.._ r-.. .s ..-....‘ ..._....-.._...... up LATEST BOLD nuns THE NEW MINES ARE LOCATED IN THE GOLDEN DOMINION. “gust!!! Foruurl)‘ Lald Out and Named -A Hundred Proeprunrs Already The" â€" (bur-cin- of II“- Dlurlct In \V bid: the New 60ch Had» Orrlll‘. The New York Triimme publishes the following despau‘h. dated Sept. 4. from \Vawa City, Michipicoten Toll Road. A'lgoma District, Canada, via Sault Ste Marie,:â€"A city with only a log but and a small number of tents has arisen by magic on the northwest angle of Lake Wewa by not of Civil Engineer Joseph (buns. who came here the other day Is a. representative of the Canadian Government, and with his theodolite and axemen and chainmen. laid out what the enthusiastic prospectors be- lieve to be the future great city of the gold field. The spot was select- ed. by Captain Joseph! Ganlley. of Ains- worth & Ganicy, whose extensive in- terests include fishing camps scattered for three {hundred Imifes along the north shore of Lake Superior. The reason why Capt. Ganley select- ed this spot is easy to perceive. The lake is surrounded by steep walls of rock, covered with moss, in many. places inaccessible from the shores of1 the lake. There is only one exit or entrance by water. and that along a small creek which flows by the new city, and Captain Gantey owns most of the land on which the docks must be built when mining opens in earnest and mamhinory and supplies are to be shipped to this section. While the In- dians allege that this creek and its con- necting rivers are navigable by asmall boat up to Massanabia, on the Cana- dian Pacific Railroad, yet there is no certainty that this statement is true. and the only way to get supplies here nowis by the way of the Michipicoten Mission. and thence overland six miles by adifficult mountain trail to the new flown. hh‘or'y one of the hundred prospecâ€" tors nowhere gathered to witness the formal christening of \Vawa City. On the hills around gleamcd the camp fires, over which the miners would soon ‘ cook their evening meal. The ceremony was very short, and when it was over every man rushed to his tent t0| cook and eat his! rasher of bacon and stale bread. that [he might soon be asleep and all the more ready to arise atsun-up tocontinue his work of pros- pecting. A site has already been se-i looted for the hotel, which is to be situ.- l sited on a bluff overlooking the luke,i and to be built. as soon: as lumber ar- I rit'ves. The owners of the land in the rear of the hotel have decided that the pleasant. grove there shall be a city park when the city is established. Captain James Gnnlley. of the steam- cr Telegram, the only vessel running regularly to this section from the inha- bi‘ted world. has staked oui't a claim which is supposed to be ver' rich. He said toâ€"day: "As to‘ the gold discover-E has developing to anything like what' i the indications give hope for. it can be , authoritatively stated that quartz has; been found not in one section only. but i in different places extending over thou- '1 sands of acres, that. assays over $800. a. ton." Jose h Dickeaison. inc editor otapa- per a Port Arthur, has the richest claim of all, and this is located at. 0. int‘ over two miles from \Vawa City. free gold has been found in the ratten 4 white quartz. in which this section. abounds, in chunks as bigas kernels of g wheat. It. is virgin gold in its purity, I nd needs not to be subjected to any i c emical process to free it from the. rack. Every day prospectors are find-, ing specimens that assay $50 to the ton. Thousands of items have already been; claimed, but there are: nearly many ‘ disputes as to the priority of dinian and nobody can tell who will get a pa- ' tcnt from the Government. I The only why to get a letter from- hore to civilization is to send it seven miles Overland through the mud and up and down mountains to Micbipi-l coten Mission, where it must; await the ‘ fishing. tug. CHARACTER OI“ THE DISTRICT. 'l'hb lutcst discovery of gold fields in | Ontario. have aroused a great deal of at- ‘ tention. Public. interest having beenl greatly stimulated by the tales of the , wealth of the Klondike. especial inter- i an. husbcen taken in the. rcporled dis- i oovory of placer mines in the district, a report which has. to be verified. as: the country. though accessible, is noti very easy to work. owing to the heavy underbush and thick, overlying moss- beds. Time. also. must be allowed for reliable news to arrive. it being only Ivory few dayssiuce the finds became pubiir. ‘l‘hc publicity given to the dis.- coveries shows the grczu interest taken in the matter. A ‘I‘HOI'SAND SQUARE MILES. The new gold fields are in the Eur- oniun formation and cover an area whirh Ls estimated at one thousand square miles. This district. is a vast Wilderness. intersected by lakes and rivers. known heretofore only to the trappcm and hunt-Ts in the Hudson Bay Company’s smui‘c. and these peo- ple have not travelled elsewhere then along the \vetcn‘ourses. The rock in the yelleys is covered with gravel and sand of various depths. but in the {Safer pert of it. the only cavering to work is 1mm which has grown to considerable depths and proves agree! hindrance to prospecting. The first discovery of (mid in the amen come to the knowledge of the irtment of Crown Lands at the hi or and. of June last. when an up [diuretion was mocked from Mr. Dick- ens-non of North Bay forafree location of forty arms under the provisions of the amended mining (is: of last sesâ€" sion by; which a grant of forty acres is uncle to the dlSCO'H‘JT ofa miuublc mm! extant unwind not. less than n I ion miles from the nearest known mine or deposit of the some mineral. The land for which he applied Lamar. the south end of Lake \V’swa. or \Vndgoose Lake. The lake is asmall body of water, fire or six miles long and three or four miles wide. Mr. Dickenson dis- 1 of a portion of his interest to r. Fee, a hoteLkeep-er of North Bay. and to a merchant of MontreaL These. men cmpioyed Mr. McKenzie of Mont- [PAL a miner of Australian experience. to examine and report on the property. Mr. McKenzie returned from the _i0- cality a few days ago. and, according to the reports that have reached Torâ€" onto. Mr. Fee is highin satisfied with the result of his report. The vein has been uncovered for some 500 feet in length and the stripping di3closes that its width ranges from 2 to 21-2 feet. It consists of a. fine-looking. sugary quartz. and some samples which have been shown are rich in ree gold. EXCI'I‘EMENT AT THE "SOC." Mr. Dickenson's discovery appears to have attrm‘ted a good deal of atten- tion at Sault Ste. Marie, both on the American and Canadian sides of the river. Two weeks ago sporty of four- teen men. organized on the Michigan side. proceeded to Michipicoten and have been prospecting in the locality south of Lake \Vawa. Reports from them state that they have made a. number of very'richi discoveries. It is said that about '70 people are now en- gaged in exptoring in that region at the present time. The season is most favorable just now. but. owing to the dense forests and the moss covering to the rock the labor is difficult. NATURE OF THE DflS’l‘RIC’l‘. Away back in 1866 a number of loca- tions were taken up at the northeast end of Lake Wawa. The mineral looked for then was copper. Others were taken up in 1871, the total area being about 2,000 acres. It is said that some film shows of' native copper were found then, but no work seems to have been done on the properties. The dis- trict received no attention from pros- pectors ulntil the present year. The B‘uronian belt, in which these veins OCOUJ‘, extends from {Lake Superior, northward as far as Dog Lake, a dis- tance of 50 or 60 miles. It is not known that the intervening country along the Michipicotcn River has been: examined, butt. discoveries of gold: are reported to ave been made along the shores of Maniton. Wik Lake. an expansion of the Michipicoten River. as well as along Dog or Mnt‘tagaming Lake, within the past .gwo years. A number of upâ€" p‘licatlons have been received at the Crown Lands Department from parties . exploring along the north shore of the lust named lake. and it is believed that good finds have: been made there. The northern area, through which the O. P. R. extends, shows extensive areas of sand and gravel thinly covered with timber, and there is a possibility of gold being found in these deposits, although as yet there is no substam vital] proof of It. In the dis-patches sent oust from the‘ “Soc,†which are apparently based on information supplied by Mr. Mcâ€" Kenzie. it Is intimated that placer gold has been discovered aroumd Manitou- wik and Dog Lakes. A prospector, a few days ago stated that g ld has been washed out of the sands aflbng several small creeks traversing the country. Wan. .. SHOES FOR ONE-LEGGED MEN. _â€" Single Slim-s â€"Somrtlmcs Sold to l‘wo- chzcd Ellen â€"â€"flhocn for Men With Miami-'0! Foot. The oneâ€"legged man buys his shoes precisely like the two-legged man. At the big city stores they break a pair to 'sell the single shoe that the oneâ€"legged man requires. without the slightest hes- itation, and he can get any kind of shoe he wants. The single shoe remaining is sent bark to the factory to in matâ€" led up, and this is done with perfect ac- curacy. Every pair of shoes is numâ€" bered, and it could easily. if it were desired, be tro-ed back to the stock from which it is made. There is no guessâ€" work about it. 'Dhoe shoe required to mate the shoe remaining may not be made on the identical last upon which the original shoe was made. but. it is made upon a. last of mathematically the same proportions. and the pair thus restored is as perfectly mated as the original pair. . The oneâ€"legged man who buys in this way a single shoe pays slightly more than half the pri-e of a pain. One-leg- ged men are in the very latest shoe stores among the regular customers; and there they are not so unusual asto be remarkable. Oneâ€"legged men. however, are not the only men who buy single shoes. There ' are two-legged men who sometimes buy only one shoe. For example, a man with the gout. He can if he wishes and he sometimes does, buy a single shoe. The remaining shoe is matedup injust the 53.1119. manncrai thc iemain- ing shoe from the pair broken for the one-legged man. There are two-legged men who wear shoes of different sizes. their {cat not being mates. This may be due to na~ ture orit may be that an accidenthas befallen one foot. For such a customer tWo pairs of shoes are broken and he takes one of ea.:h. HE COULD DODG E. There's nothing slownbout Jones, he said roflectively. The other laughed scornfully. .1 guess you never loaned him any money, he said. A Oh, yes, I have, replied the first speaker. That’s what made me speak that way. I loaned him- ten: dollars six months a o, and ‘I haven't been able to catch in since. _â€"_â€"â€"- NOT AT ALL NEW. Every boy and girl in the old time school-house understood "the art of telegraphing without wires." long be- fore modern scientists discovered it. Captain Thomas Bettingore. of the Spanish svhmvner Lola. has been given 3. gold watch by the Canadian Marine Department for his humanity in saving the shipwrecked crew of the Beatrix. McLean. of Ft. John, N. H. 'I'hc six men of Captain Ratlingore's crcw have rh-civcd money rewards of two rounï¬ci n! 1’93!!! {Hr “5‘5 ea L‘h . l I l l l 1 a ._____..._â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€" -mlfflféï¬HOME. \‘\~s- CARE OF OUR BIRDS. What a sad sight it must be to dis- cover some morning one's pet canary dead on the cage floor, especially if its death was caused through some care- lessness on the part of itsuttendant. The poor little caged songster is per- fectly helpless in its captivity, and un- less its wants are strictly attended to it suffers. in its wild state the bi'rd is able to seek its own food and remedies for its ills, but when it is caged they must be provided, and the correct ones too. Bird books advise all kinds of things at all times, but probably half the fuss directed willbring better suc- cess. There are, however, afew points which should never be neglected, and they are, to provide plenty of clean water, plenty of proper food, and to keep the bird clean and in a clean cage. In buying acage it is well to remem- ber that metallic cages enameled white, green or brown are the best. Wooden cages should never be bought and brass ones are not. to be recommended. The fountains for food or drink should be round or square cups. The perches should be plain, round, unvarnished sticks, of varying sizes. The cage should be as large as convenience will permit. It should becleaned thoroughâ€" ];y every morning. Remove the bottom of the cage and place. the cage over a saucer of water for the bird’s bath. Thisshoulxl be given daily in summer and three times during the winter. Use sand on the bottom: of the cage. 11: white sand is used it may be cleaned by being boiled in water and dried.\ The perches should also be scraped und- if the red mite is present throw them into boiling water, but allow them to. dry thoroughly before replacing. Never leave the cage damp. Hang it halfway between floor and ceiling, as the tem- perature is more even there, Keep it out of droughts, for they are injurious to the bird, and avoid too strong asun- light, unless there is some means of shading the cage through part of the day. Do not keep the bird too near a stove, fireplace or register, but endeav- or to keep it in a temperature of sevâ€" enty degrees constantly. Birds should not be fed everything. They should be given plenty of seed, al- so green parts of many plants, such as poppy, rape, hemp. and the weeds like chickvveeds, plantain, etc. The fresh, tender leaves of beets, cabbage and let- tuce are eagerly devoured by them. Avoid fruits containing a large percent- age of acid, but give occasionally a hard-boiled egg. When birds are hoarse salt pork has been recommended. .They shouldbe give'n flaxseed only occasion- ally, and when they are dumpy, ndiet of bread and water with some red pep- per sprinkled in it is good for them. Sicily canary seed uspreferable to any other; it; is plumper, a brighter color, easier to crack andfreer from ~dust. If mixed with German rape and Indian millet it-will keep the birds in good health. Bird manna should always be kept on hand and if the birds are moulting, or appear dull and stupid. feed it to them. .Insccts and worms are good once in a. while. The water dish should always be full of clean water. Some owners of birds ud- vise giving red pepper occasionally, but never sugar. crust of crisp, dry bread is often relished by the bird, and fine gravel. should be scat- tered over the bottom of the cage always. The greatest pest with which one is likely to have to contend with is red mite. So minute is this insect that“. cannot be seen about thebird or cage with the naked eye. Red mites shun the light. and usually leave the bird during the day, secreting themselves about the cage till darkness arrives. Through continual: irritation the birds lose sleep, which occasions mn-ny dis- eases, and is often the source of their death. The prehenoe of the mite is in- dicated by the uneasy manner of the birds; they become dispirited and sit in u drooping position on the porch or floor. To get rid of the mites, throw a white cloth over the cage at night and if there are any on it early in the morning, wash in boiling water. and the cage also. Repeat this until all are gone. Boiling water is sure death to them. Never keep birds in a room that is being painted or has the odor of fresh paint. It makes them very sick. When the bird is suffering from diarrhoea give water in which a rust piece of iron has been placed, and boil bread in milk until it cuts like a cheese when cold. - rough kitchen floors, for washing dishes and kitchenware. for cleaning bathtubs and for use in the kitchen boiler. NEW BURIAL PLAN. The Board of Health of New! York has approved the plans of a new man- soleum company. and the latter will establish High Bridge, \\ ith a capacity of from 10,000 to 12,000 bodies. The idea: is: to seal up the dead in cement receptacles, : after exposing the bodies for several months to a current of air made chem- ically pure by passing it over sul- phuric acid. and afterward by fire. “'hen the body is thoroughly desiccat- ed the receptacle is to be made air- tight. The sanitary authorities are reported to be well pleased with the proposed scheme, which avoids so many of the objection-.11 features of earth burial. it is proposed to erect a building 2'70 feet 1 , '15 feet, deep and three stories igh. The re- ceptacles will be formed of concrete four inches thick and jointless. in size a little larger than an ordinary coffin. -flw...‘ M’OMEN AtN D CYCLING. "\Vomen do well to ride the wheel." says Dr. Sayre, "It means a stronger. healthier race of men and women for the coming generation. \Vomen were going into a decline. 'Illllffll‘ nervous force was wearing out. That ‘mcans a. great deal for the decay of a ne~ tiotn begins always with the breaking up of the nervous systum of its women. Nm'daru’s ‘book on degeneraâ€" tion had some excuse, as is shown by the discussion it brought about. He had some strong points on which to base 'his argument, but he was not thorougth justified, and even if he were, the bicycle is proving itself to be this remedy. It. is giving women highlft'hy diversion. teaching them self-control and self-reliance. and mak~ hug tlhmn fit physically to be the mo- thers of a race. of giants. "I know that some of the women reformers have objected towheels and with justice, too; but now that saddles adapted for women are a specialty with saddle makers, the chief grounds for objection are removed. Saddles for men and saddles for women should be different. The ordinary saddles modelled on the plan of the common horse saddle for men. is not at. all suitable for women. It. is more than liker to do them serious p'llysltk’tl harm. but with a properly formed sad-' dle there is no danger 'w'hatever. Women are prone to be morbid. ’llhey have stayed indoors too much, and have gotten into this habit of thinking about Uhugmselves, worrying and fuss- ing when there was really no need of it. Now the bicycle gims them in- ducemeht to go out into the open air. to enjoy the coulntry, to be in touch with. other people. It gives them opâ€" portunity to breathe. and to breathe means better blood. "They leave off their corsets when they ride. though they will not do so at any other time. Perhaps the bicycle will kill corsets. 'lllmt would be a grand victory for the wheel. "Dr. Townsend has taken pains to study this bicycle question. He has neports from eighteen women physi- cians in Boston, all but one of whom heartily recommend wheeling, cs- peoinlly in cases of malnutrition and chronic pelvic diseases. it. is a mis- take to say that wheeling develops curved spines. . Less riders insist upon ‘s':orolr1ng.' The bestâ€"by which 1 mean the easiest and most gracefullyâ€"riders are straight backed. They have more power if they ride erect. That is one great reason why wheeling benefits Women. It makes them sit up straight._ If they will do that, consumption Will be an unknown disease in three years. "No amount of 'o‘hing about dress reform has the influence of the bicycle. Theory is good and logic is good. but' putting awoman on awheel, and letting her go out. on our smooth roads, where she has a freedom she had not thonght of before, is an argument that is effective. It wins her re- form. She gIVes up corsets and heavy! clothing; she dresses for work instead of for play; she begins to see that clothes may be. governed by intengence and as a result she is healthy "The nerd of keeping balanced main-s wheel riding of especial value to wo- men, for it is a demand that theycon- trol themselves. It also teaches self- relianocâ€" something many of them need. A woman guiding 'lwrself along the streets learns that she is abln- to take. came of herself. even if there is not. a man at her elbow. She Is Give this as a diet. for surprised, probably, to find this out; a .while with some kind of vegetable. but if she keeps at. wheeling She will During moulting time the need plenty of nourishing Worms, insects. vegetables, bread andI milk, etc, are all good {or them. l-Iv-g cry bird should be given a name umli always called by it. They like in be; talked to and potted. and if cared for‘, as they should be, make dclighliulj pets. . MAKING SOFT SOAP. Five pounds of grease will make nine gallons of excellent; soft soap. Melt a pound run of pure potash with a quart. of water in“ a large; clothesboiler. Boil the potash fori fifteen minutes, then add the five pounds of grease and stir it. well. Let the mixture boil slowly for an hour, stirrin it frequently. At the end of this time stir two gallons of hot water into it. Pour the whole into a ten-gallon keg and stir well. In fifteen minutes add two gallons more of hot water. Stir oft-m. and :n‘ternn hour add four prime: of \vate-r. This i water need not «.t â€" blood-warm water will do. > :‘ ii...- sn'ig. often in thâ€" next two or I r u IJIJI’S. .nd tin-n Eat it stiud over hi; .I 'n twelve U-urs it wiil in of .. tine. clear. 'uliylike consistency, lllOI‘Utlngy cold. it is better than .15; azimuth-fund soap for cleaning birdsl learn that. «ha is every bit, as strum: P A food. as a man physica'ly as wall as mentalâ€"l (‘h'llâ€˜ï¬‚ï¬ m the mm mm Isl. of courw, 1y. She. can develop physical [mwer quite equal to man's. and she can use a sanitary mausoleum near? It doesn'tâ€"that is, un-, ,DRUPPEDFRUMTHEULM‘BS ‘A new nrrson or ATTACXRIG } GREAT WAR VESSELS. qâ€"n nun: Ships wm be Rendered Imnlru h! . Few alumlcsulnmonnnt uprrluurnu Recently ado lu llaxlaiul. Experinu‘nm just concluded at Wool- ' wich‘ have demonstrated that l‘l' 3 11"“ method of arti‘lery stint-is the strong“ cs't bottle ship which was ever hm†may be rendered absolutely heir)le within a few minutes. This may he -done without the {tightest danger to the men who man the great W‘Vhwh perform this task. The new method is known as high anglb firing. The one experiment which demon- strated the fact. cited beyond queaâ€" tno‘n' was condimtcd with" s wire-wound piece of service ordnance of 9.2 inches caliber, weighing 19 tons. and which was on an expanding mounting placed for highâ€"anga firing. rl‘he gun utiâ€" glized was one of great power. range and penetration. In the series of trials iolf the gun the pmjoctlfes fired were Pallisor shot. weighing 882 pausnds each. and requiring for disrhhrge an indi- vidvuiul charge of mu pounds of powder. The. guln wub fixed at. various angles of elevation), the maximum range ob» tuined not being less than 12 miles. The elevation was their)! 40 degrees. Those who had charge of the experi- ments carefully calculated the speedof the: projectile, and determined that the extreme height. obtained by it was in the virinityo'f 113,030 feet. or about 3 ml‘ll‘li. The time occupied by the entire flight was , EXACTLY? ON E' MIINUTE. {The result is regarded as one of the greatest echi‘evtunents of modern gimw nary. The power of! great range and exceeding pcmctmtion which the pro- jec-t'ilb undoubtedly possesses under the circumstances dcscribed are unques- tionably dub to thin wire-winding Bye- tom. which gin‘s high resistance powâ€" erts to the guins, and thus enuhlcs heavier charges to be used. The gun which will in gone-ml be used upon the coast of Britain! weighs 27 tons,- und has a mnuzle energy' of 19,201) foot tons. ,_ It. is doubtful Is any experiment with arbitlery for 80 years has resulted in the revolution of. facts so important to novel powers. , It: needs no elaborate. explanation to demonstrate that hit) vessel: can be so 'const'ructed on modern lines as to be impervious to projomifcs dropped. from (the clouds as well as those which are fired, at. her sides. Yet that is exact- lg the position ‘the modern battle ship is pfuced in by him: udogpliio-n of highâ€" ungle firing. Of course, in purely naval battles the thighâ€"angle system cannot. be utilized in so great a degree, for‘ the power of the greatest vessel to withstand the recoil! of a gum is sur- prisingly limited. It is a very small percentage of the recoil which can be safely figured upon by those who man the gums in fortifications. Therefore. it cam be seen that the great advantage of high-angle fire from. guns (9in shore is [that they can be mounted behind earthworks or parapet: entire.y concealed from view, so that ll.‘\\'0'lllll be a matter of great. diffi- cuty - ‘ TO SILENCE 'J'H‘EM. V Again, their fire has n plunging char- actor, and Is (DiluH effective against ob- jects themselves invisible. The rent sifted made possibiie by: the use 0 this muss has causeda centralizediom| of at- tcntmrn from unitary mcn' uipon them. an of whom say wdhmrl. hesitation that .the praptaoo .of high-angina firing has 'mnqucs’t'irmulilyv u rewt future. ‘ _ ’l‘ht} inninjdea ‘the high ungi‘e firâ€" mg_is to finin a mode of attack against ships so heaviivy; armored as lo be almost proof egni'nst. artillch uscd “tithe ordinary fashion. ‘ At. first it. might be thought that a bomlmrdmcnt 1 by high oughta grunt-v mounted so deepl in the. earth that it. would be well nigh Hunt-ambit: to dir'u‘lt {their aim at all would be in thu- nmure of shooting at. r:1ndom.. AH it matter of fact. it would I he _:mylhm bun that. Ibis. now posâ€" :fflllin. in to] the speed at. which 11 pro- j_]“)':ll.", travels nnd to calculati- from , (11an {speed the distrmrre traversed with icortxnn charges of powder. used to give, A the necessary impetus. Now with ‘ those lzulrulatitms pmsiblc. and the ; I|3(,-:l-.'ilti.(if. the tompuss mrcfuily calcuâ€" ' {no I..:i Is not. fit. all mnrmg thc limbs. ISIIH inns in place a sllnt' with fair ac- : wurzu'y. This knowledge givcn. the rest is campumtiwfy easy. 'I‘he officers in w u i i I hiive an xiv-mm'ato charted map of the “'4th which It commanded. 'l‘hcy it to as continuous advantage. The wr-mhl be ulnlv from o-mdonul ohm-rm- bicycle will prove. this to _hA-.r satis- faction and to the benefit of her racc.’ â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-.m ONE JUST JUDGE. A New Jersey court has dccidedtho right of a passenger to a ' seat in a Pullman car without. paying extraun- til provided with a seat in some other car. It is to be homd the decision will have a general application. Pas- sengers on any sort of a railway. -â€" even on a _ their money to stand. The patience of the public has educated railways in the notion the right to stand ful- fills nll the conditions of their con- tract. as a common carrier. It is not a rightâ€"only an abuse of other pen. ple’s rights. TRO'HX‘TING THE l’AF'Z‘Uli They have moved our choir to i other end of the church. \Vhat’s that for? Our clergyman isdolimtn :.:«7 34 .‘r he couldn’t stand to in... l .v girls fanning his bald 5;;1. ail 2.. 030$ street carâ€"do not pay. ti-qii. of Ehnkneim to {min an urcurnte l-‘l'll of th" u-mman like V0830: at which tip-y xvi-r1! firing! \VHH lflklllx. and Hit) (buy-vb am (in: they could rain proâ€" jw-tiil-a upon iwr in a manncr whit-b \wrulil I'mme h-‘r to spewiily rulira from r'mun if Nb? \vi-rn not so disuIIIv-d :mfnlv: mutbï¬n to do r-o. 'I'hnt. is what. the nuvni nrdnnnw- («germ who have. unstrhml the (‘Xll'llJH'llLi way, and the “UL-at :md imm‘ IDHH‘F‘VHUVP. officers of 1h:- l'hmtfkb Navy join them I?" 'I'H‘l‘} HI’INION. Pd it. mm is won thn f. a saris-n of Hair zinc-in firing mm intinrim rould make my rmdstrad a very \mI-wnfnrtab'v. p'Cfif‘P. for war visuals. heavily armorâ€" a'l thumb they might. lm. Om: thimr the discovery brains to rut rm and tn, imd that in the idea that wrest frets; mm thre'itvn the m-uport. trigvl'yg of n zmvmfwti‘ nation with any Segre!- n“ Mll'!‘f’(~‘-i. The chances arc 'h‘it lief/w» tat-u yl'flm have pus†:r'ime effort «.vi'fl baw- lmn mm!!- by . "-‘W’Y n'itinn v.11“ b ‘.'.i‘\‘ ï¬trht for Wlmt Q “ "nnzi'll‘r‘k i's ri 'T'ais In earl†of 'r-rusl. - m' i'!‘ mms. ‘-":-ner, with IiL’h imit- funny! gums 'l'hiq Juno [he yum! ‘ ['71: y‘-. i-J ['1‘ . “14.1.! I. ,1,’ [1,. .' iws ir'I-rw :. m-dgxirt (:2 row of the v-.'c;zl:e:a.t v-f nations.