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g as they some are living still. I see, too, men in the street very often, who were as good as dead in the opinion of all who saw them in their extremity. People will insist on living sometimes though manifesily moribund. In Dr. Elder's Life of Kane you will find a story of this sort told by Dr. Kane himself. The captain of a ship was dying of sourvy, but the crew mutinied, and he gave up dying for the present to take care of them. An old lady in this city, near herend, got a little vexed aDr. Kane himself. The captain of a ship was dying of sourvy, but the crew mutinied, and he gave up dying for the present to take care of them. An old lady in this city, near herend, got a little vexed at a proposed charge in he will; made up her mind not to die just then; ordered a coach; was driven twenty miles to the house of a relative, and lived for four years longer. Cotton Mother tells some good stories which he picked up in his experience, or out of his books, showing the unstable equilibrium of prognosis. Simon Stene was shot in nine places, and as he lay for dead, the Indians made two backs with a hatchet to out his head off. He go well, however, and was a lusty fellow in Cotton Mat