Transcript
Page 1: pro-tubera&ce-is .if,,r''.r,t. · VOL. I. DALLAS, OREGON. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1870. m. 31. raws ated by all the laws, principles and at PROFESSIONAL CARDS, AC. tributes, 'of the

VOL. I. DALLAS, OREGON. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1870. m. 31.

raws

PROFESSIONAL CARDS, AC.ated by all the laws, principles and attributes, 'of the Deity in finite perfec-tion- .

v., . ... v,. ,, ..;You ask, how is this to bo accom-

plished? I answer, by. the fame rulethat all degrees of atomic changes andadvancement have been heretofore at-

tained bf progression onward and; up-ward. On this continent, all minerals,

To the physiologist, iuan appears tobe the result of on aggregation of at-

oms and attribufes, peculiar to the plan-et on which he is formed. He standsforth amid a .universe of forms andprinciples, the finite embodiment jof infinite worlds, above and below, hijn.Of hia body, he is of the earth, earthy.Of his mind, he is of Jaws, .principlesand intelligence," a spirit immortal, byvirtue of his'undying atoms united tohis unchangeable and indestructible at-

tributes as a planetary ultimate!Incandescent or planetery flame is

the first observable state of a planet.Then comes the mineral, or earthystate; (then the vegetable, then animal,then man. Each of these degrees is

.hi rtjgoru ) c p u M i r it it

la Iasuod Every Saturday Aftarnoon atDallas, Polk County, Oregon.

liT SyiUVAN & GAULT.

OFFICEr Main street, between Court andMill streets, two doors sooth of the PostofSee.

SUBSCS&TIOJI RATES.

.if,,r''.r,t. .. ;,.:,'SCWR COPIES One Tear, $2 50; Six"Mouths, $1 75 ; Three Months, $1 00.

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One square (lOHnesorless), first tnscrt'n, $3 00

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Profes$naI lards wilt' bo inserted at $12 00

pef annuui,. ;'; ; .Transient advertisements must bo paid for

dn advance to insure publication. All otheradvertising bills must bo paid quarterly.

Legal tenders taken at tiuJr current valuo.

Blanii and Job Work fof every descriptionfu.ru isbed at low rates on short notice.

advertising bills 'must ba paid

JENNINGS LODGrj o. O nA A. M.. Dallas, holds its regular eontmunications on fho Saturday preceding

the Full Moon in each month, unless tbefmoottfulls nISaturday--tbe- n on that day, at ovf fo'clock. y

Also on the seeond Friday ta each moathat 7 o'clock, P. M-- , for the purpose of imyrcwo-me- nt

of the' Craft in Masonic, sand for sue1!!

other work as the .Master maj from time ta (

time order. ', ,

' All Brethren in good standing are Invited t ;

attend ; By order of the , , , f jW. M.,n

t ( ,

MAIN STREET, . INDEPENDENCE..

. served to customers on short notice. r,-- .

This establishment doe not dispense tangle-foot or anything of that character. ?

"5

. 1 1 fCall, at the Gem.T , ; v

" 4

,2'i-ti- ;

Bureaus, 5,W , - U'---J

JLoti n ffesjTallies, t

i I2cds tends,A Variety of CHAIRS, for Kitchen and

Parlor et ,i7rV.j;nLRAW-HID- E BOTTOM CHATRftJ, ;

Of my own make. wy.-i-r

Shop m ar Wa ymlncf a K21II

I INVITE THE PUBLIC TO EXAX'INE j

my stock. I shall be, pleased to show yoamy goodi, and better pleased when you boy. ; 1

New Work put up to order, and Repairing )done at the lowest cash price. '

37--

vita-cxmia?,s-

B A H K EX C H A Fi GE S A LO OU, IBlaln street, : : : ' Dallas,' Og.TiriN ESiLQUORS, rOhTER, ALEI r Uitters, Cfgarsr Candies, Oystersnil Ranltnoa will Kj aorirr1 tn al.men on the outside of the counter, by a rcull-- "

m n who ha a n r tn on h, in.nl -

So come alung, bny; make no delay, aadwe will soon bear what yoa have to say.

' '32 , W.'JF. CLINUAy,. i

mmmi is, mmmi2t n i

Importers and Pealers la I J - :J

'AND !

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TbcLarest Stock and tae Oldest for.ulture House In TortlsaWL

TTAREROOMS AND FACTORY1 ' ;

CORNER SALMON AND FIRST mBSS;ifPORTLAND, ORI200K. ? '

itiFanners Attention! k X

rVTUE UNDERSIGNED IIAVINa HAJJL nearly twenty years practice in makior

nnfaUU iu vitguB,.ire leei coiiDiient we can do-es good work as can he had In any part of theState.: . ,., ,;.,. t'U;Iron .and BicLorv AjJe8-CTIiitulii-

Skeins), ? $!On hand and made to .order on short noilc

Lumber Waous L.... .......f I50 I8pExpress Wagous........miw12i3,

Call and examine our work. . Repairing,done on short notice and on .reasonable term.SIMtUN T. HARRISON,aSA S11REYK

Dallas, April 14, 1870. f

FRESH AliltlVAIi!;; 'fOUR STOCK OF NEW GOODS JOB.'

SPUING TRADE, Vii"wIs now open and lor sale at our store, on die'Corner of Front and Mill Streets, Dal-

las, Oregon. .. : k . .

We invite the attention - of our iatronslat

Dress Goods, .

... ClotJung,

Groceries, ,' tvtT-.i'- ji

Boots qShax,School Bookf.

In fact everything found In Retail Stores,V

, At Prices to Suit tho Tinea.V

Country Pradnce daxaa iLn xiaa a ;

Those having old accounts - ttr requested tocall and settle by CASH t.r NOTE. ' t t"

We .thank the uhjje, far' their liberal fatronagein thejpsst, aivd- - bene .fur acontinaanaaof the same. .

" .' ; a m'.ix- - K.Ut. J.J). LEF,

Dallas, March dst, 470. ' J,tfNOTICES a; :t

NOTICE IS HKlUiny IVEN THATJria of Vtueytrd A Butler Is this

day diasoivbdbyiautua! constat. - i;L. VINEYARD,

auglS Sw - N. L BUTLER. "

grcssion, the opposite of theoauinoandIndian." '

..

The Jewish race, or crown of theporcine kingdom, coming up into thehumanj is next in prominence of ap-pearance and traits. The porcine willnot mix or affinitixe with any otherrace," nor wilr the Jew. The nasal pro-tubera&ce- is

often of aetonishing di-

mensions, t His body is lymphatic, andha has a peculiarly white porcine skin.Like the hog, he is not a producer, buta consumer; can live on anything, isseldom sick. The Jews, like the por-cine family, band together and defendeach other.; 4 They are a 'peculiar peo-

ple" tho self caring group is prcdoininant. They are religious and intel-lectual enough, but the type from whichthey have been evolved ij so marked inthem that they .cannot fraternize withthe world generally. Thus in their re-

ligion, . a Savior who came not exclu-sivel- y

to them, could not be received,and they are still Idoking for some selfor race aggrandizing Solomon to gatherthem into fome separate sacred valley,and rebuild in kingly glory an exclu-sive New Jerusalem.

The fourtrftype is the bovine king-dom, its strongest representative onearth is the Johnny Hull of Kurope.This type is distinguished by a granddesire for good pasture, and the greatBriton or bovine has always carried outhis animal evolved trait in his dealingswith tho fields and fruiti of earth.Wherever ho has found a good green

-- pot upon this terrestrial ball, he hasappropriated it, if he could. As thepoet has sung of htm, "His flag is nev-

er furled, his morniug drum is ' beatinground the world." "Heating" mightbe rendered bellowing, and the animalin the human shows its origination, jlnthis family are font I the best of humanforms-we- ll fed, well cared Tor, wellhoufed a solid and substantial race,capable of vast progress, to be outdoneonly by the equine.

The fiftyps ashuman concentra-tion of attributes peculiar in animal

groups, is the gallininc or bird king-dom the barn yard foul being the reprcsentativc, in a domesticated state, ofthe whole feathered king-'- n. Its hu-

man prototype is found in the frog-eat- -

ng Frenchman. The strutting, fuss-- 1

ing, .fighting, gallns Gaul, fit counterpart of that vivacious Hen of France,who, always adjusting her feathers inftntatic fashionf, has become theworld's acknowledged Queen of Plum-

age, the human lover of soft cashmeres,velvets and shining satins and flossyfeathers. The giliinine, male or fe-

male, has ever led the world of humanattire, and perhaps ever will. Its de-

rivation from the feathered and plum,aged kingdom would indicate that des-

tiny.The last and highest type is the

Tiinc or horse kingdom. This typeis noted forspend of motion, endurance,patience, fidelity, nobility. This is theAmcricm group tho race that build-railroa- ds

and steamboats, and ruusthem, too; that set up rods and caughtthe lightnings;., laid wires across thrrce.ri, in order to expedite talk to Ku

rope. Totally unlike the bovine orporcine kingdoms, the equine, with a

nobility and magnanimity of soul, oth-

erwise unknown, on earth, opens theirports and offers their lands ond' coun-

try as the refuge and asylum of the oppressed of all nations and peoples. Itis the equine spirit that now governsthe American continent, and justiceand magnanimity must prevail. It isunder this flag alone, of all banners ofearth, that all nations have or can safey an d peaceably h.ere congregato ,;Thc

Wild caj ; Man is not extinguished,but is .placed upon reservations. Theovine man is given free pasturage andprotection; the porcine man can heresell "sheep clothing" to his heart's content, and watch out for the coming ofhis Judean Messiah; the i Briton andthe Gaul come here and expand theirpcculiaiitics, or harmlessly interbtendwith the generous equine. On thiscontinent, physt logically' speaking, jhelion and the lamb are lying down together. It is true the canino- - manonce held the whole continent, but theovine man came upon the south andcast, and the red man slowly departedtoward the north and west, and on thisvast continent for a field, those forcesareiearly balanced. The little childthat shall leadjhm will be tho "com-p'eh.im- n,"

that la, now a prospect oforigination upon this continent. Thetypes I have described are of incompletemen, because certain faculties prepon-derate. Faculties will just balanco inthe coming tnanr-n- ot too much canine.ovine,; bovine, porcine, gallinine, orequine, but an cqnilibrium of each.In him ; shall culminate and combinerepresentative atoms of all the planets,of all tho universe, attended and actu

JAJ.;i?IcCAIiV, f

AtVy &. oiitiKcl!or-at-La- w

McSSluuvIlle, Yamhill Co., Oregon.Particular attention given to the study and

practice of Criminal Law, Collection of Claims,Notes, .Accounts, etc. . . .

.

,7,',, " t

J. It. SITES, M. B.,Pliyiciaii and Surgeon,

Dallas, Ogn.

Having reinmed practice, will rive specialattention to Obstetrics, and the treatment ofthe dticas of Women and Children. .

jZcflr-Qffi-ce at his residence, r. .

Ml. F. ROD, ITI.

PIiyMiciau antl 8iirgeon,Dallas, Oregon.

OFFICE At NichoU' Drug Store. 38

W. D, JCFt'ltll, M. D.,

Pliysiciaii and Surgeon,J. 11 a, Oregon. .

j

Special attention given to Obstetrics andDiseases of Women. ltf ;

. J. 12. DAVIDSON, M. D.,

Physician and Surgeon,Independence, Ogiu

i

T. V. S. Embrce.PiarSICIAi& SURGEON

AMITY, YAMHILL CO., OHEUOX. j

Office at residence. Hyl ;

cTsi. cijrjL, r"Attorney and Counsellor-at-La- w,

SALEJf, OltEGOS,Will practice in all the Courts of Record and

Inferior Courts of this State.OFFICE A Co's Brick, up

stairs. l :

IV C. SlJl4l,lVAIV,Attorney k Counsellor-At-La- w,

Dallaa, Oregon, .. .

Will practice in all the Courts of the State. 1

J. X. C0LLIXS,Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law- .

Dallas, Oregon.Special attention given to Collections and to

matters pertaining to Real Estate. I :

li. Jr. WARDUW, E D.,Physic ian and Surgreon,

"

I.ewlst llle I'ulk Co., Ogu..!Tas recently rcturneJ from the Atlantic States,And uOeas his professional services to the citi-zens of the Couuiy.

Particular attention given to Female Dis-eases, h 2-t- f

X. B. K1KJUT. J W. P. LUTD

AU'ytfcConnsclIor-at-Iai- v,

Corner Commercial and State Streets,;Oppoltc l.add fc flush's llauk,

sali:m ohegox,Will practice in tho Supremo Court and theCircuit Courts of the Second and Third Ju-dicial Districts, 2tf ;

OBO. B. CGtlBBT. H. HL'KLBT,

CUEUiEY & IIURI,EYvAttorneys-At-I.ai- v,

LAFAYETTE - - - - OREGON.3 if

:ifIAI!IOi RAHISE V,Al t'y tVC ounsel 1 ov-al-La- wj

Lafayette, Oregon.

s. r. nussBLt, C. P. FERRY,Ital lttate Attornry. Xotary Public

IIUSSELL & PEEUJY,Ileal Estate Brokers and

Collection Agents, v m

Northwest Cor. of First and Washingtonr ' Streets, : ;

PORTLAND - - - - - OREGON.

Ppociftl attention given to the ale of RealKstate. Collections made In Oregon and theTerritories.

Property, town, lots, Improved farms, stockranches, lands, Ac., situated in the best portionsof Oregon and W. T., for sale on reasonableterms.- - ; :i :: S-- tf

E. O. SLOAT, -i

Carriage and OrnamentalSIG PAINTER,

Oommercla ftroef,' Opposits Starkey's Block,

2l-t- f SALEIT,;a . p. ; foiinE8 ' -

Attyt&Counsiellor-at-Iai- v.

Lafayette, Oregon.S-- tf

P. S. HIATTES.CW, :Physician, Surgeon & Accoucher,

Will attend promptly to professional calls,.". J.:6o

all vegetables, all animals; all types ofmen have met. They are constantlydying, as we say; changing their forms.As the types of men die, they casttheir atoms into the circumambient at-

mosphere, tht grand laboratory of dis-

integrated atoms and dissevered attracttion3. L These atom , alive with theirattributes,1 are drawn by tne ever on-

ward and upward tendency of attraction or creative energy, into new andmorse harmonious organization. Afew generations hence the true bornAmerican will not present specimensof the dog head, the horse head, thebird head, or the sheep head, but wibthat roundness and complete fulnesand pcrfcetness of, form, that now.sometimes found in individuals, excitesin the observing physiologist, the sweatest satisfaction and hope.

With a few references to prove mymain position, that man is auatomicallyrclated to his inferior friends, the do-

mestic stirpes or races I have mention-ed, I will submit my argument to

of my enlightened .audience.Thr peculiar dUea.q3 of these aninmlgroups become epidemics amongst ti eyoung of the human types. We havethe "cow pox," the "chicken pox," tl e"bog measles," the; "dog itch,'' the"horse whooping cough," the "sheepBcab scarlatina," etc.

Perhaps I ouht to mention that therest of the nations of the earth arcmixtures of the six prominent classesI have proved. ? The Turk is gallinine.porcine and bovine, hence is poliganic.and being porcine or e;

is jealous; as the poet hassuuof him;""l-- f tutband TbrV, tU iiArn lb world,

Its Struts abnot.wtth his whiskers curled..He's a hundred wires ander lock and keyThat nubovly else bat himself may see."The Kussian is canine, porcine and

bovine, which combination give's histemperament or cross of the "llussianlear;" the Chinaman is porcine, ovineand .bovine; the Egyptian is canineand ovine; the Kquimaux is porcineand canine; the Irishman is porcii e,

vine and bovine ; the German is stror g-l- y

porcine, and can come nearer m'x-in- g

with the Jew than any other jeo-pl- c.

Animals alsohavc their combinations.The bear is a hog and wolf,, or porclnaand canine. The lion is a bison ndeat, bovine and feline. The clephai tis a bison and hog. The camel is a bi-

son and sheep. ' Fish also have theirresemblances and refationship. Thesalmon is a sea dog; the walrus a seahorse; the porpoise a se.i hog ; the whalea sea cow or bison. Hut I have nottime now to further analyze.

To recapitulate my theory and no-

menclature, with the ruling groups ofbrain organs :

1st, or lowest : Canine, fndian,the carnivorous kingdom, the Wild BeastMan, ruling group in tho human brain,

the destructive. j .2d. Ovino : Negro,- - the sheep king

dota, the eland and hipopotamus.Group of brain, adhesiveness and theaficctional.

8d. Gallinine: Frenchman, thebird kingdom, plumage, dress-- , fashions,polygamic, fighting, Amative grouppredominating of course . highly mod-

ified by the intellectual.'4th., The porcine or hog kingdom;

tho "Jew exclusive,--? a 4poculiar peopie," mixing with no other. Self-carin- g

race, combining. Group of facu-ltiesthe altmentative and gustative.'

5th. The bovine or bion kingdom:johnny Hull, its highest earthly typeand' representative. ? Group of facul-ties the approbafive. ;

6th. The equine or horse kingdom:The American, the nation of speed, action, energy, free pasturage of the'woria ; or sicamooais, rai rjaus, ngnining trains. Will equalize the world.The whole Tilling group" of faculties,gelf-conscio- us power, energy, or esteem.

m- ; - i j ; i, ' " is"' '" '

: l

A Cincinnati Judge went swimmingand the boys stole his elothes, whichcompelled him to walk home through atickly popnlated street dressed only inan umbrella ond a chew,-o- f tobacco;Ho will see that tbcro are several juvenile funerals if they only give himhalf a chauce.

"A member of the Pennsylvania Leg-islature, in defending mothers-in-la- w,

sahl : r 'I i pow r'cra Mr. Speaker.Have ,had several. Thev'reagbod anduseful class, and yet an j yet with thetest of them there may be .trouble."

accompanied by an ascending grade oflaws. With mineral, is motion; withvegetation, life; with animals, sensation ; with men, intelligence. The lastand highest acting in a form which isthe ultimata or crown of air the pre-ceding attributes and organizations.

That man coutains all prevous de-

grees and forces, ho las but to lookaround him.

His body is a walking cabinet of

mineralogy; his blood is full of iron ;his skull a stone mansion7 with audito-ries, doors and windows. He has lime,magnesia and silex in his bones, andthe enamel of his teeth is a chemicalcompound much iiko the calcined silexof his cupboardware and; windowlights. He is also a compound of veg-etables in their contuent-- J albumengluten, flbrine. saccharine; and he isalso a laboratory of all animality. Hehns nerves, tissues, fibres, muscles, flex-

ors, bones, nails, hair, sensation ; inshort, man can trace himself back intothe earth wifh tho certainty of thethread of Ariadne in the labyrinth.See! man eats animals and vegetables;mimals eat vegetables ; vegetables eatthe ground. The atoms that composethe?e different forms and phases of pro-urc- s,

have not died; they have simplychanged degrees Xrora lower to higher.They must be kin to us, for by our eat-

ing them, they enter into life relationswith us, and daily beeome our mortalbeing ! ':

This is the observation of the physi-ologist on the side of atoms aud forms

4 Now, what docs he perceive psychologically, on the side of attribute ? (Uyactributc is meant justice, mercy, truth.zooduc'S, love, wi.uom, self hood, etc.)Fu tho spinal cord of all animals, birdsSahcs, he Cuds motor aud sensationalganglia, or nerve centres. This, insome low types, is the residence of in-

stinct andattribute ; but in highertypes, there is superimposed upon thisspinal cord, a portion of the brain, tjecerebellum, in which resides and mani-fests superior instincts and attributes;und lor still superior types of animals,as the domesticated classes, he find-.ti- ll

another brain superimposed uponthe cerebellum. This last brain, thecerebrum, is greatly diversified, andshares in animals the arrangement ofseveral groups, and the possessors ofthese groups have invariably shown theexerci.se of different faculties, instinctsand attribufes. ! a

iMan combines inhis brain all thesegroups of faculties in the aggregate,that he has found in manifestation intho singular, in the animal kingdom,besides his own groups that are pecu-liarly human.

It the plmi dogy of animals, lie discovers ruling groups, as destnictiveues?anc secretivensss in tho cat; fidelity inthe dog; nobility in the horso; concentrativeness or self hood in tho hog,etc. In one man. or in a race ofLrucn.he finds a combination of groups so pe-culiar to sbtne class of animals as tosuggest their similar physiology -- tkeirnatural derivation. For instance, therud ian predominates in those crouns offaculties destructivenes8 and cunningleading, that distinguish the entire' ca-ui- ne

and camiverous kingdom. He isthe child of the forest. Destructiveand untamable, he will not work andcannot be cuslavcd. His head is thickest through the ear. Liko the cat andpanther, ho delights in. killing and tortuiing helpless prey, j His wigwamsmells like a fox kennet He is theWild Beast Man I evolved by thechange of atom and attribute from theanimal kingdom, up into'the human.

The "next race most highly markedin points of animal and human physi-ology is the African. 1 This type pre-sents tho ovine groups in predominanccjTho Negro smells like! the sheep hishair kinks like vrool. Ho can makea battering ram of his head, like thatanimal, withont injury to his brain;Nationally ho is helpless and defence-less, like the sheep, and thereforo easi-l- y

enslaved . II is : mling .groups ofbrain are. the sflectional and the semi-mtellceiu- al.

Scripturally the'ovinc isthe emblem of ionocenco and noa-a- g

anonthly.:

From the Religio, Physiological Journal ofChicago.

PHYSIOLOGYCOSMIC ALV PSYCHICAL.

.A Lecture by G. VV. Law son, of Oregon.

REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL.

.vlf, as has been lonx credited "the

properstady of uiinkind in nian." andthat subject of study is a microcosm of

nature, then 13 physiology planetary,human, animal vegetable, mineral uni-

versal the proper field for man's in-

vestigation and research.. Cosroical physiology relntes to the

objective univene. It ta what, the eyecan see of forms and substance, around,above,, beneath"; whether they be thevast and oiighty plahets space dimin-

ished by the telescope, or'the infinites"stmaf "mite magnified by the microscope.It is the education of vbion.

Gazing into f pace on a starry night,the human eye beholds a universe of

.suds and planets. ,

- 'Pale tirs gliiaaerirg, fir and fevrrIn the deep charms of ev:rtatir g bin?,TJngatheml and tr.marHial!et,ne an.l one,

t A.1KO OUlpOSlS OI U) lUIIiir ,illl,-un- .

The '.thought arises, what composesthat starry field, and what are its uses?Constructing instruments for measurement of distances and diameters, he isstruck dumb with the indemonstrablenumber and the ireonceivable magni-tude of the rolling worlls that sur-

round him. !

Still observing, with the telescopeand the triangle, he discovers that each

planet has points of departure and rcturn ; that each sun and system ofs,unwith their unnumbered trains of planetsand satellites, revolve around sometransfixing and imperative centre. He

'discovers that all is motion all is law,obedience, order. The moon revolvesaround the planet; the , planet around

'the sun ; the sun arour.d the centralpole of its own svstem ; the systemsaround a still grander centra; and heis lost in th magnitude of the astralfield that surrounds hi rn.

Returning to himself, hc ean yet ob-

serve the sun and planets of his own

sphere. "Physiologically, the sun seemslike a mighty mother, whose children,the planets, revolve around her in theorder of their biitli. TneJ.earth, ofwhich lie Is a denizen, is one of her

.dwarfs. It has but one moon, while,Jnpitcr and " Saturn-- , proportionallylarger, nave several, uc directs his

.attention to the use3 of the satellites,and finds, that they subserve inhabi-tancy of, the planets by men and ani-

mals, for whom it reflects light, governsTnuca uun ctMiinuu. jy analogy,from observation, lie thus discovers the,nse of the planets ; that they aro fortlbe production of marr, a3 their highestand ultimate fruit; that objectivelyflawed,'?. it i a senn-livin- g body, oftvliicri man is an epitome, and has in

grosser form, rivers for its arteries andveins, granite, shale, marble, sandstonefor its ribs and skeleton bones; that its

--atoms of matter change form, but never lose life ; that . nothing b lost, ? but,order and obedience, and that througha succession --of atpmic changes ceaseless, constant, howejrer, slow, from inferior to superior, from lower to , higher,through disintegration and rccombinatiori, ; through what man calls life anddeath the final and ultimate human isat last produced, ; ,

Thus, to the phygioloaist, it appearsthat atom contains attribut; and uni-verse, intelligence. The sum of atomsforming .the visible body of the unjverse,. ond the aum of attributes, laws

and-principl- es, its deific intelligencewhat wc call God. UEENSWARE IN ABUNDANCE

At J. JJ. LlSWl'g.Q