Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 15 Nov 1889, p. 7

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. pore. UKDBRHBATH THE GREAT LAKES- flaw" of a Diver. Itisastrau‘ gaine- this diving. The r fascina some, but the peril is never for a moment lost eight of. I put on the helmet fer the first time more than ten years ago ; and yet I never resume it without a feeling that it may be the last time I shall ever go down. Of course one has more confidence after a while ; but there is some- thing in being shut up inao armour weighed down with a hundred pounds, and knowing that allelic leak in your liferpipe is your death, that no diver can ever get rid of. And I do non know that I should care to banish the feeling, for the sight of the clear blue sky, the genial sun, and the face of a fellow~man after long hours among the fishes, makes you feel like one who has suddenly been drawn away from the grasp of death. I have had some narrow escapes while pursuing my strange profess-ion ; every diver, has, or has been unusually lucky to escape them. I think the most dangerous place i ever got into was going down to examine the screw. steamer Comet, sunk rii‘ Toledo. In work- ing about her bottom, I you my air-pipe coil- ed over a large splinter from the stoven hole, and Icculd not reach it with my hands. Every time I sprang up to remove the hose my tender would give me the “cia.-k" of the line, thus letting me fall back again. He did not understand his duties, and did not know what my signals on the life lino mavnt. It wa. two hours and a half before I was relieved, and there wasn't a moment that I was not looking to see the been cut by the r-gged wood. It's a strange feeling you have down there. You go walking over a vessel, clambcring up her sides, peering here and there, and the feeling that you are alone makes you nervous and uneasy. Sometimes a vessel sinks down so fairly that she stands up on the both as trim and neat as if she rode upon the sur- face. Then you can go down into the cabin, up the shrouds, walk all over her, just as easy as a sailor could if she were still dashing away before the bretzs. Only it seems quiet, so tombtlike; there are no waves down thereâ€"only a swaying back and forth of the waters, and a see-sawing of the ship. You hear nothing from above. The great fishes will come swimming about ,- rub- bing their noses against your glass, and staring with a wonderful look into your eyes. I have been down especially to rescue the bodies of those drowned. About four years ago the screw-steamer Buckeye, belonging to the Northern Transportation Company, went down in the River St. bswrence, in seventy-eight feet of water; and it was known that a mother and child were asleep in their state-room at the time of her sink- ing. The father begged of mo and offered me a good deal of money to take out the corpses ; and though I dreaded the work, I at last consented. I had been all over the wreck two or three times, and knew just where the stateroom was. The door was fast locked, and I waited a good while before bursting it open. 0! course, a dead person couldn't harm you; but even in broad day, on shore, and with people around you, don’tyou know that the sight and presence of a dead person brings up solemn thoughts and nervous feel- ings? I know how they would look, how they were floatfn 7 about in the room, and if the father hadn’tbbeen looking so wretched above, there was no money to tempt the in there. But, at last, I got a crowbar from forwards, and, not letting myself think, gave the light door a blow that stove it in. The water came rushing out, the vessel just then lurched over towards my side, and out they came, the woman first, her eyes wide open, and hair trailing behind, and in her left hand she held the hand of the child. I knew how they would look ; but I screamed out, and jumped back. Her face was fearfully dis' tortod, showing how hard death had been made, and the eyes looked through the green waters at me in a way that made my flesh creep. The child had died easily, its little white face giving out no sign of terror. It was a good while before I fastened the line to them and gave the signal to haul up, and I felt so uneasy that I was not long in following This is one of the drawbacks to any feel! of curiosity a diver might otherwise vs. I never go down the hatehway or the cabin steps, without think- in cf a dead man floating about there. W on the Lucia Bolln sunk on St. Clair flats, the engineer was cough: in the rushing waters, and no trace was ever found of his body. His wife came to me hearing that I was to go down to the wreck, and asked me to find the body. if possible. I remembered this when i went down, and went groping through the engine room in momentary ex- ectotion of encountering the dead body. looked so long without finding it that I get nervous, and had started for the ladder to go up, when I felt something strike my helmet and give way, and a chill wont dancing over me as I thought the dead body was at hand. But on reaching I found that I had run against the fire boss. the end of which was hanging down. and that what I so dreaded was still beyond my night. On land you seldom think of accident or death, but a hundred feet of water washing over your head would set you to thinking. A little stoppage of the air pump,a leak in your hose, a careless action on the part of your tender and a weight of a mountain would press the life out of you before you could make a move. And you may “ foul" our or line yourself. and in your to on what you dread. I often get my boss around a stair or rail, and person!- ly release it without much trouble; the bare idea of what a slender thing holds back the clutch of death 08' my throat, makes a cold perspiration start from every Presence of Mind. Mrs. P. (petulantly)â€"-“ You never kiss me new. " . Mr. F.â€"-“ The idea of a woman of your age wanting to he kissed 1 One would think you were a girl of eighteen." hire. F.â€"-“ What do you know about girls of eighteen?" Mr. F.â€"-" Why, my dear, weren't you eighteen once yourself 3"â€"â€" [Mid 'â€" The Pink of Pmpriety. hire. Fastidyue (mother of a model of modesty)â€"“ Yes; my hisriar is without doubt the moat modest girl I ever saw." hire. Lsudâ€"" Well. Is she ten modest to sppear in the street in undressed kids 2 ‘ Mrs. l‘.-â€"-“ No; but actually she blushes when asked to change her mind, and will not do i: when anybody is by. ’ still underah await him. The feeling of being c sense of duty. Chiekamauoa was something like thatiof fraught at with havoc and disaster, over flows THE SUN CUBE. Where it is Practise-d with Grin! Persist- ence and Success. Scotch llamas the Quartet. In England there is a var-095 0!- personal nomenclature, and, thouuh ve have plenty of Smiths, Browne, and Rolinsons. we have nothing appraising to t“ POVErtv, in thismpect, which chat-acids“ many locall. tiesin North Britain. In carbinpnnsoi Soot- land not only have the musings been few, but there has been a strong dflpoviliou to ring the changta on a very few Christian names. with the result that the community, in ihdeoire to distinguish between persons of precisely the same name, use beenebliged to provide each with a rfichl libel, or " to. name," by which be can known. A can- tributor to the Scotsman says that in the official list of voters in a Scotch fishing town occur such “ to-names ” M “ Deadly," " Pam," as Dan,” "Cock. 1! (I Posh, A “no.” “ Sandyke,” “ Helen's James.” and so on. Such appellation as {here are not necessarily nicknames, as we understand them. Some~ times they are paironymics, sometimes they are local in allusion, sometimes they refer to individual occupations, sometimes they are personally descriptive, sometimes they are mere identifications, “ signifying nothing.” Occasionally they are simple variations upon a single Christian name. Thus it may be. one John Bruce, popularly called " Jock," has a son namad William, who becomes "Jack's Wall." His see, again. who is called ‘Nilllcm, becomes “ Jock s Wull’s Williamie,” while the last named's scu, if also called William becomes “ J ock‘s Wull’s Williamio's \anisic." A further form is “ Wullsikie,” but that, probably, is rarely used. The system still obtains in Scotland, and if it were introduced into this country it might prevent some of the confusion which exists amon our John Smiths, Thomas Epogns, and lliam ' Robinsons.â€"[London .0 I By the lake hotels and villas congregate. These are one and all brilliant and festive dwall a. To this romantic little shrine Inn worship- pers come during the summer to ofler snori~ dose, while a larger number of pleasure seekers flock in from Trieste, from all parts of Germany, Poland, and the north of Italy. What I lost in the society of the amiable and the Wealthy I never knew; for they lived down on the lake side in the " air but colony," while I remained in the village high above the lake. The “air huts" are little wooden dwell- ings for the sun cure patients, consisting of one large room, which has three walls instead of four. The flat roof of the bathhouse has been enclosed by a tall fence, so that only the sky is visible from the enclosure. Here, with beads carefully shaded from the hot rays, each in a wooden compartment, the patients frizz‘ze for about an hour or an hour and a half. This process is soothing, strange as it may appear. The sun god rewards his devotees. New and then a voice calls above the di- visions for a glass of water, now and then a sigh ovar the heat escapes a worshipper: otherwise the place is quiet and sleepy and reposeful. Reading or mental exsrtion of any kind is forbidden, and indeed severely punished by headache or exhaustion. Un- inspired must be the drowsy observations that mingle now and then with the humming of the flies and no oncattcmpts to break this rigid law. Even the executions wrung from the sufferers by the persistent attacks of these insects ought to be of the mildest chur- actsr possible considering the provocation- Muoh had to be endured from the active col- ouy that had established themselves at the sun bath. . During the last ten or twen. minutes the faithful are wrapped up in laukets like mummies ; a tepid lath and rubbing follows, and then the long~sufisriug one isreleased, but only to repeat the process ,iu the afar- noon. Through the opposite actions of the cool air in the morning and of the sun at midday, great things to the advantage of the patient are said to occur. Dr. Rilkli traces a large number of illnesses, nervous and other, to the want of vigorous skin action and the ccnzquent strain on the other parts of the body to do the work which the lazy skin is nogleciing‘to do. War. Pestilence and Famine. From Maria Mitchell's “ Reminiscence: of the dersehels,” in the October “ Can- tury,” the following is taken 2 “ One of Sir John Herschel’s numerical problems was this : If, at the time of Cheops, or three thou- sand years ago, one pair of human beings had lived, and War, estilenco and iam- ine had not existed, an only natural death came to man, and this pair had doubled one: in 36 years, and their children had doubled and so on, how large would the .pc ulaticu of the world be at this timeâ€"con 6. they stand upon the earth as a plane? We were sitting at the breakfast table when he asked the question. We thought they could not. “ but if they stood closely, and others stood on their shoulders, man. woman, and child, how many layers would there be? I said, ‘ Perhaps threo.’ ‘ How many feet of men,’ he asked. ‘ Possibly thirty,’ I said. ‘ 0h, morel’ ' Well, we'll say a hundred.’ ‘Oh, more 1" Miss Herschel said, ' Enough to reach the moon.’ ‘ To the sun.’ ‘ More, more,’ cried Sir John, exultiu in our aston- ishment; ‘bld higher.’ ‘To eptuns, said one. ‘Now you burn,‘ he replied. ‘Take ahundred times the distance of Neptune, and it is very near. That'is my way,’ he said, ‘ cf whitewashing war, pestilence, and famine.’ " W Our Glorious Renters- Even among the best informed people there is no adequate conception of the vast- ness of the resources of this Dominion. Our region of wonderful beauty, fertility and great extent has been brought to notice recently by Government explorations and surveys. All travellers who have visited the Peace River country since its discovery by Sir Alexander Mackenzie in 1793‘, agree in describing it as a region of unsurpassed richness and natural grandeur. The Peace River, rising in the same region of lakes that give sources to the Fraser and other streams emptying into the Pacific, tra- verses a country that was once the wintering ground of vast herds of buffalo. The Rocky mountains do not there present the barriers that they do further south, while the warm Chinook winds render the climate more eqmble and less severe than in any other part of our North-Went. This region has so many and so great attractions WHAT A REAL BATTLE IS. Little Opportunity for Display of “crafts or Poetic Glory. A battle does not consist, as many imag- ine, in a grand advance of victorious lines of attack, sweeping everything before them, or the helter~skeltcr flight of the unfortunate de fasted. The historian must so present it in his descriptions, the artist in his paint- ings. Even the writer of an official account must limit himself to the presentation of such moments as demand special treatment, or to such episodes as involve important and instructive tactical movements. All those events which are less striking, which pass more quietly, but which, never- theless, contribute to the final result, can. not be reproduced without too much expansion. Those incidents which no account of the battle, official or unofficial, takes any note ofâ€"the thousand and one events observed only by the participants, the innumerable cases a which the direction and control of affairs glide out of the hands of the officersâ€"these are the little drops of water that make the mighty ocean of bittlo and determine victory or defeat. ' The opening of the day of a great battle is generally very prosaic. After an uncom- fortable night passed in owct or cold bivouae, Where the men, wrapped in their overcoate, have been gathered shivering about the camp fire, tryia in vain to get warm ; after the simplest breakfasts, of which the draugbr of poor cold water was the only palatable constituent, the soldier goes forth to battle. There he may never see the enemy ; indeed, unusually long halts, uncomfortable standing oi fl-re,or apparently useless and under small-arm fire xposed to the invisible missiles of the enemy. mingled with the underlaint'y'as to what is going on to the right and left, often produces in the best of troops great depression and a conse- quent falling off in offensive strength, even when the battle in general is making splendid progress. In such moments tactics are ex haunted, and it is only a question of grit and thrown open for settlement. induce an in- flux of population, enterprise and capital. Distance and lock of means of communica- ticn are the great drawbacks at present, but they are in the way of being overcome. The Fraser, Peace and Mackenzie rivers constitute a continuous Waterway from the Pacific near the international boundary to the Arctic east of Alaska. The whole of this enormous stretch of country, for thou- sands of miles, is the riohrs'a mineral region in the known world, while the agricultural value of the prairie plateaus of the Peace is known to be as great as the most favored wheat-growing territories either in the United States or Cinadn. Reflection on great camping in mu to hasten slowly in considering any ro- positions for a change in their status. hey can afford to wait, for with regard to this Dominion the present generation are: “ Ancients of the earth, And in the morning of the times." ___â€"â€".â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-‘ How Gould He ? Passengers one street car, a short time ago, saw two men vigorously exemplifying the miunerly art of self-defense. As the car neared the spot the larger of the two knocked his 0 penaut down, and sitting on him was setting the difference between them by sundry punches in the face. Just then the young wife of the smaller man appearedu n the scans. Dancing about the struggl man she flung her arm: wild: ly in the air and screamed: “You, George, come into the house ri ht eff ; d’ye bear ‘.'" "How in the devil 0 yo i 1333388 I can Sheridan tells us : “ Indeed, the battleiof Stone River, victory restin with the side that bad the grit to defer cogent its relin- quishment of the field." Still more pressing lathe appeal to the morale of the troops when an unfortunate termination of the battle forcesan army which has done its duty to retire. Exhausted to its last gasp, its resistance, shed to the highest pitch, gives way, on with frightful reaction the resistieee macs plunges to the rear. This is to-day no longer an organlssdretreat from position to position, as our predecessors taught and practised, but an uncontrolled current, like the mountain torrent, which, its banks. Woe to the land that can oppose no other dame to this stream than strategy, tactics, and the instruction of the troops. These will be washed away like sand heaps by the roralng waters. under fellow in the fightâ€" [Cleveland Plain He Felt Relieved. 03"” Au elderl man, a stranger to the town, who was to en tothe Central Station the other day for creating a disturbance, said to the Sergeant at his record was called : “ I have perhaps made a grave mistake. If so I want to be corrected." “ Well, what h it?" “Should I have offered the cfiioer a dollar to release mel" “ If you had he might have broken your head." “Ah i That relieves me. I wasn’t sure, you know, as every city has its peculiar customs. Then I did right in not saying‘any- 3 thing? ' “ You did." â€"â€"...â€"â€" She New What Good Viciua‘s Was. A sch: Ll.n:. Leila the following rich incidou‘ She was touching a small school inan adjoining town and “bcardlnc around." On visiting r.“an v": e' one 31 -, . my a small pine t. ’ i:- snd u. ;~a meal of bread, fat from: park an“. 32.5fm potatoes. Just he’s-e rushing b3. i from the table a youngster o' t 1 years 0‘ timed . ‘i know What cod vfttuale is. Yes, ms’amâ€"I knows w at ’tls," “Do you barraseed schrmima'am, .' _ to say and ashamed to say BO!l..;.’,_'. brown The Domestic Doctor. Forconsumption, one part of powdered willowcharcoalin two parts of glyceriuc has been used. Beware of any person who has a sore throat. Do not hi or take the breath of such a person. cup, or use an person until it is disinfected. Dr. Donald A NEW AN D TERRIBLE POISON. Some Alarmmxkesults of the Fee of (‘0- cnlne-‘l'he nudes: form of Cocaine Poisoningâ€"The Danger ef'l'oe Larsen Dose. Cocaine,asiancwwellknown, is a very D9 “0‘ “figs; ‘3' “‘2; valuable but an exceedingly dangerous drug 3* mid! 3 “I and u Durfournier has lately published the Amhiyea do Medeclne the remarkable C. Hood has collected many results of his invee tiona into its use. M88 relative to the ure of salicylic acid for . Cam when poolde aye oooumdm rheumatism. 01728 patients treated with numerous, and there is hardly a an sail lates 523 were relieved of their pains using gouging who in; my ma woman .0 with a health-givin understood. part c that it must before long, or as soon as it is 5 facts like these should admonish Canadians , lthan anybody else ?’ qnlu your fighting and Father _ ' noon ; she seated berm. _;' with the family around i l I and bad examples rate, why not the benefit of the doubt lâ€"[New York seven days, whereas of 612 patients treated by other methods only 140 were relieved within the same time. The material physique has some subtle, iudefiuable influence over young children, g power not at The new baby is still in a certain sense a part of its mother, although a separate unit. close contact with her during the f the twenty-four hours. itself is an injustice to helpless infancy. It is paterfamilias who should seek another resting place, not the new life yet so frail insecure. tried this natural method can thoroughly appreciate its how admirably uses of three cared for during the ni ht without expos- ure or any sudden cbil . and protected by a loving presence, the little one sleeps long and well. weaning period, the .babv has his own bed as a matter of course. disputed half of the maternal couch is a necessity to the embryonic citlzsu, if he is to grow into that relative and strength which nature has intended for him. The human mother is the only animal that puts away its young at night, probably because the right kind of reason has not yet taken the place of half eradicated instinct. The hen gathers her brood under her wings; the mother-bear forms herself into a sort of animate wocly nest about her cubs, just as the cat’s body embraces her kittens. Our cousins of the lower orders may. not be such persons. witness them. As early sale 1887 Dr. hiat- tison published the account of forty such instances, and the roll of victims who have lost their life from a dose of cocaine has now reached as high as nine. Ina large number pmaenh wan of cases it has given rise to a species of poisoning, from which the patient usually re- covers. Among the phenomeua characteriz- ing: this form of poisoning one observed in a patient of Dr. E. Bradly is worthy of special. mention. This patient was taken with “our. raruwsxs, from which he did not recover for six months. Outer symptoms are hallucinations, great excitement, and cerebral agitation ; and t1 rally, Dr. Leslie Calloghan in one case saw :uopufire body covered by a scarlatlniform IE8 . ‘ Dr. Ssunmau, wishing to remove a large wart situated at the base of the thumb of I. Always warmed young girl of 20, injected under the skin,clc:o to the wart, one cubic centimetre of a one-in ten solution of cocaine. The patient felt no pain, but as the little wound was being sew- ed together she suddenly lost her color and fainted ; her pulse became weak and slow, and. her hands and feet stiffened. Water was dashed in her face, and she recovered con- sciousness but she did not regain at once her sense of feeling as she kept askin where her hands were. By this time the at fieuing had ex:ended to the whole of her person ; but these alarming symptoms quieted down lit~ tlo by listle and by a half an hour's time they all came to a happy end. The ease re~ presented the mildest form of cocaine poi- soning. Between this form and the case sin which death ensued come in a series of sever- er forms, mwhich the alarming symptoms lasted from three hours to five or six days. Dr. Bsratoux mentions the ease of a drug- lts wall-being requires greater A bed by Only those who have advantages and realise it insures the happi- Tho child can be After the Until then, an un- porfeotion of health to follow, afteriall. At any give those “wonderful weans" Medical Journal. gist, who, under the impression that he was . __.___......__.._..... attacked by. diphtheria, sprayeu his throat The first Greeting. with a solution of cocaine; for seven or eight When‘he stepped ofi the train he took in thcleorrouudings with one long, comprehen- sive glance. “Ah, the old town has changed some- what in five years," was his first remark, but still it looks like home. sweet home i all. I wonder who of all my old friends will be the first to greet the Wanderer on his return to his native heath, where all his afi‘actiens are centeredâ€"" “ Excuse me, but ain’t you John Todge l" " 1am." "I heard you were coming back to day, and I thought I would be the first one to meet you as you came in." " Yes 2" " Yes. I’ve got alibtle note here of yours for $30, with five years' interest, and if it’s more convenient for you to settle than to be sued, why all There’s Vill meet him roat. Vnen you done someting wicket und hafe it in get no sin it it dond vac so bad a heart dot as it looks, Dignity shtarf himself der feller dot docks him in und gif him der key to der pandry.[Nat’lonal Weekly The Way it Goes- “Ic- was ever so kind ‘cf you to bring me “my' this box of candy," said the young lady re George. “I think you are exceedingly nice." " l‘hat’s the way it goes," said George as he dropped anot "Put a caramel info the slot and get some My. n It Jones, a chronic bore, telling about an hioh a man was drowned, said: accident in w “It hspp tell it. ” “I might have been rescued, " replied a disgust ed listener. Miss Flightyâ€"“Ah,C'-\ptain Blunt, how can you manage to keep your feet on deck when the waves roll lg stand on shore in a storm.” Captain Blunt â€"-"It's jest on easy as lyln' when you git used to it, but anybody ougot porary t) be able to stand on trrra A Puzzling Pact- Beunieâ€"“ Momma, do babios':' Mommaâ€"2 "0 course child, of *cmrno. Run out now and play." (in a brown mamma, that no place like homo.â€"[1‘erre Haute Express. MW Carl Pretzel’s Philosophy. Dsr feller dot iifs wirtuous und _ find himself out; dob der qmdola of habbincfis cases total auzesthesia will not be reached, vas a stomach ache dot agoct many falters haie died about it. It vase peony sued in less time thauI take to Small boyâ€"" Pa, what is hypocris 2" (speaking from Iâ€""] Hypncrisy, my son, ilsbakiug hours he passed from one synco s to another, until he finally succumbed. r. Abade re- ports another caseâ€"a woman of 71. She re- ceived a hypodermic injection of four centi- grammes of cooaiuein hcrlower eyelid before undergoing a trivial operation in that region. Atdthe close of the operation she fainted, an All! Home, There's no place like it after HER FACE BECAME PURPLE as in asphyxia. In spite of the fact that artificial respiration waslperformed and that hypodermic injections of other and caffeine were made, and though the latter seemed for a moment to revive her, this unfortunate woman died five hours afterward. If we endeavor to ascertain to what cause to ascribe these different symptoms and these cases of death, we note that the most frequent is the use of too large a dose of cocaine. The highest dose that can be used without risk is, according to some, three centlgrammcs; according to others, twenty oentigrammss. Between these two quantities, that are so wide apart, there is a. moderate dose that we can set as being from five to seven centigrnmmss ; with this dose it may possibly happen that in some right." gout vill but in the very large number of cases no alarming symptoms will be observed. S;ill, prudent to refuse to give cocaine to aged persons, to highly nervous people, or to such as are run down from any cause. at sfery knife uud fork of der if 80. What? An esteemed United States contemporary moans : “ One third the number of steam- or! heretofore running between San Francis- co and Claimant; have been withdrawn. The subsidi ships of the Canadian Pacific railroad have been taking their freight How long will it be before one-half of the remainder will have to be taken off? And does congress propose to do anything about it, and if so what 2" It is indeed a case of “ if so, what," and the question appears to afford our bullying and braguart neighbors a most excellent chance to reflect that if their country is of vast proportions, after all it has neither the extent of terri- Mlght Eli-V6 Been- fiery nor the vast resources of the grand old British empire. And this puts us in mind that the contract has already been given out for three steamers of nearly 4000 tons burden to run from the C. P. R. terminus in British Columbia to China, making a month- ly strvioo, reducing the time now taken to go from San Francisce to China from fifteen or sixteen days to eleven or twelve by Vancouver, and making it possible to travel from Uverpool to the Celestial Kins- dem in a trifle over three weeks. Then it will be seen that, as these ships are to be ready by spring, the time does not appear to be so very far lstant when, as our contem- gruefully says, "half of the remain» der" will have to be taken 03. certain dot shlauder would and go died if it vasn't for her boubon into her mouth. .â€".¢-â€"â€"- guess so ;otherwlso the man _â€" It is 80. hi I can hardly firmer.” He Was Misunderstood. A Manhattauvllle lady was feeding s. hungry tramp, the other day, when she “ BS3113“ discovered that he was pocketing her "Hall" T0011 Why 1' l3:1silveriava1e. Se‘zlngarevolver,she exolaim. poor people buy more of 'em 0d, ' Drop thme s cons, you acoundrel, and leave the house; save it instantly 1" "But, madamâ€"" ‘ L an the house, I say :leave the house," “Patina sci-sinned tiledinful'latoldd wgman. . , “ go, ma am," as t e tra'u , “never hmd' °°’d"l' l to return, but before I do, I would like to eple really buy __.__â€"-â€" His 1) ch nition. lvwlthymr neighbor and then. when his "I" m“ I did not “wad to “to Your com; into ll‘l‘) house right Off '3 ' .1 filled the ' back is turned, k'wk‘ng his dog sgvagely. There are thirty-three educational lneii- , .1 to we." â€"â€"â€"â€" The charts of the wheat grcwm of the tutor. in the Dominion cxsrcisingfthc power Lflgaiuaippi valley iocoutroi the price of their to grant degrees in divinity. colleges Were granting line, they would soon be in want any - .‘ rhe raw material out of which to create on do nothln .1. .).'s. But Canadian dispensers of the interesting in- “d where the ltials that they are extremely carefulâ€"l perhaps a little too carefulâ€"in the distribu- ‘ “he: um um all these 3 rain o.n hordl obtain the co l’l to c to do their best in the degree g y 1 R u m cc" of which they seem can ulna. As long as have a large surp us to export they . g to afl'eet the prloe in the it can be safely eai'i for the foreign market in which they have toaeli. y have to meet the competi. den of the world. Any ties to pool market, for instance, tics of their honors. (Ibex-e is not a Oana- 2 man include .11 f." mnunenu “(1 Am_ dian doctor of divinity who is undeservlug l tum, [am the buggin. of the title, and there are a good many woe u, the clergyman without the title who would do cheap...an rho carriage, 1rdced?" exclairsrd the ear- i 3: cr‘dlt I An old maid said she wished she was an and other great "Ins, ma’an, I knows whatg'u victuais accti vnecr, for thtn it would be “ All rightâ€"fiity-ihree years old. five . feet eight inches tall and born in Chicsgo. is. I've been a"- v ‘rom some several propsrto my, Much obliged."-[Dstroit Free Press. , times, and .=â€" no 'em.’ 3 fringe. incidentally the grower may be increased by They would also ; be greatly benefived if the iniquitous gambl- mg in wheat, the gigantic corners of Chicago grain market! could to by this means prices are perfectly suppressed, for " Make me an ofl':r."â€" [Texas injuriously disturbed, sometimes with last- ' lug bad results. AT. mm... W‘ a..._ m... r . 3,. .3. .. 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