Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 24 Aug 1893, p. 3

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Ripans 'l a! ire easy to luick to act, mve many a ,or’s bill. Lerr eatip, an :pirits, Will 5111“?] M ‘emove the Whole Ripans Tabni‘ mt promptly UP ,tomach and int {yspepsizg but}?it where. Ripans Tabules a: )ounded from?! We: widely used 0" thi’b' :al authorities and! 4 «a ented in :1 f0 THEFT; DAflS. WHITE I PLYffiGUTH Bi DROUGfl-BRED :ost of $1.000, we are pr customers the benefi; rial. Call and examine stimates. All kindm Doors, Newels. Bah 0.. ' ‘ - Doors; Ne" (:., in stock tt Dry B ms { DWI 51, LINDSAY. tdsay, April 12 Hi H-CLASS P0! ruilders : Parties Wanti: filled as race all prize birds, PLYMOUTH 30C. T abules f4 had D. cunpo R AN 9 i385 3*. DH W LIKE 31. LINDSAY. ST, LINDSAY. ’ERS EPEGTIVE EUYEHS ORAN, RAN ’S, :rving Sugar for ORAN, STREET. LIN DSAY WALL PAPERS.â€"â€"â€"-New Patterns at 5c. a roll. Gilt Paper for 20¢. a roll worth 3 5c., Gilt Paper for 15¢. worth 300 , other papers at proportionate prices. Plush Photo Frames and Picture F rames at reduced prices. Call and examine my stock. MetherellIs Old Stand opposne the Post Office. GEO. A. LITTLE Books and Stationery, Kent Street, - - - Lindsay. Commencing at 10 o‘clock in the forenoon. A num her ofgood farming and wood lots in the 'l‘ownships of Verulam, Harvey, Somerville, Snowdon, and Glam- organ, including the farm in Verulam worked by the firm, and Big Island in Pigeon Lake containing 1,200 acres, and well known as the Big Island Stock Farm. Also village and park lots in Bohcaygeon, including a number of Beautiful Sites for Summer Residences. Also all their herd of Pedigreed Polled Angus Cattle, and all the remainder of their horses not sold at Toron- to. Also farm implements and second hand lumbering tools such as axes, sa\vs, chains, wagons, sleighs, etc. For particulars apply to MOSSOM BOYD, or to 7 _ __ Bobcaygeon, 01' t0 WEDNESDAY, 6th, OF SEPT. 1893. ALY HOUSE, Lindsay, Edward Daly Proprietor. I hMe again assumed control of the Daly House Everything is first class. The table is always supplied with the best in the market. The sample room is A No 1 The hotel is electric lighted throught Acommodious yard and first class stabl- ing. The best $1.00 per day house 1h Lindsay. Free buss to and f rom all boats and trains. Call and see me. Lindsay, May 10th, 1893. ED. DALY. UC'I‘ION SALE of Farming and W'ood Lands, Villagc Lots, Cattle, Horses, Farm Implements, Lumberihg Plant. _ O ‘l’hx‘f‘n‘rf nut-Au»; lllh - u“... The undersigned are instructed by MOSSOM BOYD CO., (dissolved by the death of a partner,) to offer for sale by auction, at the office of the firm, in the Village of Bobcaygeon, on MCSWEYN 8; ANDERSON are pre- pared to loan on good security both private and company funds at lowest cur- rent rates. Parties wishing to borrow on these terms should not, delav to make application. Large amounts of funds. at slightly higher rates, according to security. In most cases, solicitor work is done in my office, ensuring speed and moderate expenses. '1 aconsidcrable. though, limited sum of money, placed wuh me, for loaning on farms at, 5‘6 PER CENT AT ALL CRITICAL szoos AND cunqc: 0-: LIVE. Sold by all Druggists,or by mail pnce 50 cents, six boxes. $2.50. The Celery Pm CO“ Toronto. Ont. FIELD HOES, TURNIP HOES, HORSE POKES, CULTIVATORS, ENGLISH GRAIN CRADLES, J. G. EDWARDS 81 CO. J. G. EDWARDS GO SCYTHES A PARS GREEN Corner Kent and William-Sts. Each of these Articles are Pure and Fresh. E. GREGORY, PURE : HARVEST GOODS : 3"5 WICKHAM 8; THOMPSON, PARIS GREEN, INSECT POWDER HELLEBORE HAV’ E R ECENTLY HA1) Y'l'HIiS \2‘13 5 HAY R \KES Our Prices are Reasonable HAY FORKS, BARLEY FORKS, SCYTHES STONES ALLAN S. M ACDONELL, Barrister, etc., Lindsay Chemist ard Druggist, Three Lines SiSN OF THE ANVIL- And all kinds of ‘. A. LITTLE. Canada Life Buildmg, TorontO' {PILLS ”â€"_.. A girl of great beauty became afflicted with a species of acne, which disfigured her once fine complexion. says the New York Evening Sun. No greater calam- ity could have befallen her. She went from physician to specialist, she was put on various diets, she tried every remedy that was suggested, and finally, wearied with efforts that were unavailing, she gave herself up to zinc salves. At length there came along a. person of wisdom, who advised her to get a tonic, and obey its promptings to eat. Instead of dieting she needed to eat bountifully of nourish- ing food. .VVhat she needed was to en- rich and start the tides of her ebbing blood. This prescription was not dis- agreeable, and she followed it faithfully. Before three months her unfortunate trouble was gone, and her skin, now smooth and flawless, is brilliant with color, and her good looks completely re- habilitated. And now comes a medical authority saying that more women sin through underesting than overeating. and all women sin in not distributing their food properly. English, French and German women eat four, and often five, times a day. American women only out three times a day. The women who breakfast at 8 should eat again at 12. This should not interfere with lun- o’cioci-z should he 31:90:). and dinner :2' . «walled "mcderate” drinking of the in- habitants of a city like Munich. which consumes per head. including women and children, 568 litres (a litre is almost :1 quart) of beer on an average. gives a test ()f how elastic an iuncrpr etution the 1djective admits. luses its relevancy when by early habi- tuation to it, the system has caused to respond to its medical administration. This is one of the most effective argu- ments against “moderate drinking." Professor Forel goes as far as to say practically, that moderation in the use uf alcohol is a humlmg. Certainly the “Alcohol is the devil in solution.” says Sir £3. “1 Riclim'llscm. epigrammatically. The accomplished savant took the fol- lowing; position on the question of the use of alcholic beverages in a. recent lec- ture before the students of the Univer- sity of (im‘t‘zm Alcohol should be rele- gated to the domain of medicine and its use made conditional on the sanction of alw practitioner. A less restricted use if it, however, would be open to such members of the community as had qualified (in Sir James Coxe's phrase) to we “the intelligent custodians of their own health“â€"to such, in fact, as would be trusted to use it for dietetic or thera- peutic purposes alone. The young, whose unimpaired nervous and circula- tory systems stand in no need of adven- titious force, especially should abstain from alc~hoL Premature indulgence in it inevitably fares alls its. beneficial power at the time when failing health .lemands it, and the proverb “vinum lac senum” (wine. is the milk of the old) \Vliile the skin is red, glaring, hot, dry :m-i summing. limit it just as you would treat :1 common burn, viz.: Apply that which will "take out the tire.” The best i'emmly for: burn is a mixture of (1111111 parts of lime water and linseed oil. if Uri; cannot be procured, gently rub 11wiul'lnmedpm‘t with olive oil, sweeL oil or mutton tallow. After the soreness and redness have disappeared and the m: skin becomes brown or freckled lemon juice or ammonia me then of ser- vice. If the acid is used (vinegar is as good as lemon juice) add it to the bath waterâ€"one tablespoonful to the quart of watu: The ammonia in loss proportion -â€"~nc touspoonfnl to the quart. The oily preparations may be used every three or four hours. twice a dayâ€"night and morning is often enough to use the acid or alkaline bath. Some investigations carried out by Dr. Alexamhr A. Houston, of Edinburgh, I'u~}wcii:i§: me number of bacteria in the soii at duferent depths from the surface, gm m prove that the micro-orgzmisms be- come has and less abundant as the depth tram thesurface increases. For example, me average number of genus in a strain of Soil examined, which was taken from the surface, was 1,687,799; at a depth of three feet this average fell to 173.807: .mdat. a depth of six feet it 'as only HO. These figures are interesting. and would tend to SilCHV that at Certain dc- iir:ite dishing-es from the surface the soil would be sterileâ€"Medical News. _..___1,â€"VUV way. A few days ago a child died soon : i'tereating strawberries. “Why? Because. the fruit hati been purchased two days previously. and,ns; was onlyto he expectâ€" “(1. when eaten was in a state of decay. it i: impossible to resist the impression that negiect had something to do with the sad result in this instance. Lusciou. fruits are particularly liable to pntrefa tive change and such thrifty processes I expiaure to a cold and dry air, spreadim out and the like, sufiice only to postpom .iccay for a brief period. “’9 cannot do better than point to the incident above ltlz'ntlfllle‘i in order to remind the vendor and the purchaser alike that freshness is the only Certain guarantee of safety when any succulent fruit forms an arâ€" iicle of diet. \Ye have not forgotten that another hardiy less serious danger of the season awaits those who indulge in fruit which is under-ripe. In this case :as'c as well as judgment cmnmonly ntct'})«i.~‘e a caution the ‘xnportance oi? whicn can hardly be exaggerated. Yet here, also. the consequence of neglect have too often been sadly apparent. Bacteria in the Soil at Different Depths â€"â€"Alcolxol is the Devil in Solutionâ€" Good Food as a Beautifierâ€"Sunburn and Tan. Nothing is more essential to method in learningr than frequent reiteration, and it is therefore needless to plead excuses in seeking thus to impress even the element- ary facts of sanitary science. It might be supposed that by this time every one understood the importance of observing particular care in the selection of a sum« mer dietary, especially as regards fruit. Hardly any question of domestic man- agement is either more viral or more elmnentary. Yet error continually arises in this connection in the simplest wav. A few (lam ntrn n nhiM rum: my.» 4.00 w:um >20 czmzum ENCâ€"4. >m O>Cmm Om. maxzmmm. HEALTH AND HYGIENE. Good Food as a Beautifier. Iactm-m in the Soil. Sunburn Tippling. and Tan. He expects to clear at least $1,000 for nis year’s work. as he is now offered 51.50 per barrel for onions, 3 cents per pound for cabbage, and $2 per barrel for potatoes. This is doing better than most men. There are 3‘ great many farmers in the United States who would be glad to make $1000 a. year out of a farm of one hundred agreeâ€"Harper"; Young People. The muggy, breezeless hot spell has been named the “sizzard” as distinguish- ad from the blizzard. 0f the two terrors, however, the “sizzard” is after all much to be preferred. ngl]. Once in a. while a boy become a man when he is very young, and in that case everybody is very glad to see him suc- ceed. Frank Hogan, of Ingersoll, Texas, Is such a boy. He is only sixteen, but he has been graduated from the school where he lives, having taken every prize In his class this year. He rented fifteen acres of ground from his father, agree- ing tofurnishall the vegetables the family could consume as rental, and so far has 'rept his contract. His crop consists of four acres of oats that will yield seventy- five bushels er acre; six acres of Irish potatoes tha will yield about twenty barrels to the acre; three acres of cab- bages that have ove. nine thousand plants to the acre, and the boy thinks they will average about eight pounds to the head; and the balance of his rented land is sown in oniens that will yield not less than six hundred bushels to the sore. In addition to this, he is raising a. large number of turkeys._ .A. AAA - Here affairs have gone from bad to worse, his wife increasing in severity as she grew in averdupois. Dates and specimen instances of the “cruel and barbarous treatment” alleged are furnish- ed in the libel. Upon one occasion, as he sat smoking a cigarette afte1 dinner. his wife made 151 me 1cma1k to “'lllk h l 6 did not i111111ediateiy 1epl_v, \\ heiuupon she administered his e:1r such :1 blow as to tell him to the floor, where she sat Upon him 101 half an hour hefo1e she pei nitted him to rise. At 3110: her time he fl 1!. through the hall to escape her wmth. but just as he gained the front d001 and a siirht of libertytshe 1e:1 :hed him \\ 1th her right foot and he land d face thst on the Sidewalk, bluising his nose and otherwise damaging himself. Again she hmled a water iiiicher at his head, and he is positive that only the i11- accuracy of aim natuial to her sex saved his life. Two weeks ago Mrs. Halleck went to visit friends in Springfield. Mr. Halleck took advantage of this respite to lay his woes before a legal adviser. At the trial he promises to furnish a lot of witnesses from among the neighbors, all of whom, he says, sympathize with him. â€"Philadennia Times. him from running into such danger, but he was blind to his fate. He soon found that his fiiends weie right. In tempera- ment as well as in physique there was between the two the \\ idest incompati- bility. She was determined to rule the roost and he interposed no obiecfinn his s< le desire. aceonling to his libel in divorce being to lixea “ith her “in lov- ing peace and harmony.” Before they hefd been married a year he ave1s that she knocked nim do“ 11 because he he- came a member of :1 5001111 club. She repeated the dose frequently thereafter, appearing to find much enjoyment in it. At first he made a desperate resistance, but he quickly discovered that he was over-matched and in no wise able to cope u ith his better half. The chastise- ments he 1eceived made him an object of ridicule to neighbors and friends and for that reason he coaxed the head of the family to move to th1s city. The sequel would tend to support the elder \Veller’s story regarding widows in general. There was, to begin with, a marked difference in the 1»11}'>ic2x1a1)- pearance of the couple. Mr. Hullccli is a little man. He is lightâ€"haired. blue eyed, five feet five in height and 107 pounds in weight. His wife is dark, fully half a foot taller, broad shouldered and muscular and about sixty pounds heavier. Mr. llulleck says that up to the very moment of the mar- riage his friends tried to dissuade His Better Halt \Valloped Him Beyond Human Endurance, A remarkable divorce suit has been entered for the fall term of court. Thomas A. llalleck, a well-io~do resi- dent of Hestonville, seeks a severance of the vinculum matrimonii on the ground of “cruel and barbarous treatment.” H is wife, acoording- to his story, has for some time been 1n the reprehensible habit ofadministering to him a severe thrashing daily. Lawyer Robert J. Arundle, who represents Mr. Hulleck. tells a very unusual tale of (lmnestic in- felieity. Mr. llztlleek, he says, came here from Boston, where he was engag- ed for years in the dry goods business. He is still a young man, not being more than 35 years of age. Four years ago he was married in Springfield to a. widow. Mrs. Hattie Kemwdy. preceded by 5 o’cIock tea or the German custom of coffee at 4. It is advisable to eat also before gomg to bed. Giving the blood work 1n promoting digestion re- moves it from the head and induces sleep. The pragtice of putting into the stomach three tunes in 12 hours just as much food as. it can hold, and for 12 hours giving 113 nothing, is about as il- logical an arrangement as can be de. sired. A Popular “World” Word, “sizzard” is the latest name for a. hot Success of a. Boy Farmer. HE WANTS A DIVORCE. The bark backed off the berg, and would have cleared it, had not a wind. deflected from the berg. sent her into it again. The captam looked up and saw that the stars had been blotted out by m aw ful cunnm' of "m. Hm giant. nor- nxu dish: 'm 3. ,. “gull :4: 4...; l a a [lend ahead 1” The wooden jibboom of the tark spezired the side of the berg and broke. oil? like a toothpick. Then the steel bow- <prit, a thick tube two feet in diameter, smashed into the ice. The mighty tube broke in two. the upper half telescoping the lower, which was driven through the forecastle head clear through two hoids. twisting and breaking the deck timbers and making itself so fast that it stuck where the impact with the ice put it until it was hauled out by a crane at Rio Janeiro. The headway of the bark was only slightly checked by the break- ing the bowsprit. The cutwatcr was crushed in and the white juggler was torn off. He was held above the sea by a tangle of steel wire stays and rigging. When the stem of the bark hit the berg an avalanche of ice crashed on the forward deck. The first several hun- dred tons were crushed to snowy fineness by the ice boulders that followed, and all the forward deck was, as the skipper said, a turtle back of ice. The big chunks, some eight feet square. slid from the crystal turtle back into the sea and along the deck aft. Just as a huge cake tore along the starboard scuppers, a German seamen. who was known only as Albert, came out of the forward house with his rub- ber boots in his hands. The cake scooped him up and took him along past the captain’s cabin all the way to the taff- rail. He yelled as he dashed by the cabin, “Oh, mein Kopf!” and that is why his shipmates now call his Albert Kopf. Every other seaman went aft in a. hurry, but not on ice cakes. The wind had shifted, and the bark was on the port tack under easy canvas. Third Mate Punter. suddenly saw a green- ish white vision apparently rise out of the water dead ahead. He said it. look- nd as if it were four times as tall as the bznrk’s main truck. It was of curious form for an iceberg. A gigantic cornice extended several .‘mmlrud feet from one side. It looked as if it. had been originally an ice arch, md had been divided at the keystone. l’cntet didn‘t wait to makea note of these things. He ran aft. and, as he puzascd the forecastle, which is in a deck- house on the Cashmere, he shouted: “Ice aloud ahead !” It waé the mate’s watch, and Thlrd Mate Pontet. with a pair of the ski139er’s field glasses, was stretched on the tore- castle head, peering forward. lle looked CIOSer and made out that the Square was ice. The air was. clear. and no bergs were visible on any hori- min. The Captain. Iemenmex'ing‘ the fate m thel loyal Allrcll. an iron Lark owned 2;} the ownels of the Cashmere, which :5 supposed to have been lost by collision \\ 1m an iceberg about 11 month ago, ozu‘eletl a double lookout on duty and lent his own eves peeled for borgs. The v. ind was aft and the bark sailed serene- ly along until Feb] 1131;: 28th. At dawna towering berg was seen away 06 to the westward. There were no other glacial apparitions on that or {no foilowing day. But the captain feared the approach of night, which doesn't begin down off the Horn unti) ulout 9 p.m. 'l‘he Indian Qu€=c1fs skipper, mute and live or six men launched the lifeboat and abandoned the ship. The sccund main turned to, pumped her out, stuppml tne leak, rigged jury masts. and Lani; tilt: wsscl into Yulpzu'aisu. The skipper and his boat's crew were: never heard of'. On being reminded that the yarn of the Indian Queen was another story. Supt. 'i‘hoinpson told how he lost his tigui'eiicml, and how close he came to Ewing; the Cashmere, too. The ban; was about 300 miles east of the Falkland lslzmals on February 2231!), when time unp- tain noticed on glancing over me star- lual‘i’l quarter, a. white square in the \Vlllcr. The skipper says he remembers the Antarctic ice in the Southern Ocean, just north of the Horn, away imk in 1834, when he was master of the lil‘ilin‘h claygier Eagle. That; was the gym-ten ymi- before this one for ice in that neigh- ‘n‘ii'limxi. The clipper Indian (game-1i, pig-mg between Enginnd and Auetruiixz, iim Captain says, run into a big burg in 1:554, knocked out iierniusts and smeaimi in nor cutwator. iiriv B13: :in last evening, batteFed and mstv: move the “ater line “ith a gre m sii1- -1 \ clinging to 1101' 111111191 \E‘L‘ surfa; - is 111101; as the hairo 011 :1 Cnsinnexu goat Her nose was twis‘ed, and :1 jmy mow- t'jilltat 1m ungraceful tilt, supuiied the piace of the heavy steel bpa1.5‘i;e had bevn more than six months makinrr he: wav f1 0111 Pisugua. Capt. Thompson is a grizzled Scotch- man whose face has been burnt to a chocolate hue by the fervent sums of southern latitu'les for the last 40 years. He has been 20 times around the Horn, and he has seen lots of ice in both the \‘l’cstern and Southern oceans. but he says he never saw in so brief a period so much ice as he saw after rounding; the Horn, 'aound from Pisugtm. ()hiii, to this port, deep laden with nitrate of soda. It was not seeing the ice that bothered him, however; it was hittingitzmd lleing thumped and pounded by immeasurable tonsuf it. And that is why the Cash- mvrian juggler didn’t come proudly into port under the steel boWsprit of the Cashmere. That is also the reason why the steel howsprit was brought in on the hm'lz’s deck. The Cashmere warped into The immaculate juggler who vanished under the sea had seen enough to $11 pply 111111 with yarns that would have 11111111. t 1(2) ad entures of all other figureheads 31.9111 1111111111r03>zive in comparison. T110 story that the figmehead can: 101; tell to its 511111111z1tcs \\ .15 1e111t <1 vescenlav 1); Cap 1110111115011. the skipper of the b:11'1; Cashmere. Narrow Escape of an American Bark from Destrucxzion in the South Atlantic. Ajugrrler of Cashmere, all in white, with a lizard crawling; in his head dress $101123 years wandering in tzopic and X1( tic seas, lies in many tatimms in the South Atlantic, about 500 miles north- ,11stof the Falkland Islands. He was the fivurehead of the 1311:1511 bark C Ishme1e, one of the first of iron sailing C raft. INTO TONS OF ICE. HUI!“ LID VAU- 31 J ohnnyâ€"‘Vell what’s the difi ?â€"Bas- ton Transcript. . Biggsâ€"You say high living killed him. He was as poor as a church mouse. How could it? Boggsâ€"Fell from the window of the eighth story flatâ€"Buffalo Courier. J ohnnvâ€"In the multitude of counsel- ors there is a bicycle. Mammaâ€"Why. Johnny! “there is satiety,” not a “bicy_<:le._” ___ .- nomn 1" verse for thg lady; “Captain Here." says the Journal, showed that the life and habits of the people of Tanganyika did not differ 1n 1 essentials from those of people leading a l simple existence else“ here and the 1m- pression made upon him, especially of the people settled to the northeast of the lake, was decidedly favo1able. They had no literature, and consequently knew of no past. They had no knowl- edge of the outer world, and therefore could neither hear nor think about other people; but they were too busy to feel ennui. \Vhen a man wanted a house, he did not consult advertisements; he had to set to work, choose a site, and build it. The day’s life began early. First, the women and girls went to fetch water in vessels they themselves had made; then they took axes, which their husbands or brothers had made, and cut wood for fuel; then they ground corn, which the family had grown, and which was stored on shelves in the hut out of the way of rats, for their porridge. and so they earned their breakfast. All hands turned to at sowing time and harvest. It was an error to suppose the men did not work. They some- times worked both night and day, and sufiered great hardships as bearers in expeditions. The women were not more harshly dealt with than they were in England. One thing was to be said for these people: they were self-support- ing and self-reliant. Everything they enjoyed was the fruit of their own zlabors and ingenuity. They had developed the fishery and navigation of the lakes. and 1n fishing they employed all the ap- pliances, nets and lines that the lecturer had seen in every other part of the world Nor were they without ornaâ€" mental art, for their earthenware was of graceful design, and Captain Hore had a canoe-man who composed 3 Ion poem about the white stranger, an sang it to an instrument of his own making. ” Some years ago Captain Here, who spent some years ‘in the command of a. mission steamer on Lake Tanganyika, visited New Zealand. He addressed the Sundayschool children, and: succeeded in interestinz them by his curious and instructive information about Central Africa and its inhabitants. ’We take the following account of life in Tanganyika from the Grahamstown Journal (Cape of Good Hope): __ Hun-An uv w bulwauuylAvA: It, V bl: It is possible that the French are not naturally so “long-lived" a race as the more phlegmatic peoples of Northern Europe. At all events it is none the less true that all races survive chiefly as the home and the family relation main- Min the sanctity that belongs to them. â€"â€" Boston Globe. Perhaps this state of things is largely the penalty of being able to say that “Paris is France.” In that great me- tropolis the sanctity of marriage has sunk to a melancholy level. These wise men declare that the French die off faster than do any other European people, and that the births fail more and more each year to supply the gap caused by the deaths So great is the alarm over the steady depopulation of the country that an alliance of philosophers has been organ~ ized. They have been holding a congress this month to examine the causes of the serious drift of things and to devise methods to prevent the French race from finally becoming extinct. Now, what would you think of a trip to the pole On an iceberg cool and high, 011 a freezing sea, where the ice blocks roll --v 2 ,, -_| I. _____ ‘1-” The Home is the True Fountain of the Living Streazn of Humanity. It is said to be an established fact that the French race is actually dying off. The population decreases decade by de- cade. not through emigration, for the French are not an emigrating people, but through the rapid increase of deaths over births. Cashmere. Ho had his face to the water and a big piece of Iron was sticking in Ins back. \leen the tangled wire sup- porting him had been cut away he turn- ed ovnr and, face upward, fell mto the sea.â€"N.Y Sun. Second-Mate Hamilton superintended the cutting away glitthe‘ juggle: of the \Vhen the danger of hitting or being hit by the berg was over, the men set to work chopping away the compact mass of ice forward. The pumps had been sounded and the hold had been found free of water. The forepeak was filled, but the collision bulkheads kept the water from the hold. The ice and wreckage was not cleared away until noon the next day. Mammafâ€"Cprpe, Johnny, say your This was ’to avoid hitting the berg under the cornice and bringing it down on the bark. The keel of the Cashmere scraped on the submerged base of the berg;r as she came around into the wind on the other tack and cleared the im- pending cornice, As she passed undo! the man at the wheel looked fearfully up, trembled and cried out: “That- is going to fall. I can’t stay here.” "Yes, you can," said the skipper. “I! that falls we will all go down together. You will have as good a chance as any- body” at. ‘the wheel to jam it hard down and stiggto his post. New: In hick-bordered sky. RACE DECADENCE IN FRANCE. I low to steal a while away From every cumbering care, And take a Pullman sleeper for Chicago and the fair And when l \e spent a week 0:" And seen the sights so great, , I love to steal a chance to rule Home on an empty gyeight. Lo, the poor India. With numbered mud. The drug store combination Quick doth find. Life in Equatorial Africa A Sprinkh of Spice. Lfiadéas City Jam-ml. Afiants Constitution. 11¢...“ ‘3

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