Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 4 May 1900, p. 3

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-Ivâ€"I w‘wA‘wnwwur-l?‘ .1. {l T 3:“. 3~ i, I', » . e t On the Farm. 1&5 :WWQ‘QQ» MW“ TILLAGE. There is an ancient and erroneous saying, which has been attributed to many different writers, to the effect that tillage is manure. Yet, while tillage may not be manure, it is a fact that careless preparation of the soil rarely gives good results and that thorough tillage is the best substi~ tute for manure. we shall in most cases get a better crop by good tillage than by heavy :manuring; but, as in animal husbandry the best results canl only be obtained by the combination. olfI good. breed and good feed, so in agriculture our best dependence is in -a combination of fertility and thor- ough cultivation. From. compara- tively poor soil well cultivated we can get better crops than from rich land carelessly or unintelligently till- ed-I Even if we have applied a heavy dressing ofm'anure, thorough tillage is indispensable so that it may be well distributed in the surface soil and thereby ,put to the best advant- age. In our comparatively light soils the acme of intelligent cultivation might be summed up in the effort to secure a firm subsoil and a fine sur- face soil. Although the subsoil â€"WWB lvate at the right time. An import- ant item in judicious tillage is the compacting of the soil, wlbich is mination of seedâ€"especially grass seed. Time spent in the proper preparation of the seed bed will inâ€" variably hasten t.he growth of the crop, which is important in this latiâ€" tude. The careless preparation of the ground means, in nine cases out of ten, tardy germination, slow growth. difficulty in all subsequent: operations on the crop and meagre returns. In all our “hood” crops we should not neglect to cultivate if possible after each: rain, no matter how often, as soon as the land is sufficiently dry. This will keep the land from: caking and will retain the moisture near the surface. Such cultivation, which should be shallow, will also be the most fatal to weeds. It is a great mistake to let the enemy appear well in evidence and become 'thoroughly mobilized before commencing the inâ€" evitable battle. I PIGS ENRICH A DAIRY FARM. Iessential to- promote the perfect ger- One object in keeping swine on the dairy farm is the making of manure. \Vhere the dairy is an average sized one, and especially where there is milk the year around, the keeping of swine can beii'made fairly profitable.‘ The farmer thus situated should keep one or more breeding sows, at least: enough to raise a sufficient number of pigs for his own use. Have them ready for the market at'hix or eight months. i These are the kind most generally iwanted, and to supply the demand it it in 8Hâ€" 3‘ E VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD GVBR. interesting Items About Our Own Country, Great Britain, the United States, and Ah Parts of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted for Easy Reading. cuNADA. \Vinmpeg Y.M.C.A. will erect a $360,000 building. Branlford will spend more money on flood prevention works. Manitoba Jews have subscribed $350 for thelC‘onadian Patriotic ,li‘und. Ontario and Quebec batteries will likely be brigaded this year in camp at Deseronto. Mechanical Superintendent Atk'Inson of the C. P. R. has been appointed superintendent of rolling stock. ' A company being organized at Hamâ€" ilton for the manufacture of bricks , will reduce the price. by $2. a thousand. More settlers with effects valued at $15,000, arrived at Port Arthur -â€"IfronI Illinois. They will occupy the State River valley. ~ Fourteen horses of the Shedden Comâ€" pany at Kingston have typhoid pneu- monia, contracted from a Monsreal team shipped there, Brandon City Council has itself should be firm. of course it must neV- i is necessary to keep the animals thrifâ€" elected W. 19‘. \Vilson an alderman to er be caked or impervious to the' action ity and growing from the first, and to fill a vacancy, a call for nominations in the performance of their religious duties, is being investigated. President, l’atton, of Princeton, has made public astutement in which he upholds the \Vestiminsten Confession and claims ‘lt to be good enough, for the Presbyterian Church without amendment. Little Katie; K-nepper, of New. York. whose sleep for anore than a week has. puzzled physicians, died Thursday without. awakening. A little more than a week ago the child complained of a headache and; fell asleep. Every effort to, awaken her was in vain. GENERAL. Persia is in danger of a famine. Honolulu is now free of the plague. Plague riots have ceased at Cawnâ€" pore, India, The rlurkish Government will build a railway fromIDamascus to Mecca. A railroad‘across Greece, to cost. $9,000,000, will' be finished in four years. The bubonic plague is reported to have made its appearance. at several ports on the Red Sea. The failure of the Jamaican banana crop: has; caused widespread and acute suffering in the island. I An outbreak of {the bubonic plague Is reported in Persia, near the Turk- Ish frontier; 195 deaths have occurred in three- weeks. The anti-British portion! of the Cairo press continues the agitation against the entrance of Christian mis- sromaries into the} Soudan. _ Gen. Gomez, now at San Domingo, IsaIys Cluha fought against. the do- I-mmion of. Spain only to find herself under the heel of the United States. The sale of Polish newspapers .has n _ll II it. lNTERESTlNG ITEMS AHL’UT ,oua OWN COUNTRY» " Gathered from Various-Points from the V Atlantic to theI_Paclfli_e. Brockv-ille now has .11 telegraph sys- tem. " ' ' ‘ Owen Sound Y.M.~Q.A.~'heeds larger quarters. ’ f: . ~' ~‘ ' * St. Catharines is paper _m.i.ll. V f, _ . . .‘ Si-lvertpn, B.C.,-"is. to Shove- awater- works system. ' .,,I . London, B.C-.,'band lacked support and diesolved. I . . .' Kaslo, 13.0., new hash thrivingmpin‘ ers’ union. . e . The population of Kent county is estimated at 44 713. _' | ~:--.1 ' ‘. Rat Poa'tage’s new 0. P."R. station is almost completed. Belleville citizens think a public bath is needed there, Melita, Man. wants 'Northern Pa- cific railway connection. During 1899 only two drunks were sent to Hailton county jail. Gall. Free Library Board seeks a grant o.f_.,°p1,,000_from the town. . Hugh McDonald, of,St.‘_Helen’s,m now teaching'sc’hool in Manitoba. A new twoeroom Public school is to be erected in the South Ward od Paris. . r Over $11,000 in customs duties were collected at Stratford during March. Upwards of 500 new names :have to; have"? another of sun. air and wa'ler- When limelsecure the most profitable results it has been applied this is apt ‘t0 be the i will be necessary to feed and care for “use and in all SOilS continuous Plow-'l'them in the most. approved manner. ing at one depth will cause a hill‘dlyl'llhey must. be-keiplt warm and dry in WCRGd SlleOll- SuCh 8- condition isicold weather and comfortable at all known technically as "lime-pan” oritimes. In winter this means good -- ._ , In .- . _ quarters and plenty of bedding. Where pm“ pm A” land Should’ there much milk or other liquid food is giv-I i in the ward meeting with no response. Laurie 8:. Soul, of Hamilton, have!been £°~Vllldden at 1‘“ Prussmn WU" been added to the Simon, B-C-n VOil' been awarded a Government contract 3 way Stations. ems list. ;' Io supply 250,000 pounds of meat to the The Boer peace envoy-s have arrived South Brant and onlcmdag,1 Town- Indian Department at The Hague, and Queen Wilhelmina. Ship Agricultural Societies may amalâ€" The London bricklayers’ new agreeâ€",llfflllsl l'ecelved itth graCiTIIJSIYI- awe I giamnte. . ment with the employing builders is, _' "0‘1’611'11 “0111‘ ‘8, UD 81' ' 8 GM er-l ., . - - . - i for 37 1â€"2 cents an hour and eight ,51119' 0f Ger-many, stands aloof. Ico‘fi’nsgtflgdafgg Sintfiabbofiziggii In]: hours a day, the increase to commence; The Canadianr Government will ; “Mute _ ~ again, We avoid injury by the forced‘ Is not in proper condition, through fore, be plowed deep, or better still, QnI it will be astonishing to see how on June 1st, Ispend $50,000 on literature, both' in} stirred up with a subsoil'plow every few years. The time to do this, however, is in the fall. Deep spring plowing or cultivation is seldom, if ever, to be recommended. It is only to be recommended for land long unused or scandalously neglectedâ€"of which. there is very little in this proâ€" gressive provrnce. Even then if the '- land had much vegetation on it, or a fair sod, deep plowing would not be 'I advisable. In the fall it is different. Deep plowing or subsoiling may then be followed with very beneficial re- sults and such treatment should be meted out to all arable lands every few years. ' The objects of cultivation are to loosen and pulverize the soil so that moisture is retained near the sur- face. whether falling from above or rising by capillary attraction from: - below; to make. the soil so porous that the plants can spread their roots freely in search of food; to have the soil sufficiently firm that ~~plants can take up the largest amount of available fertility; to} have the land in the best possible condition to absorb and retain solar heat; to allow a free passage of air;. to kill weeds. There lure of course' other reasons for good tillage which do not occur to us at this moment, but the above are sufficient. . It is a careless and an improvident farmer whose implements are not al- ways ready before the ground or the crops upon which they .must be em- ployed are ready for their use. Al plow that is sharp and bright will do better work and more of it with less labor to man and beast. The same applies to all implements; but. to commence cultivating the land right. not every man recognizes the fact that the art of plowing does not lie entirely in turning over the. soil. Good. plowing can only be done- by an implement in. perfect condition and it will pay better than most. farmers realize to turn the soil over in straight “lands,” so that the shoddy farmers" method-of “cut and cover" may be avoided. It takes no In fact. the [greatest importance is at:â€" tached to this fundamental operation l' z . ot tillage )y the best farmers 1n theI when he sees “I A great advantage of mu plowing! If a girl sees another ‘girl’ with a famine fund are searching fora vesr-‘ell old country. . Fdidn’t say it. longer, or not so long, to plow well.,‘ i do not; not one man in a dazen knows I conlracts for $10,000,000 of the work 50011 U16 bedding WU} P6001118 Siltllmt', There is a, great demand for skilled ,edi and require' additions or UhanSG~ian<l unskilled labor in the Cape Bre- lThIlS Will I‘BQUil‘e «'1 large almofint '01: l ton mines, and Italians have been im- imutel‘lal for the 'F'UI‘DOSC: and 't. 11133! ported from New York. The Dominion iseom tosome that the manure thuslgme] [you CO, of Sydney is doing lmade,‘ containing so much of strawy I big. work I amater'alhvyould n°t be wiry valuablel The Guelph License Commissioners as a iefl‘llze‘," but 9:*“"""”.’“9 proyes‘ are having some difficulty in deciding tma’t It is" . .Hhe ,ratlons ,Of ,the lugs which licenses they will cut off in obe- shouldI contain a P'I'Opel “:“loufu 9ft thence to the City Council and pending griun m addition to the? Ski'mmllk mi a decision have granted all the hotels suitable growth and maturity are cx-v . .7 - , ' three months’ extension from the first =pected. tonsequently this adds to . (ij MuyI i I . the value of the manure made. ; I I I A common practice is to allow Another animal suffering from Iswine to work over the horse manure: lumpy jaw was seized In Montreal on 'Righlly managed, although it may‘Thursday by the Inspectors. Dr, L51- 'contain much straw or coarse material‘ bbl‘ge, the Health Officer, says he will used for bedding, it will become thor- ; [Pull a Stop to the Shipment of dis- ,oughly worked over and come out the cased cattle from the W est at any best of fertilizers. But there should cost. be enough of this material to keep thei » pigs busy and still not become too; wet or muddy. GREAT BRITAIN. I lords of Admiralty will inspect icadets' training school at Dartmouth. . ‘ ° . i it: is understood that Emperor \V‘il- : vaMANIS CHARMS AND FOIBLES' liam ’will visit England about August 22nd. , __ A woman's letter to her sister is the most. trifling thing on earth. I Every girl demands more credit for lemlsI I her piano playing than she is entitled1 I to. . ': A mine is {a good deal like a. woâ€" zman’s love; nobody can tell what it is I i worth. lto succeed ull' Henry Campbell-Banâ€" Primrose Dov, the anniversary of customary zeal. except beef hearts for baking. The average girl has one good dress in Willie": “Dd Changes her 01011185 by Great Britain under which Argentine ichanging the ribbon on her neck. cattle must be slaughtered Within l The prospect of going to the poor hours-of._landing and NUl‘lll Ameri- Ifarm is not so terrible; there never 011113 WlUlm Ilve day3~ FOI‘ the li'l‘eS~ l was a poor farm with a piano in it. em the order Will apply Only to Dept- ' If a girl of sixteen should give her ford' _‘ ' H age as thirty-six some woman wouldl UNITED Ellyn-’5 'say, "I know she is older than thal."| i No man should give up smoking his two cigars a day; it gives his wife such a good exuuse for extravagance. A woman is glad afterward when, V'l‘lle number of Japanese students {she refrained from saying somelhing i in America is ll'lillie'»l 8‘ 3.000- ;mean, but a man is sorry that he! .lflightpersons were killed by the 'tornado whichsw'ept over Kansas. New York rapid transit tunnel sub-l Imiral of the Yorkshire coast. ranches in Texas. New. York police commissioners will \Vomen all know-bargains, but men 5 a good hat, a good-shoe or ,a good Shirt i have been? awarded. ’ ' I The managers of '1 be United States is in the ability to 'get the (and in 1 dress on prettier than her 'own she i 10 Cill'l'y 001‘11 to India- good condition and the crop Seeded! 111153 terribly hill'd time in giving .hel' earlier In the. springâ€"an importanti it S‘WPCI expressmn. ‘ object, esp-cmally with wheat, in curl comparatively. short growing season. rust and smut, to a large extent. As- a. rule, late sown grain crops will; mnkea heavy growth of straw, which; does not stand up_as well, and a light cropland poor quality of grain. Them; plowing and working of land when iti stress of time. There is, of course, a. proper condition of the soil in whichi lihe'land should be. turned, if we could always choose it; but it' is doubtfuli if land can be injured by plowing when'. dry. On the other hand it receives: permanent injury by being plowed when wei, even the lightest of soils.' Injury is also done by driving over moist. land or allowing cattle, to ,needlessly trample over wet fieldsfl lowed or unplowed, pasture or stub-i le. Spring plowing should invari-l ably be followed quickly by the barâ€"I rows, before the ground dries out, as! ‘ l it. will quickly do if in good lilth and' condition. . The limit of tillage is hard to de- fine. but it is certain that land in good heart cannot: receive too much inlelligent cultivation, though crops?" may suffer from injudicious-cultiva- tibiaâ€"under wh-‘icth head‘ come work- ing the. land when too wet,'seeding too deep, cultivating too deep. liar more injury, however. isâ€"donc by farmers not fully realizing the ad- vantages of perfect. preparation of the soil, or by the neglect to culti- , . éwilh hir conscience if. 'he feels t . {the earlysown crops Will usually do:- L ' 'b " h“ better and will avoid such pests asl Iman’s love, and doesn't appreciate}ricaIto ,aid the Boers. ’l‘he'Nationat Sabbath Alliance is . , working hard to abolish the Sunday AI.“.,,man has d ,Iterrime .s,.,.ugg16 delive’ronf Ice-cream In New hiork. ' New Tork carpemers are on strike demanding ‘.an 8â€"hour day for, five days alweek, and 40 cents an hour.,. when a woman beam.“ éw-Ty‘l'hiug, A collie dog has died at New Yark. her husband tells her confidence» dues- Eilfifh?‘ 11:1; n't denote Imbecilit‘y “as much as it It,“ sd'vin. - .‘j . denotes extraordinary. cl-eVerness.; ' ' . ‘f ,. . - _ , ' ‘, I ‘ ,, . , , lhe Chicago IrIbune - says- an Am- “‘9 “mime ‘5 ‘11:” it. 12"“ "h‘llkfifie‘ricah officer, Major Armes, has sent her labor '3 over When-3h“? 11115 “’011 11 Lnearly. 23,000 Americans to Houth‘Af- she didn’t struggle enough with 'her husband to get him toIchurehr the strugglethat lS'ching‘ Illi'keepit. L A b,“ is hdow Congress requirIIIg When a guest doesn't bring clothes l‘I'uIsts'_ Io ,1IIuII-isli periodically sworn suitable for a big receptionin _hep,suitements‘of their capital'earnings, honor her hostess gets over an awk- ’expepsesy DTOI'WS and leldends- . ward Situation by getting up-a tacky 2- Rev. W. J. Rutledge, said to- have party. ' ' ‘- ' ' I ' v- ‘I‘beenthe first to suggestlhe' formatâ€" ‘When phlix’i-h lleoplecall-‘for a dona- ;f.‘?ll.9[1l1E%91:‘-3‘Il AkrImD’ Repubâ€" lion Iorapoor family ' a 'woman. is" u” “5 (e‘ ‘1 die “mug?” j l hard pressed H .She can’t find 50,118,. .M. V. Mc[nnes,I Canadian Govern~i prim. Shawn” M .a card party to give 3 meat agent has just shipped one. bun--i away. :dred and eIght settlers and ten cars . A y ' . . - I I -I - I Iof stock and effects from Michigan. A woman sendea of a true friend is l A “WM m C, q, a], 1m” , H p l s 'entelmm the guests and [like them l by Amcrica-n charitable institutions ml 7 l'w ri'r.‘ ':‘ - ~ down 0 11 mo 11 ngs to give 1181 l {Slnckvn “mm” chance to clean up“ the house. - ' ~ . ' ' ’ _ A prospective colony of, f American . .sctllers for the. Buffalo Lake. Alberta EVOLUTIOfiI OF. THE SHIRT WAIST :districl, numbering 2,500 (7133;000. have ’ ' i . ' fappoinl’ed four "I‘oledo men as 'dele- The mOdGl‘n belles Jam-“y 41ml beall- :gates to go ahead and select lheir tiful blouse waist has been framed back i lilnd- . . . t'o'the time of Garibaldi,- the liberator l; The Charge that American 1arm)“ 0: “Italy, who assumed-a loose red shirt Officers at lhf‘ Engineer School at Rumour says .Sir Edward Grey, is’ the death of Lord Beaconsfield, wasl , , - The Earl of Londesborough, William: After a W0mun P115585 ibitty 5116 I Henry li‘orcster Denison, is dead. He| i French and, English, to be distributed Fat the, Paris Exposition. In an adâ€" vance copy. of the catalogue it is stat- ied that at the Lon-(tom Exposition in ‘ 185] the anadian exhibits were valued gal $15,000, whileL this year s ' exhibit i will be. worth. OVEll‘ $200,000. l l -"*'*‘ l . A WINNING CREW. That bluff, and wide-awake British esting people in his varied career; but ,it is little wonder that he was pur-: iticularly interested in Ann Glanville iof Saltash, whom he knew well in her. ‘ old age,. Ann was herself a nautical charac- ter of distinction; she was stroke of the Saltash crew. To be sure, a wo- 1man who can row is nothing remark- lable nowadays; and we have all heard tot college crews composed of young Iwomcnâ€"and well-trained crews they gagaiinst each other, and never against Ecrews from outside the college, and .no one doubts that should they race The noted Sall‘ash crew,_however, of which Ann Glanville was stroke for ishould quit. talking about heiii‘l‘s,}w,,,s '00,”, in 1834, mm was Vicemd- many years, was a crew which of- ten, raced, and usually won, against A, new â€"order has been issued inicrews of men as well as of Women. They had to their credit races against male crews in the ports of Liverpool, Portsmouth and Hull. The premier of South Australian}; Szill'ash man,- re- called in a recent speech his recollec- tions Off the women of his native 'Au‘iomohiles are to' be used onlpmce: “It was a pretty sight. to see half , . I; vI . ~ . . . ' . .- ‘ no, lssue boxing [menseSI I l (IO/en boats stall In a regatta With all the women in. show-white frilled caps and frilled jackets. One crew of which Ann Glanville was stroke,l and which I have seen row, would beat a crew of men of the same number, and would not. I believe, have thought it anything very .wonderful to beat a crew of men with a couple of men lexlra. l have often heard that she l used to row round the captain’s man-land withheld from the many. o‘â€"war gigs in the Hamoaze, and chaff the bluejackels.” , llul the'most. famous feat of Ann’s ere-w occurred in 18:30, when Cap-Lain Russell of the Brunswick, bound to Ishow what. the women of his native island could do, look them to France, to race. In the regatta at; llavre. They were received there by the wondering Frenchmen with the honors of a band a military escort, and a Welcome from the mayor and corp-oration. The race duly came off; and. Ann tilanNille, with her fai'tzhf‘ul crewâ€"â€" Jane House, Emilia Lee and Hyatt Hockingâ€"won gallant ly, Czrptain Rus- sell liirmsetf steering them to victory. .‘o pleased were they that Mrsliouse â€",\\'inning, oarsmen do wild ‘things, even in our own colleges, so she may be forgivenâ€"could only express her sense of elation on reaching the com- mittee boat by leaping overboard, Illivinqunder it, and coming up tri- umphant on the other side! As the uniform worn by the Saltash rowers consisted of a blackskirt, loose white orergown and ruffled cap, she must have been an odd-looking object when she scrambled back to her place. Ann Glanville died in 188.) at the age of eighlyfour. Since then the prowess of the Saltash women has decreased sadly. - I J}; _...__.___ : liOYA-L'I‘Y’h‘ SHOPPING. , The Princess of \Vales does all of her shopping by proxy. When she desires lu purchase she semis for the fore- woman 02 the department of the store tsailor, Lord Clharles Bereaford, hasI Iseen many strange sights and inter-U l 'nerman as ’leader of the English Libâ€" ale’ 100‘ “m they seldom race’ even- ~ J. A-. Mara, form-er M.P., for You and Cariboo,'wi11 reside in the future in Victoria, BC. John Fraser, B.A'., of Parry Sound, has been engaged as principal OI! Em- br-o Public school. During January and February $600 in fines and fees were collected in the Brockville Police Court. Dr. Graves of Fergus, has been ofâ€" fered a position as surgeon in a lead- ing American hospital. Judge Vance, of. Port Huron,M.ich., is dead. He was a nat‘IVe of Ewanquet . township, Lambbon County- 1 A new postâ€"office named Ladysm’itlh has been established in Moore townâ€" ,shipu James Coer is postmaster. i ‘Mivning Recorder, Tihos. Taylor, .Trout Lake, B.C., has resigned. I He will be a candidate for the Legisla- ture. ' I I l The appointment of Hon. AI H. Gl‘l- motor to the Senate gives 29 support- ers to the Government. in the Upper Chamber on a House of 81, of aCon- servative majority of 28. Mrs. Samuel Redmond, who recent- ly died at. Millbrook, many years ago walked from Millbrook to Toronto in three and a'half days. She carried :1 observed throughout England with against men they would incur defeat, l six months’ old baby With her: {00' 5 The following have been elected lbenchers of the British Columbia law 9 society zâ€"Charles Wilson, as. IDavis, {Ht D. Heimken. L. G. IVIOLJhllllpIS, E. IV. Bodwell, D. M. Ebert's, A‘. H. Macâ€" iNeilll, 'C. Pooley, and G. Cor. .I bould. They are all (2.0, 1 l ____-°-.â€"â€"â€"- I ' a SECRET OF LEADERSHIP. There are certain qualities existing I talent for success, for instance, cannot be defined, and yet it is well known that certain individuals possess it, ,while others do not. It is not dependâ€" |eat, apparently, on any particular abil- .ity or virtue. Cleveraess will not in- I '- I . I isure it. Perseverance, thrift and In- ’dustry, although they may-I help, can- ‘ not create itâ€"it is just a gIIttIlIke the genius [or wriIing or painting,I or anything else. It is given to the few, l The talent for leadership is anoth- fer one of these mysterious attributes lfor which the why and the wherefore ‘cannot be discovered. What constiâ€" tutes a leader is as impossible to ex- plain as to Lind the keyl to the secret of success. Even at school some one boy or girl will obtain this prominence, although- there may be others apparâ€" ently-equally" well or even better lit- ted l‘o‘huld the position. 7In.later life people submit meekly to “bosses” of every descriptionâ€"puntical, social, or .linancialâ€"wondering at while not de- inying their' power. : "Why is it,” asked a society wo- man lrom‘another city the other day, “that 'Mrs. Z. has obtained so‘ much lascendancy over you all? Granted that she is well born and' is rich. but so are a score or more of others. There Iseems really no adequate reason [or 'it, yet you have put her up on. a. po- destal and bow down before her. You lall are just as pleased and flattered Iby her notice as it' she were royalty. ,She is evidently a born leader, but how does she do it?” .There is no power like this subtle power of leadership which is dependent lupon no favor and yields no submis- sion; but how it originated and why it is granted to' certain individuals is one of the conundrums that forever re- mains unanswered. ' â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"<.’-â€"-__. THE- BUTTON CR'AZE. I Buttons are quite an important: fea- ture of both day and evening gowns, the stone cameo having the pre'erence, , though numerous shell cameos are seen tucked into,the belt, a costume which \Villet’s Point, N.Y., and other. lllriliâ€" Self’cled, who comes to Marlborough .115 well as large tortoise-shell buttons. became the uniform of his troopS. tutions, interfere with Catholic priests house with a sample of the goods. 5 Seed pearls are also well favored. in some people that defy analysis. The I :‘kmflfr .33? v i; «a, ‘. Hffin IVE-Ankh... ,. . has... 4.! -kaxM 42.“, . n r:.. g, *

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