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I could not look at Ansel Chaikin, or think of him, without picturing him leaving the Manheimers in a lurch and becoming a fatal competitor of theirs. I beheld their downfall. I gloated over it But Chaikin lacked gumption and enterprise. What he needed was an able partner, some man of brains and force.

Rather curiously we find in Feuerbach's own published collection of Trials the case of a boy, Sörgel, who had 'paroxysms of second consciousness ... of which he was ignorant upon returning to his ordinary state of consciousness. We have also the famous case of the atheistic carpenter, Ansel Bourne, who was struck deaf, dumb, and blind, and miraculously healed, in a dissenting chapel, to the great comfort of 'a large and warm congregation. Mr.

Scudder, at present. Harmon met him while he was here; they were in the same class at college. Harmon recommended him highly. Olivia, he says to the niece, 'what was the name of the young man whom Harmon recommended? "'Tolliver, Uncle Ansel, answers the girl, lookin' kind of disdainful at Nate. Somehow he had the notion that she didn't take to him fust rate. "'Hey? sings out Nate. 'Tolliver?

"I was thinking of family and friends, pleasures and memories and ambitions and hopes." "I guess it don't pinch you any worse to give up a hope than it would a good two-year-old heifer," retorted Ansel; "but there, you can't never tell what folks'll hang on to the hardest!

Everybody does when they get used to it. Takes some time to get used to a place, don't you know it does, Ansel?" "My name is Albert." "Eh? Yes, yes, so 'tis. Yes, yes, yes. I don't know why I called you Ansel, 'less 'twas on account of my knowin' an Ansel Olsen once . . . Hum . . . Yes, yes. Well, you'll like South Harniss when you get used to it." The boy did not answer.

I'm glad to learn that YOU recognize them. He has told some things concernin' his stay at your home which "'Yes, yes, says Nate, kind of hurried. 'Well, I'm sorry to dump bad news into a puddle of happiness like this, but your Uncle Ansel, Miss Dixland, has been tryin' to fly without his machine, and he's sorry for it.

They don't make 'em any finer. Ah hum! And not so long ago I read about a passel of darn fools arguin' that the angels in heaven was all he-ones. . . . Umph! . . . Sho, sho! If men was as good as women, Ansel Alfred Albert, I mean we could start an opposition heaven down here most any time. 'Most any time yes, yes." It was considerable for him to say.

The first was formed in Puffer's school house on Spring Prairie in the summer of 1840, and included in its membership, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Cowham, Lansing Lewis, and Mrs. Lewis, his mother. Brother Cowham was the Leader. The other class was organized in Lyonsdale, with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lyon, Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Lyon, Mr. and Mrs. Ansel Waite, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall, and Mrs. Jones. Hon. Wm.

"You never seem to remember that men are just as dangerous to women's happiness and goodness as women are to men's," said Susanna, courageously. "It don't seem so to me! Never see a man, hardly, that could stick to the straight an' narrer if a woman wanted him to go the other way. Weak an' unstable as water, menfolks are, an' women are pow'ful strong." "Have your own way, Ansel!

C. Rogers. 2d Ward T. N. Bond, Ansel Roberts. 3d Ward A. C. Keating, Amos Townsend. 4th Ward Henry Blair, David A. Dangler. 5th Ward Joseph Sturges, B. P. Bowers. 6th Ward George W. Gardner, John Huntington. 7th Ward Peter Goldrick, E. S. Willard. 8th Ward Joseph Randerson, Wm.