Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Downers Grove Reporter, 2 Jul 1896, p. 2

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‘no mar-elo- a-n cm I. nor- ... m. anon. no. Mil oboe am will N.- am 0... ear-hula. V, W, Ill tho 0mi- lehu mu too-(towns melanoma in m um drip u had extending fru- m lam-n rim to "no out. $1 ha demo-unfit! at can mt n m vie duet by tuning an be by t and gonna” of the w. His mm: m I III ind loo- Inmaeiau [or twenty ' m- n unto In I recent 0“ who revived at men when chm Iron 1 nlnnic The ("many ll any use: the victim at lbhtnlng ”t he has been killed and fimhmltothoolmrcs not a joint when he an get min or m meet" the recu- etmnt m u hum. It _bhmd¢othctthopuâ€" ' it. [on ply-1cm: m not ”fig; 5 1:5 .{3 3 a: E mum OIDVI, : ILLINOIS. 110 meter: (mum at Lani-u. Ilcl. In really lmnlous. They have doom I nine pin hr min; poo- plop.yfor00ldnhmfll¢dhm!l no aim-u... no not quuldued min I‘ mile use tho boll. mnmmwnunm-m ad hurled II be ”It“ laid “a the «flaunt- w u then has! 3” no but NI; they know “My wan to until. a and an Mvfl chum Mn. m can. lie clue, m In... an: to tin WIS-e110" ur- my men-Ive ado. planning "and the (on of Tho-anvil”. to? II. DIW- «mg no m at k- m not It: do“. but be m and-Inn that It In unlit; tot mum nun m Int d July. who. to (lulu II- uhhc m..- d b.- Iu an.- N- ml for an. Inn- “Mini-wont no III-Cl II In mm m- nllnlo ”than, M 00 ”MI '0" II M M I). In" lat-Inn. a “auburn can. In: I... (In other slat an, boa-o inc" 1m to: Int-u w “nomad-amulet“. m Io [kl up u m. no coded by Imam In this“ Can 'fll I um. .34 mum; a my nip III N no ta mn- lu l nu‘o map “out lieu-a h (have Dom d Ento- "In" an in n In Vlad an: blow: nobody and. HI- Iulo. who was mm In tho R. Loch cyclone. m M- 8150.000. (luv-p will In Mn I bury VOICE d The Now Yort now-yam mu- m the ole!“ u-Pnddanl Katrina '1...“ u upon an proceeding! 0! the IL Loch «mun no... to pout-I an. a run an lulu. Il- ls.“ Raddy o! Chlcm In boo- umlod 810.000 for dam-go in am or maddest. But u I. likely to ho who "no Mon «to company will M Indy to pay. ml. A (em I: noc'pomhéa without rubbing. nor h I an perfected with- out Utah Olll' gluten glory Is not In never (tying, but In flung every time we It was I feminine patient who was cured of hiccouxh by putting out her tongue (or a few minutes. The scheme night. not work so well for the quieter A number of deacon: In Orange, N. 1.. have decided against bicycle riding on Sunday. It was easier to do this than to check the wheel: at the church. The town of Cincinnati and Cleve- land are now rising to prominence. They are important way-places on the mud to Canton. A Missouri man claims to have chewed up a hall mlle of threednch plus tobacco within the past sixteen Tho sickness of Aubrey Beardsley was so clearly a. mac 0! retribution that one In amazed at Ma recovery. In. Hurlet Bonner Smwa Is 85. but Uncle Tom's cabin seems to be a thousand. M to at. sanctum: luau nuny Q m his money. 000mm Cobb wo'uld look well on the Kansas corn min. Thing: no moving In Guatemala an IIIII. Another revolution has broken 9mm Gm: gqmm. mmmmi'qfii put amenity In heaping in D, "BIT: l WILLIAM I! k and um tho Bala- Ill-um. lunch-«u. In In It. Won 3 Wm. mum-g I data film ‘5! ’eythc.‘ The: I In on the watch. mt, noon the (allowed it up with 'I am out: to.” just a I new the we'll. no 0-. u “w- Aa Mun woman more recently of I convention m ha been lulu; 1m 1 new lcquhmnce: “I thought her min? I superior person," the um, “um Ilq let slip the touch-ton A: m a he throws up Ila little loud I plant my foot behind III. and ole-o up his hole. “on all I has to «humllnoutotthedmlnd drop Mn In my pocket. kicking and actual“ like I good fello'. 1 kill him. stretch his nil: on I shingle, ma a mu have In this clty ma no 81 nice. (or them to auto pans of." my berry patch nd are the tune whenever I diam llr. Ilole. The not: any when It h “In for all: to me luck I take my mm- nar the hole. “But a hole In the via“. of no". It to I: disturbed It his work at 2 o’clock to-day he will not come not till many 2 o'clock to-uorrov. You no out I wont by him not! depend on In Mu right. Well. I witch "and "In no In! phee. I fond M n has never comes straight to a. top at Ole pond, but always on I slut. and m In" no the grand calmed for tone (lave before be thrown up In hm. I! you step with!- "any fee: othlnwhenhcmmlhotoplo will Instantly stop work m m. 11‘- no use to try to catch Mn then. "To (all you the In“. a, bracelet pocket. m I! cant pocketn loo. an may '0" "la! 'III mole-Ila. Within the M nil- l have developed Into a mole hunter. and u pan. I nan «ml can In mun-no at man. and they need malleable "In. I ml to n: In a m o! "I; dim-g mac (menu mm! “In!“ new this fly «a tint. but I) n. In.- appolnuu to an mu the me an an! no (m I had been 1mm. IOIO hm. I not 'Ilfll on the ma. puts. “a l not learned their habits. aim the: Ithnotronbloauntomm “no.“ Idea to a In M In“ W and “can... an matinee Poul: "No. ma. It In": money In: ruin I, you.“ Data on I- m1 'u. but n 1- m non-I'M.“ nuance I "If-MINI. guy-bank! nick! Inn Ind-cm, ”Meant lathe-Incl: ol;hyropo III! «a sunken (of I be". Mm III In mum than. no- mo: I830. cm "at. mull-I ol (I. (than. which roo- lulu: Charl- X.. and n- Iot mm.“ to In: an no W monarchy no the but at mules." 1 hon. to stop. Bad :1 run th punk-u! condition. the Ilorll, II. noun-t nun. were I than.“ u..- wont. Then to no son pram «w 0! mm tau tho Mm: "st-can. "who. I. the lull?“ I add. "The tun.” In II. apply, ”I. .0. an at Mil-«(J which on do n n Ilka. m 3: cu "an old ml. Louis mm”, who Ian-tad m Madonna at :5. AM” nut-n! (a on M at mohltoouu He, too, In attached by the wrists to I horse’s tail Md ind thus to so all the way in a blazing sun In). Connuaiino to Ban. And thence to Bill". Tho rout lecture or thin tor- wn is the m of loss of equilibrium. It in impo‘iblo to nlndy one'I cell. the Inn. being kept. on the attach. for can in taken in unto the lone so u I m which oblileu the soldier uedwluuiltolmn-lmi. "0 In absolutely powerin- lo prevent Iii-all {Ailing (onward it be unable. lulu! I «one and when he “II- he cannot the union the urgent (in. Deputy Rome-t. who was (or three year- in an Ail-lean regiment which mu not I disciplinary one, any: that it was a hell upon earth. The oilicers and non-commissioned omms were brutallzed by absinthe, by having no check or public opinion on their bad minions and by the armnnce MIG- Ing from finding themselves master- oi the Arabs. ‘ A complaint has been sent by the brother to the war mlntster, but. a: there was no breach of rule, he will probably wash his hands of the amur. )1, Ernest Roahe. however. has given notice of an Interpenauon, so that In- quiry will be made between this and the 17th of Mny, when the chamber‘ nammblea. o! the head 0! the corps‘ to which Private Chcymol belonged. frumwummmn CUNNINO LITTLI All-ALI. ‘ _ The name or the sergeant not over Cheymol was Penln, To humble him. Pen-In ordered hlm to be tied by the wrists to a horse‘s tallmhlch was to be kept going at a brisk pace until the sergeant cried “enough l” After a long spell of this exercise Cheymol tell. The home nevertheless was given reln and whip untll It was evident that It‘ was dragging not a livlng man, but. a corpse. hunch Ida-n I‘m-Md h outl- m auxin one-nu. Another monstrous case or Algerian miliury discipline is reputed. The victim this time was I. soldier Mined Cheymol, brothet of M. Paul Ghoymol. lay- : Paris dispatch w the London News. He was sent. for some breach of ruin. in a disciplinary compuny. This means a sort 0! penal servitude oi the my fourth] kinds that. have‘ survived the revolution. 3 DISCIPLINE IN ALOIERC- (0 a. name: mind an : Success in rooting cutting: will. In I general, be in proportion to our all" n ln preventing the cutting {celtn‘ its re- | moral from the parent plant. Hence, . other thing: being equal, well-ripened ; shoots oi deciduou- plnnto are more , out!) rooted than thou In a lean lu- ‘ tire condition, though if proper condi- , tion wero at land the latter would not tho ”ones. Sumo-e you hon n ‘ nice crowing plant in your window arty in Iny, no it has may young float- on it two or three incle- Ions. olipthenoflcloaoiothormn,atofl a few of the lower lanes and Insert tn apotolnndJnooethmtothom‘ nnd air in your window and moot likely your labor will be in vain; but cover thopotwlthapiecooiglmtokoep tho number: about than not-t. and M from making until they on bar it without wilting. and yon will hove rooted photo in u nanny dnyl no you would have in weeks from decid- Iou cuttings. In general it in but to love a cutting rut ol nt 3 bud, u the vital force- nn mom there and there I: la. danger oi their denying 1 from extra nborptlon of wltor. land a I Indium in which to root cutting: in preferable to anything else. bacon.- it Mont: too men water collecting about the on. at the cutting. on tho mmmdontheotnorthontrona duo-nonlirtodryitm Ottor E It hen heen b7 the hunt rtuo end pent-tent nppllentlon o! nelntlk prlnelplen Ihnt we here (one Into poo- matheI-proredhneoeotat- ‘ tIe. her-en. sheep. hon. end poultry. nhonn well-developed no ny-netrtenl tor-e Inhe the. the china 0! ed- .Irntlen At one ecrtcnltnrnl Inlrn. II n fer-er. I-preâ€"ro nlth the not en- perlorltr at these nut-ole en competed with the err-he he hen heen rntetng. in" n pelr nn‘ uhen the. halo. hot Ignore-t at tho-e ectentlle or phynle. lnglcal love. nttentloo to thh oflc» lnnlly neon-ed the Improvement. In the neglectotthenelnvehenoonhden nerhed deterIorntlon In the progeny at Me Improved etoeh. In hIn (lappelnt- Ient ot the result at the Invest-e“ he prone-loco It n hn-hng Ind n fell- ore, vherenn the an". I. attributable «teeth to It. Inernnce. Whatever nlnn of out“ or at eon-tutor: n.- rIcnltnrnI noetetleo nay have laid to their charge. they have nt ell events neon-pushed n very Important work gIn nwnhenlng n more general Interest ’In egrlenltunl end other prod-cure [minutes In hrtnglng before the eyen 1or the eon-Inky the best results otA telnet! In the Improvement of en htnde of lone-tie net-ale, from end eerenln. elno the prone. to the .echnole me u epplled to tor-Ins luplenentn. they have enlisted the sympathy ct men and women at Intelligence nntl thought on! rolled Inhor to high poettlon of honor end lilty.â€"â€"ll G. Burl. n! m In ulna-t In “It In“ u that at In...” ovum” OIOO Wm cultivated tum, In some cues timing noun! lun- Into on. Some at the“ proprietor. have awn-h: Int-uln- lad unnamed It. mun. art-mm mu. portion at their land to taunts; other. have It.- ply ht their tam: nap-o tnto tort-tn; only one Ill" (arm on I lam ”It Nevertheless. the old on!" I: chased a than!” by tin. m that It In In"! outli- that It Im an: Man. This will not In]. bacon. a con- uulty 0! ml! (tram until the city ”I! matte-m nhuou It. And tun tho ton-tn vlll ban to you up I‘ll. mt n on pmtlo- o! plo- Iun um Inn to clout It an. AM In: In uh. o. ten to Ml“ :- way over any noun Inc- at outdmotdn-utu. Iva-htt- co-untlvoly I" auto at low: It wt to m. num- u' hm IN MI. w. m the Item 01 tn- w. HIGGINSON. in Harper’s Baler, in discussing farm ownership of lands for summer resiâ€" dences. halt opens up a palnlul as well as pleasant feature or the residence of wealthy people on country estates. The absorption of large blociw of land in the introduo-i tlon o! tenants not bound to the local~ "Y by personal investments or perma- nent interests can w-nrcoly be consid- ered a gal: when tho system replaces a “"qu farmer from native stock at the community. Fortunately the summer comers content themselves with a lot or at most a moderate sized harm. and zenerally leave lot- the protection of the buildings in winter a very 800'] class 01 men The Introduction of the new forces that now tend to a consoli- dation of (arms may change all this. and large blocks of land may he at- ,tnched to a virtual manorial estate. 1,001. Higginson. utter recounting the §natural conditions induced by large estates in Ireland, said: “th now. when he looks [mm the windows 0! his lummer abode in New Hemwhln, limo“ every inch 01 land he sees. "P :indinx several thousand acres. belong- to two or three, or at the utmost are. Proprietors. and tends tram year to year to rather concentrate than to (ur- ther subdivision. All at these In city Proprietors who have bought ID what “no Int-Imus“ III-u Alton cunn- Ilol of tho so" and Yluldl flat-o!â€" noulc-Il-m Vulcan-u and nul- «Inn FARM AND GARDEN. W In. Cum-cu. MATTERS OF INTEREST TD AGRICULTURIST “haunt-Inn. DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER. Feeding Ween-elon- M lea. The editor otL’Aoiculm-e once fed 1.500 vetermelou. my of which were amine (worth in ell 819.60) to Me query o! no colonies, from the middle d Anne! .1. the end of September, when there m n ammo dearth of forage. It valid hue coet Mn three ‘In an hm should m be men may comb lonn‘nuon, If one in union: to necnro the largest poulhle amount of honey. The out of this seen): heavy 1! times, but the foundation will guy for null tavern] [Inc- In nun honey. Now an til the surplus ”rungsâ€" uenu o! o! the old him and place than. hens and all. on the new hm. my. your mm In thin hive :- chm prepared. and then, If the team In I good one, Inch than: work. nnd yon‘ will know why I In! no; nnxlou for n ‘ nan-ruin. nee of been. nlr. move the Mrs In none on!" part of the yard. and place the brood ebmber only 0! none: hm on the on! stand where the Mn stood Iron witch the mn- W. The francs oy in. and It la in! II aalaral luv than to avat- win the «million an vigil, n it la (or the- to aaL Iona have talked. dmud. all .m- In abut aca-mr-iu ram oi bu. ht Imam-«Ili'aanrm aay loam lull. than than we do lav. Miller in I lhlal im an in In dental. It in the I'lf‘ll‘ lion that an mull; tho Inay plhl’fla "Bat.“ Iran m. “I thought that the nylodale henna" did not let Ila be“ "am." Well, that loam! II1 I "at booty, l in than team. It i mated note be“. um i would di- vldo than. A. It in nut easier to aa~ curs been than honey. I do but vm little dividing. and let nature have Inn on way. The Int thing to be tooled alter la m to mtnl star-lax. for tile la that we want to do and not to [renal iL la to can that all strong colonies have pleat] at room for nor- iu mica honey flat as fut aa they are Mil! to «my it. l said in a loner article that aa can an the Int airplaa amamt was partly full. it should in mm up and an cum on rat taller it. ll the moon la an extra good one. this protea- nay be repeated until the" are law or In upon, each m a capacity 0! twenty-(om pound: at my.“ all a! the strong colonies. ‘il than nae" an glm the. la plenty at line, swarming may ha de- layed for aoveral tan. a“ a large mat of honey ace-red fro- cad «la-r. Darla; a [nod seam it in aunt an easy to get {our um llied with Ioaey. it properly manipulated, aafliatoptmllthahaeaaraneâ€" fluted. Watch the bee. eloaely, and 'm a awar- emergu fro- a live. Mummthebeeamalliatho We inn mm to In “.0 who. but lad clan nun-u“: [or a mu- Ic- lbct m In! null la a nun Ml- ." to can any an!“ loo". om limb Ibo uno- unn I {”0th on, an I um" I. Journal of Ani- mun. I In" and In “no aha-u mm! "an "at has do M M Incl mum. bu nu I." do and MM h (in. It (to my" ".0. or alto may will won I. be very n- Mnbla mwny. lvnmlu I. n- un‘n mind 0! multiplying no hon-j my ohm into nub. poi-II Into Inns. or the M0! my house alto- mlfl double I! the ml I. loo Heb. Wu" (or [lo-u I'll-u. Rainwater is best, as nothing is more certain than that hard Inter will kill hard-vooded, line-rooted plants. It nhouid be used It a tempt-rattan nomeviuu near that or the room, and in unmoved by exposure to son and Iif. When kept in tanks lit-low wand it In immntly rendered u hard :1 spring Inter Mm it: abunbiu mane-h or line [roll the mam-inl- ol which the wall- o! the clutcm Ito composed. Stronger liquid; mini-in; some m- lmrial luttrt in solution. it given. 5mm morally he done u tho period 0! Marius. Btu-h solution should be weak Ind cit-Ir. All our stimulation at th plant-lym- would he “owed. new plant- bnr it. but others. as in tho «nation and the room. I dintoctlo. 0! I). lover an aim. Tho cum . Durwln on Emilio-Clon- There is weighty and abundant evi- dence, gays Darwin, that the flowers of most kinds of plants are constructed so as to be occasionally or habitually crowiertillled by pollen from another flower, produced either by the same plant, or generally, as we shall here- after see reason to believe by a distinct plant. Cross-tortilixation is sometimes insured by the sexes being separated. and in a large number at ease. by the pollen and stigma of the some flower being matured at different times. It is also insured, in many cases, by ine- chanical contrlvances of wonderful beauty, preventing the impregnation o! the flowers by their own pollen. Again. there is a class in which the ovule abâ€" solutely refuse to be lertliized by pollen from the same plant. but can be ter- tilized by pollen from any other indi- vidual oi the same species. There are also very many species whlch are par- tially sterile with their own pollen. jLastly, there is a class in which the flowers present no apparent obstacle oi any kind to sell-fertilization; never- theless, these plants are frequently in- ierorossed, owing to the prepotency of pollen (ram another individual or vari- ety over the plant‘s own pollen. There. are, however. some cases which seem especially oontrlved ior sell-lemma- tion. The number is much smaller than would be supposed by n hasty ob- seriatlon. l plants and the dividing ot the room of herbaceous plumâ€"4. H. Gardner. I'm-h no Ins New Wifeâ€"But It in not um. umâ€" mnflM't mind In- hding mm with my cooking. But tn think an Ion, m I unwed m :1..de mhmnnlynamumm ankle-hum mill-ammo. ImmkAml no he comm-Inca of your 01mm, did In} Well. I wouldn't mind; you will noon loll-n to male manning!!!“ wanna-u The Raspberryâ€"The raspberry, 1. one (on: or mother. I: [and my!" wild In many pm: of the workL In none In Inppeeed to be derived from "roaring" Inelh-Ien to the roughnes- or prlclllnene of in wood. In gnu. pane of Mind the term "rank" to Itlll need. It: Mental neme, Ruins Idneuc. or the Monnt [do trouble, In ob- utned from the not till It was Int Introduced Into Southern Europe tron: flaunt [docâ€"En. 3 Heeeedty for Spayln‘.‘1'ho {not that Insect Ind Mme enemies at the orchard may be held In check by enn- M attention to WI: with certain material. In: been In often and n plelnly amount-Intel that further prod seem unneeenury. By our more waste-Ive former. the practice I- not looked upon a n necessity In mace-tn! orehnrd management. Prepared or Unmanned. â€"â€" Tho (user who I! nlv-yn ready for rain then It comes may safely In all u be trio-date. Tlm and "do In" (or no In. and the um In true at the runs. The tumor one- run for ml and (may wnlu ll ml, and 1 km of [m 'bo. having vnued (or nil tn mince me a! the lump. In their Odds, lumd of the-ulna pre- venting the tor-uto- o! Imp, no not wishing It would quit mail. so they an get into tho Md Ind plat (‘0' Pn- nd Cort-m "a con In In. th Int-in to Ian II“. 3. lino-fl: A [ow to" and page two or llm lull". m m: h or nu: ml hm. The, will Mart and grout. flatly u Int. but "puny lam. and who the an to may to my 51. they fill 39m. and my!) cover It. mud. “(or In con la at all I). bogs II! he (and t- !o out the you. or (in whole um any he unned n- drr [a (reel mun-c. In none an”. an wilt he helm than trying 11 nov a row at you Mice: the to.- -u m A- I creel crop, m. will in mm th- cflmsoo chm, and not. valuable than rye. Try II II I an!) ny.-llml Nev Yotker. onu- ol Mm Daysâ€"TM pins. All the mints-n "Arbor Day” In. "Inn-(ad by tho pun-t loom-r7 d ‘ Autumn. “on mm: at tho No- btnh had of uric-Inn. TI. «to d n- mm by Ibo mun-u heard no Jun-r1 0. am The Int mun- nuo. declaring u A holiday m but by Gov. I. W. “mu. Hard 8!. II“. has "but!“ In“ April I Arbor day. mm.» won cloud a this loud-y by ulna-g Inn. mill. mt- mm and" lo ton-(- and Vood- lnm and by other method- min. man. I. Ibo ml, of (be mn- nun u the ton-u d the [Mud mun. ‘ and lllewlu o! no "Mot-(lo. at that. ‘ mm which Mn been numy de- ma cl ma.~l«man J. I. Ion". lei-«In and linking. The be" and most puctlcal way to lune". all. lull-lure and place It hm when ll. ll not! Available to! plant use la by "mum! shallow cultivation. forming a he earth mulch. Tul- up- ‘yllu to nrdcun and I" hood crops. ‘ When so" cum! all be cultivated :- vllh null (null. thm nu manure, lawn. strut. clout. mun buy. or any mterlll to undo Ibo ground and n- urd 0"th. Wllh mm mulch; clo- non-d mu plan. and a In. «uh mulch between tho to". lam "up. my be curled nhly “mush nun mouth. Comm ll onto aid mall-u u-tll ptodllcll an III-Inn.â€" II. A. “not. Ont-rd Culture. In the spring of 1891 and experiment was begun to give a practical illustra- mm or the eflecta of diluent kinda oi treatment for young orchards. Plot No. 1, containing four trees, was seeded at ‘ once to lucero; No. a seeded to clover. ‘ No. 3 to timothy. and No. 4 seeded to a mixture at timothy and clover. all being allowed to grow close around the trees. Each plat contained tour trees set twenty-tour feet apart. All the trees in the lucern died the first sum- mer. The tour plats were watered alike. but the locern plat suflered most. 0n the other three plain one-half the trees died. All were reset in the spring at 1892 and more Water applied than the previous year. The Intern by this time seemed to have such a full possession of the land that It was very difficult to keep the trees iron: drying. Some of them lived through the summer, but were dead in the wring at is”. The ; tree: on the other three platl were In 3 about the condition In the preview )‘cat.~â€"Utah Experiment Station. ted, “cording to tile. He does not It! whether the hoes wintomd on that toad. but it in to ho presumed that they did. tor the next mm. though there won 3 little flow 0! honey. he again ted watermelon: " to complete their winter provision." from which it ‘vouid appear that it ,did not hurt them. Care was taken that the juice they obtained was trash every day. He noticed that they voiciod tho watery portion during their 'return to the hive, at a distance of only a tow yards from the leading place. Before feeding the fresh melons, he had tried hailing the pulp with a little water, but the bees took little notico‘ o! it.â€"F. b. Tom» ‘ son. in Review. ‘ m. Twenty armor- I any were Illva The mnleueo of divorce In this country In one of the alarming ”my. homa of I dreadful disease In the tan- Ily m. of the nation. Fro- mo to mo no rule of divorce Increased that than an but u m muting of cu W Innâ€"lav. A. I. DIVE “J he he. the .00! end the files )toet people anyone that the moon alone is responsible for the phenome- non ot tides. but the attractian of the sun in also en important factor. 0! course, the dhnnce of the m front the earth In unthinhahly greater then thet o! the moon, hut ita inn. ie an enormous that it has metastable tide- pmdncing influence. The force which the Inn exerte ie the lune on both sides at the earth at the no time, the adeprodndng force of the greet hot-h being about four-tenths that at the neon. At the time ot hath new and MI moon the "me spheroida produced by hath the nun end the noon have their use coincident”o-that in to hey. the two greet orhe unite their energies on the iluidn of our planet and as e result the tides are higher than the evenge for the remaining portion. at the month. These are the "luring Men.” The "heap tidee" come in the time of the moon's first and third qnnr. we and ere not an greet as the am. an beam the moon and the nun ere working in opposition to each other.-â€"« fl. Louie Republic. boundary line on It. our! oi "no Usual Blues. tonom recently by excited and intention“! utterance. In the newspapers. based on In" Infmutlon, ninon' yarns. Ind Immulon. n deplorable In elm! u the tor-«r II- dllmnce. Futile opinlon In being misled nu! prey-dim to :1 deg.” mu rude” rumble con-Mentions o! the queuing ("MIL Wild editorials Inn given such Mats. points. nnd mm “on: for Crum- "cumulus." wen Inch Intended. that one night believe the Jinan journalists [up-outed Iron some the border, to lunch hater do they serve (he Dollhlol'n ends than those of our “neglected ante" cl Mun. 80 hr (he waited CIIIMNAI ".13- mo." on .u on paper. 1')- 0mm line has boon an". but In. any lmglnary culture. For I quarter of I musty (hove ha been ecu-pm. lodlflenm to the unsettled Mann Ian! pin-n! lo couuaphu .- (lb ma "mm-arm'- Iu o! mak- Aluh h Ibo “Us; any 0! Ohm: nu. um. alt-stand by John lulr || mu. "mod AM named by Admin) Bard-In In It“. in. be“ m ml cl mhr "union Inna-n tor lilac" unm- pm. All.“ mmm Inn with all." an Ibo Canon. ”In. null. m 0|.- rkr Bay :1 In my nun-m. would "and" the 3m! suck:- to the am- Im In. I“ mvml (tulle-1 mm- unm Iro- Mldlng mun at am Glad". M u Ibo Canadian n- mrflol an." in Iron «binned 'm- landing Hanan II lair mm {or VIII 0! a rum: Bt-leo mum house. ai sections, but our most unique scenic possessions. Portland Channel itsell is a lion! 0! surpassing beauty: Behin canal is justly extolled as the finest landscape reach on the com: Ravi]!- ll‘sedo is the scenic island; and John Muir is author of the saying that the Stikine river is "a Yosemite one hun- dred miles long." The Cameron line would annex all these to Canada. cm in; the Stiltine at its muddy mouth. and taking away over sixty miles of that navigable Yosemite. on 'hm banks tour places have been accepted as the temponary boundary in the past. Three times the Hudson Bay Company post and the British custom house were removed and rebuilt, until at. last. during the Cassinr mining boom. the Britiah custom house was alloved to remain on acknowledged Alaskan loll at the foot of the Great. Glacier. for the temporary convenience or the Britâ€" ish authorities and the United States military omcera at Port Wrangell, near the mouth at the Stikine river. Later a town site was surveyed around this very custom house, and entered at Vio- toria, it. C. The moat heantiiui tidrwater glacier on the cont would he lost to in by Gen. Cameron‘s nmciiod annexation 0! TIM: inlet. The boundary line. which had always been drawn at the erect ot the mountain rang. at the head of Lynn (‘anaL van moved down to tide- iiaa niaty tulle- iarthor south. to the very eninnoo at that Ina;- aiflceni nerd. gathering in all the water on the Canadian map at iii“: and in lull (in. Cannon moved tho lino sixty Iniiea tartiter south. to the magnificent lord. ulheriu in all the Dunn‘s nay him. the cannula at the head at Lynn banal. the float David-ea niacin. and tho we. at in- let lee-nirvana that mauiiuta the glory at that greater Lynn-lions at the New World. If It- Do-l-ln ”I. [I Allan-I ti. VIII-d mc- wm I“ (luck: M. tho lulu III! the III! Hutu-.m- bl and “an. CANADA CLAIMS 1'!!! "081‘ PICTURESQUI FEATURED. ALASKAN BOUNDARY. The change of boundary Indicated by the Cameron line would not only take from Alaska several rich miner. MIA R. Scldmoro discusses ”Tho Alaska Boundary Question" In the Century. The writ- er says:

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