Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 22 Jul 1887, p. 3

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edJuh-worml, nnd from plm lee end nun- bnrn. It will nleo prevent 0 none from being greuy or Ihlny. n dilfignrement com- mon to many women. One end a hnlf ounce. 0! white wax, {our ounce- of Iweet “mend oil. six drum of rou‘wnter, nnd five drops of oil of rose. Melt wu nnd oil of al- mond in a bowl ; then ndd tone-Inter end Itlr well with 3 wooden spoon. The longer it In nth-red the“\yhi_t_er lt_ _will go}: and the Brown ron. ‘Roo'r BIER.â€"â€"Teke 1 ounce each of aassafras root, allspice, yellow-dock root and Wintergreen ; .3 ounce each of wild cherry bark and coriander seed: )onnno hop; and 3 quarts of molasses. Pour anili- clent boiling water on the whole. let stand twenty-four hours; filter the liquor, add half a pint of yeut. put in a tight cask or in bottles and let stand twenty-four hours. Then use. To clean black cashmere: nod other all- wool goods, cook them over ni ht In strong borax water. In the morning ang them to dry without rinsing or wringing. and while damp, press smoothly on the wrong side. Take equnl parts of flour, gnted chem and butter; season with pepper and salt, and mix with one or two e323. Bake in small cake or path pans. ‘01: will call them nice cheese on es. Dust will netrste into closets. no mat. ter how care ul one any be, end if it once penetrates s driiss it is impossible to get it all out: U‘Jidee necessitating frequent brush- ing which wears out silk A good plan is to mske s beg of an old sheet, sketching it first that it may stand out with the dress. Make it ion enough to cover the dress completely, run 3 em st each end wide enough to run a tape in. Button the belt of the dress sud hen it over 3 “ cost hencer." Have a loop on t e hunger to come up through the bag, the loops on the big too, to hang it by when the skirt is out. Draw it up at top and bot- tom, and you may bid the dust defiance, so far as the dress is concerned. Odors from boiling cabbage, onion: hem, etc" can be prevented by mm ekettle with an open pipe running down 0 side from a. grooved to. dischnrgeu theta odors into t efire, Tomftgzy mthna cerried into the chimney. The kettle has a round- ed, very close fitting cover thnt not: into the the water at once. The reason glasses break is because the side which is first put in expands more quickly then the other. Wash glasses in hot soapy water end wipe on a dry linen towel, to make them glossy. New silver should not be wuhed in soapy water as it dims its brightness, but old silver that has always been washed thus, may look bettérjwhen washed in hot sogpyuwnter 9nd should never be wet, nor should the blades be put in too hot weter us they my expend, cracking the handles. Ice will not melt so quickly if the pitcher in covered with some non~condncting cover- ing. A thick paper bag, sli ped over will do some good, but it won] he better to make it fit better. and line it with raw cot. ton. Take a ieoe longehough to go around the pitcher, t a man giece into the top. Sew them together. an make 3 cover of chintz the same size to 0 over all. Sew handles of braid to each ei e to lift it by. To give bed-clothing and under-clothing a thorough sunning and airing in the next best thing to washing it. It- alao sweetens it. A second suit of nnderclothin should he on hand for afternoon wear, on what is taken 011' be thoroughly aired and dried before hanging in the closet. To beautify the nuile, hold them for fif- teen minutes in warm water, then, while flexible out carefully. Polish them with 3 piece 6* ohumoin akin dipped in u mixture of oil and finely Powdered pumice stone. Push down the elm: ut the lower part of the nulls to show delicete half-moons of white. grooved to no clom cape into e room. better When washed in hot soapy water and rpbbpgi with _a dry oloth._ Kgifg hgxdks A looking glass is nicely cleaned by rub- hing well with moistened paper. When all spots are removed, use dry soft paper for polishing “it. Another method is to add enough ammonia to the water in which both windows and looking glasses are washed, to make it feel slippery ; rub dry with paper. In cenninglruit, if there. is juice left over, put it in self-sealing bottles and i188 it in preparing sauces for desserts. duke of strawberries. raspberries, end the like, makes a. very pleasant drink in water, to which sweetening can be added or not as desired. \Vheli washing glass, ali it into the wa. ter no that the inside and t o out-ids touch will curdle milk; therefore in proparin dishes where much milk is used, do not ad the salt until just before removing them from the fire. A rusty wash boiler, if not leak ', cm hsVe its'usefulness prolonged by m in; a bag of coarse white muslin and scalding the clothes in it to save them from mat. Ox-gell edded to the water in which block hose or other block good: no washed, will keep them from fadi . Thoae and colored calicoea liable to fede ry in the shade. Any gold jewelry that an immersion in water will not injure, can be beautifully cleaned by shaking it well in 3 bottle near- ly hnlf full of warm on ads, towhich a. little prepared chalk has n added, and aftsr rinsing in clear, cold wnter and wiping it ry. ‘ 'i soon I. cooked, 'if oh would hnvo them at their best. A hot p tter with a. cover to re- ceive the steak or chops is desinblo. White spots on varnished furniture ore removed b rubbing than with I soft cloth or sponge ipped in o ounphor solution. Avoid takin cold by not sitting or land- ing Itill out 0 door: In windy or expo-0d places, upeciolly offer severe exercise. Oil-clothe can be bri btened, utter wed:- in , by rubbing bud w th s flannel mointem with kerosene. Sinks, both iron end zine, cu: be kept {nee from my outing of grouse by rubbing them with kerosene occasionally. more cmmy. Finn“ sdd tho'oil of mo, and than pwk awn n and! in: or pots. Thin will be tom: the equd of my 00ch crew propmtion ever invenmd. Bolling in strong soapsuda will elem up on old lunpburner md make it on good as Cou) Gaul. Thin in an invaluable recipe furnished the writer by a lady who reperc- it for he: £ht will own use, end a plied at keep the hoe free from t oee ebomineble Inuk- cell- SAM- AND MILLâ€"Remember that alt Broiled quashgtoq shank! _bo seryed u no closejy that no atoun can ea Housman) Bums. HOUSEHOLD. The (lead silence in the room was broken by a alight snicker from the defendant's at~ torncy, and then the spectators went out to snort. Tho bailiff called everybody to order and the jury filed out without asking for feesâ€"[Carson Appeal. ' lle llad Paid Once. A few do 3 ago there was a smell civil suit tried be are the J unthe of Pizen Switch â€"tho some mu who decided the anti-treat law unconstitutional. It is always custom- nry in such cases to have the winner of the suit pay the fees. The leintifi‘, a big raw- bonod rancher, was eel ed on to pay the jury of six 82 apiece. He immediately stood up in court and queried : " Pay the jury 8l2 2" “ Y " replied the court. ‘ ” 143i a‘here, judge, ain't this sorter piliu it on thick ? I just paid four of them hmld err: $20 apiece. Do you want the earth summer followed 7" sagacity. Those who have short fingers are quick, impulsive, and act usuall on the spur of the moment, more readily t an those who have long fingers. Short, thick fingers, nearly all of the same length, indicate a callous, cruel character, and betray clumsy unhsndiness in manipulation, as well as a constant tendenc to falsehood and the de- famation of the c aracter of others. Long, slender fingers betray a peevish, Worrying disposition. Young‘ women ought to choose a husband whose hands are naturally red 3 and hands made red with difficulty should be carefully avoided. A man With dark colored hands is inclined to biliousness and melancholy. As an indicator of character, however, the thumb is the “boss." A small, ill-formed, feebly-balanced thumb betrays a vacillating disposition. Small thumbed persons are governed by the heart, while the lar thumbed are swayed by the intel- lect. nde ndent, self-re iant people have large thum ,or on ht to have them, from the point of view 0 the chirosophist, while pliant, dependent, and easily governed natures may be known by the smallness of that digit, always remembering that the feature must be judged in proportion to the size of the hand and the fingers on the same hand. Language of the Hand. Hands indicate character. A thin, skinny, n\rrow palm expresses feebleneu of intel- lect, a well an absence of energy or moral force. A hollow, deep pnlm indicates min. fortune, loss of money, miner and failure in enterpriiea. Shakespeare to In of an “ itch- ing palm :" that indicates that the blood is out of order, with a covetous disposition. A stiff, herd hand, thnt opens with diflicul: Z to its full extent, betreya stubbornness of c uncter and reluctance to open to calls of chnrity. Supple elastic fingers, on the other hand, while menifeeting a tendency to ex- travaganceLnevertholees indicate talent and may went to ti hting. hey fought ard and furiously, until at last one of them, by a fortunate pass, knocked his antagonist off the rock. He did not stop, but picked into the first one he came to, and then kept knocking one of! at a time until there was but one left. The victor took one comprehensive look over the field of battle, struck up a rattlingchatuar and walked up to Miss Quail, atmtted around a few times with self-importance enough for a United States Senator, keeping up a rattling string oiâ€"ofâ€"well, blarnev, I suppose. Finally they rubbed heads and bills together, walked to the north side of the rec , roee aimultaneoualy and flew away, lighting together, ready for housekeeping. Another hen then came upon the rock with three or four males and went through the same form of courtehip, and to the victorâ€" the reward of a wife. So it went on until all the hens were mated and goneâ€"San Diego Sun. try graceful walks and oses, each strivin to outdo the others. {she more they trie to mike a" favorable impression before Miss Quail the more excited they became, until tug)! warm to fighting. _ _ _ _ __ The Courtship of Quails. I once had the pleasure of witnessing the courting and pairing ofi' of a. flock of quails I was sitting so I could look down on a flat‘ rock that stood up bi her than the tops of a thicket of brush and weeds surrounding it near a small brook. I first heard the chatter of quails in the brush. After hold~ ing quite an animated oonfab one hen quail flew up on the rock and was followed. by five or six males. Miss Quail strutted around a few times, apparently not noticing her admirers. assuming ooquettish attitudes, and putting on more style and afi‘ection than a human ‘dndess of the present day. She finally took a conspicuous pdsition and appeared t) devote-her entire attentionto- herself. Her \admiiers, in the meantime, stood around and looked at each other with defiant eye and mien. The then began to strut arbuud, spread and il their wings, - A'nd'izhen he drop on his knee: on the wet and, And hid in sobbing hoe in his hmds. The boy stood, overwhelmed, for a few moments; then he raised both his hands, end cried, in A loud voice, “ My mother'p Non pro. ing for me ! M y mother’s been preview. or I.“ a" “ They no nll lost, my lad : thou art the only on saved." Sedly the rocket-men began to drew in their line. when euddenly they felt that eomethinu wu ethched to it, end in e few minutes healed on to the beech the uptur- eatly lifeless body of n edloroboy. Tn ned end fender bends worked, and in 3 short time he beceme conscious. With wild armament he gazed sround on the crowd of kind and aym‘pgthizing friqndg. T_hoy med hign t9 his 0e}. 9 looked up int?) the wetther-boaton face of the 0H fishermm near him, and asked, “ Where an I 2" The only menu of swing the men cling- ing to the uvaylng mats was the rocket ap- porotuu. Before It could be adjusted one most (all. Just on the rocket boning the life~lino went booming out of the mortar tho ofperput tppplod ov_or. In Fobrunry, 18“. n toniblo gnlo rnged nlong the coat of Englnnd. hightyore vouch were wrecked in Harilepool Buy. while the worm won at in height, the Rising Sun, smut brig, struck on Longmr Rock. 5 root extending a mile from one side of the lay. The vessel nunk, leaving only her two iopunuu above the fooming woven. The life-boot: were uwny rescuing wrecked crown. “ The crew ?" " Where’s the cap’B 2” “ Drowned, my lad." “ The mate. then 2" “ I_I_e‘s drowngd, too.” " Th_on at here, my 19d. " Why lo Was Saved. The New York World has recently turned its attention to the evil of food adulteration. Out of one hundred samples of tea collected of retail dealers, twelve were found to be ndulterated, for the most part, with foreign leaves, known as lie tea. 0! one hundred samples of ground coffee, twenty eight were mixed with chicory and peas. 0f one hun- dred samples of sugar, onl two were found to be adultemted with g ucose starch, so that of the three hundred samples tested, forty-two, or an average of fourteen per cent, were found to be impure, enough in all con- science to show the necessity of local legis- lation, sufficiently severe to efl'cctunlly put an end to these abominable and thoroughly dishonest practices. Iivhe “i norantz" of the clerk was ex- cused, an the price of the “ I‘m-ridge” sent. ‘ “ Dam: Cumâ€"the postal was rote by mi Glut-k, me Being Buny, an’ i Reegrit that His ignornntz nhood mnke on so much Trub‘ael. He is a pore boy, 00 you must eggscuse on mkount of his not Having went to akool but little ; therefore He apeled the W0"! rqng. __ “ It is ‘ Kurrldge’ inatid of ‘ charmghe.’ Pleze eggacuse his ignomntz, an lett me no wat a 2 sate, 2 hoarse, hovered Famly kar- riqge will cost." ' In: H ‘nnnrnnlwn nf lhn Alanâ€"Ir mn- av. In reply came the following lncld expla nation: A wholesale firm in Chicago received the following postal from cne of it- ont-of-town patrons : “ Pleee too lett moo no the Prise of A goode charreghe.” No member of the firm, and not one of it- employee from the ofiice-boy up to the manager, could tell what was meant by I: “ charreghe,” and Webster and Worcester were also ignorant reggrding the meaning of the word._ Finalli the postal was returned to the sender, with a polite letter stating that the meaning of the word “ charraghe was un- known to the firm, and asking for its defini- tion. anywhere from $4.45 ‘up. His food is as simple as his clothing and his habitation. In the morning a great loaf of black bread is around ; each member of the family gauges out a iece of the inside, until finally only the h crust is left. At noon the crust is eaten, softened by a little wine. A plate of macaroni, cos two or three cents, finishes the bill o fare; At night more macaroni, then the beds or pallets are spread and the family goes to sleep, to et up and go through the sameroutine on t e morrow. The rent of one of these rooms is from ten to twelve dollars a year 3 the cost of the wine, macaroni and bread is about ten cents per day for each person ; but even at this cheap rate of living, the workman who has a family often finds it difficult to make both ends meet.‘ A skilled bricklayer only averages fifty cents a day. poor: “Old shoes, hats, clothes. candle-ends, dried cofl'ee- unds, “second.haud " oil, and s. hundrs other things are spread out upon the broad plaza (or square) of a townâ€" and it is here, to a great extent, that the Italian workman prooures 'his supplies. A laborer-’5 suit, oonsistin of breech“, jacket, vest, shirt,_socks_, nec tie, and shops, cost The Poorvof Naples. The stren er is unpleasantiy impressed by the crow ed condition 'of the massea. whole family, consisting of parents;- and sometimes from five to ten children, live in one room. The beds are rolled up in the daytime, and when nnrolled at night fill the room. A marvellous de ree of “economy is practiced even in the smal est deteils. Coffee grounds'from the wealthy man’s kitchen are dried and resold to the poor. In a similar way oil is twice and sometimes three times used, the drippings of each successive frying being gathered from the‘pen and sold to the Amy Avant, a colored woman on the plan- tation of Major James Reaves, in Marion County, S. 0., died a few days ago, of mea- sles, at the advanced age of 122 years. She was remarkably well preserved, and retain- ed all her facultiea up to the time of her fatal illness, previous to which she claimed that she had never taken a dose of medicine. During the last cotton picking season, she took her place regularly in the cotton fields and always performed a good day‘s work. Her age is well attested by family records. A snail’s pace need not be used any longer as a term more or less indefinite. By an interesting experiment at the Terra Haute Polytechnic the other day it was ucertain- ed exactly and reduced to figures, which may now be quoted by persons who favor the use of exact terms. A half dozen of the mollusks were permitted to crawl be- tween.two points ten feet apart, and the average pace was ascertained. From this it was easy enon h to calculate that one snail can crawl a mi e in just fourteen days. The male wasp, the naturalist tells us, never stings. But so long as he and his wife dress exactly alike this bit of knowledge availeth nothing to the _eareleu men, who does not know it is the lady who is ap- roaohing him until it be that she smiteth im with her bustle. What humanity de- mands of science in the case of the wasps is the invention of some prompter method of distinguishing between Monsieur and Ma- damwauie at 4 l yards. Paper doors are coming into use, and, as compared with those of wood, possess the advantage of neither shrinking, swelling. cracking or warping. It is formed of two thick paper hoards, stamped and moulded into panels, and lszad to ether with gluq and potash, and t en rolleg through heavy rollings. After being covered with a water. proof coating and then with one that is fire proof, it is painted, varnished and hung in thc. usual way. A recent report of the Pasteur Institute state that out of 2,682 patients who have been treated 2,264 hod been bitmn by ani- mnle which were undoubtedly mad, end that out of the“ 2,164 only 29 or 1.34 per cent. died. Before the dienvery of this method the lowest death rate for persons affected by nhiea was 16 per cent. , nud the secretary of the institute chime that 317 persons owe their lives entirely to Puteur's discovery. An insurance pa I" has been collecting the statistic. of nuici e in the United States. Among‘ the moat lin hu- aud rplexing thin in the {not that ‘ the cluai cation b can Ition chow- n grater proportion of an - olden unong the married than the unmar- ried which is contrary to the weepted theory. Food Adulteratlon. 80188038 AND PEN. Ills “ Chan-agile.” the United States is very large. One factory in new York makes 50,000 pounds a day, and this sold at from 15 to 22 cents per pound. Butterine is a reparation of fat mixed with butter and c nrned in butter- milk, so that the combination has the full flavor of butter. In other cases the oleomar- arine is churned with milk. Of the pro- (uct from 25 to 60 pounds in every 100 is butter. l’robabl little of that qualitfiois made. So comp etely may even the st judges be deceived, that as Mr. Armour, the great Chicago pork-packer, has proved, an article which in Iowa took the premium as creamcry butter was butterine made in his factory. We learn from a paper published in the report of the Michigan Board of Agriculture for 1886 that in the opinion of eminent med- ical men oleomargarme, even when made from untainted animal, fat, is unwhole- some, because it is insoluble and indigest- ible, and because it may carry the germs of disease or parasites into the human system. As a matter of fact, however, “ in the eager- ness of the manufacturers to produce the spurious compound cheaply, ingredients en- ter into it which are detrimental to the last degree to the consumer’s health.” The fat of animals that die 0‘ disease, and taliow, lard and other substances that have become rancid or even putrid, it is said. are largely used. These can be deodorised and brought to such color as may be desired, but their dangerous character cannot be wholly des- troyed by any chemical or other process. . ‘ Harrison Gilbert, of Chili, IlL, has a ven ernble horse. Horse and man went all through the war without receiving a. scratch. The animal is now in his fiftieth year, and is tenderly cared for, living on corn bread and bran mash. He has not a. tooth in his ceiling over the stable. ‘ One fnorfiing the cord was found out and the horse with his tail down as usual. After the stable was closed the stable do had jumped on the horse’s back, and wit his teeth out the cord that kept his friend in pain. . A SYMPA'rnE'nc D00. A horse belongin to eBoaton gentleman had a troublesome habit of etting the reins under his tail and holdin t em there tight- ly. The einewe under t e tail were cut and, when in stable, the tail was etraine by___a. cord pafseed through a. pally. in the cab. Every day after that I would see him sitting beside the track and wagging his tail as my train passed by. Several weeks later the train was running at great speed, being behind time, just at daybreak. The dog stood on the track ahead barking furi- ously. As we draw near he moved ahead, but continued his antics. I. supposed, of course, that he would leave the track, but he did not, and the train ran over him and ground him to pieces. We stopped the train, and were astonish at findin a short distance ahead an obstrue on on t e track that would surely have derailed the train had we struck it at full speed. An engineer' on the Rock Island Railroad tell this story : " While running alon near J oliet I saw a fine big black dog stuc fast under an old farm gate by the side of the track. He was howling piteously, and I stopped my engine and went to his assis- tance. He was wild with ratitude, licked my hand and wanted to to low me into the A writer in the Scientific American says : â€"A few years since I was walking along a broad road in Richmond County, Georgia, when from the .opposite side of the road coming directly toward me I saw a “ coach- whip,’ a snake much like the common black snake in form, but in color a very dark brown some two thirds of its length, the other third to the tip of the tail being a light brown, in appearance, from the pecu~ liar markings, much like the lash of a whip. Havrng nothing with which to kill the snake, I thought to amuse myself by preventing his getting to cover in the “ thick” just beyond me ; but to turn back would leave him exposed for quite a dis- tance, so, not being in a fighting humor, he made a rush for a water oak which grew just beyond me butnot on a direct line with me, the long branches of which came down to within four or five feet of the ground; then rising until he seemed almost to stand on the end of his tail, he shot up like an arrow through the branches, getting his gri entirely by lateral pressure and not by coi l_ng around the branches as I thought he Ireturned to'the piazza, and soon, when the wasp came back, I was convinced, by more careful watching, that he was measur- ing each part of the spider's body instead of trying to st hold of it. The antennaa seemed to be t e or ans mostly employed in this operation. W on he went home again, I was before him, and saw him meet his oo- worker, put his head close to his, and evi~ dently informed him that the doorway was not yet big enough, for they fell busily at work enlarging it. Then more measuring, more digging, until, after three long hours, he returned, this time with his friend, and they carried away their prey and bestowed it in their underground home. would? do. ” While sitting, one summer day, at the side of the house on a platform which served as a piazza, but was roofed on’y by the branches of twu lar e trees, something dropped upon my hes and into 1]) lap, when I saw a large white bodied spi er in the clutches of a small wasp. Hastily brushing these unceremonious visitors on to the floor, I watched to see if the wasp would succeed in flying away with his huge enemy. After a struggle the scfider lay quiet, and the wasp ran aroun , seizing lust one part, then. another but finally went away, asI supposed, for help. In about quarter of an hour he returned, still alone, and began trying again, as I thought, to find some lace y wh ch he could seize the round y and carry it away. Again he departed without his spider. This tune I watched him and saw him disappear at the edge of the lawn, under a pear tree, and, following, found him, after some searching, dilifintly at work with another wasp eu- larg g a hole in the ground, having alread thrown out quite a little mound of earth. was sur rised, for I did not then know that any kin of _wasp lived in the ground. oleomargarlne and Butterlnc. 0 ed by any chemical or other process. [19 qna‘ngitv ofr butterine now m_ado in STORIES ABOUT ANIMALS. A DOG SAVES A TRAIN. How SNAKES Cuun. AN AGED Honsn. A Wasr's “'ISDOM. In Mexico beggars are called by the ex- preseive name "Pordiosetrae" (”For-(iod- salree“). Saturday is universally recognised as ” Beggars’ day," and on that day they appear on the streets in full force, plyirfi their trade with the eatest industry. repulsed they will ma e a atatel bow and murmur a benediction upon the ead of the erson who refuses them. They always lave plenty of children and dogs, and lead a very happy, careless life. The Flea that you have no small coin is not a val d excuse with these beggars. for they enerally have awell-filled bag of silver, w ich they pro- duce and courteously offer to make change in any desired amount. V- . â€"--â€"-â€"â€"â€"--;- .--..u Irv-u nu, "luv can be little doubt that this linethod of transmitting messages will in time supersede the present s stem of telegraphic communi- cation. Pro essor Gray regards the inven- tion as a more impotent one even than the telephone. Prof. Elisha Gray, of Chicago, whose name is connected with many electrical do. vices, has just perfected a wonderful inven- tion which he calls the “ telautograph,” and by means of which a facsimile of any mic. ing can be transmitted by telegraph. It wil' enable a Chicago agedulator, for instance; to give his New York roker an order to buy or sell stock, the fac-simile of the order being reproduced in the latter cit at the same instant that it is written in éhieago. A cheque for money can be sent in the same manner, though it remains to be seen whether the banks or the courts will recog- nize such paper. No particular kind of pen or pencil need be used in writing the document to betransmitted ; in fact, a sharp pointed piece of wood will answer the pur- se. Many satisfactory experiments have on made with the machine over aehort circuit at Prof. Gray’s laboratory, and the tests were of a kind that indicated that the same work could be done over 1,000 miles of wire it necessary. ‘This hing so. there --_ L- ‘EAA‘ 1 But {0; the w: ndErful bravery of these girls I should. not be here to-nighl: to tell you this story. - An instant later the girls had dived, and the shark had nearly stopped. The water around him was red with blood. The girls came to the surface again, and again they dived and plunged their long knives into the monster. At last he lav still on the top of the water quite dead. The natives drag- ged him ashore. and found that he was one of the largest of his species: cited.- I prepared myself, and plunged in. After I had been in the Water for half an hour, I pushed one over and beyond one of the reefs which surround the xshmds. All at once I realized Ihat something was going on on the shore. There was quite a number of natives there, and they appened to be greatly ex- Suddenly two native girls swam out be- hind me with long knives between their teeth. I looked around, and to my horror I saw; a. shark making for me with terrific “'hatever may have been the original of the febled mermaids, “ seo- irla,” the red mermaids are certainly foun in the Sand- wich Islands. That a strong man, much less a young woman, can be so much nt home in the water on to tight and kill the fiercest native of that element on its own battle- onnd, se ems incredible, but Senator Fair, 0 Nevada, tells the following story as an_experience_of l is own: 7 It Happened upon my last visit to the Sandwich Islands. I am a very export swimmer, and nothing pleases me better than a plunge into the salt water. The temperature of the island is delightful, and I could not resist the temptation to take a 3mm. On the mood. Held I ylokhnx mine of wealth, With its honest toil and health It the chipt (hut Itrewed the 'roumL By some at tit'kfin “1-le tounfi. In h- r need. Should In light a d warmth Jimpnrt Blessings to _her nged heart All too phiu. 0! the many sound tie! That in hwguita [will trite, Bringing pain: Then memought the sturdy paw Th“ nu using gxe um! aw Hum-yudred. This conclusion, than, ldnw That no exenisc 01' jaw- Twisting India-tubby lawâ€" h in go d A: the nun-in- : 1 mm 0n the banal» o! the saw. sawing wood. 5nd :9ch covered “jet that tell, 99d Mommy. “was“. Plum! In An the tempted too 01 steel nude u wound the would not hell, Thmuzh the heat. Like i clieég 6a 939 mi, Ran I 88“: Now the “whom seemed to me Like 3 double .\ jp toe ; And the av. Whichever vmy 'twu tum-t. Hun be (allowed by the dust, Like the law In in tailing 539mm! {0 an, Situn l. M. one. van t hwy"â€" Stand II In the «not. t uwyer; 0n the lawyer's axiom two You could tad n knotty one, Needing hw ; While the nwycr, count and grim, On I rouxhynd tnotty limb. Saved by Two Girls. Well ofl‘ Beggars The Telautograph. Luv versus Saw. Doing goo . Japan.

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