mine, have carried it. I supposed my v W»e armed, at least when he inid to aee n*. My uncle, Clarence Walworth, has been aa a father to ns. He recently proposed to take me to Europe with Um. I waa troubled about leaving my mother without e protector. On Sunday I wrote thia to my uncle, and that I must go and see my father, and whether I could goto Europe or not depended on that interview. In fai ' wished U get reliable assi would not molest, my mot absence. I had ho intent him. When be came into my room, 1 aaked him to ait down. He did so. ! •poke to him of hia conduct, aud said “ Promise me that you will neithe: •hoot my mother, nor insult her, or any of the family any farther." Ho answered me, “ I promise," bnt with a look which to my mind implied contempt, and the reverse of an intent to keep the promise. B* ' ' ' ' 1 ’ put Ua hand up to Ua to pull out a pistol. I of having fired more than three Hh closed on me rapidly. Bis grasp waa on me when I fired the last time. I don't think he said anything the whol iterview except what I have elated. Fnanz H. Wahwonm. rax vxnDicr. After fifteen minutes' absence am hearing all the evidence in the ease, th jury fonnd the following verdict: We find that Mansfield T. Walworth eame to Ua death from shock and internal hemorrhage, the result of a pistol shot wound of the chest, said pistol having been discharged at the hands of Frank H.'Walworth at the Btartevant Broadway, New Tort;, on Tneerning, June 8, 18”

whoso mouth the word of hope unded, which she —

of love and joy t

Pponjtbe arrival of the Onion Ptaafie

{be Union Pacific depotMx J. mg mail-oanim who waa, ago, so badly riddled np

with bullets by a party of Indian* north of Laramie, Bis account of the affair, •abyiefiy told na, it, in Substance, aa He waa engaged in carrying the mail from Cheyenne to White Clay, a die-, " lance of 140 miles. Be hod a team of California bronchos and a light Wagon, weighing only 180 pwunds. When he was about thirty milea on Ut- route, he waa fired upon by a party of Sioux Indians. in ambnah, commanded by Little Wolf, a nephew of Rod Cloud. One of the ahota a track him in the neck,, narrowly escaping the spinal column. Yonng Carter feQ over in the box of the wagon, end hia team atarted on a rapid rnn-away. The Indiana sprang to horse, and followed in eloae purs nit. firing all the time at tha fallen moilcarrier for a distance of nine miles, - when Us team ran into a camp of friendly Cheyennes, who protected him s—>m hia blood-thirsty pursuers. Upbeing lifted ont of the wagon he wa* rod to beahot in ninedifferent^phuea arm, thrice in the right leg, once in the left leg, once in the ahoUdcr, and once 1 groin. Hia wagon waa covered

blood and pierced with bullet*,

•on aa ho recovered auffleient atrength to be moved any distance, he — _ taken to the military post at Lare- , twenty-nine miles distant, by the Cheyennes, who had previously bathed hia wounds and given bun all the at-

tention possible. At Larami

tiea'of railroad transportation, and, in *a— little

n for travelers, going or returning

id refreshment >ple, a man an

to atop ft.

bnt by .... ,—, _ S who were accounted to J>e honest, and, ^withal, very p roe pern ua persona. traveling public, and therefore popular. Occasionally a traveler would anddenly

• in a very mysterious and unde manner, bnt no anapiciona to the hospitable inn-keeper Matters went on tljn* for

e mysterious “

die becoming

Fathera,

been made upon Um. Bycaroful nursing, and owing to hia own strong, wiry - d wonderful power of ipidly recovered, and in i able to travel Mr. Carter ia bnt twenty-one years of age. He speaks nine different Indian languages. and for the last five yours baa been in the employ of the Government aa a acont. Ho bad been carrying the mails bnt five or six days, having taken the place of a mail-carrier who waybill-1 by the red-skins in ambush. Tlar- . • ie going homo to recuperate hia health, aud he aaya that when he entirely recovers, ho intends to return and

o bold

the biood <

oftS'

peculiar. The fate of other travelers in that aection probably made Ua sens resolved to be sharply on the alert. waa shown to Ua room 'by hia obliging boat, and when the atepa of the latter had died away on the stain, be made a careful inapootion of the surroundinga. H® discovered, among other things, that tbb bod upon which he waa expected to sleep, was ingeniously fitted in slides, so it could bo lowered with ease to the ground floor beneath. Other eir-

16

ently awancu uc lent*. A little after midnight he stealthy step* on the stairs, and I mediately put himself in a posit defend himself. The steps drew and nearer, and finally the door, wUcb waa guiltless of either look or latch, wb

the city, closely pursued by both man and wife, who followed Um nearly to the city limits. Information was at once

of all * , peared. The spectacle _ ghastly one, and the revelation of atrocity created, in that primitivi a much more intense thrill of 1

overtaking the murderer and Ua ac

or husband tore hia deigth. With

Bates, the Flag Man. Heartless cynic* will rejoice that Sergeant Bates has become so poor that he has b - * - a “-

lisity which has dictated'Uicm. I re nothing more loft for Mexico—not _ _ian, not a dollar." Then, the features of the Empress became convulsed in horrible fashion ; the white of her eye* became of the eolor of blood ; her glanoc* had a flaming, phosphorescent E low; her lips parted wide back from er splendid white teeth. With anna outstretched, ahe stepped towards the ~ id, driving forth her words s pan tings of her heaving cried with a coice which re than human: “ Yea, it ia . . ieture of my dreams, the horrible phantasy of my nights! There he stands before me with the beaker of blood—that demon of hell—the murderer of my hnaband, smiUng devil I —*— •-ie, the grandchild of Louis of that king who snatched misery and saved thee from the scaffold!" The Emperor retreated door, a* Usfore the appari-

i! bnt take with th ae which God hx — heed of the flnt murderer. Thy throne shall fall into ruins; flames shall destroy thy honae; and when thou hast been east down to the dost from which impoteoee^then shall the Angel of

One of th* most exquisite sights we have ever, perhaps, aaya a traveler, bewhilat sitting on a broad sandy ie Upper Nile, abont half an loro aunriae, wo liatened, in a reverie, to the divine waters aa they flowed atd rippled on eitb aide of the iale. To aaaiat onr medit

laid upon t beneath tl

"The Hill of Death"!* the terribly gnifleant name which rude fishermen have given to the wild, rough locality where lie buried the greater portion of tha victim* of tha wreck of the Atlantia The little fishing town of Prospect haa witnessed a aneeeealon of fearful aoenea within the past two mcaths. More

hundred corpses have been „ the shore and haarilv interred the rocky sod. Whether the of all the dead will ever be

4 it ia impossible to aay. It ia probable that some have been washed —‘ *- 3 trill bo " missing " forilifax divani have recently devoted themaelves exclusively to the work of grappling for the dead, while the eubrnartno laborers of the Now York Wrecking Company have been engaged in recovering the cargo of the t ateamer. It was found necessary — blow up portions of the submerged ateamer in order to facilitate operatic— The improvement* which have b

apparatus provided for

_. anch a nature that with ordinary caution the peril* alien" the business are less than ia oomm supposed. The dree* of the div — . . ’-'lingaeVeral

nd finally

xcitement, as may be supposed, inght np to the highest pitch, lly there came a eodden and

“Sth-c bela-

_ hi* way to Charleston, stopped at the-inn. Sitting at the fire, in the bar, sipping hi* toddy, f* — ■* denly occurred to him that the

Jne night—*o tn l traveler, on 1

'atthe-in

n forced to lay dow

obtain bread for his fi

i family. In that the set

to publish a hook of hia

Poor Batea, will the p

>r labor that his little

travels, and Batea thought the flag across the country would hia fortune. He tried it, and to show the nature of the boy, and what-he expected, be would not allow hia photograph aold, nor would he accent of presents on the way. Arriving in Washington Andrew Johnson gave nil get back to Wisconsin, and he there nearly as poor aa when he He lost hia golden opportunity, expecting that his demonstration of the I log in the South would aeenre hli good position North, with plenty of pay and no work. Finding thia did not follow, he regretted hia aornpl 3 —-•-■id that he had

money offered. Ho went to Engl and tramped there. John Boll fed touted him, bnt gave him no money, and Batea ia now looking for

It is said through the lava beds, carrying a bottle of whiskey, bat the trip wu spoiled by the surrender of Oapt Jack. If he could be indnoed to try a Cuban flag thrensh tbs “litlls nun nf th* ***a *’

the feat aeoompliahed settle down upon hia ten farm and go to chopping wood

of inachinjry ,— tore ol-a new and apparently highly anSMafn 1 substitute for eoaL The proms in question ia adapted for tire production of two or three kinds of fad, the materials used being coal dost, other aimilar substance*. The fnel that hu been already made of ooal dost and tar hu been fonnd highly satisfactory in several important respect*. It is capable of standing exposure to the weather, a q trim lily made et Dnnrobiu haring remained nnoovered daring the whole of lam winter without deterioration. It turn* out to be particularly well adapted for the rapid reiaing of steam. Then, again, the amount of aah produced ia ao trifling that very little •toking ia required^ and u for heating power, praotioa! men will nnderstaud the value of a fnel which claims to have evaporated nine and a half pounds of —er for each pound consumed. With preaant price of eoal dust, it ia ted that the fnel made of it may d to the public at something 1 shillings a ton. In the case fuel, the bans of which i* put, a cheaper raw material will render it im possible to aell the manufactured article at abont: ‘ "

7, to 820.000.

telegraphy ia establia!— - - 3: rer himself and those connected with e apparatus which supplies air tor m to breathe, ao that almost toy K cation can be asked and answered. e rock-ribbed coast of Prospect hu for weeks put been covered with groups of hemavod friends, who have watched with fearful hope the divers as they brought one inanimate form after another to the surface. Fathers, husbands. brothers, aons, waiting in pahimiliar face among the dead. These have been mostly frionda of the cabin passengers ; a large proportion of the itccrago passengers have no near rale Uvea in this country. But many anxiona wotohera, after standing day-after day upon the rocks in vain, have returned to their homes in sadneaa and disappointment The body of one cabin passenger wu fonnd off the coast of Haveuburg, nearly seventy milea from the scene of the disaster—a fact which proves that many other remains may have been washed far out to sea, wftli >ly a possibility of

If it wasn't for th* law, a mu could ■fc- a fortune in half the tune.' He who trust* to look for his happiness wjU be Indy when he gate it r To b* dexterous iff danger ia a virtao, at to oollit danger ia a weakness. Europe elooe po****se* 171 eMu eondning more than 80,000 inhabitant*. An low* farmer ie the proud poase*>r of a pig with two montha and three

r**-

Haniy Ward Beecher'* salary hu it

-J*uedfrom $1,600, in •“'* in 1870- Bee

Bishop Kip, _

lii office for twenty years, and the dioeae ow* him 821,800 *rrcar* of salary. ' Many Connecticut women aid their i unban da, father*, and brother* in their One of the beet crop* of' potatoes we nrer raised wu not planted until the Irst week in June—but the Undwu

rich and in good order.

Texas bees, by atriet attention to bosinesa, have gained a reputation for their honey that renders it more aalbthan any other in the market e proa* of Mexico favors a demand- - r — the United States Government, for reparation for the violation of torritory in Colonel McKrnaio’a raid on the Kick-

Suggestions for Horsemen.

I notice yon give my opinion of the '—i of scratches on horses, uva n

... . ■■--'er. Yon!

Rural New-Yorker.

find I am not far from

althongh merenrial oil

_ * •— -’ignorant groom-"" — *

right, althc

will ut

much, which sets t catching cold.

an offset to the lul

iclo, let me toll you some more a i preventive and cures:—A he ieh gnaws his manger, neck-yoke or Iter can be furnished with something which will bite back, by mixic peeper with siruj. B driu ready to give bite for bit*. Manv^hmrWh are called a little ft in. You have often seen a homo i ick in his stall after be had been show off hi* beat points, and pat his iso down to the floor ? The groom, tha wise look, will remark, "The ,d man gave him a hard one today," while in fact the horse was only strotchhe cords of his neck; and then, the matter still worse, the igties the halter ahorter, so aa tc

ie equilibrium, yon will

i short time create a contraction cord* of the neck and ahqultlt

and the ht

“whSi

lo feed ft

feci and no

Thia lots

founder.) My preven-

e feed ai

mode to eat like a giraffe.

Another objection to high mangora (and I never uw anything in their favor). ie, they irritate the throat end windpipe, and create a tendency heaves. If horsemen would use m >mmon sense, they would need 1

Premium on Beauty.

Yonng ladle* mutt be aemreo in Texu,

_soording to a letter written York paper, in whioh the wri

I wu told by tome yonng

turning from a country donee the other day, that ordinarily at " frolic*" there were two gentlemen to oni lady. This ia accounted for by the number of yonng men who have flocked In 1 from the older States to make their

M' >v

■he rnnas nave ooeu vuoouiy j „—„ there. A voting fellow in hia shirtsleeve*, and with hia hat off rushed np ‘he ear-window, uying: Ah, Miss Sarah, where are ^^Talertme." dear, yon don’t uy *o 1 t^you coming book right off?” Ob, a week ; a whole week ; so I What will wo do?" And jw came ont and uye, " What will we do ?" and .till **- 3 - * aimilar observation. The "young lady did not appear,*! all perplexed at thia touching del Hon of appreciation, bnt told be goed boya until her retain. I —nothing about bringing them some idy. The train moved ■off, and the lonely yonng men withdrew, aoirowA Craront’SnDm’s Wna.—A eorraeondent of the Ellsworth (Ma) American telle thia : Mr. Aaron Simpson, with hia brother Albert and Mr. Walton, ' Sullivan, while at work in a meadow August, 1872, discovered suspended upon twigs, by fonr guys, a apider’a web, the diameter of which wu about eighteen inches. Aorou this parchment (anch it aeeeu to na) were two parallel tinea quite an inch apart, whioh carved u the bane for the letter* of the' following inscription : Upon the first were the words, "Envy, envy," and upon the second, "W. W.;" all this wu& beautiful capital letter* of theBoman origin, and pane*—•-* “ - 1 OB— —

this may

-it, aud th >. The Arne

lethod ia to nuoork it, and then put

tn a warm plyoc.

Seventeen Kansu granger* turned at one day laat week with their teams and broke up twenty-uvea acre* of ground, luring it ready for planting, for one of their number who ta ill and

night* ago, while being driven rapiuiy, and hia dnver fonnd, on investigation, a yonng girl, onlyfoorteen years of*go, lying aorou the road in a state of hdp’eaa intoxication. The Dundee (Scotland) Adiwriaer ippeared in print the other day on jote paper, manufactured almost wholly from refuse jute bagging. ' The impressidq is said to have been very neat, though the paper—a defect easily remedied—wu too thin and transparent. “Unless yon give me aid," said a. beggar to a benevolent lady, "I am afraid I shall have, to resort to something which I greatly dislike to do.” The lady banded him a dollar, and oom--aaaionately asked, “What is it, poor isn, that I have saved you fromf Work," wu the mournful answer. Ninety thousand factories of various Inda in Bussia employ s million of peratives. The mortality among this lua ia enonnona, the average duration f life being only twenty-five years, hile fifty-seven per cent, of the childra die Wore they are five year* of The Missouri Republican learned a

day to be married to Senator Allison, of Iowa Tho number of people that Mist Dickinson hu been “going to marry" somewhat utonisbing. Ditto the mber of ladies Senator Allison is en gaged to.

I in New England journals, s week „ '*lj two of the ladies hu old fashioned names—soeh u Mollies, Dollies, PolUea. Libbies, Tibbies, Hatties, ratties, Matties, Lillies, and so on. A bachelor uys If he can only hear of ime girl with s familiar "Christain ame, he shall start for her. With potatoes (there ia oven a still greater necessity for planting st the proper time, end for having tha land in good order. It is s crop that requires much labor per sere, and it ia specially important to get a large crop per sere. t. — —- lc i, to plant, cultivate, of potatoes that yields ere u one that yields

It will cost hnshHi

A, band uw fifty-five feet long and _ro and a half inches in width is in snoecaaful operation in Philadelphia Its

blade will follow U grain of the lumber, t— _ economy with increased vslna in the

some person in every county to assume the task of gathering information on the condition of the erope ss they progress through the season, uy every six week* or two months, and have the faeta published, so that all can judge for themselves. It ia expected thatthia plan will ut* tha farmers from the crop humbug* snd the swindling that accrues through their false reproaenteA* a cheap advertising dodge, the postal cards have become s nnisanca Already they are coming lurgelyinto tue u a means of mrculsting medioal

ould Ire rejected in re-

wspapern or the sutl

the cards themsefraa' re evil than good in the ight to bo kbolished.

Be markable Cue of He suscItaUon.

tion, remarks Oallrpiani'l Meet lira just been effect*' • •• - •

the Vsl-de-Glsea

himself in e garret in the Bne Saint Jscque-, end having been cut down and ined by the medical men, he wu mnoed to be dud. The ckinieml rev, however, desired to-dry one lut experiment, and he opened the

ipitaTof

ration, but without st — Applied the pole of so electrical battery to the pneumogutrle nerves, and paaea strong en Trent at intervals of four »nda Boon after some signs of re

, bnt when pluter they give And yet a

; §7” to bold Ugbt picture*, eta,Very firmly. The bent plan is to enlarge tho hole to abont twice the diameter of the sere*. TW will ba held rery strongly,

tongue had to be drawn out wi

cere to lure a passage fc fow ounce* of blood were

tho medio-oepfaalio veil, pupils oontreeted, th* sagos of life b<

visible "without uSTrifrt”ekTtrinity: warmth returned to the fort, the pulsation In the carotid arteries recommenced, snd the patient wu uved.

£jS«8££'5_ __ ■iy, in combing hi*