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Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 13, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 13, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 20, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 20, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 27, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, May 27, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, June 03, 1869,
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Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, June 03, 1869,
Indiana

Cambridge City Tribune Thursday, June 10, 1869,
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Other Editions from Thursday, July 11, 1889

Alton Daily Telegraph Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Illinois

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Maine

Cambridge Jeffersonian Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Ohio

Colorado Springs Gazette Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Colorado

Daily Nevada State Journal Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Nevada

Decatur Daily Republican Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Illinois

Albert Lea Freeborn County Standard Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Minnesota

Grand Traverse Herald Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Michigan

Hagerstown Herald And Torch Light Thursday, July 11, 1889 ,
Maryland

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Cambridge City Tribune

   Cambridge City Tribune, The (Newspaper) - July 11, 1889, Cambridge City, Indiana                              v CITY A Y JULY II 1889 NO 13 PERFECTLY HARMLESS n LIVER ONE PELLET A DOSE Poisonous nils for DB PIERCES PELLETS which Pills or Antl iio Purely Vegetable Pr 1 ifi Pellets without to diet r Put 1 con nro n le or according to BIZO of dose Headache tlon or the nnl nro promptly n f cured M tlic usu 01 Sold by for li is by Ir tor H of Catarrh Iu Head cannot cure OF Dull heavy nf from throat and others thick purulent bloody and the eyes lire wnak and Iu in tho hnnkinur or to clear the throat of offensive mat tor together from the voice ifl changed mid n tho breath is nro un paired there H a of with mental a and pen feral debility Only i liw of Iho are likely to be in anv one of annually without of the re sult in and end in I No id HO common more deceptive mid or by By ita nnd healing Dr Catarrh cureK the in the Hood and This remedy docH not like poi anil with llm public have lonR simply for a Short time or tin to Ihr B8 thon ia lining in th use of such but it perfect mid tho wornt of aw can testily Cold in Iho Head eund a Head ache la relieved and cund an il by Jt removes breath and curcH long or impairment of the of or hearing by of ta they all are Sold by ftO cents A complete Treatise on Catarrh nil diet and other matters of importance will mailed post paid to any address on receipt of a Worlds Dispensary Medical Association St N IT VIBRATOR fHE NEW VIBRATOR THE NEW VIBRATOR THE NEW VIBRATOR f HIE VIBRATOR THE NEW VIBRATOR NEW VIBRATOR The same Unit which 31 years ago com revolution the Threshing Machine trade by inventing a new Threshing Machine much any machine before that all builders of the Threshing Mi ing them and copied the nev machine closely as they made an other advance and in their New Vibra tor present a Thresh ing Machine contain or ing entirely new fea tures in and cleaning which place it as far ahead of any other as the old Vibrator was ahead of the Apron ma chines Every Farm er at onco get full ro HEW which will bis Freo on application to NICHOLS MICHIGAN DYES Your will tiro everything Thajr nro lold where lor in or for or do not crock or 40 colors For ALL i 1 TOR THE Address IB Holon nro you dark Deep blue your eyes or black aa in woods at Tell mo you wear largo medium or roe I woon And yet your verses on the shoot Aro In laat new magazine know fair neighbor If your Iho woodlands or tho fastness or tho sea I ri lol It In or free AH wing Krow anil let us bo as In the to Mny 1 read between ll ami in time iil So muy I 1 1 J s lo tho hose 1 or true DoBl Ming is en agonies and cureo the whole uf editors would not at once Our And did you an each oer track IVom to Imply they had hid your Homo dreary kink of prose or line to pad a and your name tho tender pool Bourse Aluc u Ion Idly and alone my verso and youis hoa let me whisper oer T drop my pen I am dm of nil men And may they jet be right hopes uie ton Or twenty dollars from pome U T W Duke Jr in Iho Century Tho of Pensions When government borrowed it on it till eve y cent of the principal repaid And tho government borrowed man bodies it ought to pay interest till whole us before in government has kept day to this some part of every body it borrowed that is I used it mid never restored it From some it took an arm from some u lug r mi eye from nome it took the from some it took feel from others teeth from good health n a thousand These tlie government bad use of I had hest service they could ren hr and weco spent und lost while the government UHing them DM bey were lost govern ment using them if it was for the government to pay inter st on the money it till the WHM restored and it wan why s it nut right to pay interest on the it used mid failed to as For justices sake then we arc in favor of pitying pensions to these men tire in favor of it also because it H tor the general public good The States are so ivied anil that they bear lightly ou the people It may doubted that any good actual damage would follow he total repeal of our inter nal revenue even it if the States no longer needed a dol iir of revenue Our tax systems rent ing lightly and acting beneficially puts money iu the Treasury It s utterly useless there beyond what iy for current but dollar that goes out into any gives that community a more active financial life The citizen who spends money is more than he who gathers jt in Ev old soldier drawing a pension a through which money is pour into a community He ev ry cent of his money It goes o pay debts In cases out of 100 he is a man is obliged to spend it When hiH conies he buys a suit of and the tailor iu helped he uiys his wife a new dress Is helped hu pays liis grocery lill and the is helped he his overworked wife a partial and the and are helped he his dome if he owns one and the ire helped he for the THI the are helped II he happens to get several hundred of he builds a little house for a home and a dozen nt kinds of mechanics arc helped A part of that pension money goes into of half of the families in the community of the vast amount paid out in pensions in ate What if It is 180000 OOU a year The money is and sent My ing all abroad More than any ono thing ByaUm us life Make the peu Hion annually and times will be unknown soldiers will the financial ball in motion everybody will pay everybody else money will be performing its work in stimulating busi activity Ict UH have done with this that the payment of is going to the country You cant build up for a town on the ten cent plan Its too small to win There are plenty of people who cry out loud and profess to have groal interest in the towns welfare but when the Vail to make their promises and too often become the kickers FOR ANOTHERS CRIME Margaret Harpor lived alono in her roomy house on Locust Hill he had lived for Iho most part during tho forty years of her Ufo tho people had long ago ceased to ex that change in her condition There had boon times when Locust Hill was a of hospitality and gaiety Times when Iho old rooms wero brightened by beautiful young faces and made musical with tho song and laughlor of happy voices In days Colonel Harper Mar garets father was gallant courteous old man who liked the so of young people and lived over his own youth in tho happiness of his children Ho had two ho was in tho habit of saying for Gertrude Morse the his wifes dear est friend had long been made at home at Locust Hill and it is doubtful if tho old man loved John ami Margaret his own children than lie loved this child of his adoption V I In soon to become his daughter for sho was to John Harpor and Iho marriage was to lake at Colonel Harpor died suddenly a cou ple of months before tho appointed aud tho event disturbed the current of affairs in a very sad way The house was closed to scones of festivity and Johns wedding day was postponed a year During tho year folio wing era Margaret Harper had been won by a physician como to locate in the neighboring vil and it was decided that she und Dr Churchill should bo tho same lime aa John and Gertrude Churchill was nut wealthy but he had talent of no low order ami was rapidly securing a lucrative practice Hut even had there boon no prospect of his making would in no wise hare influenced Sho was not a woman lo permit pecu considerations to with her hearts best interest Two days before Christmas John Harpor rode into town to get the fami ly jewels which hud been for his bride and when night camo he did not return ns expected Tho anxious family waited for him until midnight and then Margaret sent out tho servants to search It was a very short quest The found him in a little hollow near tho main road and not rods from home Ho was dead stabbed to tho Tho diamonds wero lying ed in case in his but his pocketbook and watch were missing Nothing could the of those two bereaved women Gertrude faded like a in autumn and be fore the snows had well covered tho turf on John Harpers grave sho lay beside him Margaret hardened under lion and applied herself lo discover ing murderer Shu largo rewards and employed of eminence anil sagacity Dr Churchill joined in tho search with and was Margarets solo support iu thiM lime of bitter trial Gertrudes funeral while Margaret brokenhearted with grief on tho shoulder of her of came to Locust Hill and arrested Clemont Churchill for tho murder The fearful suddenness of blow struck Margaret down weeks sho languished on a sickbed knowing of what occurred about her When she atlast camoto herself she heard and waa blight ed by it for over charge against was sustained by unquestionable evidence Tho detectives engaged iu working uu tho ease had long had suspicions of him but had refrained from striking until tho thing was ripe In tho tirst place Dr Churchill had been seen riding with Mr Harper be tween Ion und eleven oclock on the night of tho This fact was admitted by Churchill ho hud by Harper and had taken a seat in his buggy by invita tion as far as his rooms tho second place tho dead mans found in Churchills posses sion This also tho accused admit ted Tho watch ho snid had boon given to him to lake to a shop for re pairs In tho third place ho was known to have passed BOUIO money which had boon drawn from the L Bank by John Harpor on Iho ilay of his death and this Churchill did not deny It had paid to him he said by tho in liquidation of a debt he Churchill had incurred in Johns bo half somo time previous There were a scoro of other trilling circumstances which summed up a very weighty aud jury could not do than guilty Guilty of manslaughter was their anil tho young man was sen to imprisonment for years From tho day that Clement was tak en to prison Margaret was her youth and bounty faded from horand with thorn she put aside the garments of youth and wore only sombre black Churchills was In her or outward sign of grief djd those around her sho suf Of Clomonl in all these years of exile from the world no one anything and never a word of him over reached tho who had him bolter than her His term of imprisonment expired on tho tenth of March Margaret had kept tho dismal record and on that wet misty night sho sat alone tho lire in her groat gloomy drawing room Tho tall clock iu tho Corner solemnly ft way and struck ton with sonorous voice which loudly through tho deso late room A servant to say that there was a man nt the door who wished to Harpor evidently ana out would take no assist ance ho Had the mistress gave the order to show him In and tall fig ure wrapped iu a heavy cloak gored into the fell helplessly into a chair tho fig ure in a hollow voice and Margaret lifted one of Iho candles aud lot tho light fall on tho face of tho Shu starlet backa pace some strong change passed over her coun tenance I think I do You are Peter Sew cll Yos I was your brother John s valet And I murdered my master My God Yos How strange it was that no one suspected me Why it to mo for years that tho very trees and atones by Iho wayside called out to mo Thou art tho Still Margaret was R white horror frozen on hoi face and iho man went on speaking rapidly and with evident 1 came hero to toll you tho story but I must make it brief or my will fail me and L ahull die Your was high tem and I was and insolent I boat his favorite horse unmercifully for some slight cause and John re ino about it I answered him anything but respectfully and lie struck mo with his horsewhip I know now that I deserved it but Ihen it tired my madness aud I vowed to be revenged The night he went to tho fatal had been at tho village tavern and drank pretty freely On my way homo I encountered him I donot think I should have killed him if ho had not taunted being Kven then 1 did not bavo mur der in my heart but I was mad whisky and easily enraged 1 struck at him with my pocketknife and ho fell bleeding at my feet I look somo money from his person and crept home t waa up in my room you know when you called mo logo and search for my master Ah I knew just where to look for him A little while after his death I left Locust Hill You nil thought it was because J was so deeply attached to my master thai 1 could not bear lo re reminded Die of him How easy it is for folks to of I went away because I was haunted at every step Hu waa always beside me I felt the cold continually on my check 1 his voice day and calling me hv the name of mnr 3 I wont tu California and worked like a slave Fortune prospered mo 1 grew Hen But I was none tho loss From the timo I struck John Harper his death blow Until iho present moment ho has never left me has never ceased calling on mo to con fess and mako Ho has worn inn lo a shadow and at lust I have yielded to his importunity I conic here tu confess and lo so far us possible lo the unfortunate man who for lift eon years has suffered my stead Jn this pocket is my written Con of my crime duly authenticated and wilh it my will When lues oat of prison place them in his hands All my wealth and I am worth a handsome sum I have given him Ho ceased Margaret rousing from her si u pur of went to wards him touched his arm and his chuck and rang the bell for Jt was DO The man was lead The day when they opened Iho prison doors to Clement Churchill and tho haggard prematurely old nian stopped forth into liberty once more Harper met him at tho pris on gate and hiking him by the hand led him to her carriage In a few moments ho know the whole story and lie listened to tho lust of il wilh his poor grey head pil lowed on hor bosom for in her love and pity Margaret had ignored the flight and was onco more tho loving confiding girl Churchill had known so long ngo n demonstration as there was over Churchill when the wholo truth never was witnessed Tho enthusiastic villagers unharnessed the horses and drew Margarets carriage containing Churchill and herself the si reels Thai evening Churchill having read Sowells confession and having learned that the will making him a rich man genuine document drew Mar garet to a sont beside him She was a young woman again now her bloom had como back sho had curled her soft hair and put off her black dross for a white such as she used to wear in tho old days Margaret said Dr Churchill in all these years thore has been ono thing which has no my lovo for you Do not tell mu Unit it is too for UH lo bo happy A slow crimson crept up to her cheek she yielded lo tho arm which drew her down to rest upon his heart A pair of old fools do you Nevermind They would not care a particle for your opinion People who are as Happy ns and his wife can well bo at Thq Yellow Garter Tho latest funniest whim is tho wearing of tho yellow garter Just ouo not two you understand bo worn Just above the loft kouo Tho other stocking mny bo wrinkled disconsolately over iho shoe top or bo fastened in place ono or all of tho devices known only to tho but THE PEACHBLOW VASE la by A Bilk elastic with u of the aunie simile tho tiling to is shroud ed iu murky but its sig id known to every girl who and Ibis is its Any a above lior left in lorn Tho Iro lior by n friend and 10 fail of nut owner was or one of the r The History of of Pot Itn Probably no event iu artistic lias receuily curiosity so much as tUo sale of tho fatuous How vase which among el feels of tho Mary Since Lbo sale that com disappeared have the conjectures about ita some declaring that it belonged lo ono person others that it was in anothers possession rind slill others who declared that it boon bought by the origin til salesmen iu or der to justify themselves for the enorm price paid for it by Mrs Morgan namely The vaso solil it will be remember ed for at the auction Previ to that it had stood in a small case I ho center of a group of glazes of which it waa by far tlie must example had a slender neck and being of proportions nnd beauty It stood about eight inches high Jn col or it was a dull grayish pink touched in places with a decided glaze was very tine and perfect in and evenness from top to Thousands of people the Morgan collection for the sole pur pose of seeing the diminutive piece of handiwork and many thousand more still live in over its com plete disappearance The true story of the vase has never been am hori la lively given The vase is supposed to havo been made in China during the seventeenth century and like many of these fam pieces became tho session of a mandarin Ono of the linn composing the American Art gal leries learned of its whereabouts and communicated liis Jind to home of fice urging its if possible Negotiations wore therefore into but were a long lime fruit mandarin in clung tenaciously to a very large price For three years the was earned it was at length agreed lo pay for tho vase Mr agreed lo i hiH the pus Hussion would give a reputation to Ins new galleries In words he made the for purely business purposes He bought Iho vase at f 10000 of the talk it would create and the curiosity it wis bound lo excite Jn due lime it was shipped in a mod est box wilh other oriental warus lo the n Art Association the reached its desli nation and was buing unpacked Morgan WHS present bins bought number of pieces iho box Untouched Mrs Morgans curiosity lo know Iho box be came and sho asked to see the contents Its nothing said Mr only fi wo bive bought to Ibi opened it and showed it to Mr Moroni She asked him Iho priee Mr somewhat loo In Still insisting hu old her it was Mrs no surprise Imt it lo bo Hent home with Iho rest of her goods i next step in Iho history of ihn vasu with Iho Mrs Morgan oit March in guller ius tho was very Some persons iven Iho privilege of kissing it smei they they could not own i of people were always in front of Iho vase and many and various re marks about it of sur reported value wrio most frequent when the of ilu there was a of ex over ibe The auc pointed to mildest thing asked if he could havu i bid of if 5000 for it At it was started and crept up gradually milil it reached at which it knoekeil down bur to whom This has never vet who bidding for vast win Mr Sul lon of I hu Art Ilia were not to pay more for tho vase It was sold for mid Mr Button was the buyer It has boon said he ho vase for himself but he did not He bougit it umlor fur Wil liam T Walters of and the little treasure is now in that eily it now rests in i closet hidden from tho eyes oven of Mr A few days after tho sale Mr Wallers dunicd huving bought it tp the New Yurk Commer cial only explanation given of this evasion has been Umt Mr Wallers was afraid of the which possession would give him He refused m his with tho purchase but it is less n fact Hint ho lias it now but ho probably get much from its possession Tho Year The is frequently naked how it happened that tho odd number years selected as tho term for a long lease of land Very few real men can give a satis factory answer to this question aud Uio explanations of export and experienced lawyers are rather to themselves others porli nps tho beat explanation ia that there JB a tradition which has proba bly taken iho form of law in some ot tho M a few states that a or morels not mere ly a lease but an ot the title Of course any possi is to restrain tho owner of a piece of ing a lonso of ninetynine years for nothing more dreaded byau of realty thaa a cloud on title It js however to substantially a of a of land by tho terra Rt years and a providing for repealed of tho louse for similar terms A few such louses havo boon drawn in Economist Thoro is not a whisky in Tyr Norih Ibe prison of tho county is empty acid thoro was not a stuto OHIO ou the docket at tho last court riMtt ttv In A Brooklyn report or who llll in the district not long ngo was lo see what an important part animal char plays in sugar purilication Tons tons of Iho sUilT are in nso being over and over in huge ovens thought occurred to him that very few associated tho awful smells over Iho Manhattan beach track from Barren Island with tho sweet crystallization which is iu upon their tables He therefore to Iho tirst ho had to tind out about and r what uses thcy iri put to Tho dunce camo one dav hist week when he met down at a man who had formerly boon of a bonu boiling estab lish men t best bones said the author ity arc tho fresh ones from tho slaughter houses and shopf make a special effort to collect such Tho besr quality of and forelegs and are rendered out lo them fit and and sold for purposes Shins prop cleaned vill bring a ton while thighs an a ton Forelegs arc cheap at u ton Tho makers of umbrella and liau collar buttons toothbrushes brushes buttons and all kinds of things in boun can used buy all of that they can get are mostly mudo from bones while the bones used for but tons find parasol handles aro as a general thing shipped to to be up Sheep bonus fancy and ivory which society belles languidly swing were once more intimately connected than one would think In log bone of a sheep will tako a liner polish and is loss brittle than a cow or steer bones are used for making animal Tho odds and ends that arc worth less for other purposes such as shin bones knuckles skulls and joints of ilio animals Nearly all ot tho bojie black made from those is soli lo lite sugar ami through their calcined remains the syrun is lil do you got bones 1 have said we make ft business of establishments but wouldnt us going Very so haVe over the coun tr J The houses ihc quantity as so tlie cattle killing coun try is out there Bones for fertilizing loil in open but those for arc put in air tanks and boiled underpressure this process tho nitrogen is tMl and carbon tho Do else from bongos bos ides bo no black ami material for manufacture yes neats foot oil is extracted from Iho shins and hoofs of and is loft after good glue for Iho paper Ine best bears loo Is mado from Iho marrow bo lies iho supply you with many buiKsH Of course we take stuff they hsh out but naturally it is of inferior and doesnt begin to compare willi fresh slock Will I have something Dont mind if I About of will lix my I Well here smy The Khalifa who had just threatened Victoria and the with his dim if thov do not believers in tho shows a weakness very com mon among savage nr potentates says i New Vork Sun If they happen to loom up above other objects within their vision they are apt to regard themselves as tho biggest things on earth Two or three tribes on river South America entertained the idea until that they were tho only people in the world and that llm earth was in fact only largo enough Mi eir accommodation Of course a very circumscribed view of things terrestrial is apt to give the uu savage exaggerated notions of his own importance When a missionary with more than tact told tho great king of Ma in the presence of his peo ple that God was greater than ho Ins roared at tho lop of his voice You lie anil his faithful subjects echoed tho retort so long and loudly that the religious exorcises stopped Tho idea that the groat king could occupy iv second place in any nr was not to bo tolerated of ono useless cannon and a hordo of wild mountaineers armed with Ian cos imagined ho had nothing to fear from a British army J his suc cessor King John sent a proposal of to Victoria ho had no he had given her an to a highly desirable and brilliant alliance Ring of Uganda had ever henrd oi foreign nations could diminish his in his own Ho Often white guests if thoy saw so fine an army ai his and ho also proposed nn alli the royal family of England byi asking one of his visitors to saud to ns one of tho daughters i of the An Cao you mo the pop of r First Vary good auito correct ono know r f I right j I but wb I It would one l r It is estimated the Untied hai a doctor for every 600 FRYERS The WIio Found n Xot Know In last Sundays Talking Machine a sLory was the adventure of Dr S B Thompson wilh Indians in the mountains 150 beyond Denver about in which it was said that he never saw or heard from his partner afterward The story was told the writer by a relative of Dr Thompson who heard it from him shortly after the war Now Dr Thomp son comes forward with he statement that since then ho has heard from his part net Tiie partner was George Fryer and in the background was another semi one Chaffec a sort of unlucky but sanguine who always was on tho of striking it Wo left Fryer working his way up one side tho canyon while Dr Thompson look Ilu und fell of Ules Mining partner kept on finding here am there signs of gold but hardly enough to pay for the trouble of cradling or working a pocket Finally lie reached the end of his tether Wilh only enough provi sions to keep him alive tin half rations until ho of civili he retraced his steps throwing into the bottom of his burros pack saddle u Tew pieces of sleazy brown had broken with his pick from Iho of a ledge near tho turning point mens had his attention more by their weight than from ward indication of valu Arriving in Denver Fryer dumped tho net of his unprofitable trip his trunk and hustled around for another grub stake securing which ho started again in in search of gold So matters ran on through the years of the war every one could be a soldier so Fryer hunted gold sometimes wilh Chaffee sometimes alone Dr Thompson hud abandoned the and was attending more affairs than as a iu iho union army Fryer bad the usual of he prospector sometimes striking a lead getting a few hundred ahead it all in sinking a shaft which had nothing at the bottom of it short of China One day some ten years after the with the Ules Fryer was Denver and down Overhauling his dun nage ho came across those specimens These he carefully picked out and more from curiosity than hope took to ail The assayer look ed weighed them in his hand Hm carbonates ho said Come around tomorrow When hail gone ho look a hammer laid a of the rock in the hollow of an iron plate and pound ed it up line TJ en w swept up tho pulverized muss carefully it put it in a small crucible which was placed in i portable furnace and the llamo on There were two or three other processes and then tho contents of he vessel were poured v pail of water AH tho lip of the crucible fell below the a streak of dazzling whiteness shot out und fell hissing through tho water hardening into and goblin shapes at tho bottom At the risk of burning his lingers the plung ed his hands in after it As he held it up a smile played across his a professional smile Hut set to work aud pounding up all Iho specimens went through tho process again Again a still of gleaming metal hissed through water Then he w it made a few cal on a piece of paper which ho carefully folded up aud put in his pocket closed up tho office went across tho street and took a big drink of whisky When his customer came the next day tho was very calm and nonchalant Had he as sayed the How had it turned out Oh so so By the way where did Mr Fryer lind the Fryer grinned a very sarcastic and knowing grin In Iho bottom of his trunk Could ho afford the gentle man any further information his affairs Tho sighed The bird was too old He picked the paper from his pocket and threw it across the ta ble Five dollars opened the paper and glanced at the figures He had the face of a in front of a jackpot with four kings aco I e couldnt help whistling through Ins upper teeth Silver 986 ounces to the ton You couldnt make it an oven thousand could said he to his visavis He couldnt but 986 ounces was enough It took Fryer u month to his dodge tho spies who learned of his strike get off up tho canyon and relocate his lind A few months later was born and before long Fryer sold Unit for Chaffer caught on about that time made or 000 and camo to tho United Slates somite Oao of tho Grant boys mar ried his daughter Any one iu Lead villo will point out Fryers Washington Tho The oldest of all the obelisks is tho beautiful one of rosy granite that among the green banks of the Nilo not far from Cairo Jt is the nf a ancient city which has vanished left only tho relic behind Thf city was the of t scrip the famous On which is memor able to all bible readers as this resi dence of the priest of whoso daughter m Greeks called it polls city the the of tho sun had chief iw luoro Chronicle Art What of CanVon a n isi P i Noi ladies to learn tu C We Hru not to cuter Record   

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